Archive for the ‘Graphic Novels and Comics’ Category

Sweets is Pretty Sweet

Thursday, August 5th, 2010

Sweets #1 Cover

COMIC REVIEW
08/06/10 (PORTLAND) Andy Grossberg

Sweets

Artist/Writer: Kody Chamberlain
Publisher: Image Comics

Sweets, a new Image book from writer-artist Kody Chamberlain is a cop drama for people who are sick of cop dramas. While it’s trite to compare it to CSI or NCIS or any of the other dozen cop shows currently on TV it needs to be done for contrast because the main similarity is that there are cops in this comic as well. Sweets feels far more visceral and dark and somehow less like it’s mugging for the camera than the endless string of unrealistic cop-schlock shows that permeate the airwaves (and we all know that Crime Scene Investigators investigate crime scenes, they don’t solve crimes!). No, Sweets is far more like reading a Carl Hiaasen book with its flavor of the South, and its mood: a real almost edible sense of place. Or better yet, Sweets is like what 100 Bullets should have been, what it was when it started out less confusing.

The story itself seems to hit some of the usual beats we expect from a cop drama but that’s not a bad thing really. It’s set in pre-Katrina New Orleans where our hero is a detective who’s just lost his daughter and his wife is divorcing him. His job performance has suffered and he’s hanging on by a thread. But his earnest partner gets him a reprieve if together they can solve a series of murders that includes the killing of a priest. Strands are woven that imply a deeper story and the motivation of the killer is already hinted at in the corruption we see through a city prosecutor who has a thing for rough love with call girls. And of course there is the recipe for pecan pralines, possibly one of the sweets from which the comic takes its name.

The art reminds one of Bill Sienkiewicz with some of the line work but it’s far less frantic, more precise, yet equally as graphically intense. The color palette is muted hanging a thick pall over the whole work adding a sort of claustrophobic feel to the comic and adding to the sense of dread presence that the impending hurricane brings with it. The cemetery scene, a striking street car shot and even the architecture in the splash page at the end of the first issue all add to the overall feeling to the point you can almost taste the weather as the storm approaches. The city itself plays a role as a character in the comic if only visually so far.

The first issue shows real promise for the series and I plan to come back to the next issue. Overall, I can find only one fault with Sweets and that’s that I have to wait a month for another issue. Hurry up, Kody!

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Let the Mookie Win

Monday, July 19th, 2010

Titmouse Mook Cover

GRAPHIC ALBUM REVIEW
07/19/10 (PORTLAND) Andy Grossberg

The Titmouse Mook

Titmouse is an animation studio maybe best known for the Adult Swim cartoon they produce, Metalocalypse. (You can read about our studio visit here.) But they’ve also done commercials, music videos, title sequences for shows, and much much more. Now they have added a graphic anthology to their resume. Why? Who knows, maybe they couldn’t help themselves. But it is an undeniable fact that this entry into the printed page is as creative as everything else they produce. Titmouse brings you: The Titmouse Mook.

A page from the mook

Just because a few comicbook adaptations have made some money at the box office everyone thinks they can produce a graphic novel. And every art school thinks they can turn out comic artists. But the mainstreaming of comics has left many cracks in the drying cement of its glorious multi-story tower and those cracks are where the artists of this mook live. In the muck, the grime, the dirt between slabs, which is exactly where talent has room to explore and grow like weeds, coming from a sort of anti-mainstream filled with work that makes you reexamine what you thought sequential art was supposed to be.

Yet page from the mook

Stories in the mook take stabs at genre convention, quite handily, while ripping apart preconceptions. A well drawn story with a female lead that is grounded with schoolboy humor? Flawless in its execution and chock full of satire. These are stories that grab your shoulders and shake the fixed notions out of you. Why a man with a beard of bees? Does it matter when there’s a story to be told? Sure this is a lot like any old sketchbook put out by some animation studio so you’d expect the artists to be familiar with the comic medium but many of these guys run with it and in directions that are unexpected.

Another page from the mook

There is the weird, the strange, the odd, the gross, the unpolished bits around the edges of comic art that show where there is still room to expand. And then, just when you think you have a a handle on it, they drop in some pieces from an art show in LA or an interview with an artist who’s using a prosthetic leaning device to help him draw while lying on the floor. No, what you have in your hands from the moment you open their mook is pure chaos not just static art on a page.

But if this isn’t enough, and I know it isn’t, read our review and interview with Titmouse head honcho Chris P. in the latest Tripwire out in two weeks. Or click on the pages in this review to get a closer look at some of the art. Or better yet, check it out yourself here.

Peter O’Donnell Has Passed Away At 90

Tuesday, May 4th, 2010

05/04/10 (LONDON) Joel Meadows
Peter O’Donnell, the creator of Modesty Blaise, has died at the age of 90 at his home in the South of England. Modesty Blaise was one of the most important British newspapers strips and ran in London newspaper Evening Standard from May 1963 until 2001. The strip had many admirers and was an influence on  the James Bond films. I was lucky enough to interview O’Donnell a few years ago for issue #225 of the Judge Dredd Megazine.

O’Donnell’s obituary appeared in The Times.

Also Rich Johnston has run a story about it on Bleeding Cool.

Stumptown Comics Fest 2010

Monday, April 26th, 2010

04/26/10 (Portland OR) Andy Grossberg

TRIPWIRE was at both days of Portland’s famous Stumptown Comics Fest possibly the indy comics show of the year. It compares favorably to others such as APE: It brings out some of the bigger guns like Dark Horse and Oni (if for no other reason than that they’re based there) but also dozens of DYI mini comics creators and others were in the room taking part in the photocopier revolution and getting their work seen. There were panels and signings from the likes of Paul Pope and Mike Allred and on Saturday night they gave away the 4th annual Trophy awards.
The Inside of Exhibitor's Room
The crowd seemed bigger this year than last as the show continues to grow every year. A lot of the programming focused on creating comics yourself with panels like An Artist’s Intro to Contracts or Rights and Local Printing & Publishing but there were also spotlight panels with creators like Craig Thompson. There were also terrific offsite events like Dr. Sketchy’s art classes. In all it was a low-key but terrific and exhausting show.

Things really got started the night before though at Guapo Comics, a neat comic shop and cafe that stocks a ton of Portland’s independent comics in the back. The beer was free and I’m told there was free food but we got there too late for that. Judging from the crowd the party was a success. The inside of Guapo Comics

There was so much to see that it took going on both days just to absorb the plethora of diverse books for sale in all shapes and sizes. I’m always hungry for new comics and the inspiration that comes with them so the exhibitor’s room was like food for the starving.

The guys from Sparkplug ComicsIt was great to see that many of small publishers like Sparkplug Comics have survived the stuttering US economy.

Batton LashBatton Lash was signing copies of Wolff & Byrd as well as his Archie work.

Richard StarkingsAnd of course Richard Starkings was there to promote Elephantmen (see our review from last August of last year).

Fantagraphics boothFantagraphics made the short drive down from Seattle.

Shawna Gore from Dark Horse reviewing portfolios Dark Horse Comics even had portfolio reviews going on both days!

Overall it was another great show and a triumph for the guys who put it on. I came back with so many new books to read that my head is spinning. Hopefully I’ll have some reviews of stuff I picked up to follow throughout the coming weeks.

On the Shelf Special

Monday, January 11th, 2010

Joel Meadows, April 2010

TRIPWIRE gets back into the swing of things with a review roundup of a few graphic novels and trade paperbacks from DC Comics and Vertigo.

The cover of Preacher book one

First we have Preacher Book One (Garth Ennis, Steve Dillon with covers by Glenn Fabry, Vertigo/ DC Comics, hardcover) It’s hard to believe that it’s been 15 years since we were first introduced to Jesse Custer, Tulip and Cassidy. Ennis and Dillon had just come off a highly-regarded run on Vertigo’s Hellblazer but it was plain from the start that Preacher was a very different series. A broadly supernatural series featuring Custer, a Texan preacher who found himself endowed with power that seemed to fall from Heaven itself. This hardcover collects the first 12 issues of the series and illustrates why Vertigo has such a reputation for occasionally creating fiction that really stands the test of time. Ennis doesn’t waste any time, introducing the main protagonists on the first page of the first issue, ably abetted by the simple yet brilliant art of Steve Dillon. Ennis has the admirable ability to write cinematic dialogue that manages to further the plot and characterisation. It is also the outsider’s perspective (a non-American writing about the US) that lends the series its unique voice. The trio of main protagonists have a rare chemistry that engages the reader while the threats at large here including Custer’s psychotic family, a New York serial killer and The Saint of Killers, the embodiment of retribution, all add to the overall sense that you’re privy to something a little bit different. DC has been representing many of its classic series in a durable hardback format and Ennis and Dillon’s work certainly deserves to be preserved for posterity. Glenn Fabry’s covers should also be mentioned as they set the tone for the series almost as much as Dillon’s interiors. Preacher is a darkly satirical slice of Americana, a fantastic road trip through the country’s black heart.

The cover of Tom Strong deluxe Edition Volume One

Tom Strong Deluxe Edition Volume One (Alan Moore, Chris Sprouse & Al Gordon plus various, Wildstorm/ DC Comics, hardcover). It’s been just over a decade since Alan Moore started his America’s Best Comics experiment over at Wildstorm and DC has decided that some of its output warrants the hardback treatment. Tom Strong was a great series: cut from the same cloth as pulp classic creations like Doc Savage and The Shadow but with a Victorian steampunk and a Golden Age superhero spin. Each issue reads like the creative team were having fun when they worked on them and this lightness of touch makes Tom Strong such a joy. Sprouse and Gordon are a magnificently talented artistic pair while the guest slots from artists like Art Adams, Jerry Ordway, Dave Gibbons and Gary Frank help to bring the world that Tom Strong inhabits to bright technicolor life. The series also has that feeling of familiarity that makes it accessible to readers steeped in comicbook lore. Tom Strong, raised on a South pacific island, losing his parents at an early age, is the perfect foil for Moore et al’s vintage adventure tales and visually the art pops to life in the larger format. Moore can be an inconsistent writer, taking himself too seriously on occasion but here he strikes just the right balance between pulp adventure and something with a little more depth to it. Tom Strong is a fun, rollercoaster ride of a comicbook…

The cover of The Nobody volume one

The Nobody (Jeff Lemire, Vertigo/ DC Comics, hardcover) is an original graphic novel, something that Vertigo is doing more and more of these days. It concerns itself with a mystery bandaged man who finds himself in the small town of Large Mouth. Local loner Vickie gets friendly with him but just what is his secret? Lemire handles the pacing like an old pro even though he’s only been doing comics for the last five years or so and visually the stark black and white and blue works a treat. The Nobody is about trying to escape your past and redeem yourself and is a worthy addition to anyone’s library…

The cover of Fables Volume 1 Deluxe Edition

Fables Volume 1 Deluxe Edition (Bill Willingham, Lan Medina/ Mark Buckingham & Steve Leialoha, Vertigo/ DC Comics, hardcover) Fables has been a mainstay of Vertigo’s line since it was launched back in 2002. The series, that looks at what could happen in the real world if the characters from the world of fables lived here with the ordinary people, starts strongl with a murder mystery and then the second arc is about a revolution that begins up at the farm, where the Fables who couldn’t pass for human live. The artist on the first story, Lan Medina, is solid as is the man who follows him, penciller Mark Buckingham and inker Steve Leialoha holds it all together. Willingham’s conceit works well here and it is a very likeable comic creation.…

The cover of DC Comics Classics Library Batman/

Batman: Death In The Family (Jim Starlin, Marv Wolfman, Jim Aparo and George Perez, DC Comics, hardcover). Forever remembered as the comic story with the publicity stunt (DC invited people to phone in to either save or damn Robin), the company has reissued it and its companion story, A Lonely Place of Dying, as part of their DC Comics Classic Library. Twenty years later, there’s an anodyne blandness to the storytelling that makes it hard to connect with the material. Starlin and Wolfman are solid writers but when the Joker bumps off Robin, it feels strangely anti-climactic. The Batman canon has contained a number of stories that stand the test of time, that fans and readers will enjoy for decades after their publication – the Englehart and Rogers run, parts of the O’Neil and Adams run, Batman: Year One to name but a few – but I’m not convinced that Death In The Family should be counted in that company.

The cover of Jonah Hex: Six Gun War

Jonah Hex: Six Gun War (Justin Grey, Jimmy Palmiotti & Cristiano Cucina, DC Comics) Hex continues to be one of DC’s best-kept secrets. Since 2010 is the year the character hits the big screen, the profile of the title will grow. Six-Gun War sees the scarred western hero/ anti-hero go head-to-head with a man out for revenge after Hex killed his son. Helping the bounty hunter out are other DC western mainstays, the suave gambler Bat Lash and possessed bank teller Lazarus Lane aka El Diablo. It’s a gritty and exciting western epic with Palmiotti and Grey’s simple yet effective script matched by the dynamic stylings of artist Cucina. Jonah Hex is one of the most consistent mainstream comics currently published and DC’s line would be poorer without it. Six-Gun War is the perfect introduction to the series too…

The cover of Doc Savage: The Silver Pyramid

Doc Savage: The Silver Pyramid (Dennis O’Neil, Andy Kubert & Adam Kubert, DC Comics) O’Neil is no stranger to bringing pulps to comics as he wrote the classic Shadow run that DC put out in the Seventies. So this collection of the miniseries published in 1987/ 1988 doesn’t change your opinion of him as a natural crafter of stories featuring these characters. DC have issued this because they’ve just launched their First Wave line, which incorporates Doc Savage, The Spirit and some of the other Street & Smith characters into a single universe. Here we see a generation of Savages battling an evil Nazi scientist with the original Savage seemingly out of commission. It’s pulpy, enjoyable material with the visuals of the Kubert brothers a solid marriage with O’Neil’s dynamic yarn. The colouring is a little garish so it would have been even more enjoyable if they had recoloured it but this is a minor quibble. The Silver Pyramid is an epic yarn that ticks all the necessary boxes…

The Elephantmen in the Room

Tuesday, August 18th, 2009

8/18/09 (LOS ANGELES) Andy Grossberg

GRAPHIC NOVEL REVIEW

TITLE: Elephantmen Volume 1: Wounded Animals
Writer: Richard Starkings, Joe Kelly
Artist: Moritat, Ladronn, others
PUBLISHER: Image Comics

Elephantmen Volume 1 Hardcover

Richard Starkings’s comic series Elephantmen has a really big problem. Maybe I’m just biased by the prestige hardcover edition put before me to review, with a good intro and alternate covers included. Maybe I’m just easily influenced by gorgeous art from the likes of Moritat and splendid cover art by greats such as Ladronn. And maybe I simply have a thing for good stories that can stand on their own or be read as an ongoing series with an unobtrusive yet obvious arc linking them all. Maybe that’s it or maybe it’s because the entire package itself is nice enough that it makes me wonder how I’m going to fit Elephantmen into my comic buying budget every month. You see, that’s the problem with this series: it’s good enough that if people only read it and knew about it they’d be buying it in droves.

Once you crack the cover you will be shocked by glorious artwork that’s a shout back to the heyday of comics for grownups. It belongs next to titles like RanXerox and Den in the vanguard pages of the greatest Heavy Metal issues plucked from the newsstand and read furiously, absorbed by impressionable creative young adults. Yet I fear it is lost, buried among exposed corpses in a graveyard of mediocre titles, strewn with the carrion on the shelves of the dwindling specialty shops, off sale in a month, undiscovered bones bleaching in the sun. But it has to prevail!

The story is told with a clever, European pacing, also a throwback to the best of Metal Hurlant reminding one at once of books like Inkal. But this is something unique, like Richard’s Hip Flask, his anthropomorphic animal private eye, but somehow way odder than even those tales, some strange chimera made of Blade Runner and Pinocchio. It all takes place in the same world where the titular Elephantmen, corporate-created super soldiers grown from human-animal hybrids, find themselves just trying to mesh with a future society that eagerly awaits them dying off while feigning tolerance in the name of human rights. They seem to just want to fit in and live if that’s possible. Moritat’s art shows a mastery of the animal form and a use of proportion that emphasizes both the Elephantmen’s strengths and weaknesses. The other artists that have contributed to the series are all of course beyond competent but the characters really live under Moritat’s accomplished pencil!

The combination of fantastic art and a reliable, forward-moving story drive this comic at a great clip yet there is a certain drilling down in places as well, plumbing some of the most simple moments in life but projected out of context in this dangerous future. Early on a sequence has a little girl talking to one of these redeemed killing machines ending up at a bus stop and it seems so normal, so simple, so much a part of daily life that you can see it happening now as easily as in Richard’s nightmare tomorrow: The innocent questioning the nature of “the monster.”

That’s not to say there aren’t problems with the book. The diversion into a pirate fairy tale near the end of the volume felt almost like a filler story (while a perhaps unconscious nod to The Black Freighter as well!). Meanwhile the non-Moritat illustrated issues jarred this reader as I was screaming through the pages. The absence of back matter like sketches and such is a little disappointing as well because I’d like to know the full story as to who worked on which chapter and why. It lacks a credits road map considering the talent involved. I’d also like to know what sequence the original stories and issues came in, if there were for example short stories from other collections included as with later volumes. But overall the package is really strong and the whole of Elephantmen transcends these and any other minor flaws. This book is really worth checking out and that brings me back again at last to the biggest problem of this series…

Sure the comic is visible; you can see the ads all over the place online if you go to any comics site but this is more an indication of Richard’s marketing savvy than a wave of popularity from a growing readership. This series is visible but under-appreciated and not selling what it should be. Yet it’s worth the time and money to pursue. I think many comic readers just assume everyone else is buying it, but they shouldn’t assume anything, they should buy this comic. Every comic reader that appreciates mature science fiction should read this graphic novel. You will be hooked and that’s a good problem to have.

There’s a Starman…

Tuesday, August 18th, 2009

8/18/09 (LONDON) Joel Meadows

GRAPHIC NOVEL REVIEW

TITLE: Starman Omnibus Volume 1
Writer: James Robinson
Artists: Tony Harris & Wade Von Grawbadger
PUBLISHER: DC Comics

Starman Omnibus Volume 1

Starman started life as a spinoff out of one of DC’s sprawling crossovers, Zero Hour, back in 1994. Starman was one of the JSA’s founder members but DC hadn’t had much success trying to resurrect the name over the years: Jim Starlin turned Starman into an alien prince while the ’80s saw a straight superhero title, which ran for about four years before running out of steam. Robinson and Harris’s Starman was a little bit different: Jack Knight was the son of the original hero, Ted Knight, and he is thrust into the role when his brother is murdered.

This omnibus is part of DC’s attempt to put some of their more worthwhile back catalogue into durable hardcovers and with seventeen issues reprinted here, it’s a really nice idea. Starman does come from the revisionist hero concept that was so popular in the ’80s and ’90s but unlike many of its contemporaries, Robinson understands the legacy attached to the character and so, rather than discount Starman’s past, he incorporates it while adding his own spin to proceedings. Harris’ art starts off as rather primitive and a little bit ugly but he soon grows into the settings and makes Starman his own. The team also created a fantastic place, Opal City, which is a character in its own right with a mythology, leading players and a dark secret. But the creators also took what was a minor DC villain, The Shade, and turned him into one of the most likable and complex figures in modern mainstream comics. Recast as a gentleman villain and the soul of Opal City, The Shade is a fantastic foil for the activities of Jack Knight and we get to see a story from The Shade’s past, set in 1882, which reveals his interaction with real historical figures like Oscar Wilde.

Starman is not your typical superhero book and, in fact, there is an intelligence and an erudition here that no other modern superhero series has ever possessed. By the end of this first hardcover collection, the reader is fully invested in the main protagonists. Jack Knight is a flawed and contemporary hero who is easy to empathise with, having had the Starman role foist upon him. The ’90s were a pivotal period for comics and Starman was one of the market’s most important and groundbreaking series. It is admirable that the company is making the whole run available in the Omnibus format. If you’ve not read Starman before, then you have an enviable time ahead of you, because Robinson, Harris and the other artists who also contributed create an increasingly sophisticated graphic narrative that immerses the reader.

TRIPWIRE Discovers Rainbow Orchid

Monday, August 17th, 2009

8/15/09 (LONDON) Joel Meadows
Recently TRIPWIRE attended the Rainbow Orchid launch that took place at the world-famous Foyles Bookshop on Charing Cross Road in London.

Rainbow Orchid, created by Garen Ewing, started life as a small press, self-published comic / graphic novel and now years later, it is published by large mainstream illustrated book publisher Egmont, who also publish Tintin amongst many other titles. So to celebrate The Adventures of Julius Chancer: The Rainbow Orchid Volume 1, Egmont took the Gallery upstairs in Foyles and invited people in the comics and publishing field to commemorate its launch.

Among the attendees I saw downthetubes‘ John Freeman, Alex Fitch, from Resonance FM, children’s and comic artist Sarah McIntyre, Rainbow Orchid creator Garen Ewing and Paul Gravett writer about comics and curator of the established London event Comica.

It’s rare that a graphic novel makes the leap from independently published to being part of a mainstream publisher, so it’s very exciting news that Ewing’s title may at last get the sort of exposure it and his work has always deserved.

Photos from the event:

rainbow-orchid-pic4

The Rainbow Orchid launch at Foyles

Tim Jones from Egmont and Rainbow Orchid creator Garen Ewing

Tim Jones from Egmont and Rainbow Orchid creator Garen Ewing

Pencils and coloured page from Rainbow Orchid

Pencils and coloured page from Rainbow Orchid

Garen Ewing at the launch

Garen Ewing at the launch

Alex Fith chatting to artist Sarah McIntyre

Alex Fith chatting to artist Sarah McIntyre

TRIPWIRE Visits Carey and Perkins

Monday, August 10th, 2009

8/10/09 (LONDON) By Joel Meadows
Recently TRIPWIRE went to see Mike Carey and Mike Perkins signing at central London comic shop Orbital.

Mike Carey is doing fantastic work on Vertigo’s The Unwritten series and his Felix Castor series of novels is truly compelling. Meanwhile Mike Perkins did a sterling job as inker and occasional artist on Ed Brubaker’s Captain America run and has also done work on titles like Marvel’s Union Jack. Since Mike Perkins lives in the United States he doesn’t come over to the UK that often so this was a rare treat. The turnout was good and it was always pleasant to catch up with both Mikes.

Orbital has always been a supporter of Tripwire so it’s good to see that the shop is flourishing. Also, Orbital has opened up a place where British comics stalwart Mike Lake, formerly co-founder of Titan and Forbidden Planet, is selling film posters and comic-related stuff called Shaking Street Gallery, with his partner Simon Dwyer. They have some amazing posters and paraphernalia as part of it is Mike’s own collection.

Here are some photos from the event and of the Gallery…

Three Image Amigos Sign at Golden Apple

Thursday, August 6th, 2009

The Tyrese signing at Meltdown got all the press but Tripwire went to Golden Apple for a different Image signing (and not just because there was an Indian restaurant across the street!).

Three talented Image creators pooled their resources to sign books and entertain fans at their table, a post-San Diego glad-hand treat.

Andy Suriano, Glen Brunswick and Richard Starkings

From left to right they are:

Andy Suriano, cartoonist and illustrator of books such as the Joe Casey scribed Charlatan Ball.

Glen Brunswick author of Jersey Gods, a book that Wizard and others liked a lot. We’ll post a review soon.

Richard Starkings, owner of Comicraft, a man who needs little introduction if you read comics since most of those letters belong to him but whose series Elephantmen is pretty cool. Look for that review in coming days as well. The massive hardcover is quite a bit more than a convenient doorstop!

Andy Suriano, Glen Brunswick and Richard Starkings greet fans

Here they are signing their books and chatting (photo stolen shamelessly from Richard Starkings.)

(It also doesn’t hurt that Ryan (GA’s proprieter) bought ten copies. Buy it from them if not from us!)