Category: Comics

  • Whither Vertigo?

    Over at The Engine, there’s an interesting discussion about Vertigo’s success in the monthly market. Or the lack thereof – as the original article points out, most Vertigo books sell pretty crap on a monthly basis.

    It would be easy to consider the books commercial failures, but, as the conventional wisdom goes, the monthly is only part of Vertigo’s financial crutch: It’s sales of the collected editions that will make or break a series. So how important is the monthly product?

    Fairly important, though obviously not crucially so. Brian Wood points out the benefits of having your product and your name out in the market every month. There’s also the steady, regular income, even if it’s not a lot.

    I wonder if there aren’t multiple categories, though. For a book like DMZ, whose creators aren’t brand names in the market, the monthly is probably more important. Few people will spend $10-15 for a tpb of a new series by creators they may not be familiar with. The monthly allows the creative team to establish themselves and gradually build an audience.

    On the other hand, one wonders if there aren’t different standards for longer-running books with more established creative teams. DMZ is outselling 100 Bullets in the monthly format, but the latter is an established hit in TPB format. Is it a given that readers of a Vertigo monthly will eventually migrate to TPBs? That’s been my own experience: I started reading both Lucifer and Y – The Last Man monthly, but eventually switched over to the collected editions. I’ve only ever read Losers and 100 Bullets in TPB format, the latter only after the series had already been around for a couple years. This is one of the benefits of a strong TPB format: On some books, at least, Vertigo can take a long-term view.

    It’s somewhat puzzling that Crossing Midnight, the new series by Lucifer creator Mike Carey, debut quite low: The first issue sold only (approximately) 12,756 copies, less than the 14th issue of DMZ. Lucifer never sold gangbusters on a monthly rate, but one suspects the series must have sold well in trade format to allow it to reach its 75-issue conclusion. Is Crossing Midnight just not a good seller, or is it a given that Carey has a following who will buy the collected edition?

    None of the Vertigo books sell terribly well in the direct market — a “hit” like Y clocks in at #87 with just over 25,000 copies sold — but is there a threshold for monthly sales? Testament has slipped under 9,000 copies per issue, but doesn’t appear to be slowing: With well-known author Douglas Rushkoff and a fair bit of mainstream acclaim, the book must be doing good business in TPB format. It even seems to be a hit, though the monthly numbers certainly don’t support that.

    So I wonder what the formula is: Is there a floor for the monthly issues at all? Or is the continuation of a book 90% dependent on healthy trade sales? And if the latter is true, do certain books even need a monthly product?

  • Saying Goodbye: Lucifer – Evensong

    For a long time, Lucifer has been one of my favourite comics. I picked up the first couple issues, thought they were so-so, and didn’t continue; a few years later, I proved myself a whore for marketing by picking up #25, which featured Death on the cover. I was hooked then, even though I didn’t fully understand what was going on – it was enough to be aware that something big and impressive was happening, and that I wanted in. After a couple years, I stopped reading the monthly in favour of the trade paperback format. Even though it meant only one or two fixes per year, the epic-scale story worked much better that way, though there were still occasional instances of “wait… who is that? Oh, right, they last appeared 20 issues ago.”

    After 75 issues, the story of the fallen angel and those whose lives have entwined with his came to an end last year, and the final collection was released last week. Evensong is largely an epilogue to the climactic events of Morningstar, a fine farewell to a book that brings back most of the characters and creators that made it such an enjoyable read.

    Fireside Tales is a sweet story about storytelling, a self-contained piece about a human boy entering a centaur storytelling contest. While it took me nearly half an issue to place the name “Thole”, it’s still a fun story, the sort of one-off Mike Carey does so well; while Lucifer has been one big epic, it’s also been full of short, little stories. Smax artist Xander Cannon brings his light touch to three stories about awkward truths and little white lies that wouldn’t have felt out of place in Sandman.

    Carey gets about the business of resolutions with the two-part Evensong: Lucifer says his goodbyes and settles some unfinished business before departing the universe. A visit to the realm of the Japanese goddess Izanami goes much more smoothly than his previous visit to the House of Windowless Rooms, in which he ended up slaughtering most of Izanami’s family. The high points of the story, though, are his farewells: First to Elaine Belloc, who is still figuring out her new place in the cosmos, and finally to Mazikeen, his servant, soldier, and lover. The latter scene is one of the highlights of the book, as the lord finally takes his leave of his faithful servant. It’s obvious that Mazikeen can’t get the happy ending she desires, so their parting is not entirely a pleasant one.

    While Lucifer has been a compelling and dynamic character, he’s seldom been a particularly sympathetic one. Most of the series has been about the title character using and manipulating whoever he needs to in order to further his own plans. He’s not without compassion, but it’s always tempered with cold intellect and self-serving motivations. The ultimate story of rebelling against his pre-ordained place in the cosmos is a strong one, but not exactly an emotional piece. As such, much of the emotion of the series has come from the supporting cast: Mazikeen, Elaine, and Jill Presto in particular. It’s only in Lucifer’s final scene with Mazikeen that Carey brings the book back to a human level – such as it is in a scene between a demon and an angel – and as always, he does it well.

    Before saying his final farewells, Carey takes another brief detour, this one with some more familiar faces: The Gaudium Option sees Elaine dispatching fallen Cherub Gaudium, along with his equally fallen sister Spera, to clear out an odd dimension full of forgotten gods and monsters. It’s a fitting farewell to the great comic relief of the series; Gaudium and Spera seldom failed to provide a few laugh-out-loud moments, yet never came off as Disney-style wacky sidekicks. They must deal with shrimp gods and Zoroastrian demon pits in their own barely-competent manner.

    Perhaps more enjoyable than the story itself is the appropriate return of Dean Ormston, a frequent fill-in artist before leaving the series for a full-time gig on a book that was soon cancelled. His dark, Mignola-esque pencils provided the perfect mood to some dark stories, many of the single-issue stories that made the series so great. He’s particularly suited to the morbid and bizarre adventures of the fallen cherubs, so it’s particularly nice to see him return for one last hurrah on the series. Carey mentions in his afterword that he’ll never write another Lucifer story, but I’m holding out hope he’ll one day return for a Gaudium & Spera miniseries, ideally to be drawn by Ormston.

    The book’s emotional core is tied up in Eve, in which Elaine gathers much of the supporting cast – Mazikeen, Jill, Spera, Mona, and Rachel Begai – for a girls’ night out. There are some happy endings, as well as some inevitable acceptances: Most touching is Elaine visiting her mother one final time, and the overall theme of goodbyes carries the issue nicely. There’s also surprisingly little bloodshed, given the tangled past of Elaine’s friends. There’s comedy – Mona complains that hedgehogs are taking advantage of her, and Spera manages to be blunt and fashionable – as well as a touching finale to the last of Elaine’s humanity. It’s a nice resolution to the human side of the book, without which it might not have been such essential reading.

    It’s also worth noting for Ryan Kelly’s return as the series inker, after a few issues away (during which he was covered for by Aaron Alexovich, who added a darker, heavier touch to Peter Gross’ elegant and simple pencils). Kelly, who’s been busy illustrating Brian Wood’s excellent Local, seems to be adding more of a distinctive, personal touch now – there are some strong similarities to his pencilled work.

    Finally – more or less – Carey leaves us with All We Need of Hell, perhaps the strongest, most in-depth portrait of the title character in the series. Lucifer’s thoughts and motivations were often kept close to his chest, and he was usually about planning. But now, when everything is at an end, there’s time for reflection: The past, as well as the present, courtesy of an unexpected conversation in the middle of nowhere. While Eve was the emotional finale to the series, this is clearly the thematic one, going so far as to revisit Lucifer’s “first” appearance back in Season of Mists. It’s about rebellion, and free will, how the extent of both are limited, even if you’re practically – or literally – God. “You cannot be your own maker,” is probably the truth of the series. Despite its lofty themes and epic scope, Lucifer has always been about something familiar to us all: Making your own place in the universe and escaping others’ expectations of you.

    And that’s all there is. Except, of course, for the somewhat odd inclusion of Nirvana, an one-shot that came out several years ago but wasn’t collected until now. It’s a fine story with gorgeous painted art by Jon J. Muth, but it really doesn’t fit here, either chronologically or thematically. It was originally published in 2002, so there were multiple opportunities to insert it in a collection; even the penultimate volume would have been better than this, even if it would have made for a shorter finale. All We Need of Hell has such finality – complete with a farewell & dedication page from Carey and Gross – that it feels wrong to turn the page and see another story. There is symbolism, I suppose – Muth illustrated one of the final issues of Sandman – but this just feels like bad planning.

    Lucifer must have been an intimidating gig: Take an epic literary character
    and a supporting character in one of the most acclaimed comics of all time, and make him your own. To his credit, Mike Carey is probably the only writer I know who can write Neil Gaiman’s characters without seeming like a bad Gaiman impersonator. Lucifer found its voice early on, thanks to Carey’s epic vision and strong characters, as well as Peter Gross’ restrained yet magical art, Dean Ormston’s dark contributions, and Christopher Moeller’s gorgeous covers. It’s probably been my favourite book of the past several years, and it’s certainly sad to see it go. But it bows out having done what it set out to do, a testament to vision and dedication on the parts of both creators and publisher.

    Saying goodbye is always tough, but this is really more of a “see you later” – those Lucifer volumes will have a place on my bookshelf for a long time.

  • The Best Single Issues of 2006

    I’m doing more and more reading in collected and OGN format these days, but some books just demand to be read the very day they come out in the single-issue format. Here are the top five from 2006:

    Blue Beetle #7, by John Rogers and Cully Hamner. Yes, I’m as shocked as anyone that I not only tolerated, but really enjoyed a book that had “Infinite Crisis” printed on the cover. It could have been the end of Blue Beetle for me – the book had been suffering from some sluggish pacing and unfortunate fill-in art. But John Rogers’ first solo writing effort on the book turned me around completely: This may flash back to Beetle’s role in DC’s mega crossover, but it makes it all so much fun: This is a book about a kid with an alien suit of armour who’s recruited by Batman to go up to a space station and fight a bunch of killer robots. It’s got action, it’s got Batman and Green Arrow being funny, and it’s a nice piece of character work to boot. If this story had come a few issues earlier, the book’s sales might not be in such a bad place right now.

    Nextwave #10, by Warren Ellis and Stuart Immonen. Nextwave has been a fun ride, with every issue better than the last. Honestly, I could have picked two or three different issues. This one stands out, though, because Stuart Immonen demonstrates that he’s not just very good – he’s totally awesome. After a vicious assault by Forbush Man (yes, Warren Ellis trotted out the star of Marvel’s old parody book as a major villain), the members of their team re-live alternate versions of their lives, and Immonen turns in note-perfect impersonations of other artists for each story: Monica’s other life as Captain Marvel is in the style of Paul Pope, Machine Man is as envisioned by Daniel Clowes, The Captain appears in John Paul Leon’s Earth X, and Elsa Bloodstone stars in a Mike Mignola monster mash. It’s the perfect display of clever insanity that makes Nextwave so great, and shows off that Immonen is even better than everyone thought he was.

    All-Star Superman #5, by Grant Morrison and Frank Quitely. Another book that’s very good on a bad month, and simply divine on a good one, and this issue may be the best. It’s all about Lex Luthor, as Clark Kent travels to death row for an interview with the criminal genius. Luthor expounds his many views for the mild-mannered Kent, and naturally all of them go back to Superman, who doesn’t even appear in this issue. Instead, poor Clark has to repeatedly, and accidentally, save Luthor’s life from electrocution and a Parasite-induced prison riot. It’s a great issue that helps to humanize the still-villainous Luthor and show off some beautifully subtle art by Frank Quitely, who has to draw all sorts of action and adventure without really showing any of it. Also, it has a baboon in a Superman costume and Lex Luthor drawing on a sinister eyebrow. It may not always have Superman in it, but this is still the best Superman book anyone’s seen for many years.

    Seven Soldiers #1, by Grant Morrison and J.H. Williams III. And here we have the long-delayed conclusion to Morrison’s epic, the only comics crossover that anyone needs to read. I could be negative and point out that this issue is only partly successful in capping off the 30-part story, that Morrison tries to do too much in too little space, and that it makes Mr. Miracle seem even more flawed, and it would all be true. But even so, this book is one of the most ambitious and accomplished failures you’re likely to read. The obvious and easiest selling point is the brilliant work of J.H. Williams. Like Immonen on Nextwave – but even better – he effortlessly assumes the styles of the artists on each of the Seven Soldiers minis, as well as a great Jack Kirby riff and some gorgeous styles of his own. Williams is one of the very best artists the industry has seen in some time, and this book shows off why. And while Morrison doesn’t quite cap things off perfectly, he comes so close; after a year of reading Seven Soldiers, I was wondering how on Earth he’d tie it all together in one, single issue; that he came anywhere near doing it is impressive as hell. Even if it feels rushed and overly compressed, it’s still a great story with action, epic scope, treachery, redemption, and heroic sacrifices.

    Local #3, by Brian Wood and Ryan Kelly. Legendary indie band Theories and Defences returns home to Richmond to disband after a successful career, and Wood actually tells four separate stories: Frontman Frank does an interview, bassist Bridget tries to reconnect with an old love, drummer Kevin tries to make some extra cash, and guitarist Ross plays a solo show at a small club. It’s a perfect slice-of-life story, the sort Adrian Tomine does so well in Optic Nerve, about the end of one life and the beginning of another. Like much of Local, it’s about changing your life and taking responsibility for yourself, and as Wood usually shows us, some people are better at it than others. It’s a very simple story that packs a lot into one single issue; in a few short pages for each band member, Wood and Kelly tell us all we need to know about them and where they are in their lives.

  • Free Comics!

    No, settle down. I’m not giving you anything.

    However, the lineup for Free Comic Book Day 2007 was announced this week, and there are some pretty nifty books that you can get totally for free! The big publishers seem to be putting out a bunch of generic stuff, but as usual, it’s the smaller offerings that are the most interesting:

    • The Unseen Peanuts – Fantagraphics. A collection of over 100 old strips that have never been reprinted. That’s a pretty awesome offering, and it’s gonna make me want to pick up the gorgeous collections.
    • The Train was Bang on Time – :01 Second. A preview of Eddie Campbell’s new graphic novel. (and I still haven’t even bought his last one!)
    • Comics Festival – the book of the 2007 Toronto Comic Arts Festival. Probably the book to get your hands on: Stories by Bryan O’Malley, Hope Larson, Darwyn Cooke, and others. The 2005 edition was awesome, and I expect nothing less from this one.
    • Whiteout #1 – Oni Press. Kind of an odd reprint choice – is there a movie in development? – but a book I’ve always meant to read. A murder-mystery in Antarctica, by the writer of Queen & Country? I’m in. (Still, I wonder if Oni might have been better off with Local or something more recent; last year they had an all-new Scott Pilgrim story, which was pretty awesome)
    • Owly & Korgi – Top Shelf. Owly is the cutest thing ever. You may scoff and say you’re not interested in the adventures of a friendly owl and his woodland friends, but this book will turn you around. I don’t know much about Korgi, but if it’s being packaged with Owly, it can’t be all bad. (This is probably a much more family-friendly offering than a Lost Girls/Superf*ckers preview…)
    • Wizard’s “How to Draw” Sampler – Wizard. Hah. No, not really. “Draw bigger tits. More grimacing. Why doesn’t that costume have more pouches?” Pshaw.

    If you’ve got a good comic shop around, you’ll be able to get these awesome books on May 5th. If your comic shop is just so-so, tell them you want the good stuff. Particularly Comics Festival – that one is going to rock.

  • Bye Bye to Boys; Something up at Wildstorm?

    According to Newsarama, Garth Ennis & Darick Robertson’s The Boys has been cancelled by DC. Not just regular cancelled, but really cancelled – the next four issues which had been solicited, as well as the first paperback collection, won’t ship.

    I can’t say I’m at all disappointed (my thoughts on the first few issues are here), but this is a pretty surprising decision. The Boys was probably Wildstorm’s only unqualified hit of the past year or two; a cancellation suggests either serious creative differences (Darick Robertson’s sole comment thus far is that “DC was not the right home for The Boys.”) or that some upper-echelon DC or Time-Warner exec found out about the book and demanded it get the boot.

    Or perhaps there’s something else going on (that probably involves any number of other factors). This week on his mailing list, Warren Ellis mentioned that the next issue of the Wildstorm-published Desolation Jones hadn’t been solicited, for reasons that would become apparent later – suggesting there’s some sort of announcement to be made. (Though he specified it’s not an artist change, and just today denied the book would go over to Vertigo)

    So I wonder if there’s something going down at Wildstorm beyond just The Boys; a reorganization of some sort that didn’t include Ennis & Robertson’s book. It’s not hard to call the last year a disappointment for Wildstorm: The relaunch of their superhero line was underwhelming to say the least, and a complete disaster given the disappearance of its two flagship titles. Some sort of re-branding, along with an editorial cull (of both books and personnel), might be in order.

    It should be interesting to see what comes to light over the next few days.

  • Ignorant and Proud: If I Haven’t Read It, It Hasn’t Been Done

    I have a fantastic idea for a science fiction story.

    It’s about this guy who’s recruited by a couple aliens to go and explore a mysterious and ancient structure that’s been discovered. It’s built in the shape of a massive ring around a star, and it’s full of all sorts of strange creatures. I haven’t read a lot of sci-fi, but I can tell you this is an awesome and original idea.

    Now, if I were serious about that, you would be quite correct in assuming I’m a moron. My “idea” isn’t even remotely original – it’s essentially Larry Niven’s Ringworld. It was published in 1970, and in the 30 years since there have been several sequels and any number of variations on the “ancient cosmic structure” theme. Whether I’ve read 100 science fiction books or none, my idea has been done many times before. One of the most important rules of being a writer is to read as much as possible – if you’re not doing some sort of research, how can you expect to do anything new or original? Robert Sawyer makes this point in a review of Margaret Atwood’s Oryx & Crake — Atwood seems so desperate to avoid being seen as a “science fiction author” that she ends up practically ignoring past work in the field and presents her ideas as original and groundbreaking when they’ve been done many times before.

    This all leads to an article in the Toronto Star about the return of Heroes (accompanied by a Cameron Stewart illustration). Creator Tim Kring makes many of the same comments I referred to a couple months ago: Essentially, he claims to be radically overhauling the superhero genre. What’s worse, the Star seems to agree with him:

    The freshness of Kring’s approach – no capes, no secret identities, just danger and mystery – has reached beyond the comic-book geeks to thrill a mainstream audience. No surprise that Kring himself has no deep ties to the comics heroes of yore.

    “Because I don’t have a vast knowledge of the superhero genre, I kept finding I was reinventing the wheel over and over again.”

    It’s one thing to take an idea that’s been done before and try and put a new spin on it. It’s entirely another to claim you invented it entirely on your own. The premise of Heroes, of regular people with super powers has been done many, many, many times. As early as Marvel’s New Universe line, up to the more recent Rising Stars, Supreme Power, or even Demo. Much of Wildstorm‘s recent output has been based on a world with superpowers and vigilantes, but without as much emphasis on costumes and traditional clichés, with Wildcats 3.0 being probably the best example.

    Kring cites The Incredibles as one of his primary inspirations for Heroes, and it would be hard to do better for a film version of superhero themes. but The Incredibles is itself a mix of Fantastic Four and Watchmen, among others. In taking that film as a starting point and adding his own “twist” to the genre, Kring is missing out on decades of evolution within the genre. He’s obviously not obligated to read every superhero comic out there, but neither should he be passing off his ignorance as a virtue. He’s merely the latest in a long, long line of writers and artists to modify the superhero formula, to modernize the spandex and superpower stories that have been around for 60 years.

    Heroes has its strengths and weaknesses, but to claim it’s truly revolutionary in any sense is pure ego. It’s good that Kring isn’t mired in faithfulness to the past like many comics publishers, but he should at least show a passing interest in the genre he claims to be revitalizing and acknowledge some of the many works that paved the way for Heroes‘ success.

  • Long Time Coming: The Long-awaited Kid Amazo

    Back in 2004, DC announced a JLA original graphic novel by Peter Milligan and Rob Haynes. It was supposed to come out in May, 2004. Except it didn’t.

    It was briefly announced for a JLA: Classified arc late last year, but quickly replaced by something else. (Howard Chaykin, I guess?)

    Now, finally – perhaps – it’s scheduled to start in April’s JLA: Classified #37. With a new artist, at that – Carlos D’Anda.

    I hope some day DC will explain the road the project took – low orders or problems with Haynes? – but for now, I’m happy to see it make it into print. It’s been too long since I’ve read a new Milligan book, so hopefully this will fill the gap until a new Vertigo or Wildstorm project pops up. Granted, Milligan’s not the ideal writer to handle JLA, but hopefully some of his original wacky vision will survive the new format and artist.

  • Why the Challengers of the Unknown Deserve to be Comic Book Superstars

    All right, I admit it’s probably a bit strange: In the last week or so, I’ve put up two covers from Challengers of the Unknown, a relatively obscure series from the fifties & sixties. But let me tell you: The Challengers are pretty darn cool. My main introduction came in Darwyn Cooke’s New Frontier, and if you think they’re cool there, wait until you see their own adventures in Showcase Presents: Challengers of the Unknown. Lots and lots of crazy, sci-fi, superhero fun, like:

    • Professor Haley’s lightning-quick, wholly unscientific, deductions!
    • June Robbins’ in-your-face brand of feminism!
    • June Robbins apparently confusing computers with fortune cookies!
    • Rapid-fire acceptance of death, replacement, and rebirth!
    • Jack Kirby!
      (Don’t get me wrong: Challengers isn’t Kirby’s best work by a long shot. But every now and then he turns in a panel or a page that shows off his rapidly developing style and vision.)

    And the real kicker? All these completely awesome and unbelievable moments come from the Challengers’ first two appearances, in Showcase Presents #6-7. And how can you not get excited for their third story, entitled The Day the Earth Blew Up!? (Spoiler: It doesn’t actually blow up.)

  • Early Contender for “Least Surprising Revelation of 2007”

    In an interview at Newsarama, cover artist Greg Horn reveals one of the secrets of his success:

    There is no set model for Ms. Marvel, but for other characters like Emma Frost, I had a model pose for me in a string bikini.

    Mind you, Horn is actually a pretty decent artist when he stays away from the gratuitous cheesecake: Some of his Emma Frost covers were nice once he stopped drawing porn stars, and his Elektra work was nice when Elektra wasn’t threatening to kill the reader by smothering them in her breasts, ass, or crotch.

    There’s little question about what pays the rent, though.

  • Is there anybody out there? Other than the giant green whale-monster?

    I hear it’s National Delurking Week. I’m not entirely sure what nation it’s for, but let’s assume, for the moment, it’s the Internet Nation. (Not to worry: There will be no occasions upon which I will attempt to use that phrase seriously.)

    So if you’re reading this semi-regularly (and I know a few people do), post in the comments section or something. Reciprocate my blog-love for you all.

    To stimulate and encourage discussion, I offer this stimulating and exciting Challengers of the Unknown cover: