Batman Beyond #1, by Dan Jurgens (writer), Bernard Chang
(artist), Marcelo Maiolo (colors), Dave Sharpe (letters) – On the left side of
the cover, who is the guy below Batsy’s fist? With the spit curl? I’m not up on
my “DC Apocalyptic Future” characters.
Something I didn’t realize going into this, it’s following
up on stuff from Future’s End. It’s Tim Drake in the suit, not Terry
McGinnis, and Brother Eye is still a big problem. I wish they’d let Brother Eye
drop for awhile.
Drake’s in the Terry’s time, more or less, trying to
be Batman. We learn that Gotham has some sort of program that shield it from
Brother Eye, so it’s still a relatively OK place to live, by Gotham standards.
The rest of the world is presumed to be an apocalyptic hellhole, and Tim goes
out to see, only to be attacked by a Superman who’s been turned into one of
Eye’s dupes. He fends off the less-than-Superman, but shorts out the suit,
leaving his as just Tim. Then he finds some sort of camp where people are being
herded in, including Barbara Gordon and Terry’s old friend, Max.
The book isn’t, based on the first issue, quite what I
was hoping for. It might turn out to be, but not as this point. I could have
done without any connection to Future’s End, and with no Brother Eye, at least
not the current version. Kind of sick of that guy. I don’t have a feel for this
Tim Drake, either. A lot older, I guess he’d been jaded and given up until
recently. Curious if Jurgens will play up the man out of time aspect. Tim mentioned
he promised Terry he’d stop Brother Eye, and he feels like he failed, so maybe
he’s going to be fixated on that, taking foolish risks.
Bernard Chang’s work is solid, his Batman has an angularity
that reminds me of the cartoon, which is never a bad thing. He – or Marcelo
Maiolo –does this one thing where, in certain panels, the background vanishes,
replaced with a solid color. Something very bright, orange or red. Any figures
are uncolored, white, but outlined in red. Except for Tim, when he’s in the suit,
and he becomes solid black. They use it three times during the opening scuffle
with the Jokerz, then a couple more times after that. Once when Tim talks to
Nora and Matt, the other when Techno-Superman first attacks him. It’s a real
attention-getter, but I’m not sure what it signifies, other than Tim being
exposed to something new. He learned about the Jokerz, about the Veil program,
about New York being annihilated, Superman being an enemy, and Nora told him
he’s their only hope (something Tim isn’t comfortable with). Be curious to see
if the art team keeps that up in subsequent issues.
All-Star Section Eight #1, by Garth Ennis (writer), John McCrea
(artist), John Kalisz (colorist), Pat Brosseau (letterer) – I can only assume
Six-Pack thinks he’s having a team up with Comet, the Super-Horse. At least,
that’s what I hope he thinks is happening.
DC has come calling, and in truest tradition of serialized
fiction, the hero’s happy ending must be undone so he can resume publication.
So it is that Sixpack, having become a renowned art critic after saving the
earth from other-dimensional horrors, accidentally drinks a rye and coke, and
reverts back to his alcoholic alter ego, convinced he must put his team back
together to save the world from some huge threat (or something to that effect, the whole art critic thing may have been a hallucination). Except the whole team died
against the aforementioned other-worldly horrors. After dismissing every other
hero that came out of Bloodlines (the same event that gave us Tommy Monaghan,
and as a result, Six-Pack), he manages to pull together some other schlubs, plus
Baytor. Which gives him seven guys, and look there’s Batman. But he’s too busy
arguing with a cop over a parking ticket he got while he was trying to hit up
an ATM. I get what he’s saying about those fees for using a different bank’s
machine, though. Whatever is threatening the world is clearly already affecting
Batman, because he keeps looking like he’s being drawn in other styles, like Neal Adams or Kelley Jones. Gasp, what can it mean? Then Batman drives off, pissed about the
ticket, and with no time for Six-Pack.
Not quite what I was expecting, which is both good and bad.
I was worried this would be one of Ennis’ more ugly, mean-spirited jaunts into
the cape comic stuff, but it doesn’t seem like it. It also doesn’t appear he’s
going to be sweating too much on this one, if the “You people” joke is
any indication. So OK, this probably won’t be a classic like Hitman, or his
Punisher run. Assuming we actually get to see Section Eight try to do something
in subsequent issues, it should still be funny, at least (simply making a new
Dogwelder, seemingly just like the old one, but African-American, was a cute
joke, if also a little depressing). That would be just fine. I’m actually
really excited to see Baytor fight crime, given he’s the lord of criminal
insanity, that should be an impressive disaster.
2 comments:
Section Eight is rude, crude, and idiotic... and frankly I loved it.
I'm hoping it picks up speed in the second issue. Get his new team involved, now that he has one, see what happens there.
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