Showing posts with label Image Comics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Image Comics. Show all posts

Monday, July 28, 2014

Bin Fodder: Grounded




Hello!  Welcome to another edition of Bin Fodder!  This week I review Grounded, written by Mark Sable with other original works to his credit such as Hazed and Rift Raiders.  The art is by Paul Azaceta who has a slew of credits both at Marvel and in the indie world. 
 
Courtesy of Image Comics
Grounded is set in a world where superheroes only exist in comic books.  At least, that’s what the general public is led to believe.  The story’s main character, Jonathan Shepherd, has grand aspirations of being a superhero himself; he just needs to find out what his superpower is.  He starts out thinking that he’s secretly super-fast, but that dreams ends rather quickly.  He runs through myriad other power aspirations culminating in a belief in an ability to fly causing him to jump off the roof of his house.  This ends in the inevitable failure of flight and broken bones.

Skip ahead to high school and Shepherd is still a comic book loving nerd and social outcast clinging to the belief that superheroes are real.  Turns out, they are.  And not only that, his father’s one of the most powerful ones!  He happens to find this out while his dear old dad is sleeping with another woman, a superheroine.  Yeah…pretty crappy day overall.  But it only gets worse.

Courtesy of Image Comics
For Shepherd’s protection his father takes him to the high school for super heroes where he must now attend.  So he goes from being the only kid in school who wants superpowers to being the only kid in a school full of superpowered kids not to have any.

What ensues is a somewhat strange and often times confusing storyline involving mind-control, evil teachers, strange technology and invisible skyscrapers. 

Azaceta has an uncanny ability to seamlessly flow between his modern style and the classic format used to depict flashbacks or in-story comic book tales giving the story a lot of added quality.  The writing is a little sloppy.  It seems like Sable was trying to tell too many stories at once and everything just gets jumbled.

Sadly it seems like the project was abandoned almost as quickly as it was finished, since the homepage for the site only has updates through when issue three (of six) was expected to hit shelves.  Additionally, the cover specifically calls this story Grounded Volume 1: Powerless, implying that a follow-up story was to exist but never came to fruition.

In the end, I found myself lost several times in the book because of the confusing mixture of stories and characters.  

Until next time,

This is Bin Fodder Guru Tim Blacksmith signing off!

Monday, June 23, 2014

Bin Fodder - Ultra Comic Review






Welcome to another edition of Bin Fodder!  This week I spotlight another Image Comics book, Ultra: Seven Days, written and created by the Luna Brothers.  The Luna Brothers are possibly the best (if only) Asian brother duo in comics.  Other books they’ve created are Girls and Sword, which are both Image books. 

The book is probably best described as a cross between Superman and Sex and the City.  You have the hero everybody loves, Ultra, and her two best friends Aphrodite (the slutty one) and Cowgirl (the innocent girl, daughter of the mayor).  But don’t lose hope, men, there’s plenty of eye candy to keep you into the story if you somehow fail to realize that you’re actually reading an excellent piece of writing.  Each issue ends on a cliffhanger of one kind or another.  It compels you to turn the page or buy the next issue.



Ultra is set in a world where superheroes are commonplace, so much so that they have representation (agents) and do ads for things like “Cool Cola” or “Levy’s Jeans”.  The story of Seven Days centers on the main character Ultra. (insert picture of Ultra)






She’s reached a crossroads in her life as a person and as a superhero.  A random encounter with a fortune teller, forced upon her by best friend Aphrodite, sets Ultra on reluctant search for true love.  Don’t worry though, there’s still plenty of action and sexy undertones throughout.


Ultra, whose real name is Pearl Penalosa, has a chance encounter with a guy whom after an awkward, cut-short-by-superhero-y-things conversation, she agrees on a date with.  The situation ends badly for Pearl in a thankfully unpredictable way.  The man, who seems genuine and even likable in his awkward and self-doubting way, ends up taking pictures of himself in bed with the sleeping super heroine all covered in bruises and sells the pictures and his tale to a sleazy tabloid.  This ruins Ultra’s previously untainted persona as the squeaky-clean heroine. 



As Pearl tries to recover from the public outrage against her she turns to friend Cowgirl, Jen, for a relaxing lunch and talk about life at the top of an under-construction skyscraper (ya know, a normal place to have a nice quiet lunch).  It’s here that Jen decides to express her concern for Pearl’s well being and express her love for her with a kiss.  


The admission that her best friend is in love with her does nothing to help Pearl’s situation, but as a super heroine the job never really stops. The next day she is forced to deal with a new ultra powerful super villain, a pyrokinetic.  During this fight Ultra is nearly killed and when she wakes up the hospital she starts to realize how short and fleeting life really can be.

In the end Pearl realizes that being Ultra isn’t the end-all, be-all of her existence and she decides to leave the business. 

I’d definitely consider this a book for everyone.  It’s got pieces for men and women alike.   



Until next time,

This is Bin Fodder Guru Tim Blacksmith signing off!

Monday, June 16, 2014

Bin Fodder - Phonogram Comic Review



Welcome to this week’s edition of Bin Fodder.  Today I’m spotlighting a personal favorite of mine (as opposed to the previous installments, hah!) called Phonogram.  It was originally sold as individual issues but I picked it up in trade form at a convention at one of those “50% Off All Trades” booths.  You are no doubt familiar with them.  It was probably the best random ComiCon purchase aside from all twelve issues of this gem.  But I digress, Phonogram.

It’s a tale of music and magic and how they are intertwined.  The story follows a “phonomancer” named David Kohl.  Since no one in the whole of Internetdom has taken the time to define and explain what a phonomancer is I will do so here.  A phonomancer is a person whom, through magic, engenders power to music.  That’s possibly the most complicated definition ever, but it’s the simplest.

The world of Phonogram is England with much of the story focusing on the lost state of Britpop (which is curiously a real word…never would have figured that).  Phonogram was written by well-known English writer Kieron Gillen, who is possibly the most worthy writer I’ve spotlighted to be called a Geek.  The artist Jamie McKelvie is less well-known but not for lack of talent.  His style is solid and his shading in this black & white comic is outstanding.  It was not uncommon for me to lose myself in the art as I was reading the story.

So what is the story about?  I’m glad you asked.  It’s a philosophical exploration of how music can impact the lives of everyone who listen to it.  It all starts when a very powerful phonomancer witch named The Goddess tricks Kohl into attending a club event geared towards women, knowing that a wealth of musically challenged, indie-loving, singer/songwriter chicks would be too much for him to pass up.  She attacks and subsequently curses Kohl. setting him on a quest to discover who is messing with Britannia.  Britannia is an idea.  She is rooted in Britpop in its two most well-received formats, the sixties and the nineties.  She also was the phonomancer who created Kohl.  I don’t want to give too much away but I do want to give some insight into the story and character of Kohl.

Courtesy of Image Comics
Phonomancers use magic in different ways throughout the story.  For instance, a basic ability that every phonomancer seems to have is to be able to sense the band that any person loves most of all.  Kohl uses this power on more than one occasion to score with a pretty young thing.  He isn’t a bad guy…or, well ok, he kind of is a prick as is emblematic in this excerpt right from the first page of the story:

I look in the mirror and I like what I see.  Sure, image is the first dogma of the Faustian process – but I’m all too at home with that.  Buzzcut like a squaddie on the town.  Glasses like an existentialist poet.  Black.  Black.  More black.  Still thin enough, just.  And a tough extra, especially for this evening’s festivities.  A bootleg pop-icon t-shirt [black and silver Superman] I picked up on a festival site because it was too damn cold.  Plastic coat packed with silver fluid.  Artificial enough to make you think it’s filled with Chernobyl waste.  Toxic and make.  Utterly noxious.  Totally perfect.  This evening I’m not a man.  I’m a mutation.  A genetic dead-end.  I’m a monster with a tumour hanging between its thighs.  I’m a white man in clitoris palace.  I’m…such a cock.

Before you outright decide to hate the character he does redeem himself throughout the story through acts that may appear at first to be selfless but are really quite selfish.  So where does the redemption come in?  That I’ll let you find out for yourself, but it’s there.  Buried deep in the undertones of the story.  Another version of a phonomancer is a “retromancer”.  A retromancer is someone who uses “classic” music, usually within a club setting, to feed off the memories that the music envokes within the people involved in the setting.  The retromancer gains power, youth, and vitality through magic.  There is a moment where David, who truly despises the retromancer culture, counters the spells of one such phonomancer whilst in a club causing the retromancer to wither.

I recommend this title highly because it’s an extremely smart book, which is saying something in the comics industry.  It gives you insight into a world most Americans aren’t at all familiar with and manages to do so without an overbearing amount of jargon too often found in British titles.  You may be wondering, however silently or loudly, why should I be interested in a story set in England dealing with crazy magic and crazy music references?  To quote someone I can’t remember, the question is the answer.

Music is an extremely powerful entity and this story explores the possibility of people actually using music to sculpt the world.  How cool is that!?  As you read through this potent story you are bombarded with references to bands and songs you may not have ever heard of much less understand or be able to define.  Never fear; the writer doesn’t leave you hanging.  The trade contains a comprehensive list of the bands and songs referenced, each with a brief synopsis of the band or a depiction of the importance of the specific song.

Take it from me, Phonogram is very much worth your dollars and time to read.

So, my friends, go Bin Diving and find this and other gems!

Until next time,

This is Bin Fodder Guru Tim Blacksmith signing off!

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