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Showing posts with label Warren Ellis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Warren Ellis. Show all posts

Jun 28, 2020

The 40 Years of Comics Project - Day 1950: Calibrations #1, June 1996

For information on stopping the spread of COVID-19, and on what to do if you are quarantined, have a look at the World Health Organization site.
 
 
https://www.comics.org/issue/265982/
 
 
Today's featured creator, Marc Andreyko, takes on in today's comic a fascinating character in queer literary history: Peter Pan. Since its earliest appearances on stage, the character has been played by a woman, including the very first stage performance in 1904. I'm not 100% certain what to make of a character who refuses to grow up who is always played on stage by a woman (though not in film?) - I can see the choice being a logistical one, in that a woman has the maturity to play the role and the voice to carry off a pre-pubescent boy. But there's also something to be said for a character that has been so significant in English literature, and in English Children's Literature, a specifically-male character, having such strong ties to women. Optimistically, I think it offers a way of parsing, in a century vehemently opposed to any kind of  questioning of the gender binary, the breakdown of traditional gender roles. Even the fact of the character being a "role" that a woman inhabits offers a place to start an interesting conversation about gender roles.

All that said, the Peter Pan that we encounter in today's story, a sneak peek at a longer series, does not seem particularly happy with the actress playing him on stage. Indeed, he becomes quite murderous about it, it's hinted in the final few panels, even screaming out his fury over girls playing him on stage. Is this Peter the toxically masculine, come to take what he thinks is revenge for his emasculation? Sadly, I've no idea. I may well see about tracking the series down, especially if Jill Thompson, who illustrates today's short story, continues to be involved.

More to follow.


Caliber is such an interesting publisher. Generally pretty high quality stuff.

Apr 11, 2016

The 40 Years of Comics Project - Day 412: Doktor Sleepless #1, July 2007

http://www.comics.org/issue/368906/

It's been a long while since I've read a Warren Ellis comic. For a long while, I got sick of his repetition of characterization. It's like everyone he ever wrote was a different version of Spider Jerusalem. And while I'm okay with that kind of Moorcockian parallel hero shtick, Ellis' characters just seemed to me to be mouthpieces through which the writer could spew his vitriol toward the ills he perceived in society.

I'm not saying that that's not what's going on in this comic, but at least there's a bit more characterization to the Doktor.

I've not too much to say about this comic. It was very much an introductory piece, both to the characters and to the world they inhabit. I feel like this is a very early chunk of The City's history (from Transmetropolitan), and, should I ever get my hands on the balance of the series, that's how I'll be treating it. Unless it gets weird, which is always a possibility with Mr. Ellis.

Onward.

Nov 11, 2015

Reading Between the Panels

A lovely short piece of writing by my friend Tom Sewel on the voices of comics scholarship and the ways we, as a community, are interacting with and interpreting our beloved medium.

Reading Between the Panels.

Sep 16, 2015

The 40 Years of Comics Project - Day 204: X-Calibre #4, June 1995


On the list of rotten things that happen to characters in Warren Ellis comics, having the Shadow King make Mystique simultaneously shift into every form she's ever held has got to be amongst the most awful. Not that anyone else in this comic gets treated much better than this. Ellis does here, to the nth degree, what he's really good at: torturing characters and destroying happiness. My understanding, from those who've met him, is that in person he's a lovely, unassuming gentleman. In his fictions he's anything but, and that's honestly one of the reasons I sometimes have trouble starting up one of his series, be it one I've read or one that's new. Something unimaginably awful is going to happen to one of the characters in that series, and it's not always going to be to the character who deserves (if such a thing can be deserved) it.

Now, this said, let's also bear in mind that, in this case at least, he's dealing with superhumans, these paragons of virtue or decadence, these myths encased in comic book flesh. And the things these characters do, be they virtuous deeds or heinous crimes, are often so far beyond the realm of normal human experience that we can't always be surprised when the tortures and misfortunes that befall them are also of that ilk. And this is something that I think Ellis understands very well, along similar, though in many ways opposite, lines as the mythic hero theory of Grant Morrison. Where Morrison might place the characters in situations that can only be overcome by the deployment of mythic forces, physical or mental, and these tasks prove the heroes worthy of their god-like status, Ellis is more likely to demonstrate the sorts of tortures these kinds of characters can endure and still retain a modicum of their sanity and drive. Sometimes a very small modicum.

Still and all, I would hate to be written by Warren Ellis. It'd be nice to have such snappy dialogue, but I couldn't leave the house for fear of being eaten by rabid squirrels over the course of 10 hours or something. And on that lovely note, I'll see you tomorrow.

The First Few Issues: Early Writings of the Giant Box of Comics

(This is the last of my old writings that I've found so far, so probably the last of the First Few Issues until I find something I wrote in crayon about my old Doctor Who Weekly magazines.)




Transmetropolitan, by Warren Ellis and Darrick Robertson
Overview and review of issues #28 - 30, by Tom Miller
Rating: 5/5 

The first thing you ought to know is that I'm not going to give anything away here. Not a thing. I hate reading reviews that tell you the entire plot of the (insert medium here ) that you're interested in, thus negating any reason to bother with it. That's what I'm going to try to do: give you a reason to bother with Transmetropolitan.

What you should know: Transmet has been going for 30 issues, 12 under the Helix imprint, and the rest in Vertigo. At the outset we meet Spider Jerusalem, a journalist of the near future and apparently some great fame. He is called back from a self-imposed exile on a mountain under threat of contractual breach, just the first thing to piss him off. And therein lies the key to Transmet. Things piss Spider off. Lots of things. However, unlike the majority of human beings, he does not let them slide off his back like water on a duck.
He says all the things you ever wished you could say, or thought of an hour after the fact, or were just too damned polite to utter aloud. And he says them better than you or I ever could. And he says them to all the people who've ever deserved it. The police, the government, the fanatically religious and just plain idiots. Along the way he manages to step on toes he perhaps shouldn't have, the ramifications of which are just now being felt. The early issues are collected in trade format. Back on the Street (issues #1 - 3) chronicles
a race riot in the city. Lust for Life (issues #4 - 12) is a series of stand-alones and one short multi-parter and includes my personal favourite issue, in which Spider spends the whole day watching television. Year of the Bastard (issues #13 - 18, Winter's Edge 2 story) is the beginning of a particularly ugly presidential campaign, and contains some truly chilling sequences. These books are followed by the six-part "The New Scum," the
ending(?) to the presidential arc, and a series of stand-alones that lead to .....

Lonely City: This story arc stands out for me as the best of 1999. I kid you not. I read a lot of comics, too many perhaps. When I finished issue #30, the last part of the story, I had chills. The same goes for the previous two issues. #28 makes a perfect jumping-on point for a new reader as we are given brief introductions of the main players in the series. It shifts into high gear with the most savage beating this side of Preacher that explodes into another race-related story. Determined to find out why the police insist on covering up this crime, Spider and his assistants harass officers of the law and attend volatile demonstrations. Anyone familiar with Ellis' writing will understand what kind of witty banter this involves. And it's always a treat to see Spider pull out the old Bowel Disrupter. The arc in general is perhaps not quite as verbose as the majority of Transmet, and has plenty of action and intrigue, another reason it makes such a good place for a new reader to start. "Lonely City" is an overview itself, a taste of things that have been and things to come, a brief glimpse into the world of Spider Jerusalem and the madness that surrounds him.

A quick word on the art. In Vertigo books you can generally count on some weird, pseudo-surreal art in a story that sometimes doesn't make a lot of sense. And that's what we like about Vertigo, but it's not so in Transmet. Darrick Robertson's art is deceptively simple. The characters look like comic-book characters, in a style that could easily fit into The Flash or JLA. My opinion is that Robertson's true genius lies in his backgrounds. I spend hours (seriously) pouring over his city shots,just to see what he's crammed onto the
billboards and ads. Amazing.

So now you're thinking "Damn, if I'd wanted to read an essay, I'd have stayed in school," but fear not, I'm done. If you're a fan of Warren Ellis and you're not reading this book, you should be, if only so you can gain a little more insight into the cool character that Jack Carter transformed into in Planetary #7. If you're not a fan, read the book anyway. It ranks as one of the most thought-provoking, touching and hilarious comics this addict has ever read.

Sep 2, 2015

The 40 Years of Comics Project - Day 190: X-Man #2, April 1995


I talked yesterday, or the day before, about the short-lived "Counter-X" initiative, helmed by Warren Ellis, that revamped some of the B-list X-titles. The three that received this makeover were Generation X, X-Force, and X-Man, and they were all really fantastic revisionings of the characters. Unfortunately they were around for less than a year when the head honchos at Marvel scrapped a lot of the X-titles and brought in bigger names to relaunch the franchise. And while this gave us the excellent Joe Casey Uncanny X-Men and Grant Morrison's superlative New X-Men, we lost some really great titles. At the end of his run, Nate Grey, the X-Man, had taken on the role of shaman for the mutant tribe, striding across realities and dealing with adventures of a more spiritual nature. It really was an excellent take on the character, especially give the origins we're witnessing in the Age of Apocalypse. Though it hasn't been revealed yet, Nate is an artificially grown mutant, an identity that puts him outside a group of outsiders. This, to me, is a very good definition of a shaman. A holy person of this sort is supposed to be a part and also apart from the group he or she represents, and X-Man is certainly that. And where we see Nate discovering his powers in these initial issues, the payoff comes in his embracing his outsider role in the Counter-X revision. I really do think that the three Counter-X titles could have been some of Marvel's best mutant-related output, though much in the same way that I've suggested that Generation X, at the beginning, was maybe just a bit too Vertigo for mutant fans, perhaps the Counter-X books were a bit too Transmetropolitan.

As far as this particular issue goes, I have to say I'm enjoying Mr. Sinister the most of all the characters. He's a fascinating villain, and the way he both cares and does not care about Nate makes him one of the more truly complex characters in the Age of Apocalypse.

On a separate note, my commitments to school start in earnest today. I'm going to do my best to keep up with the comics and graphic novels, but I fully admit that things might become very hectic. Apologies in advance for the short entries, or incoherent ramblings, that might follow. See you tomorrow!

Aug 27, 2015

The 40 Years of Comics Project - Day 184: X-Calibre #3, May 1995


I'm going to take another tack today. Yesterday I'd noted that what Warren Ellis does isn't very nice. That's not to say it's not good. In many instances, it's brilliant. But, as a friend noted yesterday on Facebook, "I wouldn't be a Warren Ellis character for all the tea in China." (The caveat was also added that we'd both be Elijah Snow because....Elijah Fucking Snow.) Ellis's plots are often quite brutal, but it's a considered brutality, one that, though occasionally gratuitous, is never without reason.

However, over the course of the three issues of X-Calibre, Ellis has also handed us a lovely portrait of penance. Cain Marko, aka Juggernaut, has been a staple of the X-Men rogues gallery almost as long as Magneto. An unstoppable (literally) force of rage and chaos, he tramples opposition and takes what he wants. While Magneto's transformation in the wake of Xavier's death has been the primary focus of the AoA, Marko's transformation is no less interesting, and is in some ways more so. This issue features a lovely moment where he acknowledges the evil he has done, something that even the reformed Magneto is not given the chance to do in the crossover, as his evil never existed to begin with. Juggernaut, on the other hand, has repented his murderous ways, and now lives a devout life of peace, even to the point of causing himself an aneurysm when pushed to the point of potentially having to do violence (See? Never be and Ellis character!). Marko's transformation from murderer to monk is just the latest of a number of conundrums that the crossover poses, though it never really looks very deeply at what amounts to a universal ontological quandary: is the world better off without Charles Xavier?

The easy answer is no. The slaughter of millions by Apocalypse, the forcing of ostensibly good characters into the role of killers, the threat of nuclear destruction of the North American continent. How can any of these be considered a better world? On the other hand, we have Juggernaut. We have Magneto. We have Mystique. We have Rogue and Magneto's child. The tempered nobility of Scott Summers. One begins to have to ask the question of whether or not the resources of Magneto's resistance fighters would be better utilized in toppling Apocalypse's regime, rather that re-writing the timeline completely. What kind of world would come out of the crucible of the Apocalyptian crisis? It's an unfair, and morally suspect, question, of course, which is appropriate given the morally suspect nature of many of Ellis' stories. It's a situation in which it is virtually impossible to answer whether or not the costs outweigh the benefits. The death of millions versus the redemption of the few. But is it only the few? Does the potential exist in this alternate timeline for the redemption of everyone? And if so, what cost does one pay?

Oof. Heavy stuff for an early morning blog post. For the next few days we'll leave the X-Calibre crew to their devices, and follow Rogue's contingent of X-Men to Chicago, where they're trying to stop a culling. It'll be interesting to view a window on this world that is not solely dedicated to rewriting the timeline, but rather to stopping Apocalypse's machinations. See you tomorrow.

Aug 26, 2015

The 40 Years of Comics Project - Day 183: X-Calibre #2, April 1995


I've written extensively over the course of the last 6 months about good writers versus bad writers in superhero comics. Though he's often said he doesn't like writing superhero comics, I'm going to let Warren Ellis have a few words today. This is from the opening page of this issue:

"America is dead.

What sits in its place is a gangrenous wound of a nation -- the American dream of the creature Apocalypse.

These altered states of American have become a staging area for Apocalypse's next, best nightmare -- the corruption of the rest of the world."

There follows some exposition about the specific events of the previous issue, but really those three sentences should have been the preface to every issue in the crossover. They capture exactly the flavour and atmosphere of the series.

(And not to be particularly political, but don't they seem, written as they were about 20 years ago, somewhat prescient?)

I think that Warren Ellis is perhaps the Wolverine of comics writers. He's the best there is at what he does, but what he does isn't very nice. And for a little while there, he was thoroughly over-used.

It may seem odd to point this out in an Ellis comic, but one of the things that gets me about this crossover is that we see very few instances of hope or kindness. Bear with me. This is something that I think is endemic of 90s superhero comics in general. Everything was grim and horrible. But, horrible as it is in this particular alternate universe, there have to be moments of hope, moments that stave off the horror, or people would just kill themselves. I often, when I'm confronted with the atrocities that go on in the less-stable regions of the world, wonder how humans can continue to exist in such deplorable conditions, and the answer that often comes to me is that there are small moments of peace, small acts of kindness, that kindle the tiny spark of hope that has to burn within each of us. We don't see much of this in AoA, and even less in Ellis' corner of the universe. I think, for the crossover to be not simply a successful superhero narrative but to be a successful apocalyptic story (in this, I mean, revealing of something fundamental about humans and heroism, to be literary, I guess), the story needs to show that these people, the foregrounded and the backgrounded, have reasons to live. The rescue of the child in Amazing X-Men is a glimpse of such optimism. I'll be keeping my eyes open for more.

I've invoked that term, "literary." I am curious as to whether or not a collaboratively-written piece like AoA can be literary, or if the conflicting visions of the world stand in the way of true greatness. Another thing I'll bear in mind as we continue through this "gangrenous wound." See you tomorrow.

Aug 16, 2015

The 40 Years of Comics Project - Day 173: X-Calibre #1, March 1995


It is interesting to watch this series unfold from the vantage point of Magneto's master plan. I have to applaud the characterization of the X-Men's leader by all of the writers and artists involved. They really have captured something fundamental about this character, something that is present in all of his incarnations. Arrogance, perhaps? But in service of the greater good. When suggesting epic Magneto stories, there are certain ones that are always brought up, the trial in Uncanny X-Men #200, or his tenure in the Xavier School as Xorn during Grant Morrison's New X-Men, but I think the Age of Apocalypse crossover is really a story about Magneto and the kinds of decisions that someone of his caliber (see what I did there?) is expected to make.

Today's comic represents an interesting moment for this crossover, because it is scripted by one of the second (or is it third) wave of British writers to have made a huge impact on North American comics. Warren Ellis is definitely amongst my favourite writers, though his propensity for falling back on a particular kind of characterization and dialogue more and more puts him, at least to my mind, in the same kind of place as Jack Kirby's archaic cleaving to outdated slang in order to characterize the youth. I stopped reading Ellis for a long while because it seemed to me that, after Transmetropolitan, every character he wrote was some derivative of Spider Jerusalem. That's probably an unfair thing to say (mostly), but that's how it seemed. It could very well be that after Transmet, I just needed a break from Ellis, as that series was very purely him.

Of course, X-Calibre comes before Transmet, and still there's shades of Spider. Nightcrawler is not a nice guy in this comic. There's a text piece at the end of each of the first issues of the mini-series that asks how each hero or villain might turn out in this world without Xavier, whether or not they would retain their roles from the prime timeline. Nightcrawler certainly has not, and his transformation is deftly handled by Ellis and Lashley. The same goes for the monk Cain, this world's take on Juggernaut. While many of the changes are, as with the whole crossover, due to the absence of Charles Xavier, these interesting reinterpretations beg us to consider what happened in each of these characters' lives to engender such a switch in personality. Actually, I can see Nightcrawler being far more angry and violent if he was not rescued by Professor X, but what made Juggernaut into a monk? I don't know if I'll get the answers I seek, but I can imagine.

My last thought for today is a comparative one. There's a reason Ellis is known as one of the better comics writers of the last couple of decades. His writing smacks of a certain attention to craft and detail, of the importance given to words as language itself, rather than simply as a vehicle for conveying narrative. It's interesting to be able to make this kind of comparison in such a tightly-knit crossover. One can absolutely see what it is that defines a good writer and what defines a great one. I think that I'll try paying attention to the artists in the same way. Generation Next's Chris Bachalo is definitely a great artist. What is it that separates him from someone like Lashley, on X-Calibre, whose art is good, but somehow lacking? I'll think more on this. See you tomorrow.

Aug 7, 2015

On the Run: Mark Waid’s The Flash - Part 1: Pasts, Presents, and Futures


Originally, I had envisioned my “On the Run” columns to be standalone pieces that commented on a particular writer or artist’s extended tenure on a particular title. Grant Morrison’s Animal Man, or Alan Moore’s W.I.L.D.Cats, or Warren Ellis’ Stormwatch. Or, to represent the artists a bit more, Chris Sprouse’s Supreme or Frank Quitely’s New X-Men. That may still be how the columns end up, but having just finished another go through the current The Flash television series, I was inspired to read through one of my favourite runs on any superhero comic ever: Mark Waid’s The Flash. I’ll add a caveat to that appellation, in that it was certainly not solely Waid who produced this comic. He’s ably assisted by numerous talented artists, and joined by Brian Augustyn as a co-writer for a large part of the series. But Waid is the fulcrum about whom this run rotates. I’ll give credit where credit is due, of course, when the time comes.


The problem is that this particular sustained run on The Flash (and, yes, the use of the term “run” is intentionally punned) is just over eight years long. It stretches from The Flash Annual #4 in 1991 to The Flash v.2 #159 in 2000, plus a little addendum of six issues in 2007 – 2008. How does one cover such a vast number of comics in a single post? I don’t even think such a thing would be possible, not if I wanted to do justice to what has to rank as one of the great stretches of superhero writing in the genre’s history. Thus, over the course of a number of columns, I’ll look at discrete portions of the run, at the themes that Waid and company touch upon, and at the reasons why I think this is one of the great superhero narratives.

That raises an interesting question. A couple of them actually. First, what is literature, or what makes writing great? When going over with my supervisor the changes I wished to make to my major field reading list in American Literature, we talked about this, about what distinguishes the literary from the non-literary. It was offered to me that the literary is something that stands out from the crowd, that does something different, and does it with grace and facility. I’m not sure I completely buy that that’s all that literature is, but it is a place to begin thinking about how we can define a literary portion of an ongoing superhero series. This is the second question. As an academic, I am trained to look for self-contained imaginative works that can have one or more theoretical paradigms applied to them, all in the service of saying something new and novel about the work and what it represents for our culture. How does one do this with an ongoing comic book series? The answer, I think, is to isolate particular stretches of those comics and demonstrate how they are literary, how they stand out from the rest of the series and from the genre they inhabit. Which is what I hope to do with this particular stretch of The Flash.

That said, I’m going to start in a strange place. Slightly before finishing his 8 years on the title, Waid and fellow scribe Tom Peyer, along with artists Barry Kitson and Tom Grindberg produced Flash & Green Lantern: The Brave and the Bold. Taking their title from a Silver Age team-up comic, this six-issue series tells stories of Green Lantern Hal Jordan and Flash Barry Allen. At the time of its writing, both of these characters were dead (or evil. I can never get Hal Jordan’s chronology straight). The series looks back nostalgically to these two seminal characters, but paints them in the rose-coloured hues of memory. I’ve had conversations with fellow fans about this, especially following Geoff Johns’ reintroduction of both characters into the DCU, pre-New 52. Were these characters really the paragons of virtue and, more importantly, good story-telling that they are often hailed as? I think the answer is no. I think, really, that these are two characters who became far more important to their shared universe after they died, in that they ascended from the incarnated demi-gods that the superheroes are to revered ancestors that could no longer be faulted. I’ll add yet another caveat here, in that I can hardly claim to have comprehensively read the 30 or so years of accumulated tales these characters were a part of before their deaths in the eighties or nineties. I’ve got the last chunk of the Barry Allen The Flash, and it’s actually quite gripping, telling the tale of the Flash being on trial for the murder of the Reverse-Flash. But the issues I have that predate that story are middling, at best. I think the same would have to go for most of the pre-Crisis Green Lantern stories I’ve read. At the time that this series was published, Wally West was, of course, the Flash, and Kyle Rayner had taken over as Green Lantern. They lived in the shadows of the “giants” that came before them, but that shadow is cast solely as a narrative device. My feeling is that Wally and Kyle were far better at their superheroic roles than either of their predecessors.

This is, of course, a matter of taste, and if the history of philosophy has taught us anything, it’s that taste is virtually impossible to quantify. As such, feel free to completely disagree with what I’ve written above. However, the preference of Barry over Wally, or vice versa, has little to do with the presentation of The Brave and the Bold series, which is absolutely presented as a series of memories of times gone by. Issue six even features a narrative frame from Hal Jordan’s mechanic Pie, and the use of this device begs the question of the reliability of the narrative voice of the whole series, be it Waid and Peyer’s, or the unseen narrative construction that exists within the shared universe. The series acts as a foil to the reverence with which Allen and Jordan are held in their successors’ series, a demonstration of how these characters are remembered in the shared universe, if not in the reality that we call home.

Before moving on to The Flash series proper, there are two more brief things to mention about The Brave and the Bold. First, it makes a lovely companion to the Waid/Augustyn/Kitson JLA: Year One series from a few years prior. Year One is a brilliant retelling of the Justice League’s origins, and is well worth a read. Waid’s JLA work may well show up in an “On the Run” one of these days, and Year One is definitely its high point. The second thing is the reason that I placed this series at the beginning of my read-through: Barry Allen haunts the Wally West Flash palpably. A shadow, a ghost, a reminder, an inspiration, barely two or three issues go by without a mention of the revered second Flash. This is one of the major themes of Waid’s run on the title, the ways in which we acknowledge and integrate the past into our present identities, and the ways that those integrations can go well or ill. Of course, because this is The Flash, there’s a lot of work on how we integrate our futures as well. Case in point is Waid’s earliest work on The Flash volume 2, the 1991 “Armageddon 2001” crossover annual.

(Note: this next section draws heavily from my “40 Years of Comics Project” review of the annual.)
The Flash Annual #4 is the earliest Flash story in Waid's run, as far as I know. Anyone who knows better, please let me know. I'm always excited to add something to my hunting list. It's a part of the "Armageddon 2001" crossover, a story about a time traveller trying to uncover which of Earth's greatest heroes becomes the deadly despot Monarch in the futuristic time of...2001. Apparently the whole thing was supposed to (SPOILER ALERT) culminate in Captain Atom being the big bad, but they decided against that at the last minute and made it Hawk. Of Hawk and Dove? Angry red and white guy? My understanding is that this was a last-minute decision, flew in the face of everything that had been set up, and basically made the whole crossover a bit silly.
 
But let's leave that behind, and consider it in the context of Waid's run on The Flash. What's remarkable about this story, though in many ways it's a pretty unremarkable tale, is that it presages so many of the themes Waid would take on in his run, about a year later, on Wally West's life. Alternate timelines, the Flash's children, his future spouse, the ramifications of his public identity. The framing sequence is frankly quite sinister, ending with a young lady probably about to be rubbed out by organized crime, and the Flash standing oblivious. The story of the year 2001 is a pretty standard piece, a bit sentimental, about a future that the Flash could have had (married to said soon-to-be-no more young lady, and hiding in witness protection), one seemingly averted on the very last page by the interference of the time travelling Waverider. From a particular perspective, this makes the whole story seem a bit pointless, as the timeline ceases to exist.

Or does it?

Rather famously, about a decade after this story, Waid and a number of co-conspirators introduced the concept of "Hypertime" to the DCU, a concept that restored, in some ways, what were perceived as the losses that surrounded the demolishing of the Multiverse in Crisis on Infinite Earths. In essence, Waid et al suggested a framework in which all possibilities happened, from thrown out continuities to Elseworlds stories, possibilities that made up the fabric of a far-less-traversable extra-dimensional medium called Hypertime.  Waid explored Hypertime in some detail in the end days of his Flash run, which we’ll come to eventually. The concept is now pretty standard in superhero universes, as evidenced in Wildstorm’s “Bleed,” and Marvel’s (now-deceased) Multiverse. Yet 10 years earlier, here's an alternate timeline flaring briefly into existence, offering the possibility of an array of futures, pasts, and presents. The story is a bit sloppy, in terms of the crossover. Waverider nullifies the future he glimpses, the future that apparently convinces him that the Flash does not become Monarch in the future. But if that future no longer exists, doesn’t the possibility still stand that Wally becomes a despot? Again, though, this brings us back to another of the major themes of the Waid years: possibility and probability.

I'm not claiming Waid had a giant master plan before embarking on The Flash. But I've had it suggested to me that all great writers pick a theme, or a story, and come at it from every possible angle, figuring out all the possible ways to ask a single question. I think Waid's a writer who does this. What he writes in one Annual here he dissects completely over the course of eight years on the main title. But before we get to that masterful dissection, there’s the little matter of an origin to address. Issues 62 – 65, cover-dated May and June of 1992, represent the real first steps in Waid’s run, a retelling of Wally’s origins that will resonate through the entirety of the series: “Year One.”

I don’t think I’m going to say a lot about the four issue origin story. It’s well done, covers all the pertinent details of Wally’s back story, the kind-of-insane coincidence of his gaining his powers (Flash Barry Allen arranges the chemicals in his lab to precisely mirror how they were when he got his powers, and then lightning coincidentally strikes Wally), and his first days as Kid Flash. It’s a competent superhero origin story, and out of context of the rest of the run would be fairly unremarkable. In context, however, the story lays the same kind of groundwork that Waid’s earlier annual does. We are introduced to Wally’s family, both those he likes and those he doesn’t, a family that plays a fundamental role in the development of the character over the course of Waid’s tenure. We’re shown Wally’s origin, its, even in a superhero story, highly unlikely nature, an origin that Waid explores fully through this run. And, as with most of the series, we’re given the spectre of Barry Allen. Please forgive a Wikipedia quotation now, but with Barry Allen in this run, I’m put in mind of Derrida’s notion of hauntology, in which "the priority of being and presence [is replaced by] the figure of the ghost as that which is neither present, nor absent, neither dead nor alive" (Gallix, 2011). I’ll be looking more closely at this idea as we move further through the series. It’s a smart move on Waid’s part to retell the origin, not simply to remind people or to start, literally, at the beginning, but also to point out, albeit subtly, the aspects of Wally’s story that trouble him, that have been present from the very beginning, and that are going to overwhelmingly inform the superheroic tales he’ll be telling with this character.

Which brings us to the final issue I’ll look at this time around, #66, “Fish Story.” This is a weird issue. After the promise of the origin retelling, this one is a fairly typical, and perhaps even subpar, team-up story between the Flash and Aquaman. Revolving around a telepathic villain whose powers work on Aquaman, the story tells, quite simply, of the Flash’s triumph over the villain. What I think we can take from this issue is that it’s a reminder that the Flash exists in a superheroic universe, in which he works with other heroes and in which ridiculous things often happen. Ridiculous to we readers, that is. The situation in this comic is quite serious for the characters involved, so it reminds us that Wally inhabits a world very different from ours. This counterpoints the angst presented in the origin issues with regard to family and one’s place in it, a feeling and problem that many of us in “the real world” deal with frequently. Wally, at the same time, deals with telepathic aquatic villains searching for magical ocean control crowns.

I did not make that up.

So that concludes the first section of The Flash, the Mark Waid era. I’m excited to get into the meat of the series, and I hope you’ll follow along. Fair warning, though, I’ll be moving at a slightly slower pace than the titular character.


May 25, 2015

The 40 Years of Comics Project - Day 90: Moon Knight #15, July 2015


I know I said that every 30 days I'd do a special comic, but two things occur to me: first, I'm super-busy right now and completely lost track of what day I was on. Second, I don't have that many special comics to write about, so perhaps I'll save the next one for a big anniversary, like my 100th comic (in just 10 short days' time!). So instead today I present Moon Knight #15.

I was going to stop reading Moon Knight after Warren Ellis and Declan Shalvey left the title (I'm getting a strange feeling of deja vu as I write this), but then I gave their successors a try. And it was soooo worth it. Brian Wood and Greg Smallwood continued the Ellis/Shalvey aesthetic perfectly, added some flourishes of their own, and left after 6 issues. Along comes Cullen Bunn (with both Ron Ackins and German Peralta), and the transition was once again smooth, and there's new and interesting developments in the series. For a while there I thought it was going to be a "monster of the week" sort of set up, with MK fighting something and then moving on to the next thing, but Bunn has added an interesting undercurrent that, if I'm honest, has been building since this beginning of this relaunch. Moon Knight might be the fist of Khonshu, but he doesn't always have to agree with Khonshu. And vice versa, for that matter.

My enjoyment of the title aside, I'm not quite sure how it's fitting into the "Secret Wars" event, unless this is Moon Knight in the amalgamated Manhattan that exists on Battleworld. Or it could be that the series will just ignore the crossover and get on with telling some great stories about a completely underused, and misunderstood, I think, character.

Long story short, the Moon Knight relaunch, along with The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl, is one of two real surprises I've had from Marvel over the last year. Not big splashes like the introduction of the female Thor, just solid and thoroughly entertaining comics.

See you tomorrow.