Showing posts with label Kyle Baker. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kyle Baker. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 17, 2019

#IReadsYou Review: BLACK PANTHER #1 (Marvel Action)

BLACK PANTHER (MARVEL ACTION) No. 1
IDW PUBLISHING – @IDWPublishing @ Marvel

[This review was originally posted on Patreon.]

STORY: Kyle Baker
ART: Juan Samu
COLORS: David Garcia Cruz
LETTERS: Tom B. Long
EDITOR: Denton J. Tipton
COVER: Juan Samu with David Garcia Cruz
VARIANT COVER ARTISTS: Paulina Ganucheru; Elsa Charraetier with Sarah Stern; Gabriel Rodriguez with Nelson Daniel; Alex Milne with Paris Alleyne
28pp, Color, $3.99 U.S. (January 2019) – shipped April 3, 2019

Black Panther created by Jack Kirby and Stan Lee

“The Little Things”

Marvel Action is a new line of comic books produced by IDW Publishing under license from Marvel Comics.  The titles in this line will feature Marvel Comics characters in comic books aimed at “middle grade readers” and “younger readers.”

The third release in this new line features Marvel Comics' most famous African character and the most famous Black comic book character in North America, Black Panther.  IDW's Black Panther (also known as Marvel Action: Black Panther) is written by Kyle Baker; drawn by Juan Samu; colored by David Garcia Cruz; and lettered by Tom B. Long.  This new Black Panther series is set in the technologically advanced African nation of Wakanda, where the Black Panther, a.k.a. King T’Challa is responsible for defending his people—and the world—from any threats.  He gets plenty of help—and sass—from his genius sister, Shuri.

Marvel Action: Black Panther #1 (“The Little Things”) opens in Wakanda's Western Forest where the people's idyllic existence is shattered by stampeding animals.  Meanwhile, T'Challa is giving a speech about the increase in vibranium production when a sudden violent storms shatters this rather sedate event.  Now, Black Panther and Shuri must solve the mystery of a weather system that seems to be specifically targeting Wakanda.

Now that I think about it, I wonder why Marvel Action: Black Panther is the first time that Kyle Baker, one of the best comic book creators of the last three decades, is working on a Black Panther comic book.  Baker has always been a straight-forward storyteller who is capable of both humor and pathos.  With Marvel Action: Black Panther, Baker creates a comic book that moves like a Saturday morning cartoon that is full of action and adventure – in addition to offering an exotic setting.  I think Baker's writing, already quite good, is going to get stronger with each issue.

Juan Samu's art for Black Panther has the illusion of appearing to be in motion.  The graphic design is splashy, and the story pops on the page.  David Garcia Cruz's coloring adds to the sense of motion and energy in this story.  Tom B. Long's lettering jumps off the page, also making this comic book seem even livelier with each page.

IDW Publishing is three for three.  Its Marvel Action Spider-Man, Avengers, and Black Panther titles are all winners – for readers young and young at heart.

8.5 out of 10

Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux a.k.a. "I Reads You"


The text is copyright © 2019 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog or site for reprint and syndication rights and fees.

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Monday, December 16, 2019

IDW Publishing from Diamond Distributors for December 18, 2019

IDW PUBLISHING

AUG190823    GEARS OF WAR OMNIBUS TP VOL 02    $24.99
SEP190667    GI JOE #3 EVENHUIS    $3.99
OCT190803    GLOW VS THE BABYFACE #2 (OF 4) CVR A FISH    $3.99
OCT190804    GLOW VS THE BABYFACE #2 (OF 4) CVR B GOUX    $3.99
DEC180770    MAGIC THE GATHERING CHANDRA #4 GALLANT    $3.99
JAN190759    MAGIC THE GATHERING CHANDRA TP VOL 01    $15.99
MAR190636    MARVEL ACTION BLACK PANTHER TP BOOK 01 STORMY WEATHER    $9.99
OCT190729    MARVEL ACTION CLASSICS SPIDER-MAN TWO-IN-ONE    $4.99
SEP190707    MARVEL ACTION SPIDER-MAN #12 CVR A TINTO    $3.99
AUG190819    MOUNTAINHEAD #3 (OF 5) CVR A RYAN LEE    $3.99
OCT190809    NARCOS #1 (OF 4) CVR A MALHOTRA (RES)    $3.99
MAR190743    NOCTURNE WALLED CITY TP VOL 02 TRILOGY    $39.99
OCT190821    READ ONLY MEMORIES #1 CVR A SIMEONE    $4.99
OCT190822    READ ONLY MEMORIES #1 CVR B NEOFOTISTOU    $4.99
JUL190731    SAMURAI JACK LOST WORLDS TP    $15.99
OCT190795    STAR TREK MOTION PICTURE FACSIMILE ED    $5.99
OCT190793    STAR TREK PICARD #2 (OF 3) CVR A PITRE-DUROCHER    $4.99
OCT190796    STAR TREK YEAR FIVE #9 CVR A THOMPSON    $3.99
OCT190757    STAR WARS ADVENTURES #29 CVR A CHARM    $3.99
OCT190758    STAR WARS ADVENTURES #29 CVR B FLEECS    $3.99
OCT190760    STAR WARS ADVENTURES GREATEST HITS    $1.00
OCT190716    WELLINGTON #1 (OF 5) CVR A KOWALSKI    $3.99

Monday, July 8, 2019

IDW Publishing from Diamond Distributors for July 10, 2019

IDW PUBLISHING
MAR190685    ATOMIC ROBO AND DAWN OF NEW ERA TP VOL 01    $19.99
MAY190614    CARE BEARS #1 (OF 3) CVR A GARBOWSKA    $3.99
MAR190671    DUCKTALES TP VOL 05 MONSTERS AND MAYHEM    $9.99
MAY190665    KITCHEN TABLE MAGAZINE    $9.99
DEC180698    MARVEL ACTION BLACK PANTHER #2 SAMU    $3.99
MAR190754    MEN IN BLACK UNDERCOVER    $19.99

Monday, April 1, 2019

IDW Publishing from Diamond Distributors for April 3, 2019

IDW PUBLISHING

DEC180788    AMBER BLAKE #1 GUICE    $3.99
DEC180730    ATOMIC ROBO & DAWN OF NEW ERA #4 (OF 5) CVR A WEGENER    $3.99
DEC180731    ATOMIC ROBO & DAWN OF NEW ERA #4 (OF 5) CVR B PINTO    $3.99
DEC180784    DANGER GIRL DANGEROUS VISIONS 3-D    $6.99
JAN190034    FCBD 2019 STAR WARS ADVENTURES DROID HUNTERS    $PI
JAN190005    FCBD 2019 TMNT CASUALTY OF WAR    $PI
FEB190638    GHOSTBUSTERS 35TH ANNIV GHOSTBUSTERS SCHOENING    $3.99
NOV180689    GI JOE A REAL AMERICAN HERO #260 CVR A JOSEPH    $3.99
NOV180690    GI JOE A REAL AMERICAN HERO #260 CVR B ROYLE    $3.99
JUL180941    GIANTKILLERS CVR A SEARS    $7.99
JUL180942    GIANTKILLERS CVR B HETRICK    $7.99
DEC180735    IMPOSSIBLE INC #5 (OF 5)    $3.99
NOV180726    LODGER #4    $3.99
OCT180694    MAGIC THE GATHERING CHANDRA #2 TOLIBAO CVR    $3.99
NOV180605    MARVEL ACTION BLACK PANTHER #1 SAMU    $3.99
JAN190817    MY LITTLE PONY FRIENDSHIP IS MAGIC TP VOL 16    $17.99
DEC180790    NIGHT MOVES #4 (OF 5) BURNHAM    $3.99
DEC180766    TRANSFORMERS UNICRON TP    $24.99
JAN190836    UNCLE SCROOGE #43 MAZZARELLO    $3.99
OCT180732    YE TP    $19.99

Wednesday, December 21, 2016

Review: TRUTH: Red, White & Black #2

TRUTH RED, WHITE & BLACK No. 2
MARVEL COMICS – @Marvel

[This review was originally posted on Patreon.]

WRITER: Robert Morales
ARTIST: Kyle Baker
LETTERS:  JG & Comicraft’s Wes
EDITOR: Axel  Alonso
EiC: Joe Quesada
32pp, Color, $3.50 U.S. (February 2003)

Rated “PG”

Part Two: The Future

I recently read two books that greatly affected me.  The first is a non-fiction book, Forgotten: The Untold Story of D-Day's Black Heroes, at Home and at War, by author Linda Hervieux.  It details the experiences of African-Americans and especially Black soldiers before, during, and after World War II.

The second book is Lovecraft Country from author Matt Ruff.  A work of historical fiction and science fiction and fantasy, Lovecraft Country is set in the early 1950s and follows two African-American families and their friends.  They are caught in the middle of a struggle for power by white men who want to use these Black people for themselves and against their rivals.

These two books have had me thinking a lot about Jim Crow America and about the lingering effects of not only the enslavement of Africans and their descendants in the United States, but also of segregation.  In a way segregation may have been worse than slavery.  It codified Black people a second class of American citizen; as a permanent social, cultural, and financial underclass; and worst of all, as a group of people who must be kept separate.

With this in mind, I decided to return to Truth: Red, White & Black, a 2003, seven-issue, comic book miniseries from Marvel Comics.  I have read the first issue about a decade ago and again two years ago.  Truth: Red, White & Black was written by Robert Morales; drawn and colored by Kyle Baker; and lettered by JG and Wes (of Comicraft).

The purpose of Truth: Red, White & Black was to do some reconstruction of the fictional history of one of Marvel’s signature characters, Captain America.  The Truth’s conceit was that the United States government first tested the “super-soldier” serum that created Captain America on black men.

In Captain America Comics #1 (cover dated: March 1941), we meet Steve Rogers, a young man who volunteered for “army service” but was refused because of his “unfit condition.”  Basically, Rogers was too frail to serve in combat in World War II.  Desperate to serve his country, Rogers agreed to be a lab rat for Professor Reinstein.  The professor administered the “super soldier” formula to Rogers.  The “strange seething liquid” worked, transforming Rogers into a strapping young buck and a supernaturally fit specimen of red-blooded American male, a white male, that is.  Rogers eventually donned a flag-based costume and became Captain America.

Truth writer Robert Morales flipped the script on Captain America’s origin, and referenced a real-world situation, the infamous “Tuskegee experiment,” in which Black men were used as lab rats.  “The Tuskegee Study of Untreated Syphilis in the Negro Male” was a real-life clinical study in which poor Black men were denied treatment for syphilis so that the doctors involved could study how the disease spreads through the human body and eventually kills the infected person.

Morales posed an intriguing question on Marvel Comics mythology,  What if the United States government thought that the “Super Soldier” serum was potentially dangerous and perhaps fatal, so before testing it on a White man (Rogers), the government tested it on Black soldiers?  Obviously, it is hard to imagine that even a fictional version of the U.S. government and military, especially in the 1930s and 40s, would risk creating a platoon of super Negroes.  Still, this is just speculative fiction, so why not be imaginative...

Truth: Red, White & Black opens in mid-1940 and introduces a small core of Black soldiers and their family and friends.  There is a young Negro couple, Isaiah and Faith Bradley, on honeymoon.  Maurice Canfield, a Black communist, is the son of well-to-do Negroes in Philadelphia.  He is a labor organizer, and his protests against the U.S.'s entry into World War II ends up getting him forced into the military (with the other choice being a lengthy prison sentence).  Finally, the story moves to June 1941, where we meet Luke Evans, a former Army captain. He has been demoted to sergeant after shoving a white superior who belittled the life of a black soldier killed by White/cracker cops.

Truth: Red, White & Black #2 (“The Future”) opens in May 1942 at Camp Cathcart, Mississippi, a U.S. Army training facility.  Sgt. Evans, who has plenty of experience in the ways of the “White man's army,” roughly and firmly guides the young Black man in his unit through the harsh realities of military service.  Isaiah Bradley shares some good news with his fellow new privates.  Maurice Canfield continues to rub White men the wrong way.

Meanwhile, Washington attaché, Homer Tully, and German psychiatrist and surgeon, Dr. Josef Reinstein, have arrived at Camp Cathcart, in need for an experimental Army project.  Unbeknownst to the Black men of the camp, dark doings are going on in camp headquarters that will cost many men, Black and White, dearly.

The first time I read  Truth: Red, White & Black #1, I enjoyed it, but found it a little underwhelming.  I found Kyle Baker's art to be a little too... informal and cutesy.  In the second reading, I focused more on the story that Morales told, trying to understand both the characters' personalities and the world in which they lived.  When the reader understands the context of these characters' lives, Truth becomes quite powerful.

Kyle Baker's art and graphical storytelling also takes on a stronger quality.  It becomes a blunt instrument, delivering the Jim Crow world of 1940s America because that is the story's mission.  I see it now.  Baker's graphic and artistic style has less to do with traditional comic book art and storytelling and more to do with the confrontational and scathing style of America's great newspaper and magazine political cartoonists.

That's the truth.  After two issues, it seems to me that Morales and Baker are subversively using the ruse of telling a story set in Marvel Comics' fictional universe to chronicle some truths about American history.  This is especially in regards to the deplorable treatment of Black folk in the land of freedom.  That is also the truth.

A+

Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux a.k.a. "I Reads You"


The text is copyright © 2016 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog for reprint and syndication rights and fees.

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Tuesday, March 22, 2016

Image Comics from Diamond Distributors for March 23, 2016

IMAGE COMICS

JAN160570     BIRTHRIGHT #15 CVR A BRESSAN & LUCAS     $2.99
JAN160571     BIRTHRIGHT #15 CVR B STOKOE     $2.99
JAN160521     CIRCUIT BREAKER #1     $2.99
JAN160577     CRY HAVOC #3 CVR A KELLY & PRICE (MR)     $3.99
JAN160578     CRY HAVOC #3 CVR B GANE (MR)     $3.99
NOV150604     DREAM POLICE #8     $2.99
JAN160657     EAST OF WEST TP VOL 05 ALL THESE SECRETS     $14.99
JAN160598     MIRROR #2 (MR)     $2.99
JAN160601     NOWHERE MEN #9 (MR)     $2.99
JAN160602     OUTCAST BY KIRKMAN & AZACETA #17 (MR)     $2.99
JAN160603     PENCIL HEAD #3 (MR)     $3.99
JAN160628     RATTLER GN     $14.99
JAN160609     RINGSIDE #5 (MR)     $3.99
JAN160700     SAVAGE DRAGON GROWING PAINS TP (MR)     $19.99
JAN160614     SNOWFALL #2 (MR)     $3.99
JAN160553     SONS OF THE DEVIL #6 (MR)     $3.99
JAN160618     STRAY BULLETS SUNSHINE & ROSES #13 (MR)     $3.99

Sunday, September 20, 2015

Review: BIZARRO #1

BIZARRO #1 (OF 6)
DC COMICS – @DCComics

[This review was originally posted on Patreon.]

WRITER: Heath Corson
PENCILS: Gustavo Duarte
INKS: Bill Sienkiewicz
COLORS: Pete Pantazis
LETTERS: Tom Napolitano
COVER: Gustavo Duarte with Pete Pantazis
VARIANT COVERS: Kyle Baker
32pp, Color, $3.99 U.S. (August 2015)

Rated “E” for “Everyone”

“America: Part 6”

Bizarro is a supervillain that first appeared in Superboy #68 (cover dated:  October 1958).  Created by  writer Otto Binder and artist George Papp, Bizarro was meant to be a “mirror image” of Superman, but he is also an antagonist of the Man of Steel's.

DC Comics' “DCYou” publishing initiative includes the launch of several new series, some of them are “all ages” titles.  One of those is Bizarro, a six-issue miniseries written by Heath Corson; drawn by Gustavo Duarte and Bill Sienkiewicz; colored by Pete Pantazis; and lettered by Tom Napolitano.

Bizarro #1 (“America: Part 6”) opens with Superman's pal, Jimmy Olsen, and Bizarro on a road trip.  It is all part of plan to get Bizarro to Canada and then, convince him that this foreign country is really “Bizarro America.”  Along for the trip is Bizarro's pet, Colin the Chupacabra, and alien visitors!  Plus, Regis “King Tut” Tuttle just wants to sell cars to Smallville.

The highly stylized art of the team of Gustavo Duarte and Bill Sienkiewicz is one good thing about Bizarro #1.  Anything else good about it, you might ask?  Well, Bizarro #1 is mildly amusing, but I did not enjoy reading it as much as I enjoyed the other “DCYou” six-issue all-ages miniseries, Bat-Mite.

I can convince myself that Bizarro has potential.  I don't know if I can convince myself to prove that by reading another issue.

C+

Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux


The text is copyright © 2015 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog for reprint and syndication rights and fees.


Sunday, September 7, 2014

2014 Harvey Award Winners Announced; "Saga" Leads the Awards Ceremony

Brian K. Vaughn and Fiona Staples' "Saga" Leads the Evening with Four Wins

Comics professionals honor peers for comics and books published in 2013 at the Harvey Awards Banquet

Comic professionals came together Saturday night, September 6, 2014 at the 2014 Baltimore Comic-Con to honor their peers during the presentation of the 2014 Harvey Awards.

The awards are named in honor of cartoonist, comic book creator, editor, and publisher, the late Harvey Kurtzman.  According to its administrators, the Harvey Awards recognize outstanding achievement in the field of comics, and is the only industry award both nominated and selected by comic professionals.  First awarded in 1988, it is one the industries oldest and most respected awards.

The 2014 Harvey Award winners:

Best Original Graphic Album:  THE FIFTH BEATLE: THE BRIAN EPSTEIN STORY, Dark Horse Comics

Best Continuing or Limited Series:  SAGA, Image Comics

Best Writer:  Brian K. Vaughan, SAGA, Image Comics

Best Artist:  Fiona Staples, SAGA, Image Comics

Best Cartoonist:  Paul Pope, BATTLING BOY, First Second

Best Single Issue or Story:  Pizza is my Business, HAWKEYE # 11, Marvel Comics

Best Letterer:  Terry Moore, RACHEL RISING, Abstract Studios

Best Colorist:  Dave Stewart, HELLBOY: THE MIDNIGHT CIRCUS, Dark Horse Comics

Best Syndicated Strip or Panel:  DICK TRACY, Joe Staton and Mike Curtis, Tribune Media Services

Best Online Comics Work:  BATTLEPUG, Mike Norton, http://www.battlepug.com/

Best American Edition of Foreign Material:  ATTACK ON TITAN, Kodansha

Best Inker:  Wade Von Grawbadger, ALL NEW X-MEN, Marvel Comics

Best New Series:  SEX CRIMINALS, Image Comics

Most Promising New Talent:  Chip Zdarsky, SEX CRIMINALS, Image Comics

Special Award for Humor in Comics:  Ryan North, ADVENTURE TIME, KaBOOM! Studios

Best Original Graphic Publication for Younger Readers:  ADVENTURE TIME, KaBOOM! Studios

Best Graphic Album Previously Published:  MOUSE GUARD VOL. 3: THE BLACK AXE, BOOM! Studios/Archaia

Best Anthology:  DARK HORSE PRESENTS, Dark Horse

Best Domestic Reprint Project:  BEST OF COMIX BOOK: WHEN MARVEL COMICS WENT UNDERGROUND, Kitchen Sink Books/Dark Horse Comics

Best Cover Artist:  Fiona Staples, SAGA, Image Comics

Best Biographical, Historical or Journalistic Presentation:  THE FIFTH BEATLE: THE BRIAN EPSTEIN STORY, Vivek J. Tiwary, Andrew C. Robinson, and Kyle Baker, Dark Horse Comics

Special Award for Excellence in Presentation:  BEST OF COMIX BOOK: WHEN MARVEL COMICS WENT UNDERGROUND, John Lind, Kitchen Sink Books/Dark Horse Comics

Harvey Kurtzman Hall of Fame Award: Charles M. Schulz

Dick Giordano Humanitarian of the Year Award: Stan Goldberg

Hero Initiative Lifetime Achievement Award: Herb Trimpe

The Baltimore Comic will also host the Harvey Awards for the ninth year during the 16h annual show, taking place September 25-27, 2015.

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Saturday, August 16, 2014

2014 Eisner Award Winners - Complete List

[Yep, late with this, too.  Xaime and 'Beto won, Yea!]

2014 Will Eisner Comic Industry Award Winners List

Best Short Story: “Untitled,” by Gilbert Hernandez, in Love and Rockets: New Stories #6 (Fantagraphics)

Best Single Issue: Hawkeye #11: “Pizza Is My Business,” by Matt Fraction and David Aja (Marvel)

Best Continuing Series: Saga, by Brian K. Vaughan and Fiona Staples (Image)

Best Limited Series: The Wake, by Scott Snyder and Sean Murphy (Vertigo/DC)

Best New Series: Sex Criminals, by Matt Fraction and Chip Zdarsky (Image)

Best Publication for Early Readers (up to age 7): Itty Bitty Hellboy, by Art Baltazar and Franco (Dark Horse)

Best Publication for Kids (ages 8–12): The Adventures of Superhero Girl, by Faith Erin Hicks (Dark Horse)

Best Publication for Teens (ages 13–17): Battling Boy, by Paul Pope (First Second)

Best Humor Publication: Vader’s Little Princess, by Jeffrey Brown (Chronicle)

Best Anthology: Dark Horse Presents, edited by Mike Richardson (Dark Horse)

Best Digital/Webcomic: The Oatmeal by Matthew Inman, http://theoatmeal.com

Best Reality-Based Work: The Fifth Beatle: The Brian Epstein Story, by Vivek J. Tiwary, Andrew C. Robinson, and Kyle Baker (M Press/Dark Horse)

Best Graphic Album—New: The Property, by Rutu Modan (Drawn & Quarterly)

Best Adaptation from Another Medium: Richard Stark’s Parker: Slayground, by Donald Westlake, adapted by Darwyn Cooke (IDW)

Best Graphic Album—Reprint: RASL, by Jeff Smith (Cartoon Books)

Best Archival Collection/Project—Strips: Tarzan: The Complete Russ Manning Newspaper Strips, vol. 1, edited by Dean Mullaney (LOAC/IDW)

Best Archival Collection/Project—Comic Books: Will Eisner’s The Spirit Artist’s Edition, edited by Scott Dunbier (IDW)

Best U.S. Edition of International Material: Goddam This War! by Jacques Tardi and Jean-Pierre Verney (Fantagraphics)

Best U.S. Edition of International Material—Asia: The Mysterious Underground Men, by Osamu Tezuka (PictureBox)

Best Writer: Brian K. Vaughan, Saga (Image)

Best Writer/Artist: Jaime Hernandez, Love and Rockets New Stories #6 (Fantagraphics)

Best Penciller/Inker or Penciller/Inker Team: Sean Murphy, The Wake (DC/Vertigo)

Best Painter/Multimedia Artist: Fiona Staples, Saga (Image)

Best Cover Artist: David Aja, Hawkeye (Marvel)

Best Coloring: Jordie Bellaire, The Manhattan Projects, Nowhere Men, Pretty Deadly, Zero (Image); The Massive (Dark Horse); Tom Strong (DC); X-Files Season 10 (IDW); Captain Marvel, Journey into Mystery (Marvel); Numbercruncher (Titan); Quantum and Woody (Valiant)

Best Lettering: Darwyn Cooke, Richard Stark’s Parker: Slayground (IDW)

Best Comics-Related Periodical/Journalism: Comic Book Resources, produced by Jonah Weiland, www.comicbookresources.com

Best Comics-Related Book: Genius, Illustrated: The Life and Art of Alex Toth, by Dean Mullaney and Bruce Canwell (LOAC/IDW)

Best Scholarly/Academic Work: Black Comics: Politics of Race and Representation, edited by Sheena C. Howard and Ronald L. Jackson II (Bloomsbury)

Best Publication Design: Genius, Illustrated: The Life and Art of Alex Toth, designed by Dean Mullaney (LOAC/IDW)

Hall of Fame:
Judges’ Choices: Orrin C. Evans, Irwin Hasen, Sheldon Moldoff

Recipients: Hayao Miyazaki, Alan Moore, Dennis O’Neil, Bernie Wrightson

Russ Manning Promising Newcomer Award: Aaron Conley

Bob Clampett Humanitarian Award: Joe Field

Bill Finger Award for Excellence in Comics Writing: Robert Kanigher, Bill Mantlo, Jack Mendelsohn

Will Eisner Spirit of Comics Retailer Award: Legend Comics & Coffee (Omaha, Nebraska), and All Star Comics (Melbourne, Australia)


Friday, March 14, 2014

I Reads You Review: TRUTH Red, White and Black #1

TRUTH RED,WHITE & BLACK #1
MARVEL COMICS – @Marvel

WRITER: Robert Morales
ARTIST: Kyle Baker
LETTERS:  JG & Comicraft’s Wes
EDITOR: Axel Alonso
EiC: Joe Quesada
40pp, Color, $3.50 U.S. (January 2003)

Part One: The Future

Published in late 2002 and running into 2003, Truth: Red, White & Black was a seven-issue comic book miniseries from Marvel Comics.  The purpose of Truth was to do some retroactive construction (also known as “retcon) or reconstruction on the fictional history of one of the company’s signature characters, Captain America.  The Truth’s conceit was that the United States government first tested the “super-soldier” serum that created Captain America on black men.

Back to the beginning:  way back in Captain America Comics #1, we meet Steve Rogers, a young man who volunteered for “army service” but was refused because of his “unfit condition.”  Basically, Rogers was too frail to serve in combat in World War II.  Desperate to serve his country, Rogers agreed to be a lab rat for Professor Reinstein.  The professor administered the “super soldier” formula to Rogers.  The “strange seething liquid” worked, transforming Rogers into a strapping young buck and a supernaturally fit specimen of red-blooded American White male.  Rogers eventually donned a flag-based costume and became Captain America.

Truth writer Robert Morales flipped the script on Captain America’s origin, and referenced a real-world situation in which men were used as lab rats, the “Tuskegee experiment.”  The Tuskegee Study of Untreated Syphilis in the Negro Male was a real-life clinical study in which poor Black men were denied treatment for syphilis so that the doctors involved could study how the disease spreads through the body and eventually kills the infected person.

Morales posed the following question on Marvel Comics mythology:  What if realizing that the “Super Soldier” serum was potentially so dangerous and perhaps fatal that before testing it on a White man (Rogers), the government tested it on Black soldiers.  Obviously, it is hard to imagine that even a fictional version of the U.S. government and military, especially in the 1930s and 40s, would risk creating a platoon of super Negroes.

In Truth: Red, White & Black #1 (“The Future”), Morales introduces his characters and the era in which they live.  The story opens in July, 1940 in Queens, New York at The World’s Fair.  We meet a young Negro couple, Isaiah and Faith, who are honeymooning and enjoying “Negro Week,” the week that the Fair is open to Black people.  [Remember that this is a time of segregation of people by skin color or “race.”]  Portrayed as a loving couple given to bouts of witty banter, Isaiah and Faith only run into a bad time at the Fair when they are denied admittance to an exhibit.  This exhibit displays scantily-clad white women and…  well, Isaiah is a Black man and shouldn’t be allowed to openly lust and gaze upon the pristine, snowy flesh of a White woman, even if she is whore.

Morales next introduces Maurice Canfield, the son of well-to-do Negroes in Philadelphia.  Maurice is a labor organizer, and his activities have gotten him and a friend beaten by the stevedores they were trying to organize.  Next, Morales moves the scene to a pool hall in Cleveland in June, 1941.  There, we meet Luke Evans, a former Army captain demoted back down to sergeant after shoving a white superior who belittled the life of a black soldier killed by cracker cops.

On one page, for the briefest moment, Morales offers a glimpse of the Japanese attack of Pearl Harbor (via a lovely page drawn by Kyle Baker), which is all that is needed to depict this pivotal and explosive moment in 20th century American history.  Although many Americans lose their lives during the attack, for other Americans, this tragic event offers a second opportunity.  That includes Luke Evans (who was moments from killing himself) and Maurice, who chooses enlisting to serve his racist country over spending 20 years at hard labor in prison.  Back in New York City, Isaiah likely sees military service as the beginning of an adventure.  Little do these three men know they are taking steps to lose themselves in the secret and hidden history of the United States of Marvel Comics.

I like this first issue Truth, which I first read about eight years ago.  Morales is quite good at creating three strikingly different black men, whose only connection is skin color, but who are still identifiably black men of their time.  Artist Kyle Baker’s loose, “cartoony” drawing style captures emotion through simple, yet classical cartoon facial expressions.  Baker gives each character his or her own unique physicality, but I would expect nothing less from one of the great comic book artists and storytellers of the last 30 years.  I eagerly look forward to reading more Truth.

[This comic book includes a three-page preview of X-Men #416 by Chuck Austen and Kia Asamiya.]

A

Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux


The text is copyright © 2014 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog for syndication rights and fees.



Sunday, June 10, 2012

I Reads You Review: ROCKETEER ADVENTURES VOL. 2 #3

ROCKETEER ADVENTURES VOL. 2 #3
IDW PUBLISHING

WRITERS: David Lapham, Kyle Baker, Matt Wagner
ARTISTS: Chris Sprouse, Kyle Baker, Eric Canete
INKS: Karl Story
COLORS: Jordie Bellaire, Eric Canete and Cassandra Poulson
LETTERS: Shawn Lee, Kyle Baker
PIN-UP: Eric Powell with Dave Stewart
EDITOR: Scott Dunbier
COVERS: Darwyn Cooke (A, C), Dave Stevens (B)
28pp, Color, $3.50 U.S.

The Rocketeer is a comic book character created by artist and illustrator, Dave Stevens, who died in March of 2008. The Rocketeer is Cliff Secord, a stunt pilot who discovers a mysterious jet pack that allows him to fly, and his adventures are set mainly in Los Angeles in and after the year 1938.

The Rocketeer returned to comic books in 2011 in Rocketeer Adventures. Edited by Scott Dunbier and published by IDW Publishing, this four-issue, anthology comic book was a tribute to Stevens and featured Rocketeer short stories (about 8 pages in length) from some of the premiere creators in American comic books. The tributes continue in Rocketeer Adventures Vol. 2.

Rocketeer Adventures Vol. 2 #3 opens with “Coulda Been…,” a story by David Lapham with art by Chris Sprouse and Karl Story, that finds Cliff Second and his girlfriend, Betty Page, imagining what their lives could be like. In “Butch Saves Betty,” the brilliant cartoonist Kyle Baker introduces Cliff and company to a shadowy client. Then, writer Matt Wagner and artist Eric Canete take readers to the future for a “History Lesson.”

David Lapham is a popular comic book creator, but I wonder if people really appreciate what a good writer he is. I see him as a comic book scribe who can always put an imaginative twist on the character/ensemble drama. Read 30 Days of Night: 30 Days ‘Til Death; it could have been just another vampire comic book, but isn’t. His “Coulda Been…” shows why making comic book characters “grow up,” especially those grounded in fantasy, is a mistake. The reason is that when you make characters act like real-world adults that fundamentally changes those characters, sometimes to the point in which they become different from what they were originally. Another good thing about this story is that the artist is the talented and under-utilized Chris Sprouse.

There is nothing special about the other two stories, other than that Kyle Baker draws one of them. What is special is the pin-up by Eric Powell (with colors by Dave Stewart). I could stare at a Powell drawing for an hour and not consider that a waste of time.

B