May 6

Review: Gotham Academy #6

Gotham-Academy-6-coverOlive and her friends are finally getting some answers from Killer Croc when Batman busts up the party. Olive tries to defend Croc from Batman, meanwhile Batman tries to cut Croc out of the picture permanently. A who’s who evil, rescuer situation is complicated by the fact that Olive knows it was Batman that tore her family apart, jailing her mother in Arkham and sentencing her to Gotham Academy. Apparently the Dark Knight is 1) no hero in Olive’s eyes, but is instead a family destroyer and 2) is still entirely too interested in Olive and what genetics she may have inherited from her mother. How far will he take his interest? Well this is Batman and Obsession we’re talking about, so, probably way too far.

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May 3

Review: Wolf Moon #2 by Cullen Bunn and Jeremy Haun

wolf moon 2As is the nature of comics this issue is a bit of a down time where new things are revealed to our (probable) hero. If a werewolf that possesses a new person for the three nights of the full moon and slaughters gleefully through families and towns isn’t bad enough someone is hunting the survivors, the people who the wolf once possessed, and tearing them apart. Spliced with wolf adventures with some clever, but not clever enough, heroes, this issue at least lets our hero know what exactly is at stake. Recommended for horror comic readers.

Contains: Violence, Language, gorewolffmoon2

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May 1

Review: Wolf Moon #1by Cullen Bunn and Jeremy Haun

wm1A lot has been done with the werewolf tale, in fact romance tales of werewolves being tamed run side by side with horror tales of cannibal beasts. Bunn offers us this take of a werewolf that doesn’t just transform people, it transforms lives, and of the people obsessed with ending it.

There’s plenty of gore and darkness to be had amid some awesome art. (A touch of Supernatural, a touch of The Wolfman.) but it’s in the last frame that Bunn gives us more than just a good, but typical werewolf tale. This is the first in a 6 part mini series so it should be easy and inexpensive for comic readers to check out. And if readers love horror comics this is one to find.

Contains: Gore, language, violence

wolfmoon2

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April 3

Review: City of Legends by Cheyanne Young

Where to start with this one. Maci Knight lives in a world where there are superheroes (they all pretty much have the same powers, speed, healing, strength, etc) and normal people. She’s not just from a superhero race, she’s the prized daughter of the Mayor of the Superheroes. She, like all members of her genetic race, has been training her whole life to become a hero like her older brother and her dad.

But right before she takes her final graduation tests she learns that she was born a twin (in a horribly stilted, cheesy way), and before her all twins born to the super race are killed because one always goes bad, and there is no way to tell which is which. The elders of the city are reluctant to let Maci become a hero and fail her… at which point Maci throws a fit and whines a whole lot about not getting her due.

There are some interesting ideas here. The concepts of supers and normals, and how supers are adored, but seem to look down on normals as frail and pitiful. The hero-worship culture, the normals being seen almost universally as lesser people who must be taken care of, and the tradition of killing all twins (except, of course, when the mayor had twins. Then he broke all the rules for his daughters. And this is the motivation for the bad guy.) even Maci’s own subconscious programming to only accept being a hero as a valid path in her life, to view other positions in the super city itself as lesser, inferior, all could have been very very interesting subtexts.

But instead there’s zero self awareness or introspection from our entitled, ill-tempered heroine. She doesn’t care why losing hero status gets such a reaction from her. She doesn’t wonder if her own narcissism is an issue, or even use learning that she is a twin to explore the idea of nurture over nature, or shades of gray in heroism. No, she just throws fits, breaks things, runs away, disobeys, defends the status quo, talks about how she deserves to be a hero because she’s the best, gets people killed(!)…

And in the end it’s almost like Maci manages to reach through the text and convince the author to give her what she wants. The cool guy likes her, even though she completely and totally looks down on him (he’s not a hero). One would think he’d get tired of hearing how being a hero is the only thing she ever wanted and she totally deserves it, when her behavior says different. And the bad guy, who is completely and totally justified in feeling ire and anger against a system (And the iconic head of that system) that slaughters twins without a thought, EXCEPT when the mayor breaks the rules for himself after he has literally demanded the death and torture of thousands of people for not fitting the super-society norms. In the end the author touches only a tiny bit on that conflict, then ham-handedly turns the villain into a cartoon, blindly cackling and being evil just because.

I almost quit reading this one a hundred pages in. The whining fit-,throwing from entitled Maci toned down after a while, but the story didn’t really redeem itself. If you want a Peep of a superhero story with battles, a villainous villain and a sassy hero, you might like this. If you prefer a complex meaty super tale, skip on, because this one avoids the most interesting parts of its own concept.

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April 2

Review: Gotham Academy #5

It’s a special kind of school that has Killer Croc hiding it its walls. And it’s a special kind of student who has Killer Croc as a guardian angel. At least some of the hauntings are Croc, who promised to her mother, a fellow inmate at Arkham Asylum, to watch over Olive before Arkham was destroyed. A school dance makes the perfect distraction for the crew, who are now hunting for Croc for their answers.

I am absolutely in love with Maps at this point. The girl is pure geek, and while everyone else seems to want to roll eyes and sneer at her geek jokes and role playing mindset the Academy itself is just proving her right with secret tunnels, chained monsters, and rune puzzle-locked doors. It’s hard not to be infected by her enthusiasm.

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