Showing posts with label Joe Madureira. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Joe Madureira. Show all posts

Sunday, August 18, 2013

I Reads You Review: SAVAGE WOLVERINE #7

"Zeb not well; Mad is crazy good"

SAVAGE WOLVERINE #7
MARVEL COMICS – @Marvel

WRITER: Zeb Wells
ARTIST: Joe Madureira
COLORS: Peter Steigerwald
LETTERS: VC’s Cory Petit
28pp, Color, $3.99 (September 2013)

Parental Advisory

One of the titles to come out of Marvel Comics’ “Marvel NOW” initiative is a new Wolverine series, Savage Wolverine.  The first five issues of the series were drawn by good girl artist, Frank Cho.  Now, Joe Madureira (A.K.A. Joe Mad) is the series artist, and he is delivering some of his best work in well over a decade.

In the current storyline, Wolverine and Elektra find themselves helping Wilson Fisk – The Kingpin.  Fisk is now the head of The Hand, the notorious ninja clan.  [I didn’t know that, either.]  A faction of The Hand apparently plans to resurrect the deceased lethal marksman, Bullseye, as their champion to depose Fisk.  No one, least of all Elektra, wants that Bullseye brought back to life.

As Savage Wolverine #7 opens, Wolverine and Elektra launch an attack on a New York City hideout of the Hand.  The two (anti) heroes end up in a pitched battle against a legion of ninja and some of the Arbiters, which are particularly grotesque members of the Hand.  Nothing can prepare Wolverine and Elektra, however, for the thing known as Shikaru.

I’ll be honest and admit that I bought Savage Wolverine #7 solely because of Joe Madureira.  I was a rabid fan of Joe Mad’s art after his then original art agent gave me a tip about a hot new talent.  After finding a few comic books featuring his art, “Joe Mad” became something like my Justin Beiber of comic book artists.  I am happy to say that his art in Savage Wolverine #7 reflects what I consider the period of Madureira’s best work.  That would be the latter half of his run on the Uncanny X-Men in the mid-1990s, when Tim Townsend was his inker, into the early issues of his creator-owned series, Battle Chasers (for Cliffhanger, an imprint of Image Comics’ Wildstorm Productions).

Even without Townsend as an inker, Madureira produces art for Savage Wolverine that also recalls the influences that shaped his style:   anime, manga, and Art Adams.  Peter Steigerwald’s colors give Mad’s Savage Wolverine art a kind of futuristic and apocalyptic mood.  That is a good thing, because the art’s sinister atmosphere saves the story.

All that writer Zeb Wells is offering in Savage Wolverine is an unimaginative, barely inspired rehash of everything that Frank Miller has done ten times better with Elektra, the Hand, the Kingpin, and Wolverine.  Yes, Virginia, Savage Wolverine #7 is a catalogue of Frank Miller clichés. There is a saying that those who can’t do, teach.  In comics, those who can’t do original, do Frank Miller.

B-

Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux




Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Marvel Comics from Diamond Distributors for June 12 2013

MARVEL COMICS

APR130668 ALPHA BIG TIME #5 $2.99

APR130690 ASTONISHING X-MEN #63 $3.99

MAR130732 ASTONISHING X-MEN GIFTED PROSE NOVEL MASS MARKET TP $7.99

APR130680 AVENGERS ASSEMBLE #16 NOW $3.99

APR130669 AVENGING SPIDER-MAN #22 $3.99

MAR130723 CAPTAIN AMERICA PREM HC VOL 01 CASTAWAY DIMENSION Z BK 1 NOW $24.99

APR130748 CAPTAIN MARVEL BY MANARA POSTER $8.99

APR130658 DEADPOOL #11 NOW $2.99

MAR130735 DEADPOOL KILLUSTRATED TP $14.99

MAR130739 ESSENTIAL WOLVERINE TP VOL 07 $19.99

MAR130620 GUARDIANS OF GALAXY #3 NOW $3.99

MAR130747 MARVEL NOIR TP DAREDEVIL CAGE IRON MAN $34.99

APR130695 MARVEL UNIVERSE AVENGERS EARTHS HEROES #15 $2.99

MAR130737 MARVEL UNIVERSE WOLVERINE DIGEST TP $9.99

APR130611 SAVAGE WOLVERINE #6 NOW $3.99

APR130747 SAVAGE WOLVERINE SPIDER-MAN BY MADUREIRA POSTER $8.99

MAR138357 THANOS RISING #1 2ND PTG BIANCHI VAR NOW $3.99

APR130640 THOR GOD OF THUNDER #9 NOW $3.99

APR130673 ULTIMATE COMICS X-MEN #27 $3.99

APR130652 UNCANNY X-FORCE #6 NOW $3.99

APR130667 VENOM #36 $2.99

APR130749 WASP BY MANARA POSTER $8.99

APR130644 WOLVERINE #4 NOW $3.99

APR130687 WOLVERINE AND X-MEN #31 $3.99

APR130745 WOLVERINE COMIC READER TP #2 $3.99

MAR130738 WOLVERINE TP FIRST CUTS $19.99

Friday, December 9, 2011

I Reads You Review: AVENGING SPIDER-MAN #1

"Need another Spidey title like you need a hole in your head"

AVENGING SPIDER-MAN #1
MARVEL COMICS

WRITER: Zeb Wells
ARTIST: Joe Madureira
COLORS: Ferran Daniel
LETTERS: VC’s Joe Caramagna
COVER: Joe Madureira and Aron Lusen (Variant coves by Humberto Ramos and Edgar Delgado; J. Scott Campbell and Edgar Delgado; and Joe Quesada, Danny Miki, and Richard Isanove)
32pp, Color, $3.99 U.S.
Rated T+

The new Spider-Man comic book series, Avenging Spider-Man, acts as the latest Spider-Man team-up title. The most famous is Marvel Team-Up, which first ran from the 1972 to 1985 (Vol. 1). There is an “afterword” in the back of Avenging Spider-Man, in which editor Stephen Wacker writes that this new title is going to be a star creator-oriented comic book that will feature oddball comic book characters, as well as popular characters as guest stars.

The star creators to start this are writer Zeb Wells (a star?) and artist Joe Madureira (still a star, but likely not as bright as he was back in the 90s). The team-up joins Spider-Man and the Red Hulk.

As Avenging Spider-Man #1 opens, Spider-Man and his Avenger teammates are battling A.I.M. and a giant A.I.M.Bot. Meanwhile, New York City Mayor J. Jonah Jameson has just shot the starter pistol to begin the New York City Marathon. The marathoners, however, immediately find their progress impeded by an invasion of diminutive yellow monsters. Hopping a ride to NYC on the back of the Red Hulk, Spider-Man finds himself arriving just in time to lose to the invaders – even with the Hulk’s help?!

Back in the mid-1990s, penciller Joe Madureira (also known as Joe Mad) and inker Tim Townsend formed one of the best (if not the best) art teams working in superhero comics. Maduriera’s anime and manga influenced style were transformed into solid comic book art by Townsend, an inker with a master illustrator’s touch. Madureira’s art did not suffer much when he left Marvel for Wildstorm Productions and Image Comics to produce his creator-owned title, Battle Chasers (published under Wildstorm’s Cliffhanger imprint). By the beginning of the 21st century, however, Madureira had left comics to work in the video game industry.

Joe Mad returned to comics in 2007 for The Ultimates 3 from Marvel Comics, but his art was no longer inked by Townsend or inked at all for that matter. Now, Madureira’s art was colored directly from the pencils. For me, it left much to be desired. As best as I can tell, Madureira’s is producing the art for Avenging Spider-Man the same as he did for The Ultimates.

It is not that I think Mad’s art here isn’t good. I do think that compared to the work he did on Uncanny X-Men with Townsend inking, this Avenging Spider-Man art is inferior, at least in terms of style and draftsmanship. However, I still admire Mad’s compositional and design skills. Some other artists may stretch out stories with splash pages or pages composed of big panels simply because those pages are more attractive to sell as original art. Mad uses splash pages and big panels to create a heightened sense of the dramatic or convey the power of action, force, movement, etc. The way Mad positions characters and objects in panels and the “camera” angles he uses reflect what Stan Lee preached in his How to Draw Comics the Marvel Way (co-authored with John Buscema).

As for the story: it’s mediocre. I’m amazed that Marvel and DC Comics can still get away with producing remarkably mediocre material, the kind of toad burger product that would spell doom for a publisher not financed by a multi-national media corporation. I’m surprised at the mediocrity because I remember when Zeb Wells first showed up on the comics scene; he was supposed to be some kind of golden boy. Is that golden as in piss gold?

My grade reflects my still-alive love of Joe Mad, but the grade should be lower because of the story.

C

[This comic book includes a preview of Avengers: X-Sanction #1 by Jeph Loeb and Ed McGuinness.]

P.S. I’m going to buy a copy of Avengers: X-Sanction #1 just to rag on it. The five pages that are previewed here are just lousy. I’d really be disappointed if it turned out to be good, thus denying me some fun.

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Marvel Comics from Diamond Distributors for November 9 2011

MARVEL COMICS

SEP110676 AVENGERS FOREVER TP NEW PTG $29.99

SEP110529 AVENGERS ORIGINS VISION #1 $3.99

SEP110536 AVENGING SPIDER-MAN #1 WITH FREE DIGITAL CODE $3.99

SEP110687 AVENGING SPIDER-MAN BY JOE MADUREIRA POSTER $8.99

SEP110505 BATTLE SCARS #1 (OF 6) $2.99

SEP110566 BLACK PANTHER MOST DANGEROUS MAN ALIVE #525 $2.99

SEP110683 ESSENTIAL SGT FURY TP VOL 01 $19.99

JUN110717 FANTASTIC FOUR BY JOHN BYRNE OMNIBUS HC VOL 01 $125.00

JUN110718 FANTASTIC FOUR BY JOHN BYRNE OMNIBUS HC VOL 01 DM VAR ED $125.00

SEP110499 FEAR ITSELF #7 POINT TWO $3.99

SEP110568 GHOST RIDER #5 $2.99

SEP110664 INCREDIBLE HULKS HEART OF MONSTER TP $16.99

SEP110517 JOHN CARTER OF MARS WORLD OF MARS #2 (OF 5) $3.99

SEP110511 JOURNEY INTO MYSTERY #631 $2.99

SEP110613 MAGNETO NOT A HERO #1 (OF 4) $2.99

SEP110533 NEW AVENGERS #18 $3.99

SEP110670 NEW X-MEN BY GRANT MORRISON GN TP BOOK 07 $14.99

SEP110516 NORTHANGER ABBEY #1 (OF 5) $3.99

SEP110665 OZ WONDERFUL WIZARD OF OZ TP $24.99

SEP110496 POINT ONE #1 $5.99

SEP110667 POWER MAN AND IRON FIST COMEDY OF DEATH TP $16.99

SEP110621 PUNISHERMAX #19 (MR) $3.99

SEP110669 PUNISHERMAX BULLSEYE TP (MR) $19.99

SEP110666 SPIDER-MAN MATTERS OF LIFE AND DEATH TP $19.99

SEP110520 ULTIMATE COMICS SPIDER-MAN #4 $3.99

SEP110614 UNCANNY X-FORCE #17 $3.99

SEP110686 VENOM BY JOHN TYLER CHRISTOPHER POSTER $8.99

SEP110597 WOLVERINE #18 XREGG $3.99

SEP110603 X-MEN LEGACY #258 $2.99