I'm ready for summer to be over. Pity it's probably only going to get longer in each successive year. For today, there's one comic wrapping up (for now), and another almost to the end.
Jenny Zero #4, by Brockton McKinney (writer), Dave Dwonch (writer/letterer), Magenta King (artist), Dam (color artist) - Don't do it Jenny! He has the high ground!Jenny's doing pretty well against the rank and file. Helps when you're big enough you can toss a tank around like a Nerf football. So they send down the big mech on the cover, who proceeds to mess her face up until we find out the dog can also grow to kaiju-size and rips its arm off. Jenny finishes it by smashing the skull with its own metal fist. Which also kills the pilots, because she thought they'd be in the torso.
I feel like there's a joke there I'm not getting. Is it referring to a difference in where American and Japanese fiction depict as the traditional cockpit location in giant mechs? Or was Jenny just shitfaced? She did ask the dog for his opinion, which could be taken any number of ways.
Jenny still loses to the old "we have a alien smart gun pointed at your friend's head, surrender or else," ploy. So she works for the corrupt security agency after all. Which is headed by a woman who is part of a hive mind with the thing Jenny's father died trying to stop. Since the comic ends on that reveal, I guess the follow-up will have to come in another mini-series.
That's a little frustrating, but I guess it makes sense. It didn't seem likely winning one big fight was going to get these people off Jenny's back for good. And while she's learned about her ability and maybe how to really use it, there's still the matter of her actually using it. She really does not want to be like her father, but it doesn't appear she's going to get that choice. I don't love that aspect of it, that's she ultimately going to be forced to do the world defender thing. I imagine she'll ultimately embrace it, but it feels like putting the best spin on a bad situation.
But I'm criticizing stories that haven't been written yet. What a foolish endeavor, especially given my piss-poor track record predicting what's going to happen in stories.
King's scratchy, loose lines work really well for people getting beat up. It easily translates into someone looking ragged or battered, like they've been knocked off-model a bit. The characters can get hurt, even if it doesn't seem to slow them down much. "Mayo Boy" was moving around pretty good after Jenny flicked him over the horizon. Jenny shakes off getting her face punched in once she's got a minute, too. They both probably have advanced healing, though. On a coloring note, there's one page where Dam gets Jenny's uniform entirely the wrong color scheme. Only for that one page, though, which makes me wonder how nobody caught that before it was too late.
Van does talk her way out of trouble, by showing the clone had a transmitter they can use to access the Ward's island. So they do, and the Ward are long gone, leaving only an immense computer brain (with a smiley face) and some clones. Who kills a bunch of the people in the Bloom, meaning they were clones of people other than Van's son (based on something Van says about how it not being able to kill her means she's not a clone.)
The computer separates them and tries to bargain with Van for information on the giant alien thing she's been trying to resurrect. Van takes the opportunity to learn some things, though I'm not clear what good they do her. She continues to refuse to play ball. I feel like she keeps changing her mind about what her goal is, but the consistent theme is she doesn't want to let anyone else be the one who changes her mind. She works with the Bloom, but there's no real sense she cares about their goals, and if they interfere with hers, well too bad for the Bloom.
One person's way to save the world is another's way of burning it down. Or, it may not bring someone much consolation you're going to save humanity, if you get them killed in the process. It's kind of funny that Van is the sort of person who will do something that affects you without consulting with you first, on the grounds she's sure she knows better, while simultaneously being the type of person who would never tolerate someone else doing that to her. I feel like I just described Tony Stark.
There's a two-page bit where the computer shows the surviving member of the Bloom this idyllic landscape, which is then subsequently destroyed by Van, as a way to set the two of them against each other. I'm curious why that would work, when I don't think that lady has ever seen the world look like that. Hasn't it been a mostly frozen wasteland for most of her life? But it does also show her friends and allies being killed by Van's path of. . . whatever you'd like to call it. Vengeance doesn't seem quite right. That part is certainly accurate. Van leaves a real trail of bodies in her wake, and since I can't see her letting this thing about her son's DNA go, I suspect there'll be a few more in the final issue.
No comments:
Post a Comment