Showing posts with label Authors/Artists: Alex Ross. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Authors/Artists: Alex Ross. Show all posts

Thursday, 22 March 2012

Books: Justice

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Justice
Vol 1 
Written by Alex Ross and Jim Krueger
Art by Alex Ross
2006



Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/

Justice
Vol 2
Written by Alex Ross and Jim Krueger
Art by Alex Ross
2007



Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/

Justice
Vol 3
Written by Alex Ross and Jim Krueger
Art by Alex Ross
2007



Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/


Oh boy. Just look at those covers! They look so cool! And flick through those pages! Oooooh! The way that the light reflects so sweetly - and everything has a warming glow that seems to emanate from somewhere deep inside - I dunno - your memories of superheroes past. Or something.

But: yes. Let's face facts: Alex Ross makes comic fanboys go funny in the head. Did you know that Comics Buyer's Guide discontinued it's Favorite Painter award from their CBG Fan Awards due to the fact that Alex Ross kept winning the damn thing year in year out? Oh - you did know that. Oh. In that case - nevermind. My point still stands that if you looked into the heart of any DC/Marvel geek - chances are - Alex Ross' name is tattooed across it. Because - damn it - he makes superheroes look real and how superheroes have always existed inside your mind - every since you first saw your first ever picture of Superman. All the other artists out there - they're just drawing pictures. Alex Ross - he's taking photographer from inside your comic book soul.

Jim Krueger on the other hand. Well - I've no idea who he is. (checks his wikipedia page) Hmmm. Well. His  wikipedia page is a little sparse and feels a little - depressing. ("He has written his first novel, whose title is thus far unrevealed but has something to do with Christmas.[citation needed]"). He's written other stuff - but it seems like his most well known things are Justice and Earth X - a marvel comic also co-written with Alex Ross.

Now - I don't want to be mean (and looking around it seems like the internet is a mean enough place already...) - so if Jim or any of his fans are reading this - I apologise - but I kind of get the feeling that I get from reading Justice is that Alex Ross - riding atop the plaudits and praise of fans worldwide - thought "hey - writing comics - how hard could that be?": enlisted the help of his friend Jim Krueger (are they friends? I have no idea - sorry) and was like - I want to draw this, this and this (I would include links to images from the book - but dagnamit - I'm too lazy - use your imagination or pick up the book itself or something) and Jim said something like "yes sir boss!" and so now we've got three books to content with - full of (and I think maybe I'm not saying this enough) absolutely astounding art - but not much way in terms of a well told story.

Although - wait - to be fair - I should admit that back when this first came out - I managed to get a copy of volume 1 (back when I worked at a different library) and thought that it was absolutely astounding - and not just because of the artwork - it had a cool set-up, a wicked-cool cliffhanger (*gasp!*) and it all seemed appropriately EPIC (and everyone likes their superhero stories to be epic - that's for damn sure).   

But then when I finally - finally [1] - got to the read the next two parts - it was all of a bit of a muddled let-down - which: frankly - left me with no desire to read it again (full disclosure: so far in writing this I still haven't).

The problem really is that - no matter how fantastic the pictures are - you need to be using them to bring to life a story worth telling (which is ironic - seeing how in the introduction - Jim Krueger mentions Robert McKee (the guy played by Brian Cox in Adaptation) and so really he has no excuse - although (and I realise that this is all getting a little bit much for a book that probably doesn't deserve this level of blah - but whatever): I'm of the opinion that the people that go to those kind of story-writing seminars are probably (making a massive generalization here oh well) the kind of people that probably aren't going to be that great at telling stories. Sure - everyone can do with a helping hand here and there - but if you really struggle that much with the basics and have never realised before that oh hey - maybe bad guys don't actually think of themselves as bad guys! (which is what said in the introduction)- then maybe I shouldn't be wasting my time reading the stuff that you've written).

My main problem with the book tho is something that will mean that some of the rest of you might really take to it and that's the level of fan service that is paid here. If you've been reading DC comics non-stop for the past 30 years - then I reckon you're really going to dig it. There's loads of stuff with different super-people's super-villains popping up and being super-evil (but not obviously - because they're doing stuff that they think makes them good guys. Or something). But yeah - by the end it all just collapsed into a big Grant Morrison-style ending mess. Like there's a feeling that something is probably making sense somewhere - but just not anywhere inside your own head.

And I think it says a lot that trying to track down some reviews or something to put down next to the links so far I'm coming up a little blank. I mean - everyone seems to love the pretty pictures - but no one seems to have much to actually say. (Or then again: maybe it's just because "Justice" is a hard thing to google properly).

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[1] Here's something you might not know: sometimes it can take a while for libraries to a hold of the book you want.

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Links: The M0vie Blog Review.

Further reading: Kingdom Come, The World's Greatest Superheroes, DC: The New Frontier, Final Crisis.

All comments welcome.

Saturday, 17 September 2011

Books: Kingdom Come

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Kingdom Come
Written by Mark Waid and Alex Ross
Art by Alex Ross

1998




Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/


Everyone loves a good Ragnarök. And in the mid-nineties Kingdom Come was the place to go for anyone wanting to get their apocalyptic superhero kicks. Taking place in a universe where all the first generation superheroes like Batman, Superman, Wonder Woman et al have grown old and increasingly irrelevant - superseded by a younger violent generation of heroes who have none of those old moral qualms and a much more brash and over-the-top attitude to dispensing with bad guys (spot the subtext) Kingdom Come is equal-parts lamination for the gods of times past and triumphant hallelujah for the power they still hold. Owing quite a debt of gratitude to Alan Moore's Twilight of the Superheroes pitch (which you can read here) and fortified with the same prevalent gloom as The Dark Knight Returns and Watchmen (which gets a few sly nods and winks): it nonetheless manages to dropkick the reader with a succession of thrilling moments all building to an epic end-of-the-world climax. With expertly written dialogue that's always to the point (""Man of tomorrow", my ass. Try "Man of the nineteen-fifties!"") and - this should go without saying by now - magnificent painted artwork from Alex Ross: this is a comic that cackles with all sorts of intense brilliance. It's pompous - yeah - but it works: and it's the right tone for this kind of downcast and moody colossal undertaking and (thankfully) it never gets "grim+gritty": so it's still something that the kids can enjoy.

One of the only possible down-sides are the many, many references to seemingly every other DC character in existence (as with all these types of books - you may need to check out wikipedia at several points): this may make it seem that you need to be a DC aficionado to be able to make sense of the story - but don't worry: as long as you're good with your superhero basics (ie you know the difference between your Dark Knights and Man of Steels): then you'll be ok.

Also - have to say: that this may be one of the best Superman stories (along with Red Son and All Star Superman) ever written (he's always at his best when he's facing nebulous worldwide problems rather than just beating up bad guys). So there's that to recommend it too.

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Links: The Hurting Article: I've Run Out of Cute Titles / Pocket Change / Iconography / What We Talk About When We Talk About Kingdom ComeWorld's of Westfield Interview with Alex Ross, Comic Book Resources Interview with Alex Ross, Comic Book Resources Review, Wired Review, Ninth Art Review, The M0vie Blog Review, Hooded Utilitarian Article: A Piercing Glimpse of Pants.

Further reading: Marvels, Batman: The Dark Knight Returns, Superman: Red Son, Final Crisis, DC: The New Frontier, Irredeemable, Superman: BirthrightWolverine: Old Man Logan, The World's Greatest Super-Heroes, Civil War, Batman: The Dark Knight Strikes Back, Superman: All Star Superman, Watchmen, Justice.

All comments welcome.

Monday, 6 June 2011

Books: The World's Greatest Super-Heroes

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The World's Greatest Super-Heroes
Written by Paul Didi
Art by Alex Ross

2010




Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/

It's described as "oversized" and i'm guessing they're refering to the format it was published in, but it could equally apply to the characters and stories contained within: Superman: Peace on Earth, Batman: War on Crime, Shazam!: Power of Hope, Wonder Woman: Spirit of Truth, JLA: Secret Origins, and JLA: Liberty and Justice. These are the biggest, super-heroes out there who not only bestride the worlds in which they inhabit: but also our own with their names, attributes and symbols branded into our collective unconscious (you think I'm exaggerating? Show me a child that's never heard of Superman and I'll show you a liar). In this collection of stories Paul Didi and Alex Ross afford each one of them the sort of reverence that once was only afforded to religious icons - with all but the last story told sans dialogue with that sort of slightly-ponderous narration you could easily imagine being voiced by Morgan Freeman. Forgoing crash-bang action adventures for uncomplicated parables (Superman fights World Hunger, Batman fights not crime - but the causes of crime, etc) and lovingly painted and composed by Alex Ross (so very very pretty): to continue the religious theme still further: it's bit like sitting in church - although the costumes are much prettier and the super-powers much more flamboyant it's still be hard resisting the urge to fidget and although it seems all deep and grown-up it doesn't exactly plum any depths: rather it takes the limits of a typical superhero comic and inflates them into something bigger, grander and more imposing - so like I said at the start: "oversized."

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Further reading: Marvels, Kingdom Come, Superman: All Star Superman.

All comments welcome.

Wednesday, 13 April 2011

Books: Marvels

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Marvels
Written by Kurt Busiek
Art by Alex Ross

1995




Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/

With beautiful fully painted Norman Rockwell-style artwork from Alex Ross - this book is a luxurious treat for anyone who's ever read a Marvel comic. One of the first notable series to star a normal human being living at the bottom of a world full of costume powered heroes (see also: Astro City, Powers, Gotham Central and Kingdom Come) Marvels stars ordinary news photographer Phil Sheldon and spans several years from 1939 all the way to 1974. Featuring cameos from all the major Marvel heroes (Spider-man, Fantastic Four, The X-Men etc) but not always in the way you would expect - this is a book that shows you how the epic battles and galactic conflicts of superheroes can affect, shape and change (or fail to change) the life of one man. Ideally balanced with enough references and in-jokes to tickle all the Marvel fan boys and girls but also enough of an emotionally gripping story to satisfy those who don't know the difference between Doctor Doom and Doctor Octavius. This is a thoughtful superhero book that uses classic Marvel storylines to address weighty human issues (tolerance, prejudice, family, love) that will make your rethink your perspective on superheroes.

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Links: The Hurting Article: Another Look At MarvelsThe Hurting Article: (X) + (Y) = You Suck or How I Learned To Stop Worrying And Love The SpandexThe M0vie Blog Review, Whatever Comics Review, The Comics Cube Article: Pop Medicine: All the Fancy Artistic Goals.

Further reading: Astro City, Powers, Gotham Central, Kingdom Come, The World's Greatest Super-Heroes, Watchmen.

All comments welcome.