Showing posts with label creator: stuart immonen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label creator: stuart immonen. Show all posts

24 June 2024

Legion of Super-Heroes: Five Years Later Omnibus, Volume 2 by Tom & Mary Bierbaum, Tom McCraw, Stuart Immonen, Chris Sprouse, et al.

Legion of Super-Heroes: Five Years Later Omnibus, Volume 2
 
Collection published: 2022
Contents originally published: 1992-94
Acquired: June 2022
Read: May 2024

This volume collects the second half of the so-called "Five Year Later" Legion—which is also the last two years of the original thirty-six-year Legion continuity. It not only collects the main Legion title and the Legionnaires spin-off, but also some issues of L.E.G.I.O.N. and Valor that tied into it. It's a pretty nicely put together collection, and it means that DC has collected all the Legion material from 1958 to 1984 and from 1989 to 1994 in hardcover. All they have to do is the five years of Legion of Super-Heroes vol. 3 (and some ancillary material from that time) and they'll be done. C'mon DC, you can do it! But as for this volume itself, I'll take it in chunks because it's so big:

Legion of Super-Heroes vol. 4 #40-48

Writers: Tom & Mary Bierbaum with Tom McCraw
Pencillers: Stuart Immonen, Chris Sprouse
Inkers: Ron Boyd, Karl Story, John Dell III
Letters: John Workman, Bob Pinaha
Colorist: Tom McCraw

These issues set up the new status quo for the Legion; you may remember that in the previous volume, a group of younger (cloned?) Legionnaire surfaced, the so-called "Batch SW6." The opening story sees the two Legions divvy up responsibilities; the older (original?) will take responsibility for the wider United Planets, while SW6 Legion will stay on "New Earth," the collection of linked domed cities that's all that's left following the destruction of the Earth.

Most of these nine issues are given over to a tedious storyline about the return of Mordru, using an army of the dead to try to take over the galaxy. I found the beats of this storyline very repetitive, and it dragged on and on. Writers Tom & Mary Bierbaum, on their own after co-plotting with Keith Giffen in the previous volume, are good at character moments and comedy, but I think not great at telling big stories; there are lots of nice moments and good ideas, but the overall story just isn't big enough to justify the space given to it. The art is excellent, though; well done Stuart Immonen especially.

Legionnaires #1-8

Writers: Tom & Mary Bierbaum
Pencillers: Chris Sprouse, Adam Hughes, Colleen Doran
Inkers: Karl Story, Mark Farmer, John Nyberg
Letterer: Pat Brousseau
Colorist: Tom McCraw

Legionnaires also starts with a multi-part story, this one about a new Fatal Five assembling to take down the new Legion. Again, it's okay but too drawn out, and again it has great art, here from Chris Sprouse.

What did really work for me in this set of eight issues were the last two, a pair of standalone stories. The first features some exquisite Adam Hughes art in an adventure where the Legion visits the Atlantis dome; the character driven stuff really suits the Bierbaums' strengths in a way that wasn't true of the earlier stories, and Hughes is all-time great when it comes to "acting"; his Legionnaires are expressive and lively. I would have loved to have seen a longer run from him on the Legion. There's also a Brainiac 5–focused story that I found so-so, but really shines thanks to some Colleen Doran art. Again, she's an all-time great, and Legionnaires was lucky to get her early in her career.

The fun thing about seeing the young Legion in a 1990s comic is that they come across as genuine teenagers in a way that wasn't really true of the 1960s squares of the era from which they were supposedly plucked.

Legion of Super-Heroes vol. 4 #49-52 & Annual #4

Writers: Tom & Mary Bierbaum, Tom McCraw
Pencillers: Stuart Immonen, Darryl Banks, Joe Phillips, Christopher Taylor, Nick Napolitano
Inkers: Terry Austin, Ron Boyd, Wade Von Grawbadger, Dan Davis, Pam Eklund, Rich Faber
Letters: Bob Pinaha
Colors: Tom McCraw

This section opens with a "Bloodlines: Earthplague" annual; it is of course terrible, but all of 1993's Bloodlines annuals were, so I don't know how much we can blame the Bierbaums for this. (It is, however, kind of misplaced; it takes place during the Mordru storyline from earlier in the book.) A skateboarder dude with attitude gets powers and travels to the thirtieth century and lives it up... and it's just awful all around, not helped by some really bad art. (There are five credited pencillers and four credited inkers.)

The last four issues here are transitional standalones: a comedy Tenzil "Matter-Eater Lad" Kem story, a big celebration for the fiftieth, a story about Kent Shakespeare and some Legion-adjacent children, and a Timber Wolf story. Most are not great. The Tenzil one was nowhere near as funny as previous Tenzil adventures; I am not sure what happened there. The one about the kids was confusing; maybe I would have liked it more if I could remember who these characters were, but I mostly did not. (It's been over two years since I last saw most of them in the previous Five Years Later omnibus.) The Timber Wolf one mixes great Stuart Immonen art with terrible Christopher Taylor art, and seems like a bit of a regression for a character I don't particularly like to begin with.

That said, I did really like #50, which was also the swansong of the Bierbaums on the main book. One thing I've really liked about their run is the sense of the Legionnaires as real people that have grown and aged and come to terms with themselves, and that's really present in this issue; there's a great conversation between Light Lass and Timber Wolf, for example. There's a strong Element Lad focus here, which really works; I think they nicely picked up the baton of treating these characters as people in a way that Paul Levitz had begun and no one before him had. It's a shame all this work got wiped out by later writers, even when DC did return to the "original" Legion.

Legionnaires #9-15

Writers: Tom & Mary Bierbaum
Pencillers/Breakdowns: Chris Sprouse, Adam Hughes, Brian Stelfreeze, Joe Phillips, Chris Gardner, Frank Fosco, Jeff Moy
Inkers/Finisher: Karl Story, Stuart Immonen, Mark Farmer, Wade Von Grawbadger, Jason Martin, Dennis Cramer, Ron Boyd
Letterer: Pat Brousseau
Colorist: Tom McCraw

I wouldn't call this great, but it's a reasonably strong run from the Bierbaums; instead of doing one big story, it's more in the classic 1980s style of the Legion, where there's a bunch of different stories on the boil all at once, rotating in prominence, with the character work being the main throughline. I think this plays to their strengths more than other work in the volume, and I think had they been allowed to stay on the title, they could have eventually made it great. Unfortunately, what should have been the best subplot (Kono and a disguised-as-a-woman Tenzil infiltrating space pirates) turns out to be the worst. I don't know how they screwed that one up but it just doesn't make sense at all.

Legion of Super-Heroes vol. 4 #53-59

Co-Plotters: Tom McCraw, Stuart Immonen, & Ron Boyd
Words: Tom McCraw
, Mark Waid
Colors: Tom McCraw
Art: Stuart Immonen & Ron Boyd, Chrstopher Taylor & Dave Cooper
Letters: Bob Pinaha

Tom McCraw's brief run on the Legion is freaking awful. They're once again on the run and against the government, which feels like a regression; they adopt stupid new codenames; they suddenly start acting and posing in a very 1990s "attitudinal" way. I don't really know what anyone was going for here but it was pretty badly done.

L.E.G.I.O.N. '94 #69-70 / Legionnaires #16-18 & Annual #1 / Legion of Super-Heroes vol. 4 #60-61 & Annual #5 / Valor #20-23

Writers: Tennessee Peyer, Mark Waid with Ty Templeton, Tom McCraw, Kurt Busiek
Pencillers: Arnie Jorgensen, Derec Aucoin, Paul Pelletier, Jeff Moy, Stuart Immonen, Curt Swan, Ron Boyd, Wade Von Grawbadger, Craig Hamilton, Ted McKeever, Colleen Doran, Chris Gardner
Inkers: James Pascoe, Mark Farmer, John Lowe, Wade Von Grawbadger, Ron Boyd, Jose Marzan, Jr., Dave Cooper, John Lowe, Robert Campanella, Karl Story, Colleen Doran, Dennis Cramer
Colorists: Gene D'Angelo, Tom McCraw, Dave Grafe
Letterers: Gaspar, Pat Brousseau, Bob Pinaha

First we get some pages from two issues of L.E.G.I.O.N. that wrap up Jo Nah's search for the missing Tinya Wazzo, though he finds out that L.E.G.I.O.N.'s Phase is no Tinya, but her cousin. This is a retcon I don't buy and tend to ignore, but good on DC for including the pages here. (I think these are the only issues of L.E.G.I.O.N. to ever be collected?) After that we get two Elseworlds annuals, one where the Legion are Arthurian knights in space, and one where it's an Oz riff. Neither is a great Elseworlds tale, though the Arthurian one has its moments.

Finally, we get a set of timebending Zero Hour tie-ins that draw this era of the Legion to an end. A couple issues of Valor are here, though Colleen Doran art aside, I don't rate them highly; even Mark Waid can't make this dud of a premise work. (The SW6 Valor has to replace the original Valor and do everything he did, but earlier and quicker, for some reason.) Then time anomalies begin threatening the Legion and Legionnaires in the thirtieth century, their continuity slipping around them; Cosmic Boy turns out to be the Time Trapper; a series of increasingly complicated but meaningless reveals about nothing are made. It's the worst kind of superhero comics, where what happens is more important than how.

And then it all comes to an end. I guess I can see why DC decided to start over with the Legion, but it seems to me that this was the beginning of the slow thirty-year death of the Legion. No longer was the Legion a single ongoing story to which different authors and artists added their bits, but rather it was now continuously jettisoned and started over arbitrarily. Even when later runs were strong (I do really like the "threeboot"), the overall health of the Legion as a concept never recovered. I wonder if there was a way to continue on from this era and make it work (probably such a way requires there to never have been an SW6 Legion) but we'll never know.

But regardless, this is a great collection in that it provides ready access to a key slice of DC history. Even the bad choices here are interesting, and the good choices are great. I'm pretty close to owning an unbroken 1958-94 run on the Legion, and I look forward to savoring this volume as the culmination of the original dream.

I read a Legion of Super-Heroes collection every six months. Next up in sequence: Legion of Super-Heroes Archives, Volume 1

06 March 2024

Nextwave, Agents of H.A.T.E. by Warren Ellis, Stuart Immonen, et al.

Collection published: 2020
Contents originally published: 2006
Read: January 2024

Nextwave, Agents of H.A.T.E.: This Is What They Want
Nextwave, Agents of H.A.T.E.: I Kick Your Face

Writer: Warren Ellis
Penciler: Stuart Immonen
Inker: Wade Von Grawbadger
Colorist: Dave McCaig
Letterers: Chris Eliopoulos & Joe Caramagna

After her original appearance (see item #2 in the list below), Elsa Bloodstone was reinvented in the pages of Nextwave, Agents of H.A.T.E., a farcical maxiseries about a team of D-list characters who find out that the anti-terrorism organization they work for, the Beyond Corporation, is actually run by terrorists and testing its WMDs on Americans. You might think this would be a very dramatic thing, but it actually happens before issue #1. This is because Nextwave is not about stuff like characters or themes, it's about leaning into two things: 1) violence is a fundamental tenet of superhero comics, and 2) superhero comics are full of dumb shit.

The main characters are largely has-beens or forgotten: Elsa, of course; but also Jack Kirby's Machine Man, from his weird 2001: A Space Odyssey tie-in; Tabitha Smith, an X-Man named "Boom-Boom" with the powers to explode things; and Monica Rambeau, recently on the big screen but then kind of irrelevant and without a home, as a former Captain Marvel, then Photon, then Pulsar. Add to all these the original character "the Captain," who answers the question, "what if the worst person alive got the power of Captain America... and also he never figured out the answer to 'Captain What?'"
 
Perhaps the truest ever depiction of Elana Gomel's "violent sublime."
from Nextwave, Agents of H.A.T.E. #6

Ellis delights in making them all pretty awful. Tabitha is basically Paris Hilton with superpowers (very topical in 2006), Machine Man is always drunk and ranting about "fleshy ones," Monica rattles on about when she was in the Avengers but now doesn't give a shit, Elsa just likes to kill monsters. Each two-issue story sees them turn up somewhere and then dismantle a Beyond Corporation plan in as violent and gratuitous and stupid a way as possible.
 
In the first volume, Elsa seems like she could be the same character we knew from Bloodstone, just older, but in the series's second volume we are told she was raised by her father (not her mother, as established in her debut), who dropped her into monster pits as a baby in order to develop her skills. It passes my law of retcons: though different, I find it just as interesting as her old origin.
 
A very different mother for Elsa.
from Nextwave, Agents of H.A.T.E. #8
 
The book as a whole is good fun... one sort of feels like it's simultaneously (almost) Stuart Immonen's best work and like he was wasted a bit. Like, there's not a bad panel, scene, character, or composition here... but oughtn't he be illustrating things like Secret Identity or Moving Pictures? Though if they had got some hack to do this, it wouldn't have worked. At first I thought the whole thing was a bit of an Authority parody... then I remembered who wrote The Authority! But when I got to the end, I realized I was right. What kind of writer satirizes themself just six years later? Don't answer that, but it's funny anyway.
 
Collection published: 2019
Contents originally published: 2006-07
Read: January 2024

So is it great? I don't know. Is it worth your time? I don't know. But if Marvel reprinted the complete run at an affordable price again (I read it via Hoopla this time), I probably would pick it up. Healing America by beating people up!

This is the third post in a series about Elsa Bloodstone. The next installment covers Marvel Zombies: Battleworld. Previous installments are listed below:

  1. Bloodstone & the Legion of Monsters (1975-2012)
  2. Bloodstone (2001-06) 

07 July 2016

Review: Moving Pictures by Kathryn & Stuart Immonen

Borrowed from a friend
Read March 2015
Moving Pictures by Kathryn & Stuart Immonen

This is a beautiful comic book with deft characterization and excellent coloring with lots of neat moments, but I'll be damned if I could tell you what was actually happening 50% of the time. Lots of neat stuff, but I wish it had been a little more obvious. I don't mind working hard, but I couldn't even tell you where to begin with this one! It seems like it would be worth the effort, though.

23 January 2010

Faster than a DC Bullet, Issue #17: Superman: Secret Identity

Comic trade paperback, 206 pages
Published 2004 (contents: 2004)

Borrowed from a friend
Read January 2010
Superman: Secret Identity

Writer: Kurt Busiek
Artist, Colorist: Stuart Immonen
Letterer: Todd Klein

DC Universe Timeline: N/A
Real World Timeline: 1990-2050?

Imagine your parents' surname was "Kent", you were born in Kansas, and they gave you the first name "Clark". Wouldn't that be terrible? But then imagine that one day you discovered that you really were Superman. That is the premise of Secret Identity, which follows this boy named Clark up into adulthood. I'd known the fundamentals of the premise, but not much more, before reading it-- enough to know it took him up until he was old enough to hold a newspaper job, at least, but I didn't know quite how far along the story went. 206 pages to cover a man's entire life. The book is narrated by Clark, in the form of extracts from a typed diary he keeps and doesn't share with anyone.

Given Superman action figures he doesn't particularly enjoy by his family and the constant butt of jokes from his cruel classmates, Clark is pretty much a typical teenager until he discovers he can fly. It's a magnificent moment, as you might imagine, and he soon discovers he has all Superman's powers: super-strength, x-ray vision, super-hearing, laser eyes, super-breath, and so on. He spends the rest of the book figuring out what he ought to do with these powers: should he used them for good? Should he go public? Should he hide them from everyone he knows? In the end, events convince him that he can't afford to go public-- the risk is too great.

In the first chapter, when Clark is still in high school, his powers are pretty obviously a metaphor for the need all teenagers feel to hide themselves and fit in with others, yet at the same time be recognized for who one really is. There's a girl Clark wants to impress, of course. But dare he go out on that limb? Of course he doesn't, but he gains some small recognition from her all the same. The end of the chapter, though, introduces this notion that there are darker forces at work: there are people out there who want what Clark is. Only he himself doesn't know who he is-- where did he come from? He's not adopted, so how did he gain these powers?

At first, I was tepid about these plots. Surely the point of the story was how did a boy deal with these things? Explaining where they came from, or introducing a group of evil folks trying to take advantage of him seemed like it would just derail that. That wasn't going to be the interesting part. It's like in Ken Grimwood's Replay-- the powers the main characters have can never be explained because any answer would be boring. But as the story unfolded, I realized that I was wrong: just as Clark's powers stand for the true identities we all carry within us and reveal only to a few others, the government officials trying to uncover him stand for the forces of the world constantly trying to push us out into the world where everyone sees us. It's interesting to have a story that argues we ought to keep parts of ourselves hidden from the world, whereas most fiction tells us "to be who we really are" but it works here-- and truth be told, it's how things actually work in the real world.

Unfortunately, Busiek seems really worried that the reader can't figure out this subtext on their own, and there's a few panels where this is ham-handedly narrated by Clark. "THIS IS WHAT THE STORY MEANS." Ugh. Thank you, I am capable of interpreting literature myself.

Clark's friends delight in setting him up on dates with women named "Lois" and "Lana" (and even "Cat Grant"), but one of these dates introduces him to the woman he eventually marries, one Lois Chaudhari. (Though I was amused by this element, I found it hard to buy the story's claim that Lois was constantly set up on dates with men named Clark-- is "Lois" really so uncommon?) It's a very real romance, and the moment where Clark reveals his secret identity to her is fantastic.

Stuart Immomen's art is a little odd. It's often glorious, especially in his big wide vistas and such, but often times his faces look a little stiff-- and stuck on an emotion that doesn't actually fit with the dialogue depicted. But his action shots are great, as is his use of color. It would be a very different and somewhat inferior book with a different artist on the case. Possibly the best sequence is when Clark is captured by the government and makes his escape: there's no dialogue, no narration, yet it's utterly harrowing.

As I said, Secret Identity covers quite a span of time, the last chapter taking place when Clark and Lois's own daughters are grown. Some aspects of this I found improbable, but the last few pages of the story, as he goes on one last mission, declares his retirement, and celebrates Christmas... well, I think I must have had something in my eye while reading it, because the alternative is untenable for me. The emotion that Busiek and Immonen drew together at the end was potent and powerful.

This is a fantastic story, told fantastically well. I think the appeal of Superman is that he's an ordinary person, just with superpowers-- he'd be trying to do good even if he wasn't from Krypton, and this story drives that idea home. People often complain (wrongly, I think, but also understandably) that Superman is hard to relate to, but this Superman certainly isn't. He really is just like you or me or anyone else you know. He could be you or me or anyone else you know. After all, don't we we all have secret identities?

Note that this originally appeared on my old LiveJournal and included pictures back then. Sadly, the pictures are lost in the mists of the Internet.