________________________________________________________________________________
Point Blank
Written by Ed Brubaker
Art by Colin Wilson
2003
Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/
If comics people talk about Point Blank nowadays it's pretty much always in relation to Sleeper - Ed Brubaker's and Sean Philip's big undercover spy caper that (well - for the first half at least) is one of the tensest comic books around - seeing how - well - Point Blank is a Sleeper prequel (albeit a rarity these days seeing how it's a prequel that was written before the things that came afterwards instead of - well - afterwards [1]) - but (hey) even if you have no idea who Holden Carver is - Point Blank is a book that you can pick up with no background knowledge needed and [2] still get a kick out of. Put it this way: it knows how to pull your strings (like a puppet? You know: like on the cover? No? Oh. In that case: nevermind).
With hardly an inch of excess fat and with artwork duties for once not conducted by Sean Philips (Ed Brubaker's usual partner in crime for this kinda of noir meets superheroes kinda work) Point Blank is a detective story where the twist is [3] that the guy doing the investigating isn't really cut out for it (and Brubaker really spells it out for you: "I'll freely admit that I 've never been much of a detective. Putting together clues and figuring out motives just seems too tedious.": but then like I'm remarked before he's never really been one for playing thing subtly and so there's lots of stuff like people staring into cracked mirrors and the reoccurring line (do you see what he's done there?) of "It's like déjà vu all over again. [4]").
And in fact - while we're on the subject of the writing: I mean - judged on it's own merits this is a pretty fun book that (for me at least) doesn't really do anything too complicated [5] - but manages to bounce along in a pretty fun way and Colin Wilson's art (that we'll get to in a little bit) is pretty much consistently crackling. But then - right at the start there's a little dedication that reads "To Lee Marvin and Alan Moore and the idea that simple is not better." and in the afterword Ed Brubaker (who comes across as sounding way too self-satisfied for writing a book that (if I was giving grades [6]) would be C+ at best) says "I found myself asking what Mature Readers superheroes comics should be. As you can see, I decided they should be really complicated." And even goes so far as to compare the book to a möbius strip and then dares to mention it in the same breath as Watchmen (the cheek!): which for me - is a little like someone making you a cheese toasty and then start talking about michelin stars: I mean - I have no problem with what it is (and it is very tasty) - but let's not start getting a swollen head or nothing. Especially when your opening includes the line "It's like waking up from an alcoholic blackout and discovering that the girl on the next pillow is actually a pre-op trannie" (I mean really?) and then follows it with: "But, of course, by then it's too later because you've realized the truth about life right at the end... and all you can do is wait for the final blow." (Which in terms of the context you've set up just seems like a really poor choice of words - no? Just me?).
But hey - Colin Wilson on art! And for me - I've been a fan ever since I saw him doing Rogue Trooper and Judge Dredd stuff for 2000AD and like it says on his wikipedia page: "No one ... draws near-future military hardware like him." (In fact - before I read his wikipedia page I was going to say that his art really reminds me of the stuff that Möbius [7] (the artist not the strip) used to do on his strip Blueberry: but it turns out that Colin Wilson used to actually draw Blueberry so I guess that his work just reminds me of him - oops (oh well)). But yeah: his art has this really nice European flavor - that makes it a bit of a shock seeing it in an American context (and I'd say - goes a long way to making Point Blank seem a lot more classy than it actually is). But there's just so much nice little touches - like using the background colours to signify where in time you are - and the buildings and interiors all look proper lovely and detailed and good - like proper manga good (I mean - maybe I'm just thinking of Katsuhiro Otomo and Domu - but for me manga is always the gold standard when it comes to architecture in comics) .
So: enjoy the art and don't go thinking that the story is somekind of masterwork and you'll have a great time.
Simple as that.
...................................................................................................................................................
[1] Sorry: did that make anyone else's head hurt or is it just me? I just meant that most prequels tend to come out after the main thing (ie The Phantom Menace (which I guess is the best example for prequels) came out after the original Star Wars trilogy as opposed to before it - right?). But then I guess if prequels came out first then most of the time you don't call them prequels - you call whatever comes after sequels and just leave it at that (so - for instance - it would sound pretty strange if you called Toy Story the prequel to Toy Story 2). Of course that then begs the question as to why Point Blank is called the prequel to Sleeper instead of Sleeper being just referred to as the sequel to Point Blank? I guess the reason why prequel fits is that you can read Sleeper and be completely unaware that Point Blank even exists (in fact - I think that's just what I did the first time round...) and although there's a through-line linking both books: the emphasis is on different characters - so it's more like Manhunter and Silence of the Lambs rather than the Silence of the Lambs and Hannibal - yeah? Ok then.
[2] Cole Cash (aka Grifter) is actually a character that first appeared in a strip called WildC.A.T.s. But I've never read it so I don't think you need to either
[3] Although it's really not really that much of a twist. In fact - I would have assumed it's actually a pretty common device by now - I mean Frank Miller was doing it with Marv in Sin City all the way back in 1992 and Sin City (as great as it is) was a series that's whole thing was that it was upon built upon already well-worn clichés - but then - hey - what do I know? I'm just a humble little comics blogger.
[4] Which - I would like to point out: is a line from Fight Club. (But - hell: actually it's such a cheesy line I wouldn't be that shocked if it turned out that it was first used back in the Middle Ages or something...)
[5] Although I'm writing this at the same time I'm rereading Chris Ware's Jimmy Corrigan - so maybe my perspective is a little out of whack? (But on second thoughts - no. It's not me: it's the book. And Ed Brubaker - so just disregard this).
[6] Ooooooh. Grades! That's a good idea!
[7] Or - if I was going to be more specific: Möbius crossed with Dave Gibbons.
...................................................................................................................................................
Further reading: Sleeper, The Authority, Incognito, Criminal, Sin City, 100 Bullets, Queen and Country, Red, Anna Mercury, Global Frequency, Desolation Jones, Fatale, Domu.
Profiles: Ed Brubaker.
All comments welcome.
Showing posts with label Authors: Ed Brubaker. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Authors: Ed Brubaker. Show all posts
Thursday, 18 October 2012
Monday, 21 May 2012
Books: The Marvels Project
________________________________________________________________________________
The Marvels Project
Written by Ed Brubaker
Art by Steve Epting
2010
Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/
That Mitchell and Webb look (which is like Peep Show - only not as clever, dark or funny) had this sketch where one Nazi - noticing the skull emblazoned across his hat - asks another Nazi: "Hans - are we the baddies?" To which the answer (obviously) is: yes. Yes. Yes. And yes again. For if there's one thing that our culture has taught us since the start of World War II all the way to the current moment it's that: the Nazi's are baddies. The ultimate baddies. The baddies to beat all other baddies. None more baddie. The baddies to rule them all etc. If you're looking for a quickest and easiest shortcut to make someone look evil just make them a Nazi, get to proclaim their love of Hitler and draw them with a swastika (just ask Charles Manson): you don't even have to bother with any other sort of characterisation or distinguishing marks or anything like that - it's like the way that the bad cowboys in old films used to wear black hats - being a Nazi clearly and simply and totally marks you out as a bad guy [1].
And for those very reasons - (and as strange as this may sound to say) Nazi's have been a bit of blessing for stories of action and adventures and - particulary - superheros. Because not only are an easy shortcut to badness - but they also have the whole evil image thing down pat: those skull on the hats for one thing, not to mention the thigh-length boots, all the the facist-style marching and that intimating salute (designed - apparently to show the underside of your hand to whoever you give it to). Which is why they've been utilized in films from everyone from Marathon Man to Indiana Jones and in comics - well - everywhere.
There is a down-side to the use of Nazis-as-bad-guys tho - one which The Marvels Project seems unaware of. Namely - that while it's alright to use the Nazi's as your antagonists - things get a little more fraught when you start to refer to the actual atrocities they commited. For this reader mixing elements as cartoony as a villian whose head looks like red skull with references to the holocaust is like mixing ice cream with dog poo: at the very least - it's distasteful [2].
But - let's back up a second: what is The Marvels Project about anyway?
Well - set in the late 1930s and early 1940s it's a period peice that takes all the early Marvel stories featuring the likes of The Human Torch, Namor and Captain America and retells them to make them a little more realistic and gritty. I don't know if there's anyone who read those comics when they first came out who'd still be bothered to read this book now (they'd have to be - at the very least - 90 years ago) - so it's a little bit nostalgia-by-proxy - it isn't anything that anyone can be geninuely nostalgic for - but you can kinda squint your brain and pretend.
For me - the only way that I really know about any of this kinda early-days-of-Marvel stuff is by reading Kurt Busiek and Alex Ross' Marvels book (and there's even a few points where the cross-over directly - isn't that image of New York being hit by a tidal wave the same in both?): and it's the one book that I was most reminded of when reading The Marvels Project. However - whilst Marvels manages to make it's superheroes seem more realistic by hiding their exploits under a veil that the reader doesn't really get access to - The Marvels Project by letting the reader into every nook and cranny of it's superheros lives just makes those same superheroes seem less and less believable [3].
Yeah - maybe it's just time that I stop reading superhero comics. I didn't much enjoying reading this book - and by the end just felt kinda demoralised and sorta spiritually exhasuted and I could ask myself was: "what's the point?" There have been lots of worthwhile books that I have discovered my making my way through lots of pages of men in tights - but at this point it's starting to feel that the well has run dry and there's nothing much more to wow or thrill me. About the only thing I did like with The Marvels Project was the background appearances of some of the characters from The Twelve (does that mean that The Twelve has reused old Marvel characters? Or is The Marvels Project referencing The Twelve directly? Altho on second thoughts - who cares?)
................................................................................................................................
[1] My pitch for a film (if anyone's listening) would be set sometime during the World War II and have a bunch of Allied troops and Nazi troops getting stuck in some dingy place together - coming up against some evil Lovecraftian monster - and being forced to join forces in order to fight it (because - hey - if something is even worse than Nazis then you know that it's got to be really really really bad).
[2] Altho - it's not impossible to get that sort of high/low combination right: see Kurt Busiek and Carlos Pacheco's Arrowsmith: So Smart in Their Uniforms book (link below) - which manages (somehow) to mix "war is hell" with wizards and dragons and make the whole concept sing.
[3] I call this "The Batman Problem": as in Christopher Nolan's Batman films where the more effort he expends into making Gotham City seem like somewhere that could exist in the real world - the more you start to feel the ridiculousness of the fact that the hero is a man dressed like a bat.
................................................................................................................................
Links: Pop Dose Review, Espinasse's Super-Read-Of-The-Week Review,
Further reading: Marvels, The Shadow, The Twelve, DC: The New Frontier, Arrowsmith: So Smart in Their Fine Uniforms.
Profiles: Ed Brubaker.
All comments welcome.
The Marvels Project
Written by Ed Brubaker
Art by Steve Epting
2010
Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/
That Mitchell and Webb look (which is like Peep Show - only not as clever, dark or funny) had this sketch where one Nazi - noticing the skull emblazoned across his hat - asks another Nazi: "Hans - are we the baddies?" To which the answer (obviously) is: yes. Yes. Yes. And yes again. For if there's one thing that our culture has taught us since the start of World War II all the way to the current moment it's that: the Nazi's are baddies. The ultimate baddies. The baddies to beat all other baddies. None more baddie. The baddies to rule them all etc. If you're looking for a quickest and easiest shortcut to make someone look evil just make them a Nazi, get to proclaim their love of Hitler and draw them with a swastika (just ask Charles Manson): you don't even have to bother with any other sort of characterisation or distinguishing marks or anything like that - it's like the way that the bad cowboys in old films used to wear black hats - being a Nazi clearly and simply and totally marks you out as a bad guy [1].
And for those very reasons - (and as strange as this may sound to say) Nazi's have been a bit of blessing for stories of action and adventures and - particulary - superheros. Because not only are an easy shortcut to badness - but they also have the whole evil image thing down pat: those skull on the hats for one thing, not to mention the thigh-length boots, all the the facist-style marching and that intimating salute (designed - apparently to show the underside of your hand to whoever you give it to). Which is why they've been utilized in films from everyone from Marathon Man to Indiana Jones and in comics - well - everywhere.
There is a down-side to the use of Nazis-as-bad-guys tho - one which The Marvels Project seems unaware of. Namely - that while it's alright to use the Nazi's as your antagonists - things get a little more fraught when you start to refer to the actual atrocities they commited. For this reader mixing elements as cartoony as a villian whose head looks like red skull with references to the holocaust is like mixing ice cream with dog poo: at the very least - it's distasteful [2].
But - let's back up a second: what is The Marvels Project about anyway?
Well - set in the late 1930s and early 1940s it's a period peice that takes all the early Marvel stories featuring the likes of The Human Torch, Namor and Captain America and retells them to make them a little more realistic and gritty. I don't know if there's anyone who read those comics when they first came out who'd still be bothered to read this book now (they'd have to be - at the very least - 90 years ago) - so it's a little bit nostalgia-by-proxy - it isn't anything that anyone can be geninuely nostalgic for - but you can kinda squint your brain and pretend.
For me - the only way that I really know about any of this kinda early-days-of-Marvel stuff is by reading Kurt Busiek and Alex Ross' Marvels book (and there's even a few points where the cross-over directly - isn't that image of New York being hit by a tidal wave the same in both?): and it's the one book that I was most reminded of when reading The Marvels Project. However - whilst Marvels manages to make it's superheroes seem more realistic by hiding their exploits under a veil that the reader doesn't really get access to - The Marvels Project by letting the reader into every nook and cranny of it's superheros lives just makes those same superheroes seem less and less believable [3].
Yeah - maybe it's just time that I stop reading superhero comics. I didn't much enjoying reading this book - and by the end just felt kinda demoralised and sorta spiritually exhasuted and I could ask myself was: "what's the point?" There have been lots of worthwhile books that I have discovered my making my way through lots of pages of men in tights - but at this point it's starting to feel that the well has run dry and there's nothing much more to wow or thrill me. About the only thing I did like with The Marvels Project was the background appearances of some of the characters from The Twelve (does that mean that The Twelve has reused old Marvel characters? Or is The Marvels Project referencing The Twelve directly? Altho on second thoughts - who cares?)
................................................................................................................................
[1] My pitch for a film (if anyone's listening) would be set sometime during the World War II and have a bunch of Allied troops and Nazi troops getting stuck in some dingy place together - coming up against some evil Lovecraftian monster - and being forced to join forces in order to fight it (because - hey - if something is even worse than Nazis then you know that it's got to be really really really bad).
[2] Altho - it's not impossible to get that sort of high/low combination right: see Kurt Busiek and Carlos Pacheco's Arrowsmith: So Smart in Their Uniforms book (link below) - which manages (somehow) to mix "war is hell" with wizards and dragons and make the whole concept sing.
[3] I call this "The Batman Problem": as in Christopher Nolan's Batman films where the more effort he expends into making Gotham City seem like somewhere that could exist in the real world - the more you start to feel the ridiculousness of the fact that the hero is a man dressed like a bat.
................................................................................................................................
Links: Pop Dose Review, Espinasse's Super-Read-Of-The-Week Review,
Further reading: Marvels, The Shadow, The Twelve, DC: The New Frontier, Arrowsmith: So Smart in Their Fine Uniforms.
Profiles: Ed Brubaker.
All comments welcome.
Tuesday, 24 April 2012
Authors: Ed Brubaker
_________________________________________________________________________________
Ed Brubaker
17 November 1966
Bethesda, Maryland
Self confessed Ex-Army Brat Ed Brubaker has been bringing back the noir into comics in a way not seen since the heyday of Frank Miller. With series full of disreputable shady types up to all sorts of no good - his most well-known series is called Criminal which should tell you everything you need to know. The type of writer who's never met an anti-hero that he didn't want to make you fall in love with - the stories he writes luxuriates in the seedy, down-trodden and randomly violent: with lots of chunks of moral ambiguity to make them stick in your teeth. No surprise then that he's the one responsible for killing Captain America (well - at least for a little while).
.................................................................................................................................
Links: AV Club Interview
Selected works: Catwoman, Daredevil, Point Blank, Gotham Central, Sleeper, Books of Doom, Incognito, Captain America, Criminal, The Marvels Project, Fatale.
All comments welcome.
Ed Brubaker
17 November 1966
Bethesda, Maryland
Self confessed Ex-Army Brat Ed Brubaker has been bringing back the noir into comics in a way not seen since the heyday of Frank Miller. With series full of disreputable shady types up to all sorts of no good - his most well-known series is called Criminal which should tell you everything you need to know. The type of writer who's never met an anti-hero that he didn't want to make you fall in love with - the stories he writes luxuriates in the seedy, down-trodden and randomly violent: with lots of chunks of moral ambiguity to make them stick in your teeth. No surprise then that he's the one responsible for killing Captain America (well - at least for a little while).
.................................................................................................................................
Links: AV Club Interview
Selected works: Catwoman, Daredevil, Point Blank, Gotham Central, Sleeper, Books of Doom, Incognito, Captain America, Criminal, The Marvels Project, Fatale.
All comments welcome.
Monday, 16 January 2012
Books: Sleeper
________________________________________________________________________________
Sleeper
Season 1
Written by Ed Brubaker
Art by Sean Phillips
2004
Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/
Sleeper
Season 2
Written by Ed Brubaker
Art by Sean Phillips
2005
Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/
Do you like spies? Cold-war style espionage style spies? So far deep undercover that they don't even know who they're working for anymore? With grim hard-boiled voice-overs? And characters who say things like "we're past petty concepts like good and evil." With (added bonus!) superpowers that handily reflect character's personality traits? Yes? Yes? and Yes? Well then - Ed Brubaker and Sean Philips have just the comic book for you.
Told over two "Seasons" [1] (comic books = the new televison! Or something) Sleeper is a series that will keep you gripped in it's vice-like jaws (Grrrrrr!) as it moves from one outrageous set-piece to the next (at point early on there's actually a panel with the main character falling out of helicopter over Paris as he fires a mini-canon-thing (sorry: I'm not great with identifying guns) at an airplane (altho sadly it's nowhere near as good as that sounds). With characters with such gonzo names as: Genocide Jones, Steeleye, XXX Ray, The Nihilist [2], Diesel Max and Miss Misery [3] who tend to refer to superheroes as "dweebs" and who are so cagey about when it comes to revealing anything about their past they have to toss a coin to see who goes first ("Origin Stories. Heads or tails?").
It's not exactly subtle ("I'd crushed charred baby skulls underfoot and choked the life out of freely elected Presidents so we could replace them with hand-picked dictators. And yet, at the end of the day, I still believed I was one of the good guys." [4]) and everything always seems to be "one pussy hair" away from everything else [5]. But just as long as you can make it past the (yawn) section which makes the claim that pop music keeps people stupid... ((But maybe that's just me? I dunno: but then there's something about the writing through the whole comic that makes me feel that it's written by someone who just not quite as smart as he thinks he is (sorry Ed - nothing personal) there's a point where someone throws out the word "Obsequiousness."[6] which just makes it seem like they're trying too hard: I mean - it's a good comic for what it is - but it's not exactly Will Self (who you know makes using long and difficult words look easy)).
Cut from the same noir meets superheroes! cloth as Incognito (which you'll love if you enjoy this and vice versa) this is 21st Century superhero comics - yeah it's grim and gritty and darker than being locked in a cupboard with a blindfold on: but it pops like a boat full of fireworks, snaps like a crocodile that's only just got out of bed and crackles like a whole roll of bubble wrap (and if you thought popping on those things was addictive: just you wait until you start reading this).
It's just a shame that Season 2 isn't as gripping as Season 1: in the afterword at the end of the last book Ed Brubaker admits that they only had things planned up until the end of the first half ("When we started, I had planned it to be 12 chapters, and thought we'd be lucky to get those.") - and yeah: that sure does make a lot of sense - as the pressure that they so artfully build up over the course of the first book just sort of dissipates as the double-crossing gets double-crossed so many times that it can be hard to keep track who exactly is lying to who - and although that has it's advantages (I guess) it does mean that the tension isn't cracked up to the same levels as before (someone lying to someone else = tension, someone maybe lying to someone else who maybe already knows that they're already maybe lying just = a little bit confusing).
(Oh: and - if you liked Sleeper - then you should know: that there's a prequel comic out there called Point Blank (same writer - different artist) that you should try too).
...............................................................................................................................................
[1] Or (if you can't get the two books above) it also comes in volume form - Vol. 1: Out in the Cold and Vol. 2: All False Moves (that's Season One) and Vol. 3: A Crooked Line and Vol. 4: The Long Way Home (Season Two). (I mean - I guess I could have posted it up in volume form here because Islington has copies of both types - but in terms of my personal preference I would go for the Seasons: it's just more satisfying to read them in big chunks and only have a single rest in-between.
[2] Who's a total (deliberately?) Comedian (from Watchmen) rip-off. But then - hey - I guess if you're gonna steal: steal from the best.
[3] Which I wanna believe is an Elliott Smith reference. (I mean - I know it's probably not: but still: I want to believe that it is). Also: am I totally alone in thinking that Figure 8 is his best album? I mean - good lush production isn't something to be scared of people...
[4] For the full effect I think you have to imagine that being said by Michael Sheen as he lies on his bed staring at a ceiling fan.
[5] I mean: seriously I think they must use that line at least twice (maybe even three or four?) I dunno: I mean I guess I could go back through the whole series to check: but definitely they use at least twice. At least. (Or maybe I'm being too harsh? Maybe in the world of Sleeper "pussy-hair" is an official unit of measurement? Inches, centimeters and pussy-hairs? "Does it not quite fit?" "Yeah - it's - let me see........ it's six pussy-hairs too big. Sorry.")
[6] It means: "Full of or exhibiting servile compliance; fawning." (and yeah: I have no problem admitting that I had to look it up: just be warned - I may try and see if I can slip it into another post at some point in the future..."This book is so full of obsequiousness!").
...............................................................................................................................................
Further reading: Point Blank, Incognito, Criminal, 100 Bullets, Queen and Country, Red, Anna Mercury, Global Frequency, Desolation Jones, The Authority, Fatale.
Profiles: Ed Brubaker.
All comments welcome.

Season 1
Written by Ed Brubaker
Art by Sean Phillips
2004
Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/

Season 2
Written by Ed Brubaker
Art by Sean Phillips
2005
Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/
Do you like spies? Cold-war style espionage style spies? So far deep undercover that they don't even know who they're working for anymore? With grim hard-boiled voice-overs? And characters who say things like "we're past petty concepts like good and evil." With (added bonus!) superpowers that handily reflect character's personality traits? Yes? Yes? and Yes? Well then - Ed Brubaker and Sean Philips have just the comic book for you.
Told over two "Seasons" [1] (comic books = the new televison! Or something) Sleeper is a series that will keep you gripped in it's vice-like jaws (Grrrrrr!) as it moves from one outrageous set-piece to the next (at point early on there's actually a panel with the main character falling out of helicopter over Paris as he fires a mini-canon-thing (sorry: I'm not great with identifying guns) at an airplane (altho sadly it's nowhere near as good as that sounds). With characters with such gonzo names as: Genocide Jones, Steeleye, XXX Ray, The Nihilist [2], Diesel Max and Miss Misery [3] who tend to refer to superheroes as "dweebs" and who are so cagey about when it comes to revealing anything about their past they have to toss a coin to see who goes first ("Origin Stories. Heads or tails?").
It's not exactly subtle ("I'd crushed charred baby skulls underfoot and choked the life out of freely elected Presidents so we could replace them with hand-picked dictators. And yet, at the end of the day, I still believed I was one of the good guys." [4]) and everything always seems to be "one pussy hair" away from everything else [5]. But just as long as you can make it past the (yawn) section which makes the claim that pop music keeps people stupid... ((But maybe that's just me? I dunno: but then there's something about the writing through the whole comic that makes me feel that it's written by someone who just not quite as smart as he thinks he is (sorry Ed - nothing personal) there's a point where someone throws out the word "Obsequiousness."[6] which just makes it seem like they're trying too hard: I mean - it's a good comic for what it is - but it's not exactly Will Self (who you know makes using long and difficult words look easy)).
Cut from the same noir meets superheroes! cloth as Incognito (which you'll love if you enjoy this and vice versa) this is 21st Century superhero comics - yeah it's grim and gritty and darker than being locked in a cupboard with a blindfold on: but it pops like a boat full of fireworks, snaps like a crocodile that's only just got out of bed and crackles like a whole roll of bubble wrap (and if you thought popping on those things was addictive: just you wait until you start reading this).
It's just a shame that Season 2 isn't as gripping as Season 1: in the afterword at the end of the last book Ed Brubaker admits that they only had things planned up until the end of the first half ("When we started, I had planned it to be 12 chapters, and thought we'd be lucky to get those.") - and yeah: that sure does make a lot of sense - as the pressure that they so artfully build up over the course of the first book just sort of dissipates as the double-crossing gets double-crossed so many times that it can be hard to keep track who exactly is lying to who - and although that has it's advantages (I guess) it does mean that the tension isn't cracked up to the same levels as before (someone lying to someone else = tension, someone maybe lying to someone else who maybe already knows that they're already maybe lying just = a little bit confusing).
(Oh: and - if you liked Sleeper - then you should know: that there's a prequel comic out there called Point Blank (same writer - different artist) that you should try too).
...............................................................................................................................................
[1] Or (if you can't get the two books above) it also comes in volume form - Vol. 1: Out in the Cold and Vol. 2: All False Moves (that's Season One) and Vol. 3: A Crooked Line and Vol. 4: The Long Way Home (Season Two). (I mean - I guess I could have posted it up in volume form here because Islington has copies of both types - but in terms of my personal preference I would go for the Seasons: it's just more satisfying to read them in big chunks and only have a single rest in-between.
[2] Who's a total (deliberately?) Comedian (from Watchmen) rip-off. But then - hey - I guess if you're gonna steal: steal from the best.
[3] Which I wanna believe is an Elliott Smith reference. (I mean - I know it's probably not: but still: I want to believe that it is). Also: am I totally alone in thinking that Figure 8 is his best album? I mean - good lush production isn't something to be scared of people...
[4] For the full effect I think you have to imagine that being said by Michael Sheen as he lies on his bed staring at a ceiling fan.
[5] I mean: seriously I think they must use that line at least twice (maybe even three or four?) I dunno: I mean I guess I could go back through the whole series to check: but definitely they use at least twice. At least. (Or maybe I'm being too harsh? Maybe in the world of Sleeper "pussy-hair" is an official unit of measurement? Inches, centimeters and pussy-hairs? "Does it not quite fit?" "Yeah - it's - let me see........ it's six pussy-hairs too big. Sorry.")
[6] It means: "Full of or exhibiting servile compliance; fawning." (and yeah: I have no problem admitting that I had to look it up: just be warned - I may try and see if I can slip it into another post at some point in the future..."This book is so full of obsequiousness!").
...............................................................................................................................................
Further reading: Point Blank, Incognito, Criminal, 100 Bullets, Queen and Country, Red, Anna Mercury, Global Frequency, Desolation Jones, The Authority, Fatale.
Profiles: Ed Brubaker.
All comments welcome.
Friday, 4 November 2011
Books: Criminal
_________________________________________________________________________________
Criminal
Vol 1: Coward
Written by Ed Brubaker
Art by Sean Phillips
2007
Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/
Criminal
Vol 2: Lawless
Written by Ed Brubaker
Art by Sean Phillips
2007
Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/
Criminal
Vol 3: The Dead and The Dying
Written by Ed Brubaker
Art by Sean Phillips
2007
Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/
Criminal
Vol 4: Bad Night
Written by Ed Brubaker
Art by Sean Phillips
2007
Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/
Criminal
Vol 5: The Sinners
Written by Ed Brubaker
Art by Sean Phillips
2010
Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/
Criminal
Vol 6: The Last of The Innocent
Written by Ed Brubaker
Art by Sean Phillips
2011
Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/
Someone told me that the books in the Criminal series could be read in any order - and while I see the point (each volume is it's own self contained story): there's some things that won't hit you right and some bitter ironies that you'll miss unless you read them in sequence. Certain moments that might seem hopeful if you come at them the wrong way. But wait. What is Criminal anyway? Why read them at all? Ok then: the baby of American writer self-confessed "army brat" Ed Brubaker and English ex-2000AD artist Sean Phillips (who have also worked together to create Incognito and Sleeper - so if you like this - you should go check them out too) the series Criminal is the flagship title of modern crime "neo-noir" comics and the successor of a tradition that started all the way back with Frank Miller's Sin City (and if you haven't read those already - what the hell is wrong with you?). Unlike Sin City - there isn't too much wild and crazy with the techniques used here (with a few exceptions here and there) - so anyone hooked on the outlandish excesses of your Alan Moores and Grant Morrisons should look elsewhere (or - you know - simply adjust your expectations accordingly): Criminal is stripped back, unshowy and cuts right to the point (and most times - that's the end point of a knife pushed up against someone's throat). In common with Sin City (I promise I'm gonna stop going on about Sin City soon) what's nice (nice?) about Criminal is the way all the separate stories inter-lock and dovetail into each other - so that each successive volume drags you under a little deeper and pours on the injustice a little more - creating a world where character's fates end up being decided before they even get a chance to grow up.
The artwork follows the cue of the writing containing all the action in the same sequence of little tidy boxes (which - if you compare it to his art for other books - isn't really something Sean Phillips does elsewhere): but it definitely adds to the claustrophobic atmosphere that builds up in every story and reinforces the central idea contained within every volume (and hell - every noir story) that escape is impossible: and your only options are death or - even worse - prison.
Other things I liked: the unlikely names of the characters ("Teeg Lawless"?); the lighting (hell yeah comics can have good lighting too); the few times the art switches styles (mostly in dreams and memories - and there's a cool trick in Vol 4 that I won't spoil); the piling up of bad luck upon trouble that afflicts every character caught in headlights of plot in a way that never seems too contrived but always left me thoroughly gripped.
So - yeah - anyone that likes a good old dollop of hard boiled crime fiction (and Ian Rankin wrote an introduction - so you know this is the real thing): Criminal is waiting to show you a good time... Just make sure you watch your step.
....................................................................................................................................................
Links: The Comics Reporter Interview with Ed Brubaker, Page 45 Review of Vol 1, Tor Review of Vol 1, Gosh! Comics Blog: Gosh Recommends Criminal Coward and Lawless, A Criminal Blog, Tearoom of Despair: It's Criminal, Tearoom of Despair Criminal: The Sinners Article, Tearoom of Despair Criminal: Last of the Innocents Article, The Comics Cube Article: Gateway Comics: Criminal.
Further reading: 100 Bullets, Incognito, Sleeper, Sin City, Scalped, Queen & Country, The Punisher: The Punisher MAX, Marvel Zombies, Goldfish.
Profiles: Ed Brubaker.
All comments welcome.

Vol 1: Coward
Written by Ed Brubaker
Art by Sean Phillips
2007
Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/

Vol 2: Lawless
Written by Ed Brubaker
Art by Sean Phillips
2007
Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/

Vol 3: The Dead and The Dying
Written by Ed Brubaker
Art by Sean Phillips
2007
Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/

Vol 4: Bad Night
Written by Ed Brubaker
Art by Sean Phillips
2007
Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/

Vol 5: The Sinners
Written by Ed Brubaker
Art by Sean Phillips
2010
Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/
Criminal
Vol 6: The Last of The Innocent
Written by Ed Brubaker
Art by Sean Phillips
2011
Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/
Someone told me that the books in the Criminal series could be read in any order - and while I see the point (each volume is it's own self contained story): there's some things that won't hit you right and some bitter ironies that you'll miss unless you read them in sequence. Certain moments that might seem hopeful if you come at them the wrong way. But wait. What is Criminal anyway? Why read them at all? Ok then: the baby of American writer self-confessed "army brat" Ed Brubaker and English ex-2000AD artist Sean Phillips (who have also worked together to create Incognito and Sleeper - so if you like this - you should go check them out too) the series Criminal is the flagship title of modern crime "neo-noir" comics and the successor of a tradition that started all the way back with Frank Miller's Sin City (and if you haven't read those already - what the hell is wrong with you?). Unlike Sin City - there isn't too much wild and crazy with the techniques used here (with a few exceptions here and there) - so anyone hooked on the outlandish excesses of your Alan Moores and Grant Morrisons should look elsewhere (or - you know - simply adjust your expectations accordingly): Criminal is stripped back, unshowy and cuts right to the point (and most times - that's the end point of a knife pushed up against someone's throat). In common with Sin City (I promise I'm gonna stop going on about Sin City soon) what's nice (nice?) about Criminal is the way all the separate stories inter-lock and dovetail into each other - so that each successive volume drags you under a little deeper and pours on the injustice a little more - creating a world where character's fates end up being decided before they even get a chance to grow up.
The artwork follows the cue of the writing containing all the action in the same sequence of little tidy boxes (which - if you compare it to his art for other books - isn't really something Sean Phillips does elsewhere): but it definitely adds to the claustrophobic atmosphere that builds up in every story and reinforces the central idea contained within every volume (and hell - every noir story) that escape is impossible: and your only options are death or - even worse - prison.
Other things I liked: the unlikely names of the characters ("Teeg Lawless"?); the lighting (hell yeah comics can have good lighting too); the few times the art switches styles (mostly in dreams and memories - and there's a cool trick in Vol 4 that I won't spoil); the piling up of bad luck upon trouble that afflicts every character caught in headlights of plot in a way that never seems too contrived but always left me thoroughly gripped.
So - yeah - anyone that likes a good old dollop of hard boiled crime fiction (and Ian Rankin wrote an introduction - so you know this is the real thing): Criminal is waiting to show you a good time... Just make sure you watch your step.
....................................................................................................................................................
Links: The Comics Reporter Interview with Ed Brubaker, Page 45 Review of Vol 1, Tor Review of Vol 1, Gosh! Comics Blog: Gosh Recommends Criminal Coward and Lawless, A Criminal Blog, Tearoom of Despair: It's Criminal, Tearoom of Despair Criminal: The Sinners Article, Tearoom of Despair Criminal: Last of the Innocents Article, The Comics Cube Article: Gateway Comics: Criminal.
Further reading: 100 Bullets, Incognito, Sleeper, Sin City, Scalped, Queen & Country, The Punisher: The Punisher MAX, Marvel Zombies, Goldfish.
Profiles: Ed Brubaker.
All comments welcome.
Thursday, 21 April 2011
Books: Gotham Central
_______________________________________________________________________________
Gotham Central
Vol. 1: In the Line of Duty
Written by Ed Brubaker and Greg Rucka
Art by Michael Lark
2011
Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/
Gotham Central
Vol. 2: Jokers and Madmen
Written by Ed Brubaker and Greg Rucka
Art by Michael Lark
2011
Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/
Gotham Central
Vol. 3: On The Freak Beat
Written by Ed Brubaker and Greg Rucka
Art by Michael Lark and Stefano Gaudiano
2011
Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/
Gotham Central
Vol. 4: Corrigan
Written by Ed Brubaker and Greg Rucka
Art by Kano and Stefano Gaudiano
2012
Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/
I'd say that everyone everywhere as at one point or another (even if it was only for a second at the back of their mind) entertained the idea that Batman was real.
Don't lie.
I mean - come on: wouldn't it be awesome? Some crazy dark mystery man stalking the city streets ("Batman? Nah - it's just an urban legend man - read what it says on snoops..."): avenging evil, scaring the bad guys and protecting the innocent and all that stuff? It would be great. Taking it apart: I guess that part of the reason is that it's a comforting idea: a guardian angel only without the flowery white robes and heavenly countenance: but coming instead from the shadows, dressed up in black, mean and vicious and completely unstoppable [1]. And also: I guess that there's a part of us that just gets off on the power-trip. I mean - even if it's not us that's actually doing all the Batmaning (that's a word right?) - it's still somehow makes the world better to make-believe that there could be someone out there who stood up against all the stuff that most of us end up passively accepting: because there's so much crud and bad things going on in the world that most of the time the only thing you can do is just to ignore it and just keep trundling on - but damn - what if there was someone out there who was big enough and brave enough and bold enough to make a stand and say: "no." [2]
Of course: the only problem is that well - (brace yourself) the idea of Batman is (yes) inherently ridiculous [3]. You want proof? Well - howabouts it's always the bits of the Christopher Nolan films when they start to focus on the idea of Batman himself (and his stupid growly voice) that the suspension of disbelief gets a little - well - suspended.
But don't worry: Gotham Central is here to save the day.
First published between 2003 and 2006 (and there are collected editions that came out around that time but it's been so popular that they've rereleased them (those are the ones you can see up above [4]) - which I guess must be some small comfort to the everyone on the Gotham Central creative team seeing how notorious it was on it's original release for its outstanding reviews, dedicated fanbase and poor sales (according to wikipedia it was - like - 120th place (?! ) in the comic sales charts (and me - I didn't even know that there could be 120 comics that all came out at the same time)). But then - hey - I guess that adds even more zest (zest?) to the claim that: it's like The Wire - only with Batman in it [6] (you know: ignored while it's been released and then everyone saying "oh my god - best thing ever" when it's no longer around).
Writers Greg Rucka and Ed Brubaker - who (come on) both know a thing or two about making how to cook a comic hard boiled [7] - Gotham Central is a tasty little police procedural series about the ordinary men and women working in the extraordinary city of Gotham (namely: The Major Crimes Unit of the GCPD). Pay attention: this is what life is like in the shadow of the Bat. A slow burning comic that uses the Dark Knight's impressive gallery of rogues (or "freaks" as they're called here) - and a (few of it's own inventions [8]) - to spin out several cases of violent crime, murder and intrigue. Nowhere near as flashy as you might expect - with realistic characters, understated artwork and dynamic plots: this is what happens when the superhero genre grows out from it's comfort zone and out into fresh, new, exciting territories.
Of course - for most of us - up until you're into Gotham Central the only people of the Gotham City Police that you'd be able to name would be Commissioner Gordon, Chief O'Hara [10] and Harvey Bullock (from the Batman: Animated Series - no? Wore a tench coat? Always acting like a wise-guy?). But the series kicks off at a point where none of these guys are to be seen [11] and so it's straight into the deep end with the distinctly unglamorous day-to-day life of a whole bunch of unknowns (all of which seem to be expendable so (and this is a good thing) it's pretty hard to tell who's going to live and who's going to die): it's not like it's Tom Cruise and his action cops! More like - people who most of the time are looking forward to nothing more than going home to bed and who are more used to dealing with junkie snitches, sorting out their over time and fighting amongst themselves than they are taking on laughing sociopath in pancake make-up (and I like how - even tho it's densely layered with real clues hidden amongst all the red herrings - it still makes time to make have people talking about everyday rubbish: "Besides you're never gonna get Americans to use a currency that isn't dollar green. Just won't happen" / "No, sarge.. I'd bet we have a woman President before we have another one with a beard.").
Of course I realise that maybe that makes it sound like it could be deathly boring (as if the whole series is nothing but people filling out paperwork - and the only tinge of the fantastic is that it says "Gotham" on the letterheads instead of "New York"): but the excitement comes from the way that the crazy and bizarre world of Batman interacts and cuts into typical police normality [12] (and oh: must say - I really liked the way that they make it into a spoken rule that the Batman only comes out to play after dark: "This isn't Metropolis Captain, and not just because our guy works at night."). If you read a Batman comic then you know (and expect) supervillain craziness to explode upon the scene at any given second - but with Gotham Central most of the time you'll find yourself hoping that all the characters that you'll come to know and love [13] won't have to bump uglies with the like of Mr Freeze, The Mad Hatter and the Joker. And then: as opposed to following the usual trails and showing us things that we've all already seen a million times before (Climbing clocktowers! Fighting on rooftops! Hanging off bridges!) it takes us to places that we haven't seen before - the bloody aftermath of crime scenes where people have been killed by science-fiction-level technology and the way turning on the Bat Signal [14] can make someone feel (yeah - I know that sounds kinda stupid - but read the books and we'll talk afterwards) instead of relying upon the bad guys leaving obvious clues (or you know - riddles [15]) there's a strong reliance upon - well - old-fashioned detective work - that (for me anyway) is endlessly thrilling in it's own special way (oh boy - can they crack the case in time? Get all the clues? And all that stuff).
Before I started writing this I thought that maybe I would just refresh myself by rereading Vol 3 - I got about 5 pages into it before I realised that actually it would be much more fun to start from the beginning because - well - yeah: although it might seem like you can just dip in from any point and work your way through (it's all just different cases right? So you can just start anywhere...) - one of the pleasures of going through from the beginning is seeing how there loads of small references to things ("Someone in evidence control lost the knife" / "Aw, no way! That's the first place you look?") that bubble up and reappear at a later point... (Kinda like the stuff that Alan Moore used to do with stuff like Halo Jones and things like that [16]) and watching the way that everyone's relationships build up (and collapse) over time - on the opening page of Vol 3 it has the little "Previously in Gotham Central" bit ("What started as mutual respect between the two has matured into a genuine friendship that has thus far survived every test Gotham has thrown at them") and I just thought to myself - hell: that sounds like much more to read rather than just read about - you know? With Gotham always chewing people up and spitting them back out (so you know: happy endings are in pretty short supply here) a lot of the fun comes from watching the way that the characters weather the storms and then - after the worst is over -seeing how (depending on who it is) things can pick up or (oh yeah - sorry) get even worse. So basically: if you're interested and you're thinking of joining the party- my advice would be to definitely start at the start - it's all just so much better that way.
And yeah - Michael Lark who's the main artist across pretty much the whole series (and I won't lie - I did tend to miss him when he wasn't there - altho Greg Scott does a fairly good impression in Vol 2 [17] and (ha) Stefano Gaudiano is so convincing that it wasn't until I got to Part Two of Keystone Kops that I realised they had switched artists... but maybe that's just me being slow on the uptake) is just the right person to bring the Rucka and Brubaker's grim world to life: he's not really comic-booky in any big way - and his dark shadows and simple non-fussy lines gives the whole a level of sober seriousness that means that there's no problem taking things seriously - and I like the way he draws people: it always looks like everyone is constantly frowning (it's just a shame that his Joker looks more like Cesar Romero than Heath Ledger - but then - hey - The Dark Knight didn't come out until 2008... so) [18].
For the last book - Vol 4 - it's all Kano (no - not the rapper - at least - I don't think so...) and (the previously mentioned) Stefano Gaudiano - who together (and I wish I knew how they split up their art chores) manage to create a strange kinda hybrid of Sean Phillips and Darwyn Cooke - which is especially effective for the final story Corrigan II - where all the wheels come off and the series comes spluttering to a halt (I just finished reading it and I can't really tell if I liked it or - I mean - technically - it's really impressive and does loads of cutting across scenes from panel to panel in a way that you don't normally see - and it very much left me shook up emotionally: but I dunno part of me feels that maybe it was a bit too overblown as a climax - I dunno...)
But - yeah - talking about the whole thing overall: it's nice how faithful it is to all the mainstream Batman comics - not only is there loads of insider fan references to all sorts of stuff like No Man's Land (but then I guess that may be because Greg Rucka was one of the writers who worked on it) - but they also pay respect to famous predecessors through the names of the streets ("Traffic backed-up on the Kane all the way to 203rd" / "No the one on Finger, not Cuttler." [19]). Although in Sunday Bloody Sunday they get drawn into some Infinite Crisis stuff - which - for me at least - cracked the veneer of realism that had been so carefully built up over the past three books (Captain Marvel will do that to you I guess...): but that's the only real serious misstep (and I'm guessing that maybe the writers didn't have that much choice in the matter - seeing how it's one of those company wide crossovers that every book has to take part in).
Still: snuggly fitting between the two taste extremes of people who like their superheroes and people who like their serious comics - I mean - judging from the response that these books have got from the good folks at the Islington Comic Forum (one reader - who normally only really likes Mark Millar comics - returned Gotham Central by dropping them loudly on the table and announcing to everyone: "Best. Comic. Ever."). And if that isn't enough to make you want to read it - then I'm not really sure what will.
Also: because Batman is always kept at a distant remove (hiding in the shadows, wearing disguises ("You going to turn on that damn light...?")): it's the most realistic Gotham City reading experience out there. `And once you're between it's covers - you will believe in a man dressed as a bat.
And what more could anyone possibly want from anything - right?
..................................................................................................................................................
[1] From the Justice League TV series: Doctor Destiny: "You know, I could let you go. You're a distraction now. And as the others who have the real problems. We're like insects to them. They step on us, ruin our lives. And they don't even realise it. But you're different. You don't have any special powers." Batman: "Oh, I have one, Johnny: I never give up."
[2] Good example - My literary flatmate forwarded this to me: OH MY GOD. I JUST WITNESSED THE SINGLE GREATEST MOMENT IN HUMAN HISTORY. "On a bus, heading home from the city I am greeted by an incredibly nice Russian-sounding bus driver with a smile on his face. About 4 stops later (in the valley, of course) a bogan hops on with his skanky (I assume) girlfriend. (May have been sister. May have been both.) Naturally, he does not have the money for a bus, so of course The Bogan (Henceforth referred to as Shit-Skull) blames the bus driver. Using all manner of racial slurs, loud profanities and general offensive douchbagery, Shit-Skull proceeds to be a asshole and make the entire bus shuffle uncomfortably in their seats. All except one man. Ah, this man. I wish I could BE this man, this average looking hero that stepped up to defend the poor bus driver.“Look mate, he’s just doing his job. How’s about you calm down and leave the driver alone. It’s not his fault you can’t pay.” The logic of the situation made a slight whistling noise as it passed over Shit-Skull’s head. We could see the Tonka Truck gears clunk and grind in this mans underdeveloped cranium. Calm…down? It must be a challenge!“Are you try’na start me c**t? You wanna go me you f**king c**t? You wanna f**ing go me?” Ah, truly the words of a poet. But not even Oscar Wilde himself could have predict the Batman-esque reaction of: “Yeah, actually. Let’s do this. Off the bus.” You could hear a penny drop as the 256mb brain inside Shit-Skull’s shitty little skull ticked over. Finally, the judging eyes of the bus coupled with the high-pitched, slurring voice of his sister-daughter telling him to “take him” and (quoting directly) “don’t take none that shit babe” convince them both to step off the bus ready to fight.Calmer than a monk on morphine, our hero turns to the bus driver, simply says “shut the door mate”, AND WALKS BACK TO HIS MOTHERFUCKING SEAT. The bus driver shut the door, drove away, and the entire bus ERUPTED. We were clapping, we were cheering, I gave Shit-Skull the finger out the window and I’m pretty sure people hugged. Tl;dr: Thank you stranger, for making humans okay in my book."
[3] As the always wonderful xkcd has so helpfully reminded us: it's a man dressed a bat.
[4] If you're trying to match up the different collected editions with each other then (here you go): Vol 1 In The Line of Duty = In The Line of Duty, Motive and Half a Life; Vol 2 Jokers and Madmen = Daydreams and Believers, Soft Targets, Life is Full of Disappointments and Unresolved; Vol 3 On The Freak Beat = Corrigan, Lights Out, On The Freak Beat, Keystone Kops [5] and Vol 4 Corrigan = Nature, Dead Robin, Sunday Bloody Sunday and Corrigan II.
[5] Fun fact: The Keystone Cops were fictional incompetent policemen, featured in silent film comedies in the early 20th century. The movies were produced by Mack Sennett for his Keystone Film Company between 1912 and 1917.
[6] Brief tangent: I was going to start off this little post by confessing that I'm not really much of a Wire fan (before I decided that the whole "what if Batman was real"? was a much stronger way to go). Obviously I realise that in polite company saying that you don't much care for The Wire is like saying that you think that Hitler had some good ideas or that you've always felt that Simon Cowell is a very attractive-looking man but whatever I'm just gonna go for it: for something that's been held up as a shining example of how to make an intelligent cop show that doesn't treat the audience like they're children - it sure does get pretty cartoony at times. Brother Mouzone being the best example of this - I mean: he's played like a Batman villain and completely undercuts the realism of the rest of the characters (he's like a refuge from a Coen Brothers film: a character that maybe got cut out after the first draft and managed to escape to David Simon's house or something). And Omar Little - as fun as things can get when he shows up on screen - is actually only a few steps from just being Batman. I mean: give him a mask and a cape and he is the Dark Knight (not that I'm the first person to think this).
[7] Greg Rucka with the James Bond but played for real (and also way more depressing): Queen & Country (it's like Spooks but for grown-ups): plus the total amazing Batwoman: Elegy (that you should just go ahead and read already) and Ed Brubaker with - well - where do you wanna start? Sleeper, Incognito and Criminal: are all sorts of excellent. Sleeper and Incognito mixing up superheroes with gritty crime noir thrills and Criminal just serving it up straight.
[8] Actually - reading back through this books a second time (after having read Batman: Knightfall) - I know realise that Firefly (oops - sorry Firebug [9]) is actually part of the Batman canon rather than a Rucka and Brubaker invention - oh well (can you blame me tho? It does seem like a bit of a one-note idea: I mean - Firebug? Really? That seems like something that would have taken all of like 5 seconds to come up with... (and it's almost worst that there are two Batman villains with the same gimmick - what's next? The Evil Clown? Umbrella Bird Man? Double Face?). Also - that Black Spider guy in Vol 3? Turns out he's also got previous.
[9] I had started to write this up before I had actually reread the books and (after doing a quick google to double-check that I had the name right: "batman villain firefly") and so then when the book got around to Firebug I just sorta assumed that the writers were making a snide joke about how in the insular world of the Batman comics everyone calls him Firefly - but to everyone else - he's Firebug (no? Not that funny? Ok then - whatever): but then someone does make a crack about it later in the comic - so what the hey...
[10] You know - the fat-faced Irish guy from the Adam West Batman TV series.
[11] When Gotham Central came out both James Gordon and Harvey Bullock were off the force (which kinda adds to the feeling of realism: seeing how both of them are pretty pervasive elsewhere in the movies and cartoons and other comics and stuff - so it's nice that the series gets a chance to find it's feet without them - plus they've both been going for so long - it makes sense that they would be retired) but - DC comics being what they are - (according to wikipedia anyway - home of all my comics news) both have since been reinstated into GCPD (Yay!).
[12] Plus - there's a burst of action towards the end of Vol 1 that's a just little like that Armoured Car Robbery scene in Michael Mann's Heat (or - hell - may as well say it: The Dark Knight film too).
[13] It's a series that doesn't exactly play coy about getting you mixed up with the personal lives of the detectives - which just makes it all better. So it doesn't just feel like cardboard cut-out stand-ins investing Bat-crimes (CSI: Gotham?) - more like messy humans with messy lives that spill out in their professional lives in all sorts of unexpected ways...
[14] "The G.C.P.D. can’t officially touch the Bat-Signal, or in any way acknowledge the existence of Batman."
[15] This article from the Hurting: "Seeing that Batman is - or at least was once - the "World's Greatest Detective," it makes sense that he would have an arch-nemesis devoted exclusively to the creation of mysteries. Nowadays, the most detecting Batman ever does is call in a question for Oracle or one of his other assistants. It doesn't help that few Batman writers seem able to write a genuine mystery to save their lives. But how about a Batman villain who isn't a psycho, who isn't necessarily even a violent criminal - just, say, a man with a mania - some might even say an obsession - for making things fit, for putting together all the pieces to puzzles that other people don't even perceive. And of course, when he figures things out, he isn't content just to enjoy his own private knowledge, he has to share - or at least, he has to leave the clues there for anyone with the brains necessary to follow his formidable train of thought. Batman has psychotic killers, megalomaniacal world-beaters, tragic monsters and even alien despots in his rogues' gallery, but the one thing he doesn't really have is a purely cerebral foe, someone who can match the Detective wit-for-wit, someone whose most basic metier is designing the perfect crimes. The Riddler has been a joke for over twenty years, but he doesn't have to be. What Batman needs is his very own Professor Moriarty. Thankfully, he already has one, sitting in the corner and slightly dusty from disuse, but a very sturdy concept nonetheless."
[16] There's a point in Vol 2 where Jim Gordon makes a brief cameo and drops this little nugget of wisdom: ""What you'll realize over time is that a lot of criminals aren't really all that bad at heart... They just don't think through all the ramifications of their actions. They want something, or they're on drugs, so they do things without ever thinking about the damage they're going to cause... In a way, people like that bother me more than the true freaks. There's just - there's no excuse for that kind of mindless ignorance when you live in a society." And I guess what makes Gotham Central such a treasure is the way that Rucka and Brubaker think through the ramifications of everyone's actions and the way that one bad decision all the way over there can end up affecting a whole bunch of other people all the way over here.
[17] And I do like how he draws Vincent Del Arrazio so that he looks like Joe Pantoliano (better known as Ralphie Cifaretto from The Sopranos).
[18] And at the big conclusion of the Half a Life storyline - it really adds a lot to the atmosphere the way he bends the lines of the panels so that they end up looking like fun house mirrors...
[19] Although - hell - maybe they do that in all the Batman comics - I dunno. (In fact - now that I think of it - I'm pretty sure that Frank Miller did the same kind of thing in The Dark Knight Returns - so huh - whatever I guess...).
..................................................................................................................................................
Links: Comics Alliance Article: Gotham Central: The DCU Police Drama Everyone Should Have Read.
Further reading: Powers, Top Ten, Marvels, Batwoman: Elegy, Incognito, Batman: Year One, The Dark Knight Returns, Queen & Country, Hitman, Batman: Knightfall, Sleeper, Sherlock Holmes: The Hound of the Baskervilles / A Study in Scarlet / The Sign of the Four / The Valley of Fear, The Punisher: The Punisher MAX.
Profiles: Ed Brubaker.
All comments welcome.

Vol. 1: In the Line of Duty
Written by Ed Brubaker and Greg Rucka
Art by Michael Lark
2011
Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/

Vol. 2: Jokers and Madmen
Written by Ed Brubaker and Greg Rucka
Art by Michael Lark
2011
Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/

Vol. 3: On The Freak Beat
Written by Ed Brubaker and Greg Rucka
Art by Michael Lark and Stefano Gaudiano
2011
Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/
Gotham Central
Vol. 4: Corrigan
Written by Ed Brubaker and Greg Rucka
Art by Kano and Stefano Gaudiano
2012
Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/
I'd say that everyone everywhere as at one point or another (even if it was only for a second at the back of their mind) entertained the idea that Batman was real.
Don't lie.
I mean - come on: wouldn't it be awesome? Some crazy dark mystery man stalking the city streets ("Batman? Nah - it's just an urban legend man - read what it says on snoops..."): avenging evil, scaring the bad guys and protecting the innocent and all that stuff? It would be great. Taking it apart: I guess that part of the reason is that it's a comforting idea: a guardian angel only without the flowery white robes and heavenly countenance: but coming instead from the shadows, dressed up in black, mean and vicious and completely unstoppable [1]. And also: I guess that there's a part of us that just gets off on the power-trip. I mean - even if it's not us that's actually doing all the Batmaning (that's a word right?) - it's still somehow makes the world better to make-believe that there could be someone out there who stood up against all the stuff that most of us end up passively accepting: because there's so much crud and bad things going on in the world that most of the time the only thing you can do is just to ignore it and just keep trundling on - but damn - what if there was someone out there who was big enough and brave enough and bold enough to make a stand and say: "no." [2]
Of course: the only problem is that well - (brace yourself) the idea of Batman is (yes) inherently ridiculous [3]. You want proof? Well - howabouts it's always the bits of the Christopher Nolan films when they start to focus on the idea of Batman himself (and his stupid growly voice) that the suspension of disbelief gets a little - well - suspended.
But don't worry: Gotham Central is here to save the day.
First published between 2003 and 2006 (and there are collected editions that came out around that time but it's been so popular that they've rereleased them (those are the ones you can see up above [4]) - which I guess must be some small comfort to the everyone on the Gotham Central creative team seeing how notorious it was on it's original release for its outstanding reviews, dedicated fanbase and poor sales (according to wikipedia it was - like - 120th place (?! ) in the comic sales charts (and me - I didn't even know that there could be 120 comics that all came out at the same time)). But then - hey - I guess that adds even more zest (zest?) to the claim that: it's like The Wire - only with Batman in it [6] (you know: ignored while it's been released and then everyone saying "oh my god - best thing ever" when it's no longer around).
Writers Greg Rucka and Ed Brubaker - who (come on) both know a thing or two about making how to cook a comic hard boiled [7] - Gotham Central is a tasty little police procedural series about the ordinary men and women working in the extraordinary city of Gotham (namely: The Major Crimes Unit of the GCPD). Pay attention: this is what life is like in the shadow of the Bat. A slow burning comic that uses the Dark Knight's impressive gallery of rogues (or "freaks" as they're called here) - and a (few of it's own inventions [8]) - to spin out several cases of violent crime, murder and intrigue. Nowhere near as flashy as you might expect - with realistic characters, understated artwork and dynamic plots: this is what happens when the superhero genre grows out from it's comfort zone and out into fresh, new, exciting territories.
Of course - for most of us - up until you're into Gotham Central the only people of the Gotham City Police that you'd be able to name would be Commissioner Gordon, Chief O'Hara [10] and Harvey Bullock (from the Batman: Animated Series - no? Wore a tench coat? Always acting like a wise-guy?). But the series kicks off at a point where none of these guys are to be seen [11] and so it's straight into the deep end with the distinctly unglamorous day-to-day life of a whole bunch of unknowns (all of which seem to be expendable so (and this is a good thing) it's pretty hard to tell who's going to live and who's going to die): it's not like it's Tom Cruise and his action cops! More like - people who most of the time are looking forward to nothing more than going home to bed and who are more used to dealing with junkie snitches, sorting out their over time and fighting amongst themselves than they are taking on laughing sociopath in pancake make-up (and I like how - even tho it's densely layered with real clues hidden amongst all the red herrings - it still makes time to make have people talking about everyday rubbish: "Besides you're never gonna get Americans to use a currency that isn't dollar green. Just won't happen" / "No, sarge.. I'd bet we have a woman President before we have another one with a beard.").
Of course I realise that maybe that makes it sound like it could be deathly boring (as if the whole series is nothing but people filling out paperwork - and the only tinge of the fantastic is that it says "Gotham" on the letterheads instead of "New York"): but the excitement comes from the way that the crazy and bizarre world of Batman interacts and cuts into typical police normality [12] (and oh: must say - I really liked the way that they make it into a spoken rule that the Batman only comes out to play after dark: "This isn't Metropolis Captain, and not just because our guy works at night."). If you read a Batman comic then you know (and expect) supervillain craziness to explode upon the scene at any given second - but with Gotham Central most of the time you'll find yourself hoping that all the characters that you'll come to know and love [13] won't have to bump uglies with the like of Mr Freeze, The Mad Hatter and the Joker. And then: as opposed to following the usual trails and showing us things that we've all already seen a million times before (Climbing clocktowers! Fighting on rooftops! Hanging off bridges!) it takes us to places that we haven't seen before - the bloody aftermath of crime scenes where people have been killed by science-fiction-level technology and the way turning on the Bat Signal [14] can make someone feel (yeah - I know that sounds kinda stupid - but read the books and we'll talk afterwards) instead of relying upon the bad guys leaving obvious clues (or you know - riddles [15]) there's a strong reliance upon - well - old-fashioned detective work - that (for me anyway) is endlessly thrilling in it's own special way (oh boy - can they crack the case in time? Get all the clues? And all that stuff).
Before I started writing this I thought that maybe I would just refresh myself by rereading Vol 3 - I got about 5 pages into it before I realised that actually it would be much more fun to start from the beginning because - well - yeah: although it might seem like you can just dip in from any point and work your way through (it's all just different cases right? So you can just start anywhere...) - one of the pleasures of going through from the beginning is seeing how there loads of small references to things ("Someone in evidence control lost the knife" / "Aw, no way! That's the first place you look?") that bubble up and reappear at a later point... (Kinda like the stuff that Alan Moore used to do with stuff like Halo Jones and things like that [16]) and watching the way that everyone's relationships build up (and collapse) over time - on the opening page of Vol 3 it has the little "Previously in Gotham Central" bit ("What started as mutual respect between the two has matured into a genuine friendship that has thus far survived every test Gotham has thrown at them") and I just thought to myself - hell: that sounds like much more to read rather than just read about - you know? With Gotham always chewing people up and spitting them back out (so you know: happy endings are in pretty short supply here) a lot of the fun comes from watching the way that the characters weather the storms and then - after the worst is over -seeing how (depending on who it is) things can pick up or (oh yeah - sorry) get even worse. So basically: if you're interested and you're thinking of joining the party- my advice would be to definitely start at the start - it's all just so much better that way.
And yeah - Michael Lark who's the main artist across pretty much the whole series (and I won't lie - I did tend to miss him when he wasn't there - altho Greg Scott does a fairly good impression in Vol 2 [17] and (ha) Stefano Gaudiano is so convincing that it wasn't until I got to Part Two of Keystone Kops that I realised they had switched artists... but maybe that's just me being slow on the uptake) is just the right person to bring the Rucka and Brubaker's grim world to life: he's not really comic-booky in any big way - and his dark shadows and simple non-fussy lines gives the whole a level of sober seriousness that means that there's no problem taking things seriously - and I like the way he draws people: it always looks like everyone is constantly frowning (it's just a shame that his Joker looks more like Cesar Romero than Heath Ledger - but then - hey - The Dark Knight didn't come out until 2008... so) [18].
For the last book - Vol 4 - it's all Kano (no - not the rapper - at least - I don't think so...) and (the previously mentioned) Stefano Gaudiano - who together (and I wish I knew how they split up their art chores) manage to create a strange kinda hybrid of Sean Phillips and Darwyn Cooke - which is especially effective for the final story Corrigan II - where all the wheels come off and the series comes spluttering to a halt (I just finished reading it and I can't really tell if I liked it or - I mean - technically - it's really impressive and does loads of cutting across scenes from panel to panel in a way that you don't normally see - and it very much left me shook up emotionally: but I dunno part of me feels that maybe it was a bit too overblown as a climax - I dunno...)
But - yeah - talking about the whole thing overall: it's nice how faithful it is to all the mainstream Batman comics - not only is there loads of insider fan references to all sorts of stuff like No Man's Land (but then I guess that may be because Greg Rucka was one of the writers who worked on it) - but they also pay respect to famous predecessors through the names of the streets ("Traffic backed-up on the Kane all the way to 203rd" / "No the one on Finger, not Cuttler." [19]). Although in Sunday Bloody Sunday they get drawn into some Infinite Crisis stuff - which - for me at least - cracked the veneer of realism that had been so carefully built up over the past three books (Captain Marvel will do that to you I guess...): but that's the only real serious misstep (and I'm guessing that maybe the writers didn't have that much choice in the matter - seeing how it's one of those company wide crossovers that every book has to take part in).
Still: snuggly fitting between the two taste extremes of people who like their superheroes and people who like their serious comics - I mean - judging from the response that these books have got from the good folks at the Islington Comic Forum (one reader - who normally only really likes Mark Millar comics - returned Gotham Central by dropping them loudly on the table and announcing to everyone: "Best. Comic. Ever."). And if that isn't enough to make you want to read it - then I'm not really sure what will.
Also: because Batman is always kept at a distant remove (hiding in the shadows, wearing disguises ("You going to turn on that damn light...?")): it's the most realistic Gotham City reading experience out there. `And once you're between it's covers - you will believe in a man dressed as a bat.
And what more could anyone possibly want from anything - right?
..................................................................................................................................................
[1] From the Justice League TV series: Doctor Destiny: "You know, I could let you go. You're a distraction now. And as the others who have the real problems. We're like insects to them. They step on us, ruin our lives. And they don't even realise it. But you're different. You don't have any special powers." Batman: "Oh, I have one, Johnny: I never give up."
[2] Good example - My literary flatmate forwarded this to me: OH MY GOD. I JUST WITNESSED THE SINGLE GREATEST MOMENT IN HUMAN HISTORY. "On a bus, heading home from the city I am greeted by an incredibly nice Russian-sounding bus driver with a smile on his face. About 4 stops later (in the valley, of course) a bogan hops on with his skanky (I assume) girlfriend. (May have been sister. May have been both.) Naturally, he does not have the money for a bus, so of course The Bogan (Henceforth referred to as Shit-Skull) blames the bus driver. Using all manner of racial slurs, loud profanities and general offensive douchbagery, Shit-Skull proceeds to be a asshole and make the entire bus shuffle uncomfortably in their seats. All except one man. Ah, this man. I wish I could BE this man, this average looking hero that stepped up to defend the poor bus driver.“Look mate, he’s just doing his job. How’s about you calm down and leave the driver alone. It’s not his fault you can’t pay.” The logic of the situation made a slight whistling noise as it passed over Shit-Skull’s head. We could see the Tonka Truck gears clunk and grind in this mans underdeveloped cranium. Calm…down? It must be a challenge!“Are you try’na start me c**t? You wanna go me you f**king c**t? You wanna f**ing go me?” Ah, truly the words of a poet. But not even Oscar Wilde himself could have predict the Batman-esque reaction of: “Yeah, actually. Let’s do this. Off the bus.” You could hear a penny drop as the 256mb brain inside Shit-Skull’s shitty little skull ticked over. Finally, the judging eyes of the bus coupled with the high-pitched, slurring voice of his sister-daughter telling him to “take him” and (quoting directly) “don’t take none that shit babe” convince them both to step off the bus ready to fight.Calmer than a monk on morphine, our hero turns to the bus driver, simply says “shut the door mate”, AND WALKS BACK TO HIS MOTHERFUCKING SEAT. The bus driver shut the door, drove away, and the entire bus ERUPTED. We were clapping, we were cheering, I gave Shit-Skull the finger out the window and I’m pretty sure people hugged. Tl;dr: Thank you stranger, for making humans okay in my book."
[3] As the always wonderful xkcd has so helpfully reminded us: it's a man dressed a bat.
[4] If you're trying to match up the different collected editions with each other then (here you go): Vol 1 In The Line of Duty = In The Line of Duty, Motive and Half a Life; Vol 2 Jokers and Madmen = Daydreams and Believers, Soft Targets, Life is Full of Disappointments and Unresolved; Vol 3 On The Freak Beat = Corrigan, Lights Out, On The Freak Beat, Keystone Kops [5] and Vol 4 Corrigan = Nature, Dead Robin, Sunday Bloody Sunday and Corrigan II.
[5] Fun fact: The Keystone Cops were fictional incompetent policemen, featured in silent film comedies in the early 20th century. The movies were produced by Mack Sennett for his Keystone Film Company between 1912 and 1917.
[6] Brief tangent: I was going to start off this little post by confessing that I'm not really much of a Wire fan (before I decided that the whole "what if Batman was real"? was a much stronger way to go). Obviously I realise that in polite company saying that you don't much care for The Wire is like saying that you think that Hitler had some good ideas or that you've always felt that Simon Cowell is a very attractive-looking man but whatever I'm just gonna go for it: for something that's been held up as a shining example of how to make an intelligent cop show that doesn't treat the audience like they're children - it sure does get pretty cartoony at times. Brother Mouzone being the best example of this - I mean: he's played like a Batman villain and completely undercuts the realism of the rest of the characters (he's like a refuge from a Coen Brothers film: a character that maybe got cut out after the first draft and managed to escape to David Simon's house or something). And Omar Little - as fun as things can get when he shows up on screen - is actually only a few steps from just being Batman. I mean: give him a mask and a cape and he is the Dark Knight (not that I'm the first person to think this).
[7] Greg Rucka with the James Bond but played for real (and also way more depressing): Queen & Country (it's like Spooks but for grown-ups): plus the total amazing Batwoman: Elegy (that you should just go ahead and read already) and Ed Brubaker with - well - where do you wanna start? Sleeper, Incognito and Criminal: are all sorts of excellent. Sleeper and Incognito mixing up superheroes with gritty crime noir thrills and Criminal just serving it up straight.
[8] Actually - reading back through this books a second time (after having read Batman: Knightfall) - I know realise that Firefly (oops - sorry Firebug [9]) is actually part of the Batman canon rather than a Rucka and Brubaker invention - oh well (can you blame me tho? It does seem like a bit of a one-note idea: I mean - Firebug? Really? That seems like something that would have taken all of like 5 seconds to come up with... (and it's almost worst that there are two Batman villains with the same gimmick - what's next? The Evil Clown? Umbrella Bird Man? Double Face?). Also - that Black Spider guy in Vol 3? Turns out he's also got previous.
[9] I had started to write this up before I had actually reread the books and (after doing a quick google to double-check that I had the name right: "batman villain firefly") and so then when the book got around to Firebug I just sorta assumed that the writers were making a snide joke about how in the insular world of the Batman comics everyone calls him Firefly - but to everyone else - he's Firebug (no? Not that funny? Ok then - whatever): but then someone does make a crack about it later in the comic - so what the hey...
[10] You know - the fat-faced Irish guy from the Adam West Batman TV series.
[11] When Gotham Central came out both James Gordon and Harvey Bullock were off the force (which kinda adds to the feeling of realism: seeing how both of them are pretty pervasive elsewhere in the movies and cartoons and other comics and stuff - so it's nice that the series gets a chance to find it's feet without them - plus they've both been going for so long - it makes sense that they would be retired) but - DC comics being what they are - (according to wikipedia anyway - home of all my comics news) both have since been reinstated into GCPD (Yay!).
[12] Plus - there's a burst of action towards the end of Vol 1 that's a just little like that Armoured Car Robbery scene in Michael Mann's Heat (or - hell - may as well say it: The Dark Knight film too).
[13] It's a series that doesn't exactly play coy about getting you mixed up with the personal lives of the detectives - which just makes it all better. So it doesn't just feel like cardboard cut-out stand-ins investing Bat-crimes (CSI: Gotham?) - more like messy humans with messy lives that spill out in their professional lives in all sorts of unexpected ways...
[14] "The G.C.P.D. can’t officially touch the Bat-Signal, or in any way acknowledge the existence of Batman."
[15] This article from the Hurting: "Seeing that Batman is - or at least was once - the "World's Greatest Detective," it makes sense that he would have an arch-nemesis devoted exclusively to the creation of mysteries. Nowadays, the most detecting Batman ever does is call in a question for Oracle or one of his other assistants. It doesn't help that few Batman writers seem able to write a genuine mystery to save their lives. But how about a Batman villain who isn't a psycho, who isn't necessarily even a violent criminal - just, say, a man with a mania - some might even say an obsession - for making things fit, for putting together all the pieces to puzzles that other people don't even perceive. And of course, when he figures things out, he isn't content just to enjoy his own private knowledge, he has to share - or at least, he has to leave the clues there for anyone with the brains necessary to follow his formidable train of thought. Batman has psychotic killers, megalomaniacal world-beaters, tragic monsters and even alien despots in his rogues' gallery, but the one thing he doesn't really have is a purely cerebral foe, someone who can match the Detective wit-for-wit, someone whose most basic metier is designing the perfect crimes. The Riddler has been a joke for over twenty years, but he doesn't have to be. What Batman needs is his very own Professor Moriarty. Thankfully, he already has one, sitting in the corner and slightly dusty from disuse, but a very sturdy concept nonetheless."
[16] There's a point in Vol 2 where Jim Gordon makes a brief cameo and drops this little nugget of wisdom: ""What you'll realize over time is that a lot of criminals aren't really all that bad at heart... They just don't think through all the ramifications of their actions. They want something, or they're on drugs, so they do things without ever thinking about the damage they're going to cause... In a way, people like that bother me more than the true freaks. There's just - there's no excuse for that kind of mindless ignorance when you live in a society." And I guess what makes Gotham Central such a treasure is the way that Rucka and Brubaker think through the ramifications of everyone's actions and the way that one bad decision all the way over there can end up affecting a whole bunch of other people all the way over here.
[17] And I do like how he draws Vincent Del Arrazio so that he looks like Joe Pantoliano (better known as Ralphie Cifaretto from The Sopranos).
[18] And at the big conclusion of the Half a Life storyline - it really adds a lot to the atmosphere the way he bends the lines of the panels so that they end up looking like fun house mirrors...
[19] Although - hell - maybe they do that in all the Batman comics - I dunno. (In fact - now that I think of it - I'm pretty sure that Frank Miller did the same kind of thing in The Dark Knight Returns - so huh - whatever I guess...).
..................................................................................................................................................
Links: Comics Alliance Article: Gotham Central: The DCU Police Drama Everyone Should Have Read.
Further reading: Powers, Top Ten, Marvels, Batwoman: Elegy, Incognito, Batman: Year One, The Dark Knight Returns, Queen & Country, Hitman, Batman: Knightfall, Sleeper, Sherlock Holmes: The Hound of the Baskervilles / A Study in Scarlet / The Sign of the Four / The Valley of Fear, The Punisher: The Punisher MAX.
Profiles: Ed Brubaker.
All comments welcome.
Friday, 25 March 2011
Books: Incognito
________________________________________________________________________________
Incognito
Written by Ed Brubaker
Art by Sean Phillips
2009
Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/
Incognito: Bad Influences
Written by Ed Brubaker
Art by Sean Phillips
2011
Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/
Met Zack: he used to spend his life beating up the good guys - but now he's stuck on the sidelines, in the Witness Protection Program and working the nine to five. Just don't expect him to like it. From the creative team behind Sleeper comes a comic book with more mashing up of hard boiled noir and classic superhero serials. With lots of over-the-top characters (Professor Zeppelin anyone?), morals that are so loose they've slipped off completely and the delectable art that only Sean Phillips can provide this is a story for anyone that has ever found themselves rooting for the bad guys.
.....................................................................................................................................
Further Reading: Sleeper, Wanted, Criminal, Irredeemable, Gotham Central, Hitman.
Profiles: Ed Brubaker.
All comments welcome.

Written by Ed Brubaker
Art by Sean Phillips
2009
Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/
Written by Ed Brubaker
Art by Sean Phillips
2011
Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/
Met Zack: he used to spend his life beating up the good guys - but now he's stuck on the sidelines, in the Witness Protection Program and working the nine to five. Just don't expect him to like it. From the creative team behind Sleeper comes a comic book with more mashing up of hard boiled noir and classic superhero serials. With lots of over-the-top characters (Professor Zeppelin anyone?), morals that are so loose they've slipped off completely and the delectable art that only Sean Phillips can provide this is a story for anyone that has ever found themselves rooting for the bad guys.
.....................................................................................................................................
Further Reading: Sleeper, Wanted, Criminal, Irredeemable, Gotham Central, Hitman.
Profiles: Ed Brubaker.
All comments welcome.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)