Showing posts with label Rijul Raut. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rijul Raut. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Week In Review : Avengers #25 / B.P.R.D: The Long Death #3 / Batman #8 / Nighwing #8 / Ragemoor #2 / The Shadow #1

 Avengers #25 (Marvel)
Story : Brian Michael Bendis
Art : Walter Simonson
(Reviewed by Anubhav Sharma)
As I’ve said last week, I’m a big fan of Bendis penned event tie-ins, mainly because he gets the level of characterisation and depth stories as big as the events we’ve been seeing for the last half decade which may not fit in well with all the big action in the main books. At face value, one may not see how relevant this issue is to AvX as a whole, but deep down it gives much needed buildup on the Avengers side of the conflict at the core of the event, and serves as a bridge between the recent Osborn storyline and AvX. Captain America and the Protector, in particular, get their motivations fleshed out, which explains some of the former’s decisions in AvX so far and the latter’s solicited actions.
Of course, one can’t talk about this issue without talking about the return of legendary artist Walt Simonson to Marvel. With modern colouring techniques showing is art in a new light, it’s safe to say it as the same level of dynamism he was known for at his best. Also, is Thor particularly looks as majestic as ever.
SCORE : 8.2 / 10

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Week In Review: America's Got Powers #1 / Deadpool #53 / Frankenstein Agent of SHADE #8 / Suicide Squad #8

America's Got Powers #1 (Image Comics)
Story : Jonathan Ross & Bryan Hitch
Art : Bryan Hitch
(Reviewed by Anupam Sarker)
The story begins with a flashback to a weird, big and shiny blue crystal landing in San Francisco, causing every pregnant woman within a five mile radius from the crash site to give birth. All these newborns had some special super-power except for one unlucky chap named Tommy Watts a.k.a The Zero (means the guy has Zero Power).
So what do these Super-powered kids do when they grow up? They join a reality TV show called America's Got Powers where all Super-powered folks compete to be in the world's biggest superhero team. And what does Tommy Watts do when he grows up? He does menial jobs at a stadium called Powers Arena where the TV show competition takes place.
Back to the present, Tommy and his friend dress as mascots and go about the arena. Sometime after the show has started, a super-powered guy is thrown out of the arena by the gigantic robots and explodes against the barrier wall, causing civilians to get inside the arena. A kid also gets into the arena and Tommy jumps in to save him. The issue ends with Tommy being revealed to have an unknown type and level of super-power while saving the kid.
I'm a big fan of Jonathan Ross. He is responsible for Turf, a five-issue Image mini which was awesome. But I'm pretty disappointed with the familiarity of the story. I mean, after reading the first few pages of the comic, one already knows what is going to happen. The concept of the comic sounds loosely based on another Image series by Todd Nauck called Wildguard, a comic where super-powered folks enter a reality TV show to join the world’s biggest superhero team (talk 'bout uncanny similarities)
Bryan Hitch's art is pretty good, but sometimes the faces seem to get sloppy or out of proportion.
Overall, the comic is interesting with some amazing visuals and extremely awesome colours by Paul Mounts and attractive letters by Chris Eliopoulos.
If you are looking for an awesome comic which will get more awesome in the next issues, then this is your thing.
P.S- Image Comics publisher Eric Stephenson does a cameo in a panel of the comic.
SCORE : 8.5 / 10

Deadpool #53 (Marvel)
Story : Daniel Way
Art : Alex Garza
(Reviewed by Anant Sagar)
No No No!! What has Deadpool done? You want to know? No? Well too bad. Wade here has gone and made himself normal. Well okay, normal is relative. He’s now mortal, he can die, he can finally be with the love of his..err..life, Death. Anyway down to business.
THE GOOD:-
As all of you following Deadpool would know and agree with me. The story is excellent. Deadpool is finally closer to dying. We know he wants to die so he can be with Death. So now, with a serum, he actually loses his healing factor. Has X-force after him, apart from Tombstone who wants to put a bullet through his head. The art follows over from the old issues. The fact that Deadpool is now mortal adds a nice twist to the way one would perceive the issue.
THE BAD:-
The story has been going so well so far. And when it comes to the story the only thing I can say is, WHY IS HE MORTAL?? That’s something that’s going to make things weird for a bit. But I guess it may become one of his many quirks. Or he’ll just be dead. I doubt he’ll just stay dead. I don’t know, Deadpool being normal-ish just doesn’t seem right. I guess only time will tell.
THE FUNNY:-
As I have stated before. EVERYTHING!
My favourite moments include the following (and everything else in the issue):
- the secret ingredient to the serum is baby hair. (YES BABY HAIR!! Yikes!)
- Bob: “You’re not mad?” DP: “I’m a MAD genius. Maybe....”
- E.V.A.? Expliquez. S’il vous plait.
- “it doesn’t work,” (expression) “It doesn’t??” “it only works on you” “YESS”
- Deadpool getting smacked on the head by Bob, yes Bob, with a pot.
My final opinion... I eagerly look forward to the conclusion. I want it I want it I want it!!!
The story arc so far, 9 out of 10. Grab a copy NOW!
SCORE : 8 / 10

Frankenstein Agent of SHADE #8 (DC)
Story : Jeff Lemire
Art : Alberto Ponticelli
(Reviewed by Rijul Raut)
I love done-in-ones. Writing for the trade is something I can tolerate, and its ubiquity in recent comics makes it all the sweeter when a good one-shot issue sneaks past that combines characterization with plot relevancy. This issue is one of that rare breed, mixing flashback with reality as a sort of mirror (another semi-recent example would be Greg Rucka writing in pre-reboot Detective Comics) and providing insight into that issue that every Franken-fan has pondered - what caused Frankenstein and his Bride to separate way back when?
SCORE : X / 10







Suicide Squad #8 (DC)
Story : Adam Glass
Art : Frederico Dallacchio
(Reviewed by Akshay Dhar)
This is among the worst books DC has in it's new line-up, but I can't lie – it's also one of the most entertaining guilty pleasures.
Violent, blatant, shameless and mindlessly entertaining, this new incarnation of the fan-favourite and acclaimed Suicide Squad titles is nothing but the epitome of the 90's-style “EXTREME” that DC has been pushing in several of their books – mostly in the crappier of the lot. But here it works somehow, despite Glass' often mediocre writing and insufficient characterization.
FOR THOSE JUST COMING IN:
The latest version of the squad is officially known as Task Force-X and still run by Amanda Waller. The mainstay members are Deadshot, Harley Quinn, Black Spider, King Shark and El Diablo. In only seven short issues they've had brutal missions including one where an entire stadium was sealed off because it was possessed by something evil and not only did they get team-mate Voltaic to kill them all, Deadshot popped him in the head after that to pin it all on him. Between that and other members getting their head blown off (literally!) by nano-bombs they all have implanted in their necks (in case they get frisky!), this has been a pretty hardcore series. Not to mention Harley going AWOL and brutalising an entire police station after hearing Joker died (read Detective Comics for more on that story).
MOVING ON:
The last issue ended with Harley finally getting what she deserved and after a bullet at extremely close-range, being put down after her murder-spree of madness! Now this issue she's been revived and given one last chance before they pop her head like a potato in a microwave.
This one is kind of an interim issue in that it follows what's happening with the squad after several missions and the fallout for them, both personally and in terms of their deal with Waller. In a sense this is the closest you'll see to character development by Glass is my guess and he doesn't do too bad a job on it here. El Diablo is now back on the team and Savant is released back into the wild, his term complete and such, ending with a deadly new mission ahead which promises that the next issue will be a return to the usual bloody, violent and wicked form that makes this title a success.
Don't get me wrong, I don't love it for that, I just enjoy it and am willing to admit that if done well such mindless fare can be fun too. However unless he can really up his game, Glass should limit the characterization attempts and stick to crazy adventures. The only thing that worries me is the rate at which he's killing folks here, either they need to create a bunch more characters that are there just to be killed brutally or try and find adventures where they don't die quite so often or something. How long this series will stay readable, I don't know – but for now it's entertaining enough that I'll keep catching it when I see it.
SCORE : 6 / 10

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Week In Review: Danger Club #1 / O.M.A.C #8 / Supreme #63 / Voltron Year One #1 (DOUBLE REVIEWED)

Danger Club #1 (Image)
Story : Landry Q. Walker
Art : Eric Jones
(Reviewed by Akshay Dhar)
F*** Yeah!!!
If there's a new superhero comic to try and a new world to explore – this would be it!
It's only the first issue.
I was amused in the first couple of pages which are done very nicely like a good old silver age comic that give us character names (like Kid Monstro and Apollo) and a feel for how this new world works with the superheroes that are like the Teen Titans of this world.
Then it throws it all out the window.
Picture a bunch of characters that are like alternate-universe-young-adult-versions of all your favourites like Kid Vigilante (Batman!), Apollo (Superman, duh!), Fearless (Nick Fury), etc... Now picture an Earth where all the superheroes left to combat some great threat in space months ago and now... well, lets just say that things are not looking good and Apollo has lost his marbles more than a little. I'm not saying the characters are direct rip-offs, but one can see parallels and archetypes at play here when creating the style and characteristics of all of them.

Monday, March 19, 2012

Week-In-Review: Adventure Time #2 / Conan The Barbarian #2 / Saga #1 / X-23#21

Adventure Time #2 (BOOM! Studios)
Story: Ryan North + Lucy Knisley and Zac Gorman (backup stories)
Art: Shelli Paroline and Braden Lamb
(Review by: Rijul Raut)
Hoo boy. Let me start off by saying that Adventure Time is one of my favourites of all cartoon TV shows, nay, of all TV shows. Its mixture of bizarre action, surreal humour and the best friends anywhere, ever, makes me watch this show for hours and hours. So when I heard that it was getting a tie-in comic, I was ecstatic. I had extremely high expectations of this comic, and boy, does it deliver. Some pressing issues prevented me from reading the first issue, and so I must bring before you a review of Adventure Time #2.
The main story continues on from the first issue, with the Lich having captured Finn, Jake, Dessert Princess and Ice King inside a mysterious bag. Marceline, Bubblegum Princess and Lumpy Space Princess (boy, this comic has a LOT of royalty. Marceline's a vampire queen) are also caught during the events of this comic, and the plot deals with them trying to find their way out. There are tiny, three-panel mini-comics on the bottom of some pages, and they are hilarious. My favourite moment has to be the Ice King's pet penguin Gunter reading Ice King-penned fan-fiction.

Monday, March 12, 2012

Week-In-Review: Fairest #1 / Hell Yeah #1 / Irredeemable #35 / The Avengers Prelude: Fury's Big Week #5

We have four awesome new titles for you here folks, with four more to follow tomorrow! (It's been a huge week!) So no wasting time - let's get to it!
Fairest #1 (Vertigo)
Story : Bill Willingham
Art : Phil Jiminez, Andy Lanning (Inks) and Andrew Dalhousie (colors)
(Reviewed by: Anubhav DasGupta)
Fables, in my opinion, is one of the best ongoing comic books at the moment. While I haven’t loved each and every issue, there hasn’t been one that I’ve hated even a little. Bill Willingham has created a universe too charming and wonderful and sexy to be disliked by anyone. Fairest is a spinoff of Fables, but I don’t think you need to be a regular reader of Fables to enjoy the issue that I’m reviewing. One issue in, Fairest has got nothing to do with the current story arc in Fables, and it’s amazingly enjoyable.

Monday, February 27, 2012

Week-In-Review: All-Star Western #6 / No Place Like Home #1 / The Flash #6

Hey folks! Welcome to another week of new comics and this week we again split our review into two because we just had too many comics to review (it's a dirty job but someone's gotta do it!) and so we bring you three spectacular new comics today:
 
All-Star Western #6
Story: Justin Gray and Jimmy Palmiotti
Art: Moritat (w/ Gabriel Bautista on colours)
(Review by Akshay Dhar)
There is little anyone can say about this series except that it is without a doubt one of the best things to come out of DC's “New 52” relaunch.
Jonah Hex has always been one of the most popular cult characters and under the pen of Gray and Palmiotti, one of the better non capes-n-tights comics on the market consistently. But this relaunch that brought Hex to ye-olde-Gotham back in the day, bringing the rugged outdoorsman and vagabond into the confines of a city really put things in a different direction and allowed a whole new kind of Jonah Hex story, mingling the standard western adventure he is known for with a hint of the just-south-of-normal that was a hallmark of his tales for a long time.
We get a conclusion to the big mystery this time around as Hex and his unintentional partner Dr. Arkham race to learn the fate of the kidnapped children of Gotham and fight a giant demonic bat along the way – just another day in the life of Hex. With a satisfying ending that isn't quite an ending but a nice and neat lead-in to the next issue that gives us a sweet little teaser of what to expect and a whole new guest star/partner for Hex, I would say I'm loving the way this book is being handled and hope it stays around at least for a while.
The back-up story (another comic practice I miss!) stars the mysterious lady known as the Barbary Ghost as she continues on her hunt for vengeance and so far has been well told and the character fairly nicely put forward so this promises to be another welcome addition to monthly reading for those who like these hardy frontier characters in this wild world.
The art is without reproach in both stories and the combination of art and colouring carries a wonderfully faded grittiness to it that really brings out every mood and facet of the excellent layouts and detailing and I look forward to much more of the same in issues ahead!
SCORE : 8.5 / 10

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