Marvel: December 2007 Archives

The Bookshelf: Triple Daredevil Review

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I've been on a Daredevil kick for the last few weeks, so having read 3 six issue arcs, I'd figured I'd review them here, from worst to best. What's wierd is that in some way, all of these stories have to do with Dardevil's origin and his father, Jack Murdock.

 

Daredevil: Father
Writer and Artist: Joe Quesada

Ever remember people saying that Joe Quesada had forgotton how to draw at one point? After reading this abysmal story, I now believe them. Joe Quesada's Daredevil here is a bulky, grimacing beast, unlike the one he had drawn with Kevin Smith 10 years back, and every other interpretation of the character. The story here is that there is a serial killer going out and cutting out people's eyes, while Daredevil does nothing, and in the end, it's all his fault. Well, partially anyway. Quesada introduces some new super-team called the Santerias who do nothing but fight with Daredevil in the two issues they appear in, and their inclusion in the story has nothing to do with the ongoing plot. There are some asides to a young, media-mogul, who has daddy-issues too, and he funds the Santerias and asks Daredevil to look into this serial killer. Daredevil refuses because the killer is not striking inside Hell's Kitchen, so it's not his problem, that is until he finds out that all of the victims are his former clients, and that the killer is someone he knows. All of these plots converge in issues 5 and 6 of this mini, showing me that issues 1-4 were pretty unneccessary and that you could've picked up issue 5, read the recap page and finished the mini. That's not good for a story. Quesada seems like he's reaching out in every direction here, which leads to a sloppy plot, and an even sloppier finish, leaving me to close the last issue with disgust. I went into this thinking it was going to be a story that harkened back to Matt's Father, Quesada tried to do this, but got so wrapped up with everyone else's daddy-issues that he forgot that Jack Murdock was supposed to be the centerpiece of the story. It's because of this that the story gets lost. If Quesada had kept everything in check, this might have been a mediocre story, instead of an abysmal one. Quesada is trying to do too much here, and it all gets lost in the shuffle. As for the art, People weren't kidding that his "One More Day" stuff was his best in awhile, because the stuff here looks more cartoony and less detailed than any of his previous work or his new stuff, and that's bad for an artist who is known for a dynamic, detailed style. I don't know if Quesada was so loose to try and get a nostalgic feel in the art, or because his Editor-In-Chief job at Marvel got in the way of the quality. Richard Isanove does the colors here, with his digital painting style, and I almost wish he didn't. Every panel has some wierd color filter. Flashbacks are all yellowed, like on old paper, Daredevil scenes are bathed in red, and the Matt Murdock scenes have a blue hue. This doesn't work well across the board, because it makes the book look monotone. There is nothing to keep me looking at the page, since, because of the coloring, it all looks the same. I want the coloring to make me stop and smell the roses, this stuff didn't. All in all, don't spend your money on this book because you're wondering what the hassle was all about with the delays way back when, grab it in a bookstore, take 20 minutes and skim through it. You won't be thouroughly impressed to buy it after that. D

Daredevil: Yellow
Writer: Jeph Loeb
Artist: Tim Sale

One of many "Color" books by Loeb and Sale, this one focuses on Dardevil and his time at the beginning of his career, in his Yellow costume. A majority of the book focuses on his origin, slightly altering it more than I've ever seen. In this book, Jack Murdock is killed while Matt Murdock is studying in Law School. Everywhere else, Jack Murdock is killed while Matt is a young boy. It doesn't do much to serve the story, other than place it within the first year of Daredevil's first appearance. Anyway, Matt fights some gangsters, it's all pretty standard stuff. The real star of the book is Tim Sale, who's work is phenominal in whatever form it appears, whether for DC, Marvel, or on the Heroes TV show. If you're looking for a book that cover's Dardevil's origin without feeling dated or tying into any continuity, this is the book for you. If you're looking to introduce someone to Daredevil, this might be the book to do it. A solid comic story with some fantastic art. C

Daredevil: The Man Without Fear
Writer: Frank Miller
Artist: John Romita JR

Out of all the Dardevil stories I've read, which really is limited to these three, plus Kevin Smith and Brubaker's first arc, this was the best. Like Daredevil: Yellow, this is an origin story, though it ties in the origin everything Loeb left out, mainly Stick and Elektra. Elektra has been trained by the Hand and is addicted to killing people, but must start confrontations to with thugs to do so. Stick, here is a mysterious janitor who trains Matt in his dad's gym at night. It's not clear why he trains Matt, what is clear is that he's dissapointed in Matt when he uses his skills to fight crime, though his black-sillouhetted boss is not. This is like Batman: Year One, but for Daredevil. I think it might not be as revered as that, because, essentially, Miller is applying his Year One formula to Batman. It introduces a young boy, his dad dies, he trains, meets a female villain, and fights crime. The Kingpin also makes his first appearance here, and his rise to power is quickly established in a few, pages, and that's all we need to know, we can fill in the blanks ourselves. That might be what makes this story so great, is that we're able to fill in the blanks ourselves, with whatever we want the blanks to be, or whatever continuity we know and love. This is pre-Goddamn Batman Miller, so it must be good, right? Fear not, it is. John Romita JR, does a formidable job on art here. I'm not quite sure whether it's because of his love for the character, or because the acrobatic Daredevil is slightly similar to the lanky and acrobatic Spider-Man, which he so greatly draws. And, it's not heavily inked by Klaus Janson, so there is no muddiness to the art, like on that last issue of World War Hulk. This is good quality Miller and Romita JR, and should not be missed for any comic fan, even if the Daredevil costume never appears in the actual story. A

Ultimates 3 #1

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Writer: Jeph Loeb
Artist: Joe Maduriera
 
Well, yet another much-hyped book falls flat.  I can't decide if it was the artwork that killed it because it was so static, or the writing that seemed to have almost nothing in common with the previous volumes.  Also, the book took me about 5 minutes to read, which for 2.99 is dissapointing.  We start off with a meeting in the Ultimates' headquarters, unfortunately viewing a sex tape of Iron Man and the deceased Black Widow.  Is a sex tape the only scandal that Jeph Loeb can think of? Really?  Anyway, the Ultimates discuss it for about a page when Venom bursts in rambling, "where is she?" over and over again which gets annoying.  Over the course of this fight I learn that Thor is now speaking in more evocative language than the hippy-speak he used to spout, Thor has a girlfriend, Black Panther doesn't speak, and Hawkeye/Bullseye has a death wish.  Where the hell is Iron Man?  Captain America?  These characters only appear for a page or so, and these were the most interesting characters of Volumes 1 and 2, not to mention Nick Fury who isn't even mentioned.  At the end of the book, someone gets shot, and I really don't care.  Everything here seems so deriviative of Millar's previous work.  Jeph Loeb is certainly a capable writer, but I think him taking over a book that had such a distinctive look and feel was a bad move.  Millar had more than action going on in his book, his characters had relationships with each other, personal problems, lives, families, and we caught a glimpse of that while they battled the Hulk, Aliens, each other, and Norse Gods.  It's that complexity that Millar brought to the book that made Ultimates great, not to mention Hitch's contribution.  Here, Loeb is just throwing things at the wall, seeing what sticks.  We know Captain America is still a man out of time, but you don't have to throw it at our face by having him reprimand Scarlet Witch for her skimpy costume.  It's just cliche.  Maybe Loeb should've had a whole issue to deal with these characters before he started his fight, or made this issue double-sized even.  It might've helped the story, not to mention the transition from great to mediocre.
 
I've seen Joe Mad's work before in an X-Men trade or two.  I liked his stylistic stuff, and it worked for the time, but here it just feels bland.  The characters feel posed and have little or no real expression to their faces.  Go back and look at Hitch's expressions in every book, they were phenominal.  The fight scenes aren't drawn particularly exciting, and the coloring just hinders the interior art in my opinion.  The man needs a real inker, get rid of this digital painting style, it doesn't work here, it just muddies the art.  It's hard to read this book and not compare it to the previous two volumes, and when you do compare it, it doesn't measure up, not even close. D

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