Comics

Comic Rack

Hmm, we’re about to talk about comics so it must be Wednesday!  Welcome to the RazorFine Comic Rack boys and girls.  Pull up a bean bag and take a seat at the master as we look at the new comics set to hit comic shops and bookstores today from DC, Marvel, Dark Horse, WildStorm, Vertigo, Dynamite Entertainment, IDW Publishing, and Image Comics.

This week includes The All-New Booster Gold, Green Lantern, Hereos For Hire, The Lone Ranger, Stormwatch: PHD, Star Wars: Legacy, The Un-Men, the first issues of Parade (with Fireworks) and Suicide Squad: Raise the Flag, and the 100th issue of Daredevil.  Also don’t forget the truckload of new graphic novels including BtVS Omnibus Vol. 2, Desperadoes: Buffalo Dreams, Essential Punisher Vol. 2, The Flash: Wonderland, Marvel Zombies/Army of Darkness, Predator: Flesh and Blood, Star Trek TNG: The Space Between, Superman: The Death and Return of Superman Omnibus and much, much more.

Enjoy issue #38

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The White Event

A world without heroes, until now.  newuniversal takes us into a world very much like our own, with some important differences, where an unexplained celestial event would cause the birth of a handful of super-humans with the abilities to change human history forever and a world not yet ready for gods to walk the Earth.

20 years after Marvel’s New Universe Warren Ellis and Salvador Larroca re-imagine a world facing the birth of heroes.  Think NBC’s Heroes, but more consistent, better thought out and, you know, good.

newuniversal Vol. 1: Everything Went White
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20 years ago Marvel Comics launched a new brand of comics set in a distinctly different, and more realistic, world.  The New Universe experiment, though ultimately a failure due to creative issues and Marvel’s budgetary problems at the time, intrigued many and was years ahead of its time.  Last year Warren Ellis and Salvador Larroca were tapped to re-imagine New Universe for its 20th Anniversary.  The result became newuniversal.

An ordinary world, not that different from our own, is visited by an unexpected celestial event.  All at once, all over the globe, everything goes white.  At first it appears the event had no effect, but then a handful of people begin developing unusual powers and abilities.

We learn that this “White Event” was caused by the world’s contact with the “newuniverse structure,” an artificial structure created eons ago by a now long dead and forgotten race.  Its purpose is to alter a small group of sentient beings for specific roles.

The trouble however lies not with these newly super-enhanced beings, but for a world unready and unwilling to allow such fundamental changes in the world’s balance of power to occur.  Led by a secret NSA program known as Project Spitfire, the US Government has strict rules for dealing with super-humans, and even killing them when necessary.  The appearance of one living super-human commences surveillence and defense preparations.  Two super-humans means putting agents into the field ready to act.  The appearance of three super-humans, which leads to a mathematical probability that they will meet, means death.  Presided over by Philip L. Voight, Spitfire has taken necessary action in the past and is willing to take deadly action again if necessary.

The four transformed characters include John Tensen, a NYPD detective near death after a gunshot wound to the head who miraculously reawakens completely healed and with the ability to see though a person’s lifetime and judge them on their actions in the name of Justice.  Kenneth Connell was a small town hick who awakes to find his girlfriend burnt alive and a strange glowing image of the Star Brand on his right hand.  Dr. Jennifer Swan, a scientist working on a weapons system for Spitfire becomes aware of an uncanny ability to understand and talk to machines.  Izanami Randall awakes inside an alien communication station inside the Superflow, a transuniversal space where dreams and ideas interact with the physical world, and is given the information about what has happened and told a “paradigm shift” has occurred.  She is to be the Nightmask herald and is given the task to find the others and help the world understand and cope with the changes that are to come.

Also part of the narrative are Dr. Leonard Carson, Dr. Hannah Ballad, and Jim Braddock and their team of archaeologists who discover the ruins of the shining city of Zardach, a city of amazing technological achievement which was destroyed before written history began, uncovered by the White Event, and Dr. Emmet Proudhawk, a Native American CIA consultant contacted by the Superflow during a vision quest.

click for larger image

This hardcover volume collects the first six issues of the series which is set to start back up again for “season two” in 2008.  Sadly it doesn’t contain an introduction from Ellis, but does contain cover art, including variant covers, and some early sketches of the main characters.  Movie watchers may also enjoy Larroca’s artwork which models many of the characters off Hollywood actors and actresses including Bruce Willis, Josh Holloway, Angelina Jolie, and James Cromwell.

In terms of storytelling newuniversal is first-rate.  Fans of Ellis’ work on Stormwatch, The Authority, and Planetary will recognize similar ideas of multiple realities and dimensions and a region (here the Superflow, similar though different to the Bleed) outside of them.  Also of interest are the variations of this alternate reality.  Hillary Rodham Clinton is the President, the Twin Towers still stand, and Paul McCartney (not John Lennon, who still lives in this reality) was shot all those years ago.  All these little details give a well formed and well developed world into which these characters exist.  Unlike NBC Heroes which plays with some of the same themes, here the events and the boundaries of the world are understood, well thought out, and explained.  There are still mysteries to solve, but the readers understand the basic rules of the game (instead of just redefining them every week as fits the writer’s fancy).  For fans of the show, and others, like me, who have been disappointed by its lack of foresight, I would recommend you take a look at newuniversal and see how good writing can make all the difference.

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Comic Rack

Hmm, we’re about to talk about comics so it must be Wednesday!  Welcome to the RazorFine Comic Rack boys and girls.  Pull up a bean bag and take a seat at the master as we look at the new comics set to hit comic shops and bookstores today from DC, Marvel, Dark Horse, Wildstorm, Vertigo, Dynamite Entertainment, IDW Publishing, and Image Comics.

This week includes Amazing Spider-Man, Buffy the Vampire Slayer Season 8, Detective Comics, Midnighter, Outsiders, Scalped, Star Trek: Year Four, and the first issues of Brit, Captain America: The Chosen, Infinity Inc, Iron Man: Enter The Mandarin Lobster Johnson: The Iron Prometheus and Sorrow.  Also don’t forget the truckload of new graphic novels including Checkmate Vol. 2: Pawn Breaks, Ms. Marvel Vol. 2: Civil War, The Pro, Spider-Man Family: Back in Black, Star Wars 30th Anniversary Collection Vol. 7: Darklighter, Sword of the Atom and much, much more.

Enjoy issue #37

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RazorFine Presents – Booster Gold

Welcome to the second issue of RazorFine Presents Comic Spotlight as we take a look at comic heroes, villians, and everything in between.  This week we examine a screw-up from the future who stole equipment and knowledge and traveled back in time to the 20th Century to become “the greatest hero the world has never known” – Booster Gold.

Booster Gold

Name: Michale Jon Carter

1st Appearance: Booster Gold issue #1 (Vol. 1, 1986)

Currently apearing: Booster Gold (Vol. 2, ongoing series)

N/A

Created by Dan Jurgens, Booster Gold is about as far from a model hero as you can get.  A self-promoting thief from the future who saves the day to win adulation and glory more than do the right thing has come quite a long way since his first appearance back in 1986.

The Greatest Hero the World
Has Never Known

Michael Jon Carter was a famous football star in the 25th Century before being banned for betting on his own games.  Taking up a job as a night watchman in the Metropolis Space Museum he studied the past and with the help of a security robot named Skeets stole a uniform and various super-hero equipment including a Legion of Super-Heroes flight ring and Brainiac 5’s force-field belt.  “Borrowing” Rip Hunter‘s time machine Carter and Skeets journeyed back to the 20th Century where he reinvented himself as the hero “Booster Gold.”

Booster Gold remained in modern day Metropolis, bringing him often into conflict with Superman, and used his celebrity and knowledge of the future to build himself a sizable fortune (though many heroes protested against his commercial deals, merchandising, and celebrity status).  In the late 80’s Booster became a cornerstone of Keith Giffen‘s run of Justice League International.  Booster fit right in with Guy Gardner, Captain Atom, Fire and Ice, and formed a strong friendship with the Blue Beetle (together the two found countless ways to get into trouble including opening a JLI resort on the living island of Kooey Kooey Kooey).

Life after the Justice League, including founding The Conglomerate and a short stint as part of a new team known (or best forgotten) as Extreme Justice, wasn’t too bright for our hero, and at one point he even hung up his costume.

Booster reemerged during Infinite Crisis, and played a key role in DC’s year-long event 52 by saving the newly created DC Multiverse.

 

In his new ongoing series Booster Gold accepts a job from Rip Hunter to maintain his reputation as a super-hero failure in order to use his powers secretly to help Hunter save the Multiverse from potential time anomalies and villains who will prey on them and truly become “the greatest hero the world has never known.”

Booster Gold earned his own episode “The Greatest Story Never Told” on Justice League Unlimited (read the full review).

Here’s a scene with Booster and Skeets.  This episode is an almost perfect portrayal of the early Booster Gold as his attempts at acknowledgment and celebrity only lead to dead-ends (and people constantly thanking Green Lantern for his actions).  And when he finally does save the world, of course, no one ever knows.  Classic.

For me Booster Gold was a staple of Giffen’s mad and hilarious run on Justice League and I’m so happy that he’s earned himself a new series to promote his own brand of super-heroing.  For more on our hero check out Justice League: A New Beginning, Formerly Known as the Justice League and I Can’t Believe It’s Not the Justice League

, and all four volumes of 52, all currently available in trade paperback.  You can also check out “The Official Booster Gold Chronology” to find other appearances by our hero.

RazorFine Presents – Booster Gold Read More »

Comic Rack

Hmm, we’re about to talk about comics so it must be Wednesday!  Welcome to the RazorFine Comic Rack boys and girls.  Pull up a bean bag and take a seat at the master as we look at the new comics set to hit comic shops and bookstores today from DC, Marvel, Dark Horse, Wildstorm, Vertigo, Dynamite Entertainment, IDW Publishing, and Image Comics.

This week includes Action Comics, Conan, Silver Surfer: Requiem Teen Titans, Wetworks, and the first issues of Bomb Queen IV, The Last Fantastic Four Story and The Mice Templar.  Also don’t forget the truckload of new graphic novels including Batman: Secrets of the Batcave, The Complete Bite Club, DC/Top Cow: Crossover Classics, Essential Daredevil Vol. 4, Manhunter Vol. 3: Origins, Ninja Scroll, Tangent Comics Vol. 1 and much, much more.

Enjoy issue #36

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