THE TOP 100 COMIC BOOK HEROES OF ALL TIME

Posted on December 5th, 2011 by ekko

IGN published a top 100 comic book heroes that made me crazy, both in its predictability (Hey! Superman and Bats are #s 1 and 2!), overinclusiveness (every single Robin except Damian Wayne (who is the most interesting one by far), as well as Superboy and Supergirl?  Really?) and its attempts to be esoteric without providing sufficient justification (Groo makes the list, but they don’t really say what makes him so essential; James Gordon makes the list, but Aunt May and Uncle Ben don’t–nor does Jarvis; and Nova makes the list, but nobody really gives a shit about Nova).  Maybe it was the list’s sketchy criteria for placement: “Picked by their cultural impact, character development, social relevance, general cool factor, and importance of storylines, these are the best of the best.

It made me so nuts, I made my own list.  Yes, there’s a lot of overlap.  But mine is better.  Because I said so.

Note: If you’re just looking for a list without supporting arguments, you can jump to the last page of this post.  But you can’t tell me I was wrong to put Thor at #33 unless you go and read why.  So, read every page and then tell me why I’m full of $#!+.

Enjoy!

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THE NEWS IN COMICDOM

Posted on July 4th, 2011 by ekko

I know I just did one, but with the release of new Justice League pictures, and information about the Batman reboot and upcoming sequels to GI Joe and R.E.D., I couldn’t wait for a regular bi-weekly update . . . Also, I want to say that the critics who said Transformers 3 was good and better than the first . . . Were wrong.

Hit the break.

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LOOK! IN THIS POST! IT’S COMIC BOOK NEWS!

Posted on June 25th, 2011 by ekko

This week is almost all about reboots and returns.  And before the break, I’m leading with this:

MORE DETAILS ABOUT DC’S NEW 52: PAGE LEAKED FROM UPCOMING GRANT MORRISON ACTION COMICS #1!!

Just kidding. But here’s some stuff we do know about the upcoming revamped DCU:

  • Action Comics and Justice League are set in the past, which means they are basically origin-story retcons.
  • Green Lantern, Batman and Legion of Super Heroes continue existing continuity, without a reboot, which of course means that those superheroes’ past stays the same.  Unclear what that means for Superman, whose past is intertwined with LSH, but it was pretty obvious to everyone that DC wouldn’t mess with Geoff Johns’ biggest selling DC books of the last five years (GL, Blackest Night, etc.) or with Grant Morrison.  If they screwed with Grant, I think Dan Didio would be hung in Times Square.  And he still may be, actually.
  • The Deadman tale in DC Presents, Green Arrow #1 and Hawkman #1 all start right after the end of Brightest Day.
  • Everything else gets a reboot, apparently.  Don’t know if that includes Swamp Thing—but if it does, then the current “Search for Swamp Thing” mini is completely irrelevant.

And if everything is rebooted, I asked myself while poking around Amazon this week for recent trades to buy, then why bother?  I did plunk down cash for the Batwoman: Elegy trade paperback because it is visually stunning, and I still bought Secret Six, ‘cause it’s so fantastically good, but other than that: I spent my money on an old Warren Ellis title I haven’t ever read, called Desolation Jones.

So, wake me up when September ends.  Until then, hit the break for some cool news of the week….

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ALL 52 OF DCU #1s!

Posted on June 14th, 2011 by ekko

(From the top 10 most stupid action figures ever.)

We (and everyone else) have been talking about it a lot, and now, at last, all 52 new #1 issues for the D.C. Comics reboot of its universe for 2011 (and probably about 7 years beyond) have been announced.  With some of them (like Green Arrow’s new series) being origin books but others relying on there having been backstory, it seems like there will be books that take place at various different times—not all of these #1s will be in continuity.

Here’s what you should (and shouldn’t) care about, after the break.

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COMICBOOKNEWSBLAST

Posted on June 12th, 2011 by ekko

Before I launch into the semi-regular comic book news items, I want to throw attention to Turbo Defiant Kimecan, an online graphic novel that’s been around since January 2010 and is poised to jump to print later this year.  But it’s not the print work that’s catching my attention, it’s how they handled the online publication.  The panels jump seamlessly, the art is beautifully reproduced…It’s actually fun to read it online, as each mouse click builds suspense.  This is the future of comics. Why they’re going to print, I don’t know.  Oh, wait.  Yes I do.  Because you can’t make money with online indie comic book.

This week: The new Daredevil! Joker versus Dick-Bat! More new DC books announced! The X-Men First Class sequel! And more! Hit the break!

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DC REBOOT: IN SUM AND SO FAR.

Posted on June 11th, 2011 by ekko

I know, I know, yet another article about the “new DCU”? But it’s clearly important nerdnews, and it will be for at least the next 10 years when DC reboots again.

Lots of folks are griping about how this makes the DCU untrustworthy: Why should we care about their “major events” if they’re just going to erase them all on a regular basis via a Crisis or a Flashpoint or what-have-you. I imagine that these are the same folks who didn’t like Spider-Man: Brand New Day for the same reason. But I submit that this isn’t really a bad thing.   The core information about the DC heroes will stay the same—the legends that we grew up with will essentially be updated or tweaked, leaving intact the Clark Kents and the Bruce Waynes, but reworking everything so that it is less ridiculous that Bruce Wayne has been fighting crime for over six decades but is still in his thirties.

What’s the alternative for a long-running publishing comic book company with beloved heroes?  Marvel chooses to ignore “real time” and instead keeps its characters at the same age in perpetuity, relatively, but puts them through “cycles” either in their own books (Cap gets shot, Bucky becomes Cap, now exit Bucky and reenter Steve, e.g.) or on a “universe” level (House of M, Dark Reign, etc.). That’s why Brand New Day was necessary: Peter Parker was getting too old and needed to revert, because age and personal developments narrow possibilities for a storyline that is in essence timeless.

So accept that this is just DC’s way of cycling back for the next generation of readers and, knowing that, let’s look at the whole thing on its merits.

Lots and lots of changes are being proposed—nearly the entire publishing line is changing. Here’s a cheat sheet to help you reconstruct your entire monthly pull list….After the break.

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MORE DC REBOOT NEWS…OF BATMEN AND GREEN MEN.

Posted on June 7th, 2011 by ekko

The post-Flashpoint announcements keep coming.  I’ll start with the least first.   After Flash saves everyone from evil Aquaman, we’ll see four GL books:

* Green Lantern by Geoff Johns and Doug Mahnke.
* Green Lantern Corps by Peter Tomasi and Fernando Pasarin.
* Green Lantern: The New Guardians by Tony Bedard and Tyler Kirkham.
* Red Lanterns by Peter Milligan and Ed Benes.
Not a lot of new stuff here, but we all hope that Red Lanterns don’t suck as
hard as Red Hulks.  But now the real news . . .

HOLY NEW BAT-TITLES, BATMAN!

The “new” (i.e., returning with a number 1 until they hit a milestone number when they will probably revert to the old numbering) Bat-titles are listed below, in the order of which you should give the least to most sh!t about them . . .

·         Batman and Robin by Peter Tomasi and Patrick Gleason.  No changes here, except that Dick isn’t Batman anymore; there will be only Bruce.  Damian Wayne is still Robin.  There is little doubt in my mind that this book will continue to suck wind.

·         Batwing by Judd Winick and Ben Oliver.  This will star Africa’s Batman—DC’s answer to Black Panther.  Winick’s certainly a good writer, but if nobody bought the groundbreaking Unknown Soldier book, why would someone buy this?  It promises to be completely irrelevant.

·         Nightwing by Kyle Higgins and Eddy Barrows.  Dick Grayson returns to the role.

·         Detective Comics by writer/artist Tony Daniel.  I didn’t buy Tony Daniel when did Batman.  Now they’re moving him to Detective, and putting the Detective team on Batman.  Just to f^C# with my pull list…

·         Birds of Prey by Duane Swierczynski and Jesus Saiz.  Batman’s answer to X-Force.  Can’t say I’m a big fan of Duane (he killed the Immortal Iron Fist comic, for one thing), but he did do well with Deadpool…

·         Red Hood & The Outlaws by Scott Lobdell and Kenneth Rocafort featuring Arsenal and Starfire.  And speaking of Deadpool, how much does this look like a DP book?

·         Catwoman by Judd Winick and Guillem March.  Now here’s the first new one I’m excited about.  A fantastic artist and writer team on what promises to be a dark, off-center superbook.

·         Batman: The Dark Knight by writer/artist David Finch (no changes here).

·         Batwoman by J.H. Williams III, Haden Blackman and Amy Reeder.  I’ll believe it (and buy it) when I see it, but if they ever actually get around to publishing it, it’ll be genius.

·         Batgirl by Gail Simone and Ardian Syaf/Vicente Cifuentes.  Gail Simone?  Hmmm.  This may end up on the pull list…Batgirl is Barbara Gordon again, with her legs working.

·         Batman by Scott Snyder and Greg Capullo.  Best bat-team working right now, in my opinion.

What all of this means for all the Incorporated dudes isn’t clear, but that title is off the roster.  It will complete its run after issue #10 (which Grant Morrison promises will be a game-changer), and then will disappear for a few months until 2012, when it will return as Batman: Leviathan–a 12-part “conclusion” to Morrison’s entire Batman run.  Presumably, that will be GM’s last work with the character (as he takes over Superman).  And I’m sure it will be phenomenal.

WHASSUP WITH THE COMICS AND MOVIES AND STUFF?

Posted on November 6th, 2010 by ekko

I know, I know, I have no original sources and just rehash the stories and rumors I find whilst surfing the series of tubes, but admit it—I perform a vital service . . . And you love it.

MOVIE NEWS!

GREEN LANTERN. I’ve learned that his costume is entirely CG. That’s a little odd. Also, they released a plot synopsis. The Green Lantern Corps will confront Parallax. Earth’s first ringbearer, Hal Jordan, will have to prove himself to the Corps (obviously, they have nothing but contempt for Earthlings—something that they have in common with . . . most other Earthlings). He’ll save Earth with the help of Carol Ferris (played by Blake Lively).

WOLVERINE IN X-MEN: FIRST CLASS! A taxi driver published on Facebook that he’d taken Hugh “Wolverine” Jackman from the airport toJekyll Island, where Bryan Singeris filming X-Men First Class. Singer denies that Woverine will make a cameo, but clearly this blew what was supposed to be a surprise. How stupid can the studio be to let Jackman cab it from a public airport—they can’t spring for a studio limo escort? Idiots.

PLANNING TO SEE IRON MAN 3? It will be out on May 3, 2013. Hmmm. My throat’s scratchy. Think I’ll be too sick to work that day . . .

BATMAN 3. Thankfully, they’ve backed off the plan for 3D, but it will be filmed in IMAX. Does that mean we have to wear special goggles and/or pay twice the ticket price? Will there be an alternate “regular” print as well? Enquiring minds want to know. Nolan has specifically said there will be no Riddler, which is fine with me (sorry Eminem), but there may be a Catwoman. Personally, I hope they go with The Mad Hatter and Tweedledum and Tweedledee. Kidding, of course.  But I would like to see me some Bane or Killer Croc—you know, a really powerful foe as opposed to another psychotic. They’ve already done two “Batman beats the crazy guy” movies—now it’s time for something bigger. Rumors also abound that Commissioner Gordon will get to bang Charlize Theron. Lucky guy. The movie will be called “The Dark Knight Rises.” Stupid title. I know Batman has no powers, but he’s at least more powerful than yeast.

THE GREEN HORNET SUCKFEST. The film’s release date has now been pushed back (a second resked) to January—when bad films are launched to die quietly. The preview looks godawful. But my 9-year-old thinks the idea of shooting a traffic light is pure brilliance.

T.V. NEWS!

THE WALKING DEAD. You all delivered for the new AMC show, with the highest ratings ever for a show on that network. Still no order for season two, but if next Sunday’s ratings are comparable, I’d say it’s pretty much a guarantee.

YOU BLEW IT UP! DAMN YOU! The bastards cancelled Caprica. I can’t blame them—it wasn’t doing very well—but I thought it was terrific. It didn’t catch on, perhaps because it was too intellectual (read: no real action sequences).  The last 5 eps will be burned off in 2011.

REST GETS A DEAL. NBC has signed a development deal with actor Milo Ventimiglia (Heroes) to develop the Top Cow comic “Rest” into a TV show. The book is about a guy addicted to a drug that makes it so he doesn’t have to sleep.

COMIC BOOK NEWS

ROB LIEFELD’S ZOMBIE JESUS. Rob “Deadpool” Liefeld’s next comic is ZOMBIE JESUS. But it’s actually a lot better than it sounds.

MARVEL POINT ONE. In February 2011, Marvel is starting up “Marvel: Point One,” designed to bring new readers into long-running books with self-contained stories that will jump new readers into major story arcs. I hope regular readers don’t also have to shell out for them.

MARVEL CINEMATIC UNIVERSE. Marvel also has announced another possible universe—not Ultimate, not What-If or alternate. This one will based on Marvel Studio’s movie universe. It will include direct adaptations, but will also tell “side-stories” of events mentioned in a film but not shown. I think I’ll be saving my money and voiding this one like the plague.

POST NYCC NEWS BOMB!

Posted on October 17th, 2010 by ekko

Tons of news this week following NYC Comicon, so let’s just do it all rapid fire style . . .

MOON KNIGHT NEWS

Perhaps the best news out of comicon was that Brian Michael Bendis and Alex Maleev will be re-teaming in 2011 on . . . A Moon Knight ongoing series! This is now officially my most eagerly anticipated series ever. Bendis and Maleev are brilliant together, most recently in the underrated Spider Woman miniseries that collapsed because Maleev couldn’t produce the art fast enough. Here’s hoping he can keep to a schedule for this one. Bendis also said he’s planning to relaunch Alias—one of the most criminally underrated Marvel books of the past 20 years.

PRICE WARS.

First D.C. blinked, announcing a full-dollar reduction of all ongoing titles from $3.99 to $2.99, then Marvel quickly followed suit (on its newly launched titles only).  Does this mean that ongoing print titles are on the way out, to be ultimately replaced by the digital medium?

RELEVANT ANNUALS?

Whoever heard of such a thing? Unlike the past, when you could rely on Annuals to introduce major characters (like Rogue, from Avengers Annual #10) or weddings (Spider-Man, the Inhumans, etc.), today’s annuals usually have little to do with anything and . . . Kinda suck. Marvel is looking
to change that in March 2011 by releasing a three-part story told in X-Men, Steve Rogers, and Namor Annuals. The characters will be stuck in the Negative Zone (not to be confused with D.C.’s Phantom Zone), and, one presumes, will be fighting dudes like Annhilius and Blastarr The Living Bomburst. Meh.

THE FLASH AND GREEN LANTERN 2.

D.C. advises that both films may be ready by X-Mas 2011. Rumors abound that Bradley Cooper will play the scarlet speedster.

SIN CITY 2.

Robert Rodriguez says he’s ready to make the film, but the script isn’t done. He’s looking to make it after he does Spy Kids 4. Guess that means Deadpool’s off his plate?

EXPANDING THE ULTIMATE LINE

I’m on record saying that Ultimates Volumes 1 and 2 were two of the best comics of the last decade, and Ultimate Spider-Man has generally been up there as well. As for the rest of the Ultimates line: The Loeb books were terrible and the Millar reboot has been okay but underwhelming.  I thought for sure it would all go away once Bendis and Millar got bored with it, but instead Marvel has been expanding the line. The last announcement was that Jason Aaron and Ron Garney will be doing an “Ultimate Captain America” miniseries that will take take place out of regular continuity and will be about
a different Captain America. I trust Aaron (and Garney), so this seems like an Ultimate book worth getting. To be fair, almost all the Ultimate books have been pretty good (except the Loeb ones)—they just haven’t been, well, “ultimate” for many years.

DOLLHOUSE, THE COMIC

I guess everything Joss does gets to live on in a series: Buffy, Firefly, Angel, and now Dollhouse—coming in 2011 from Dark Horse and written by Jed (not Joss) Whedon.

MARVEL ANIME!

We’re looking at four different series, at 16 episodes each, featuring “Iron Man,” “Wolverine,” “X-Men” and “Blade,” and the four series will have “universe bleed”—meaning that the characters could show up in each others’ series. Due in Summer 2011.

YOUR WEEKLY SUPERNERD NEWS!

Posted on June 7th, 2010 by ekko

1.  THE WALKING DEAD. I’m leading with this story because (a) I love zombies; (b) I love comics; and (c) I’m starting to love AMC’s original productions.  Oh, and (d) because “The Mist” is one of the best horror films of the past 10 years.  And this story combines all of this, and more!  AMC released still shots of what the zombies will look like in their Frank (Shawshank Redemption and The Mist) Darabont helmed adaptation of Robert Kirkman’s brilliant, ongoing epic, The Walking Dead.  The bad news: Season one will be just 6 eps.  No release date yet, either.  The picture, above, does a very nice job at mirroring Adlard’s brilliant art from the comic.  If they can do an equal job at paralleling Kirkman’s scripts, we’re in business!

Go here to see all the pictures.

2. GREEN LANTERN’S BIG AND SMALL, AND OTHER D.C. MOVING PICTURE NEWS. Here a Hal, there a Hal, everywhere a Hal Hal! Not only were plot points about the movie recently leaked to the internet, but Cartoon Network has announced a cartoon coming in 2012.  The leaked details weren’t huge (or unexpected), but they confirm that the film will feature the entire Green Lantern Corps, the threat will be Parallax, and characters will include Sinestro, Abin Sur, and Amanda Waller.  DC is also saying that their next live-action flick will be Batman in 2012, and then The Flash after that, but Wonder Woman and Aquaman are also in development.  Vincent Chase is up for the lead in the latter film.  Seriously, though, my question is, is Justice League dead in the water?  I wonder whether the abysmal failure that will be called “Jonah Hex” will have any effect?  And another thing: Why does it take so damn long to release all this stuff?  At least DC isn’t making the 1-a-year mistake Marvel keeps making: Both Batman and Superman will come out in 2012, with Bats getting Independence Day and Supes taking Christmas.  Still, it seems nobody has learned from Peter Jackson that it is easier and more economical to film three movies at once and then stagger the post-production and release dates.

3.  SPEAKING OF GREEN . . . I was a big advocate of the Rulk series when it started: Big, muscular McGuiness artwork and Jeph Loeb at his Bruckheimer best, but the series floundered under its own weight.  It started taking itself too seriously, created a whole conspiracy thing, and stretched out the central question: Who is Red Hulk?  Turns out, it is General Thunderbolt Ross.  Which we all pretty much knew anyway.  This series had a promising, fun start but ended up being some of the worst work these two extremely talented individuals ever put out.  Sad.

4.  X-MEN FIRST CLASS. And speaking of movies, the “X-Men: First Class” movie appears to have begun casting, so it may actually be a “go.”  James McAvoy has signed on to be the young(er) Professor X.  They’ve also got a director (Matthew Vaughn) and a release date of June 2011.

5.  TEEN TITANS . . . Hasn’t been good since Geoff Johns left it several years ago.  In fact, it’s been awful.  To try to save this once venerated franchise, D.C. is bringing in JT Krul.  Krul wrote the Blackest Night Titans spin-off, which wasn’t horrible but was pretty much dispensable.  He says he’s going to try to make the team stable and relevant again.  That would be nice.  During both the Marv Wolfman and Johns runs, it was one of my favorite reads.

6.  THE RETURN OF THE LIZARD. If you don’t know that Amazing Spider-Man has been revamping and reintroducing Spider-Man’s rogues gallery, one crook at a time, then you haven’t been reading this blog enough.  Spidey’s enemies are by far the most engaging group of baddies in comic history.  Yeah, Batman has a bunch of foes, but they’re not nearly as distinctive as the ones created by Stan Lee so many years ago, which included a zoo crew (Lizard, Vulture, Rhino, Scorpion); hunters, thieves and killers (Kraven, Chameleon, Shocker, Mysterio); mob leaders (Hammerhead, Kingpin, Silvermane); forces of nature (Molten Man, Electro, Sandman, Hydro Man); and of course the evil geniuses (Green Goblin, Tinkerer, Doc Ock).  The latest three-issue arc featured The Lizard, reimagined now as a Jeckyl/Hyde type who can control little lizards like Aquaman speaks to fish.  The plot itself was fairly simple, and not nearly as interesting as the Rhino and Sandman arcs, but it was well-written.  For example, the internal dialogue is on a par with Daniel Way’s work on Deadpool.  The star here, though, is artist Chris Bachalo.  Amazing work on a title that is surprisingly solid and consistent considering it publishes thrice monthly.

7.  THE RETURN OF BRUCE WAYNE. Between this title and Batman and Robin, I’m actually turning into something I never thought I’d be: A fan of Grant Morrison.  His narratives are still a little too random and insidery for me, a casual Batman reader, but they’ve gotten much better than they used to be.  And the stories are constantly intriguing.  I know where this miniseries has to end, but I have no idea how it is going to get there.

8.  THE DEATH OF DRACULA/X-MEN #1. By now most of you probably know that Victor (Deadpool: Merc With A Mouth) Gischler and Paco (Deadpool) Medina has written the next big X-Event, “Curse of the Mutants,” which is about mutants and vampires.  Basically, Lord Drac dies and the rest of the bloodsuckers scramble for a new leader.  Wow!  That sounds . . . Stupid.  No, not stupid: Blatant and pathetic.  We know all the teens are digging Twilight, and True Blood is the only popular show left on HBO, but come one.  The one-off Claremont did, years ago, where Storm hooked up with Dracula in the Uncanny X-Men title was good.  But no more ever needed to be said on the topic.  I’d say I’ll keep an open mind, but that would be a lie.  I won’t.  X-Men books have been too convoluted, intermingled, intermixed and complicated for decades now, and just starting at an issue #1 simply is too little, too late.  How did Claremont’s brilliant vision get so off track?

9.  AVENGERS MOVIE. Last but not least, one of my favorite new actors, Jeremy Renner, may play Hawkeye in The Avengers.  Combine that with Joss Whedon in line as director and you’ve got The Best Superhero Movie Ever Made.

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