Thursday, March 28, 2019

The Incredible Hulk: Future Imperfect

The Incredible Hulk: Future ImperfectThe Incredible Hulk: Future Imperfect by Peter David
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

In a future dystopia, The Maestro reigns supreme! The small resistance recruits the one foe capable of beating the Gamma-powered tyrant: himself! Can the Hulk defeat an older, more brutal version of himself?

The recent Immortal Hulk excepted, The Hulk has never been one of my favorite characters. Some of my earliest nightmares featured the Lou Ferrigno version. I've got maybe ten issues scattered among my thousands of comics. On the heels of reading Back Issue #111, specifically the interview with Peter David and George Perez, I had to read this.

The book stars in the Maestro's time. I don't know if events in the regular Hulk series led to this or I'm just supposed to connect the dots. Anyway, people use Doctor Doom's time platform to bring the Hulk to the future so he can fight himself. The best slugfest since Superman vs. Muhammad Ali eventually ensues.

The story is pretty good for the early '90s, a couple slugfests wrapped in a timey-wimey tale about the Hulk confronting what he could become. The art, however, is fantastic. The devil is in the details and George Perez invokes the horned one in every panel. Page after page is crammed with detail, from the two page crowd shot near the beginning, complete with hidden Waldo, to the Maestro's trophy room. I had way too much fun spotting the artifacts of dead heroes.

My edition contains a second story, The Last Titan. Peter David serves up a yarn of Bruce Banner wandering the earth a couple centuries in the future, the last human alive, a human haunted by The Hulk! Dale Keown served up on the art on that one, an introspective tale about the Hulk's last days. It was surprisingly good.

As far as products of 1990s go, The Incredible Hulk: Future Imperfect was pretty damn good time travel slugfest. 3.5 out of 5 stars.

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Wednesday, March 27, 2019

New Gods by Jack Kirby

New Gods by Jack KirbyNew Gods by Jack Kirby by Jack Kirby
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Orion of New Genesis battles the forces of Darkseid at every turn! But what is their connection? Can Orion stop Darkseid before he seizes the Anti-Life Equation?

I've been wanting to read this saga for decades. My first encounter with the New Gods was when Darkseid became a regular villain on The Superfriends. A little later, I picked up Who's Who in the DC Universe and became enthralled with the saga of the New Gods and Orion vs. Darkseid. Now, probably thirty years later, I've finally read it.

The New Gods is a sprawling epic, the comics of cosmic scope that Jack Kirby was known for. Orion goes to war to save his adopted home against the father that sent him there in the first place, a war that will take him from New Genesis to Earth to Apokalips.

Without giving away too many nuts and bolts, this is the Kirbiest of Kirby books, combining the things I love about Thor, the Silver Surfer, and the Fantastic Four into one epic adventure. Kirby was at his peak during New Gods 1-11 and he pulled out all the stops. There is one epic battle after another, cosmic vistas, creatures of all description, philosophy, cheesy silver age dialogue, the whole magilla.

The New Gods was a foundational work much like the Fantastic Four, laying the groundwork for stories that DC would do decades later, most without Jack Kirby. So many big ideas and interesting characters are thrown around, many of which an entire series could be built around.

My highlights would be Orion, Lightray, and Forager teaming up against Mantis and the Bugs and the Death Wish of Terrible Turpin, when an earth cop takes a Daredevil-level beating trying to arrest Kalibak. If a New Gods movie gets made, it should be a buddy movie featuring Orion and Lightray.

My major gribe is that Jack Kirby wasn't allowed to wrap things up before New Gods was cancelled. Even Gods Must Die and the Hunger Dogs were followups over a decade later but both the art and stores aren't up to snuff. Shit, Kirby was probably around 80 at the time so he can't really be faulted. Still, I have to dream about what might have been. Lastly, I found it interesting that the New Gods were referred to as Eternals or Celestials on several occasions since Kirby would create The Eternals with a lot of the same inspiration when he returned to Marvel not long after the New Gods wrapped.

The New Gods was the Kirbiest of Jack Kirby books. Four out of five stars.


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Sunday, March 24, 2019

Super Gorillas vs. The All-American Victory Legion

Super Gorillas vs the All-American Victory Legion #1Super Gorillas vs the All-American Victory Legion #1 by Alan Kupperberg
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Super Gorillas vs. The All-American Victory Legion collects two tales of the All-American Victory Legion by Alan Kupperberg.

Super Gorillas vs. The All-American Victory Legion was another impulse buy after seeing the Charlton Neo guys talking it up on Twitter. The All-American Victory Legion are public domain characters published by Centaur Comics in the 1940s and Alan Kupperberg did these stories on commission for a fan. Paul Kupperberg found them upon his brother's death and published them through Charlton Neo.

The first story, Monkey Trial, is by far the best. Mayor LaGuardia is kidnapped by a bunch of super-powered gorillas and it's up to the AAVL to save him. This story features a Nazi Green Gorilla, Hitler, and Chimp Pan-Genius, Primate Investigator. It's a fun slice of Silver-Age cheese as the AAVL splits up to combat the menace of the super gorillas.

The second story, Time Out of Mind, sees the AAVL living other identities in the Old West, courtesy of Amazing Man's arch-nemesis, The Great Question.

The art on these tales reminds me of Dick Dillin's monumental run on Justice League of America and the writing reminds me of early silver age DC comics. By today's standards it's extremely cheesy but it's still a lot of fun. 3 out of 5 stars.

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Charlton Arrow Volume 2 #1

Charlton Arrow #1 Volume 2Charlton Arrow #1 Volume 2 by Nicola Cuti
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Charlton Arrow Volume 2 #1 contains stories featuring E-Man, Mr. Mixit, Colonel Whiteshroud, Deathwatch, and Edison Corliss, done in the spirit of the Charlton Comics of the silver and bronze age of comics.

I bought this not long after it came out after seeing it hyped on twitter. It languished inside the end table next to the couch until I unearthed it earlier today.

Charlton Comics Group was the rogue comic book company of the '60s, '70s, and early '80s. Lots of creators got their starts there and other, more established creators honed their skills on titles like Captain Atom, Blue Beetle, and various other Charlton titles. Eventually, the company went tits up and DC acquired the assets around the time Crisis on Infinite Earths dropped.

Gone but not forgotten, Mort Todd and others have revived the Charlton name and got the Charlton Arrow going. This volume contains some standalone tales, as well as the beginnings of longer tales featuring E-Man and Mr. Mixit.

Joe Staton's art on E-Man makes me wish I would have been digging through back issue bins for E-Man years ago. While I knew him from a stint on Green Lantern, I really like Joe Staton's art in the E-Man installment, although it was mostly setup for a longer tale.

Mr. Mixit is why I originally picked up the book and, no surprise, wound up being my favorite feature. Barry Baxter gets super powers from a magical spinner rack of silver age comics. What's not to like? Mr. Mixit is a fusion of many Steve Ditko creations, namely Spider-Man, Blue Beetle, The Creeper, Captain Atom, Speedball, and probably others. A showdown is brewing with the Dream Weaver and now I definitely have to grab the next installments.

The stories featuring Colonel Whiteshroud, Deathwatch, and Edison Corliss all share the early Bronze Age feel of E-Man and Mr. Mixit. The writing and art of the various features feel like the best of the Bronze Age, from the horror of Deathwatch to the bombastic fun of Mr Mixit.

Charlton Arrow feels like a glimpse into the forgotten past. I'm on board for the duration. 4 out of 5 stars.

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Saturday, March 23, 2019

Usagi Yojimbo Saga: Legends

The Usagi Yojimbo Saga: LegendsThe Usagi Yojimbo Saga: Legends by Stan Sakai
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Usagi Yojimbo Saga: Legends contains Space Usagi, Senso, and Yokai.

To be honest, I've been avoiding reading this volume for a while. The stories aren't part of the main saga and it's the last volume in Usagi Yojimbo Saga. While being stricken by the worst case of allergies yet this year, I finally bore down and read it.

Space Usagi started the trade and it was by far my least favorite Usagi Yojimbo story yet. It isn't terrible but doesn't feel a whole lot like the rest of the saga. Stan Sakai's art is as good as ever, though, and he gets to draw a wide variety of creatures. The creatures remind me of all the insectile monsters in Nausicaa, making me wonder if Sakai is a Miyazaki van.

Senso, the second story in the collection, is H.G. Wells' War of the Worlds set in Usagi's feudal Japan and a possible ending to the Usagi Yojimbo saga. The art is great and a lot of serious shit happens. There's also a great fight involving a Martian Tripod and a secret I don't want to reveal. There were some tragic elements to this story. It fit into the Usagi Yojimbo canon a lot better than Space Usagi but I can see why it's not an official part of the Saga.

Yokai was my favorite story in the collection by a wide margin. Usagi and Sasuke fight a bunch of monsters in a tale done in water colors by maestro Sakai. It could easily have fit into one of the other books.

With Usagi Yojimbo Saga: Legends, I'm all caught up on Usagi until Usagi Yojimbo Saga book 8 comes out in May. Not bad for a bunch of odds and ends but not essential. 3 out of 5 stars.

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Sunday, March 17, 2019

Usagi Yojimbo Saga Book 7

Usagi Yojimbo Saga Volume 7Usagi Yojimbo Saga Volume 7 by Stan Sakai
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Usagi Yojimbo Book 7 collects Usagi Yojimbo #117-#138 plus "One Dark and Stormy Night" and "Cut the Plum."

In this volume, Stan Sakai sends Miyamoto Usagi on a collision course with bandits, zombies, monsters, and the usual fare. Old favorites like Kato, Sasuke, and Kitsune make appearances. There are big battles, encounters with monsters from Japanese folklore, and touching moments.

Honestly, I'm running out of ways to say this is the best comic around. Stan Sakai's minimalist yet still complex art is as masterful as ever. He's as adept with facial expressions as he is with battles and decapitations. The writing is as smooth as fine sake, expressing humor, disdain, happiness, and sadness with equal skill.

My favorite stories in the collection were "A Town Called Hell," Sakai's take on Red Harvest, and "The Death of Lord Hikiji," an Eisner Award-nominee. Honestly, they were all good, though. Anyone already reading Usagji Yojimbo knows what to expect.

While I already have Usagi Yojimbo Legends and I've pre-ordered Usagi Yojimbo Saga Volume 8, I dread the day when I have no Usagi Yojimbo comics left to read. Stan Sakai's Usagi Yojimbo Saga continues on it's meteoric course toward the comics hall of fame. 4 out of 5 katana.

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Saturday, March 16, 2019

Batman: Dark Victory

Batman: Dark VictoryBatman: Dark Victory by Jeph Loeb
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

A year after Holiday was brought to justice, a new killer haunts the nights of Gotham City. The Hangman is killing cops, cops that seem to be linked to Harvey Dent in some way. Is Harvey Dent The Hangman?

On the heels of Batman: The Long Halloween, I just had to read this. Fortunately, I snagged it on the same trade-in deal when I acquired The Long Halloween.

Dark Victory and The Long Halloween share a similar structure. The Hangman only strikes on holidays. Each issue is centered around a different murder. Batman and James Gordon race to catch the Hangman before their heads wind up in nooses. Meanwhile, on the periphery of the case, Holiday is out on bail and something is brewing in the Gotham Underworld.

To be honest, it felt like a retread of The Long Halloween for a while. Not bad but not really anything new. However, once the added wrinkle of some shady shit going down at the Haly Circus surfaced, I was all in.

I've had a lot of favorite comic characters in the past four decades but Robin was the first. While I normally don't like retellings of characters origins, I enjoyed Loeb and Sale's take on Robin's origin quite a bit and it fit seamlessly with the rest of the day. The conflicted relationship between Harvey Dent and his former friends drove the rest of the book very well.

I complain quite a bit about decompression in today's comics but it works great when Jeph Loeb and Tim Sale use it to tell a slow-burning mystery like The Long Halloween or Dark Victory. Just like the Long Halloween, the clues were in place but I missed them. Tim Sale's cartoony, moody art did a great job setting the tone, although I don't care for his Joker or Scarecrow. Loeb and Sale do a great Batman, too, complete with Kevin Conroy voice in my head.

As far as sequels go, Dark Victory did a great job following up The Long Halloween. Four out of five Batarangs.



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Sunday, March 10, 2019

Mister Miracle by Jack Kirby

Mister MiracleMister Miracle by Jack Kirby
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Mister Miracle by Jack Kirby collects issues 1-18 of Mister Miracle, written, drawn, and edited by the King himself.

On the heels of Tom King's Mister Miracle, I decided to go back to the Source. I knew the bare bones of Kirby's Fourth World from entries in Who's Who back in the day but this was my first foray into one of the King's last great works.

Mister Miracle is a gadget-driven hero, an escape artist. Consequently, most of the stories start with him escaping a trap of his own devising and feature deathtraps constructed by various villains. Over the course of the book, Mister Miracle and Big Barda go up against Virman Vundabar, Granny Goodness, Funky Flashman, Doctor Bedlam, and a lot of scrubs in one shot appearances. It only intersects with the greater Fourth World saga at the very end and barely scratches the surface of what I know of Fourth World lore.

In many ways, Mister Miracle feels like a silver age Marvel book, not surprising given how much of the foundation of the Marvel Universe was laid by Jack Kirby. Mister Miracle feels like Captain America minus the patriotism at times, a superb physical specimen that relies on strategy and gadgets to beat mightier foes.

Scott Free's relationship with Big Barda is one of my favorite parts of the book, a far more equal partnership than Reed Richards ever shared with Sue Storm. Later in the book, Shilo Norman joins the cast. Shilo, of course, would later adopt the Mister Miracle identity himself decades later. Oberon is a mother hen but still a fun part of the cast. The Female Furies are also an entertaining bunch. It's a shame Bernadeth, Stompa, Lashina, and Mad Harriet don't make all that many appearances once the series is over.

While the dialog is clunky in places, the art is vintage Kirby. The King was still at the top of his game, depicting earth scenes and cosmic vistas with equal skill. I kept imagining what might have been if Kirby had done The Fourth World with Marvel but I think he did pretty well for himself at DC. If nothing else, Mister Miracle has whetted my appetite for more Fourth World action.

Mister Miracle is a fun read and one of Jack Kirby's last great works. Four out of five stars.

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Saturday, March 9, 2019

Batman: The Long Halloween

Batman: The Long HalloweenBatman: The Long Halloween by Jeph Loeb
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Someone is killing off associates of Gotham City's crime lord, Carmine "The Roman" Falcone but only only holidays. Can Batman, Commissioner Gordon, and Gotham City District Attorney Harvey Dent stop Holiday before the entire Falcone crime family is dead?

I first read Batman: The Long Halloween in that mythic time before I felt compelled to write reviews for everything I read. I didn't care for it at the time but when a copy fell into my lap last week, I decided to give it another go.

Batman: The Long Halloween is a 13 issue murder mystery. Someone is knocking off criminals with a .22 pistol and Batman and the law are stumped. Who is Holiday, aka The Holiday Killer, and why is Catwoman nearby every time Batman tries to investigate The Roman? And what does Calendar Man have to do with it? And what's up Harvey Dent's ass? All of these questions and more are answered over the graphic novel's nearly 400 pages.

I don't normally go for retellings of stories I already know but The Long Halloween fleshed out a chapter in Batman's early days, Harvey Dent's transformation into Two-Face. While Tim Sale's artwork isn't my favorite, its cartoony, moody, dark feel perfectly suited the story. I've never been a huge fan of Jeph Loeb but he did a great job here. The mystery was great and even solveable if you were paying close attention. I wasn't and was surprised by the reveal, even though I read the Long Halloween before back before the world moved on.

The Christopher Nolan Batman movies borrow a lot from the Long Halloween. I once said Grant Morrison's Batman felt the most like movie Batman but I think I'm going to have to issue a retraction for that. The Batman in Long Halloween IS the Batman from the Christopher Nolan trilogy.

I will say that some of the story felt like filler. The bit with Poison Ivy was a little unnecessary and the whole Sofia Falcone Gigante thread could have been cut. It felt like the book was slightly stretched to fill thirteen issues instead of twelve. Those are pretty much my only gripes with it. Batman felt more like a detective in this and less an uber-prepared scientist super soldier, as it should be.

Batman: The Long Halloween is right up there with Batman: Year One in the upper echelon of Batman books. 4.5 out of 5 Batarangs.

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Thursday, March 7, 2019

Supergods

Supergods: What Masked Vigilantes, Miraculous Mutants, and a Sun God from Smallville Can Teach Us About Being HumanSupergods: What Masked Vigilantes, Miraculous Mutants, and a Sun God from Smallville Can Teach Us About Being Human by Grant Morrison
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Supergods: What Masked Vigilantes, Miraculous Mutants, and a Sun God from Smallville Can Teach Us About Being Human is part history of comics, part Grant Morrison's autobiography, and part Grant Morrison's opinions on popular comics.

I've had mixed reactions to Grant Morrison over the years. I loved All-Star Superman, 52, some of his Batman work, and Marvel Boy. His X-Men were good and I liked his run on Doom Patrol quite a bit, even though I didn't understand it, and I loathed Final Crisis. I think Morrison is a great idea man but works best when someone is reining him in. When this popped up on the cheap, I was cautiously interested.

First off, the subtitle is misleading. Maybe the first 40% of the book is actually "What Masked Vigilantes, Miraculous Mutants, and a Sun God from Smallville Can Teach Us About Being Human" and even that is debatable. It's mostly comics history with snide remarks from Grant Morrison.

The rest of the book is Grant Morrison's autobiography with plenty of potshots at Alan Moore, Watchmen, and pretty much every popular comic from 1984 on. I find it interesting that Morrison didn't insult anyone that could have an adverse effect on his career, only Alan Moore and a bunch of dead guys.

There's lot of talk about Morrison's life of drugs and jet-setting when Arkham Asylum took off and lots of twaddle about putting himself in the 2-D world of comics. I remember reading years ago that Morrison was writing a book about his experiences while writing The Invisibles. I'm guessing a lot of that material found its way into Supergods.

Just to make it clear, I'm not shitting all over this book. There were interesting bits of information to be had but there were a lot fewer in the second half, when it became a meeting of the Grant Morrison fan club. Also, I'm really curious about what he's doing on Green Lantern so I guess the joke is on me at the end.

Morrison covers the big crossover events in the home stretch and then it's on to recommended reading, which curiously includes Watchmen. He hypes Astro City so he scored some extra points there.

At the end of the book, I'm still conflicted about Grant Morrison. He's part interesting figure, part full of his own bullshit. If you're already a member of the cult of Morrison, you'll probably enjoy this. If you already suspect Morrison isn't the messiah of modern comics, this will add more fuel to that fire. 3 out of 5 stars.

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Sunday, March 3, 2019

Batman: The Dark Knight Returns

Batman: The Dark Knight ReturnsBatman: The Dark Knight Returns by Frank Miller
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Ten years after the last appearance of Batman, Gotham is overrun by crime.
Ten years after the last appearance of Batman, Commissioner James Gordon is retiring.
Ten years after the last appearance of Batman, the world is on the brink of nuclear war.
Ten years after the last appearance of Batman, Bruce Wayne has had enough!
Ten years after the last appearance of Batman, The Dark Knight Returns!

The first time I read The Dark Knight Returns, I was an impressionable lad of twenty. Now, two decades later, I've revisited it.

The Dark Knight Returns is still a powerful book. Bruce Wayne crawls out of a bottle, shaves off his mustache, and puts on the cowl to fight crime once again, heading toward inevitable showdowns with Joker and Superman once he restores order to the streets of Gotham.

The art shows the evolution of Frank Miller's style from his Daredevil days, bridging the gap between that style and the style he'd be known for on Sin City years later. The writing is why the book was influential at the time, though, and is still influential decades later. This is the birth of the chronically pissed off, over-planning Batman of today. It also paved the way for Batman: Year One, the Tim Burton Batman movie, and even Batman Beyond to some degree. Broken down Batman in this volume isn't that far removed from broken down Batman in Batman Beyond.

I'm a sucker for tales of the aging hero trying to fix things while he still can and that's pretty much what this story is. However, this book has not aged nearly as well as Watchmen or even Miller's own Batman: Year One. It screams 1980s on almost every page. I also forgot how damn wordy it is.

For good or for bad, Batman: The Dark Knight Returns is an influential Batman book and an important piece of Batman lore. However, I don't think it holds up nearly as well as Batman: Year One or Batman: The Killing Joke. 3.75 out of 5 stars.

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Mister Miracle

Mister MiracleMister Miracle by Tom King
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Scott Free is found bleeding out on the bathroom floor by his wife, Big Barda, in an apparent suicide attempt. It seems there are things that even Mister Miracle, the world's greatest escape artist, can't escape...

On the heels of his run on The Vision, Tom King's Mister Miracle was a no-brainer for me. Since my previous Mister Miracle experience was the Fourth World entries in Who's Who, a handful of issues of Super Powers, and the Giffen era of Justice League International, I was going in fairly cold.

You can't escape yourself seems to be the message of the book. Tom King and Mitch Gerads take a deep dive into the lives of Mister Miracle and his wife, Big Barda, and the eternal conflict between New Genesis and Apokalips.

This could have easily been a 1990s Vertigo book. Scott and Barda discuss remodeling their LA condo while engaging in a bloody war against Darkseid's forces. And the veggie trays. So many veggie trays.

It's not hard to picture Scott as a Christ-like figure at times, especially with the full beard. Highfather and Darkseid exchanged sons to end the war between their worlds. Orion was raised on New Genesis in a loving environment and Scott went to the living hell of Apokalips. To my knowledge, this is the first time the impact of this on Scott's psyche was referenced.

Scott and Barda naming their son Jacob, a reference to Jack Kirby, was heartwarming to me. Scott and Barda's daily life was by far my favorite part of the book. When Scott was faced with the choice of making the same sacrifice Highfather did, the book took an interesting turn.

A lot of the book is left open to interpretation. Did Mister Miracle survive his suicide attempt? Which version, if any, of the DC continuity does this story happen in, if it happened at all? If nothing else, this book his sparked a desire in me to read more Tom King and more of Jack Kirby's Fourth World stuff.

Mister Miracle shows that any character can be a headliner if given the right creative team. Mister Miracle is. 4.5 out of 5 stars.

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Batman by Neal Adams Book Two

Batman by Neal Adams Book TwoBatman by Neal Adams Book Two by Neal Adams
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Batman by Neal Adams Book Two contains stories from Batman 219, The Brave and the Bold 86 and 94 and Detective Comics 395, 397, 400, 402, 404, 407, 408, and 410.

Neal Adams is often credited with revitalizing Batman and changing comics forever with his illustration-based style. This volume is a prime example.

In Batman by Neal Adams Book Two, the Caped Crusader goes up against Man-Bat, Dr. Tzin-Tzin, and the League of Assassins, as well as more mundane menaces. He teams with Deadman and enters the House of Mystery, encounters ghosts and immortal lovers. None of the stories are anything spectacular apart from Neal Adams' art, although it's interesting to see Batman as the Dark Knight Detective rather than the guy who plans for every contingency. As a whole, the stories are more mature than the ones in Batman By Neal Adams Book One, although it's still amusing to see Neal Adams' realistic looking Batman engaged in occasional Silver Age silliness.

Neal Adams' art is as fresh as ever. It has a timeless quality, like it was in a comic published yesterday instead of being fifty years old. Dick Giordano's inks on most of the tales only serve to drive home that point. Adams and Giordano's Batman spends a lot of his time in moody, shadowy places. His Man-Bat is also great, a grotesque but still sympathetic figure. It's sad that Man-Bat has pretty much faded into obscurity these days since his tales in this collection were easily my favorites.

Neal Adams' reputation as a pioneer and innovator in comics is well-justified. While his Batman isn't quite my favorite, it's easily in the top three. Four out of five stars.



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Saturday, March 2, 2019

The Immortal Hulk: The Green Door

Immortal Hulk, Vol. 2: The Green DoorImmortal Hulk, Vol. 2: The Green Door by Al Ewing
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

The Immortal Hulk: The Green Door collected Immortal Hulk 6-10.

Immortal Hulk: The Green Door picks up where the last volume left off. Bruce Banner is on the run, just like the good old days, both from his enemies and from the evil that lurks within, The Immortal Hulk! In this volume, old jade jaws goes up against Gamma Flight, the Avengers, and a beefed up Absorbing Man. That undersells it, though.

The Immortal Hulk is more of a horror comic than it is a super hero comic. What's more horrifying than a pissed off monster that could rip your head off without the slightest strain? Al Ewing's Hulk is like a pit bull that's broken free of its chains after a lifetime of having some asshole beat the shit out it.

The gore level is high and there is some grotesque imagery I don't want to spoil for anyone. The only way I would enjoy the Immortal Hulk more is if Bernie Wrightson was doing the art. It's that damn good. The ending has me wanting the third volume right now!

I don't know why no one has attempted doing The Hulk as a straight up horror comic but The Immortal Hulk really works for me. 4.5 out of 5 stars.

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