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The Bum’s Rush #35
The Best In Comics 2005 (in my humble opinion) – Part II
Continuing my three-part series highlighting the best in
comics from the year 2005! This week it’s my favorite
mini-series, single issue and one-shot! Now, on with the
show!
Favorite Mini-Series of 2005 – GLA:
Misassembled
This
is a joke right? The best mini-series of 2005 is one that
starred the Great Lakes Avengers, a group of the lamest and
most forgettable characters ever created? DAMN STRAIGHT!!
I’m sorry but it’s true. One of the coolest, funniest,
best-drawn and most enjoyable comics I read all year was
indeed
GLA: Misassembled. This might make you think that the
comics’ scene in 2005 was a wasteland, but you’d be wrong.
Quite simply, writer Dan Slott (who also got my nod for
Favorite Writer last week) took a very tongue in cheek poke
at just about every dumb and overused trend in comics from
the past few years, as well as few well placed jabs at the
stereotypical view that most people have of the comics
industry and he did it all with the biggest hard-luck, loser
superheroes on the block. Not only that but he also spun an
enormously fun, exciting, laugh-out-loud (seriously, not
many comics can really make me laugh out loud, but this one
did several times) action/adventure story about heroes who
never ever give up, even when they really, really should.
And he made Squirrel Girl into a good character! SQUIRREL
GIRL! The dark secret in the back of the Marvel Vault that
everyone would sooner ignore and hope that it just goes
away. That Squirrel Girl. I honestly thought I was the only
one who even remembered her, as I had the unfortunate
experience of reading her first and only previous
appearance, in which she saved Iron Man and fought Doctor
Doom, back when I consumed comics as if my very life
depended on it. But lo and behold, here she is and she’s
actually one of the best characters in the book.
And what about the art? Paul Pelletier’s art on the series
is probably some of the best of his career. All superhero
comics should look this damn good. Look, I can’t say enough
good things about this comic. I’m just going to stop now and
tell you to go pick up this book right now. Do it! Do it for
Monkey Joe! Poor, poor Monkey Joe. He liked nuts. He will be
missed.
GLA: Misassembled was just collected as a trade paperback
which includes the four-issue mini-series as well as West
Coast Avengers #46, the issue in which the GLA first debuted
and the original Squirrel Girl story from Marvel
Super-Heroes #6. She really does fight Doctor Doom. And
beats him. With squirrels. Not his finest moment. Also just
released was the GLX-Mas Special which picks up pretty much
right where the mini-series leaves off and features a number
of talented artists, including Paul Grist
and
Ty Templeton .
A Close Second – Hellboy: The Island
Even though it’s been about 2 years since the last
Hellboy mini-series,
Hellboy: The Third Wish, by
Mike Mignola The Island proves that this is still one of the
best and most fascinating continuing stories in comics.
Hellboy: The Island is the book that Hellboy fans have been
waiting for since the very first series, the origins of
Hellboy, the Right Hand of Doom and the evil Ogdru Jahad!
To say that Mignola is at the top of his game in this
two-issue mini is an understatement. He is the master of the
game, cutting out all the fat and trimming his art and
dialogue to only the most necessary aspects to tell the best
possible story. Plus, monsters get hit and stuff ‘splodes.
What more could you want? Except for more Hellboy on a
regular basis.
Hellboy’s adventures will continue in 2006 as Mignola puts
away his pencil and focuses purely on writing, first with a
tale from Hellboy’s past in Hellboy: Makoma, drawn by
Richard Corben and then with
Hellboy:
Darkness Calls, a sequel to The Island, drawn by Duncan Fegredo. And as always, you can catch
the adventures of Hellboy’s former teammates, the B.P.R.D.,
in an ongoing series of mini-series by Mignola, John Arcudi
and Guy Davis.
Another Close Second – Ocean
I’m pretty sure that there’s no one better at doing
self-contained non-superhero mini-series than
Warren Ellis. Ellis gets in, tells an amazing story,
and then gets out, never to revisit the story or characters
again. It’s like watching a great summer blockbuster or
reading an engrossing adventure novel, but in comic book
form.
Ocean, with art by Chris Sprouse, tells the story of U.N. Weapons Inspector Nathan
Kane as he travels to a space station orbiting the Jovian
moon Europa, where a mass grave of alien bodies and ancient
but advanced alien weaponry has been discovered. This is
easily one of the best straight-up science-fiction comics I
have ever read and was ever so close to nabbing the top spot
in this best of 2005 list.
Ocean, originally a six-issue mini-series published by WildStorm Productions, is now available in trade paperback
form.
Favorite Single Issue of 2005 – All-Star Superman #1
Well, I already did an entire column based on this book, so
I’ll try and keep this short and sweet. I am a HUGE fan of
Superman. He is, has been and always will
be my absolute favorite character of all time. Even so, I
find it very difficult to read Superman comics these days.
Most of them are just boring and some of them plain old
suck.
But now, finally, someone has gone and made Superman fun and
interesting again, not to mention noble and heroic. In an
age when most superhero comics are boring me to tears, Grant Morrison and Frank Quitely have restored my faith, showing me
that unique and fantastic and original stories can still be
done using decades-old icons like Superman, the first and
greatest superhero of them all.
Morrison and Quitely’s run on All-Star Superman is slated to
run at least 12 issues. No word yet whether or not Morrison
will continue writing the book after the initial 12 issues,
but it’s doubtful that Quitely will do more.
A Close Second – Nada. Nothing comes remotely close… move
along.
Favorite One-Shot of 2005 – PENG!
Another no-brainer, and also another book I’ve talked about
quite a bit in previous Bum’s Rush columns, PENG! is an
example of the best of the best. It’s a story that
absolutely could not have been achieved with as great a
result outside of comics, with the possible exception of
anime and even then I doubt I would have enjoyed it half as
much. It’s every kick-ass fighting game you loved as a kid,
every fantasy you ever had about applying superhero physics
to real life, every brain-rotting bad-ass cartoon you
watched as a kid all rolled into one giant 72-page romp. The
book’s artist and writer, Corey “The Rey” Lewis, is the
future of comics and the future looks damn good.
Corey Lewis broke into the comics scene in a big way in
2005, but he is going to absolutely dominate 2006 with the
release of a
Rival School
adaptation for Udon Comics, the re-release and repackaging
of
Sharknife Vol. 1 (now called Sharknife:
Stage First – Champion Edition) and the debut of a second
volume, Sharknife: Stage Second.
A Close Second – GLX-mas Special #1
Well, it’s more like a distant second really, but I already
cheated once by skipping over the Close Second Single Issue
of 2005. This book is really just a nice Christmas treat for
fans that dug the heck out of the GLA: Misassembled
mini-series. More death, more laughs and more proof that
Squirrel Girl just might be the greatest superhero in the
Marvel Universe.
God, I really hope they let Dan Slott do more GLA books.
Hmmm, maybe I should just ask Santa Claus… that is, if the
evil Dr. Tannenbaum hasn’t kidnapped him!
Next week, it’s the 3rd and final chapter of The Best In
Comics 2005! Until then, have a safe and happy holiday
everybody! MERRY CHRISTMAS!
Quick Bits
Warning! Nothing you read here in Quick Bits should be
considered FACT until it actually happens. Which it might
not. How do you know I’m not just making all this crap up? I
could, you know. You’ve been warned!
- The
Ghost Rider movie has been pushed back to
2007, apparently due to Sony’s already massive slate of
movies set to debut next summer. Still, one can’t help but
wonder if there’s a more sinister meaning behind the delay.
And by sinister I mean that the movie sucks. We’ll see.
- Marvel has announced yet another BIG EVENT comic coming in
2006 called Annihilation. The series, written by Keith Giffen, will feature most, if not all, of Marvel’s major
cosmic characters. My favorite part of the whole
announcement it the way in which the series will unfold,
with an initial one-shot followed by four individual
mini-series leading into a final six issue mini-series tying
the entire event together. Hmmm, where have I seen something
like that before? Oh, yeah, DC already did that. I think
it’s called Infinite Crisis or something. Supposed to be a
big deal.
- Mark Millar, the human hype-machine, recently stated that
his upcoming Marvel mini-series, 1985, “… has the potential
to be Marvel’s Narnia” referring, obviously, to the classic
series of books and the recent movie adaptation. Even upon
clarification of this statement, wherein Millar elaborated
by saying “… it's a story about a boy in our world finding a
way into the Marvel Universe,” I still find myself
scratching my head and wondering where he comes up with this
stuff. Like when he first began talking about his Top Cow
mini-series,
Wanted which he described as being
the
Watchmen for supervillains. Just seems like
he enjoys completely overstating the importance of his work,
trying to establish his books as classics before they ever
hit the shelves. Eh, whatever, I’m tired of talking about
this now.
- Speaking of Mark Millar, the big Marvel event he’s working
on with Steve McNiven
has been
officially announced as Civil War and will spin out of
events set in motion in the New Avengers: Illuminati
one-shot by Brian Michael Bendis and Alex Maleev . Good GOD! How many BIG EVENT comics does Marvel
need to do in one friggin’ year anyway? I count three
(excluding the fifth week New Universe event) coming up so
far. And not one of them makes me excited at all. I’m a much
bigger fan of Marvel’s low-key books.
- Let’s throw in some DC news – Firestorm’s getting a new
costume. Wheeee! Meh, I tried.
- Actually, most of the big DC news centers around the
upcoming One Year Later story spinning out of Infinite
Crisis and while there have been several interviews with the
creators of some key OYL books, things are still
understandably hush-hush.
- The long-in-development Watchmen movie has been picked up by
yet another studio, this time Warner Bros. The previous
Paramount production was all set to go earlier this year but
was shut down when new management took over. Paul Greengrass,
the director who was working on this previous incarnation of
the film, has apparently left the film and Warner is looking
at new writers and directors, so it seems as if they’re
starting from scratch. So much effort for a movie that won’t
be even half as good as the graphic novel it’s based on.
- Did I already tell you guys about the Hellboy animated
series being released direct to DVD? No? There’s going to be
a Hellboy animated series being released direct to DVD.
- Also possibly maybe perhaps in the works for direct DVD
release are a series of three
Futurama
movies. Animated, of course. Maybe…
- Marvel Comics Solicitations for March 2006 are up
over
here.
I’m not trying to be antagonistic here as I really don’t
have anything against Marvel in general but this latest
offering of books is just… bland. I really can’t see
anything, aside from my normal picks, that makes me sit up
and go “Wow! Gotta read that!” I’m not so much angry or
disappointed or anything as I am just sad. I’ve said it
before and I’ll say it again, with all the random
mini-series (that seem to serve little purpose other than to
retain rights to characters before their copyright lapses),
meaningless “events” (New Universe, I’m looking in your
direction), and so on the company really doesn’t seem to
have any direction or purpose to it. It all seems so random
and “just because.” More of the “throw it at the wall and
see if it sticks” policy that just smacks of an overpowering
desire to create the “next hot thing.” Bleh. Excuse my
little rant there. And my blatant overuse of “quotation
marks”.
- And finally, the Image Comics Solicitations for
March 2006 can be found
here. Some cool looking stuff in here, like Scott Kurtz and
Aaron William’s Truth, Justin and the American Way and
Benito Cereno’s Hector Plasm.
NEXT WEEK: The YEAR END EDITION of The Bum’s Rush - Part
three of The Best of 2005!
Send me hate mail at
thesuperleezard@yahoo.com
Read more stupid crap I
write at
www.livejournal.com/users/superleezard
Check out my (semi) daily comic, Der Wundervolle Bean,
at
www.livejournal.com/users/der_magic_bean
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