Tuesday, September 4, 2012


Pick of the Brown Bag
September 01, 2012

by 

Ray Tate

Hello, and welcome to the Pick of the Brown Bag.  Well, we've got a huge yield of books to cover, but before we get to all that.  POBB is proud to present our first exclusive, an...

Interview with Cthulhu


POBB:  Greetings.  Today, we're lucky to have via satellite, direct from the city of R'lyeh, somewhere beneath the depths...Cthulhu!  




  


POBB: Cthulhu, welcome to The Pick of the Brown Bag.

Cthulhu:  Thank you, Raymond.  It is good to be here.

POBB:  What stirs you from your dreams, Cthulhu?

Cthulhu:  I am here to endorse Mitt Romney for king.

POBB: President, you mean.

Cthulhu:  President? I thought...Never mind.  Mitt Romney is what America needs right now.

POBB:  Why, exactly?

Cthulhu: Because the alien Obama is fixing your economy, preserving your rights and returning America back to its former splendor.  This impedes the inevitable takeover of the planet by the great Cthulhu and his minions.

POBB: Wait.  Run that back.  Alien?

Cthulhu: Everybody knows that Obama is an emissary from the Elder Gods, sent to destroy Cthulhu and his minions.  Born in Hawaii indeed.

POBB: I see...You claim Obama's policies have hurt you?

Cthulhu: The runes are on the wall.  

POBB: Can you give our audience an example?

Cthulhu: Obama supports women.  "Rape is rape."  I have never heard such nonsense, but Cthulhu and his Republican followers know that women are mere chattel, vessels for the Deep Ones that worship the great Cthulhu.

POBB: The Deep Ones are the cross-species rapists from the oceans?

Cthulhu: Spurious lies! Ladies simply like sex rough.

POBB: With claws and scales.

Cthulhu: Cthulhu does not appreciate your tone, young man.

POBB:  This is all about that putz Congressman Todd Akin, isn't it?

Cthulhu: Akin is a wise man.  Women must want to be serviced by Cthulhu's followers and the Deep Ones that throw women down and rut them.  Else their natural defenses would seal their holes.

POBB:  Rape is violence that defies and betrays biology.  Its product a parasite.

Cthulhu:  Gifts.

POBB:  Santorum at least called them "broken gifts."

Cthulhu: There was a communication breakdown.  Gifts.  Not broken.   Does not every woman wish to sire offspring? 

POBB:  Not that way.  For Republicans the ends justify he means.

Cthulhu: You are demonizing "rape" far too much.  It is like Tom Smith said.

POBB:  Tom Smith? That nobody running against Senator Casey?  What's he got to do with anything?

Cthulhu:  He justly compared having a child out of wedlock to having a child out of rape-lock.  

POBB:  You're joking.

Cthulhu:  Would he use his own daughter as an example if his philosophy were mere jest?

POBB:  You mean, she was raped?

Cthulhu:  No, she apparently had a child out of wedlock.  It is the same thing.  Tom Smith said, and Cthulhu agrees.  Please pay attention.

POBB: So, you concur with Romney's running mate, Congressman Paul Ryan, in that rape is a valid form of conception.

Cthulhu:  Legitimate rape.  An "honest rape," to borrow a phrase from Ron Paul.  Yes.  Approximately 32,000 women become pregnant through "rape."  When you consider such a large number and factor in the words of Ryan, Akin, Paul and Smith, you arrrive at the conclusion that actual rape is rare.  After all, if these women were raped, they wouldn't become pregnant.  Their bodies would repel these invaders.  It is but a simple matter of logic.  

POBB:  You really are evil, know that?

Cthulhu: Thank you.

POBB: Your endorsement of Romney still puzzles me.  Romney is a vainglorious sphincter, but he did say that he would magnanimously grant abortions in the case of rape.  That would certainly screw your Deep Ones.

Cthulhu: Mitt Romney has no personality of his own.  Nor free will.  He is but a mirror.  He will reflect party values, which I dictate.  He is but an empty glass, waiting to be filled with our desires.  He is the perfect tool for Cthulhu.  Let him wear the crown, for then Great Cthulhu and his servants will rise! The City of R'yleh will return to its former glory, and humanity will become our thrall.  This interview ends.  



POBB: Um…Thank you, Cthulhu.






"Let's Get Ready to Rumble!"

It's time for the new 52 Annuals.  Annuals used to be special, but over the years, their worth eroded to hastily slapped together mediocre stories with art by the guy that happened to be walking down the street looking at the clouds.  An editor would pop his head out and go, "Psst, hey kid, want to draw comics?"  Wanting to kill time before lunch, the passerby would look at his watch and say, "Sure." Are the new 52 Annuals any better than previous annuals?  Detective Comics and The Flash definitely surpass past efforts.

In Detective Comics Annual #1 current writer Tony S. Daniel creates a new identity for Black Mask.  Black Mask began his criminal career in a mostly forgotten slip of Dark Knight time, during the flux of pre-Crisis morphing to post-Crisis.  



Created by Doug Moench and Tom Mandrake, Black Mask aka Roman Sionis was retro-planted as a boyhood acquaintance of Bruce Wayne.  Roman started his fictional life under a dark, humorous cloud.  An alcoholic doctor literally dropped Roman on his head at birth.  

Apparently the impact wiped out his conscience and resulted in serial killer emptiness.  Bruce and Roman were left together to play while Bruce's parents socialized with the Sionises.  Young Bruce, always an astute child, didn't like him.  Roman later murdered his parents, mutilated the corpses and vandalized the coffins.  Part of that vandalism resulted in carving out his sobriquet from his father's coffin.

Black Mask was no doubt inspired by the famous hardboiled detective magazine.  Indeed, Roman's natty nineteen thirties appearance reflects the sharp look of the gangsters prevalent in pulp literature.

Despite alluding to the past, Black Mask's signature was very modern.  Black Mask murdered his victims by gluing masks to to their faces.  They died of suffocation, leaving behind nasty scenes where the police would unfasten the murder weapons from multiplying corpses.  As he slew his victims, Black Mask attempted to build an empire through the False Face Society--punks and hoods wearing masks.  Though he ritualized the induction, never was there anything supernatural about Black Mask or his namesake.  That was the past.  This is now.  

Black Mask's ties to Bruce Wayne, once meant to be a big thing, have been long forgotten.  Indeed, we can probably thank Hush for that.  It's probably the only thing we can thank Hush for.  The Unknown Soldier/Crime Doctor rip-off was introduced as Bruce Wayne's childhood friend.  So, Black Mask's association was redundant and let's face it not as important as the creators wanted it to be.  Sionis' method of murder also appears to have shifted to a more magical slant.

The Annual posits a war between the Mad Hatter and Black Mask, arguably a war between science fiction and horror.  The Mad Hatter always controlled the minds of others through science and technology.  Black Mask only uses his namesake.  The new 52 Black Mask is essentially possessed by the mask, which has supernatural properties.  I imagine the Peter Cushing/Christopher Lee cult favorite The Skull inspires the twist.  



In that movie, adapted from a Robert Bloch short story, the Skull of the Marquis de Sade possesses its owners into becoming sadomasochistic killers.  

If you don't mind the sudden Sionis powers and the lion's share of the book being devoted to the villain war, then the story's for you.  Batman's presence is felt throughout, but the tale's not really about him, nor is it much of a puzzle.  It's competently told and well illustrated, but nothing special--certainly nothing that warrants an annual treatment.

3

Still, the story does feature a really good scene in which Batman beats out information from Tweedle-Dum and Tweedle-Dee, the logical henchmen of the Mad Hatter, only now exploited as such.  Tweedle-Dum and Tweedle-Dee actually predate the Mad Hatter.




The Flash is an under-the-radar comic book.  It's less hyped than the Batman or Superman titles, but The Flash is consistently well-written.  Storytellers Francis Manapul and Brian Buccellato make Barry Allen's new 52 adventures fresh and entertaining.  The comic book sports a unique look, and each story displays a flair for education; today we learn a fact about the Salt Lake Flats.  Before, you could learn about how the Speed Force might work and its ties to Stephen Jay Gould's Theory of Punctuated Equilibrium.
  
Over the course of twelve issues, Manapul and Buccellato reintroduced nearly all of the Flash rogues.  Last issue, Mirror Master, Heatwave and the Trickster completed the family picture.  Before the quartet, the writers updated Weather Wizard.  In a subplot, the Piper returned, and of course they reserved a big issue for the return of Captain Cold.  Put them all together, and you've got an Annual that's actually something.  It's the payoff to the buildup you didn't even know Manapul and Buccellato initiated.

Although the creative team updated the villains, they didn't change the most likable aspect of the Flash rogues.  The Flash rogues weren't all bad.  You can't trust any of them, but on occasion, they're reasonable.  The rogues aren't interested in world domination.  They're bank robbers.  They seek filthy lucre plain and simple, and The Flash Annual reinforces that ideal. 

Captain Cold reiterates the mantra of the Flash rogues.  No matter how they pull off their heists, they follow three golden rules, described by guest finisher Scott Kolins.  The adherence to the rules forces Cold to make a drastic change to combat the Flash.  This sets up Chapter Three where we learn why Lisa Snart hates her brother, how duplicitous Dr. Elias was and why Lisa hates Elias, an animus that catalyzed the last issue of the Flash and this issue's crescendo.

If you're thinking that the Flash rogues take over the book, think again.  Like the Detective Comics Annual, the Flash's presence is always felt, but he takes a more proactive stance in the chapters. 

Five chapters comprise The Flash Annual, each with different illustrators finishing Manapul's breakdowns.  Manapul and Buccellato write the entirety.  The first chapter finished by Batwing's Marcus To, gives Flash a Fortress of Solitude, so to speak, that's tied in with his childhood and his relationship with his father.  In Chapter Five, with excellent artist Wes Craig, we see the Flash willing to do anything, including throwing in with his arch-enemy, to see justice done.  Of course, that won't help him against the Mirror Master. 

Throughout the story, Manapul and Buccellato give the Flash a playful demeanor and dialogue that contrasts the usual depiction of determination.  The Flash for example can admire the Mirror Master's ploy.  He can as well simply go with the flow, allowing him to team up with his nemesis, but it's this sort of three dimensional thinking that can also place the Flash in danger.  Batman would never turn his back on his enemies, even if they gave their words not to stab him.  The Flash is far more trusting, hoping to see the good in everybody.  That's why Elias' betrayal in the previous two issues hit him so hard.

Whereas most Annuals are stand-alone and perfunctory, The Flash Annual relates a complete story but daringly ends on a hilarious cliffhanger.  What other book would do that? Manapul and Buccellato take advantage of this free-wheeling Flash and his less than honorable, but not truly murderous, rogues to deliver a perfectly timed line.  It furthermore offers another explanation why the Rogues actually don't wish to kill the Flash.  He doesn't just protect the innocent from a dangerous universe.  He protects them as well.

5
Aquaman #12

The art by Ivan Reis, Rod Reis and a parade of inkers far exceeds the quality of Geoff Johns' latest chapter in Aquaman's war against Black Manta.  It's not that the writing is horrible.  It's simply uninventive and stale.  You have Aquaman whining about his friends helping him kill Manta, and Manta going nuts with a scepter that allegedly sank Atlantis.  End of story.

That old penetration fetish Johns developed over the years appears to have returned as well.  Another one of the Others, Aquaman's first team of superheroes, dies by being poked to death, and Aquaman spears one of Manta's flunkies with his trident.  

You could say typical Geoff Johns, but although the story's mediocre, tends to swim against the current in order curtail the pace and relies on the "shock" of two penetration deaths, the new 52 Aquaman still demonstrates an overall improvement from the way Johns used to write.  In other words, Mera's still alive.  Death's gender equal.  While characterization is paper-thin, Johns does give the character slain by Manta some heartfelt words.  You do feel sorry when this character dies, and the Other dies a hero. 

3


No doubt you've seen the cover to Justice League number 12 all over the internet.  Yes, Virginia, Superman and Wonder Woman are an item.  Does it matter? No, not really.  I mean, it's the new 52.  Lois Lane's marriage to Superman never existed in continuity proper.  The union only exists in Smallville and existed in Batman Beyond.  I don't know why people have a problem with this idea of tabula rasa.  It's a simple concept, and if somebody wants to complain about having the history that they knew pulled out from under them.  Well, "cry me a river." 

The budding romance between Wonder Woman and Superman doesn't really factor into the 

2I'm giving The Justice League. The truth of the matter is that Justice League is written as a lame soap opera all the way through.  The artwork by Jim Lee is adequate, but both Geoff Johns and Jim Lee produce schmaltzy melodrama that lacks gravitas or humor.  

The best scene in Justice League occurs when the League realize that David Graves isn't evil.  He's mentally ill.  Upon recognizing his mental illness, the League stop kicking his ass, echoing the merciful champions we remember.  Still, there's just not enough meat on this bone, and the glimpses of what may come are completely neutral: could be good, could be bad, given editorial changes, they could in fact not be at all.


Meh.

Created in 1941 by Will Eisner and Jerry Iger, the Phantom Lady became the symbol of Good Girl Art.  That may sound insulting, but the best in the business produced Good Girl Art, and the Phantom Lady benefited from such artists as Matt Baker and Joe Kubert.  Her original artist Arthur Peddy was no slouch either.

In terms of story, Sandra Knight set about clearing her father from a frame up by attacking criminals with a good right cross, a high heel or two to the instep and a black light projector which blinded felons silly.  

DC claimed ownership of the character when they began publication of The Freedom Fighters in the mid-seventies, but the rights to the Phantom Lady have always been debatable.  Many believe she's in fact a public domain character, which would explain why DC has never actually pressed the issue when various companies reprint her old Police Comics adventures.  I think DC would render the issue moot if they released The Phantom Lady Archives.  If these archives matched the quality of their other archives, nobody would care who claimed ownership.  DC would have the final word on the subject.

What we can say is that DC published new stories with different versions of the Phantom Lady at the greatest if not most consistent frequency.  The latest version of Phantom Lady, paired with a new incarnation of Doll Man, another hero having a questionable copyright history, is written by Jimmy Palmiotti and Justin Gray.  That can't be bad.  So, let's get on with it.  

I think the most interesting thing about the writing is that Gray and Palmiotti already make PL and DM a thoroughly modern friends-with-favors type couple.  So this won't be a will-they-or-won't they book.  Like Burn Notice's Michael Westen and Fiona Glenanne they do and already have.  

The newest avatar of Sandra Knight is obsessed with bringing down the Bender family.  One of the proud members murdered her parents.  Like Batman, she also witnessed the homicides and could do nothing to prevent them.  As an adult, Sandra makes her trade reporting for The Daily Planet and sleeps with one of the upper level Benders to find the evidence to take an axe to the family tree.  That tree probably finds its roots in a real life Scottish family of murderers also inspiring Wes Craven's The Hills Have Eyes.  

A flag raised immediately when Gray and Palmiotti set the story in Metropolis.  Way back in the day, I objected to Marc Andreyko having Copperhead kill a slew of people in Superman's City.  Manhunter eventually blasted a hole in him, but I had a definite image in my head of what Superman did and how he operated.  It didn't matter that writers weren't following suit.  In fact, this is when I began to realize that the core of DC was rotten and I started to embrace Manhunter as the only hero actually doing something to deter crime.  

The new 52 Superman is a different sort of animal.  He's purposely being written against the old characterization.  Now, I can say without a shadow of a doubt that the old Superman, the Big Red S, the Man of Steel would not have allowed the Benders to build so much as a criminal lemonade stand let alone a criminal empire in Metropolis, but the new 52 Superman? Maybe he's not quite so vigilant.

With the premise vindicated, the characterization good, the twists and turns to the source material, very little could go wrong with the book except the artwork.  



Cat Staggs is no Amanda Conner, but who is?  Staggs produces a reliable visual narration and strong anatomy.  Tom Derenick's inks and Carlos Mangual's colors are a little dark, but as a whole, the illustration is quite presentable.  

As to the Phantom Lady herself, the classic cheesecake that became so integral to the character vanishes in favor of more practical garments.  Conner's low-cut ensemble displays as much skin as you're going to get, but the artists and writers do emulate the past in the basic design of the costume.

In addition to the adherence of the yellow scheme of the original costume, they bring back the Phantom Lady's hood, something she wore in the very early adventures.  The change from purple instead of green makes her blend into the shadows a little better, and also, it compliments the yellow nicely.

Is Phantom Lady and Doll Man a must purchase.  No, I'd not say that, but if you're looking for a supplemental title with a strong female character and/or a potent partnership, then I'd slip it in your brown bag next to Batgirl.  At the very least you should consider Phantom Lady and Doll Man amongst your regular browsing on the rack.  Who knows? You might just like what you see.

4








This issue of Bionic Woman is a tonic for the doldrums.  The action never stops.  Leno Carvalho's art hits all the right notes.  It doesn't matter whether the scale depends upon examples of bionic strength or expertly beat out comedy.  Carvahlho nails it.



Writer Paul Tobin's jokes range from the running gag of Jaime Sommers taking down the group harvesting bionic parts one-by-one and gathering intel from each of her targets to a question of closeness from her friend Nora.  Tobin employs a new tactic for Jaime when one of the group under her glare smartens up, realizing that Jaime is a hero, and a "soft" one at that.  

The villain concludes Jaime's completely harmless, despite her bionic abilities, because she'll never back up her bluff.  Big mistake.  Without contradicting previous characterization, Tobin finds an ingenious means to corroborate her no-kill policy but still make her threats count.  Thus, he continues to make Jaime likeable and at once brings a new edgier attitude to her cases.

5








Red Sonja fans won't want to miss Prophecy, as the She-Devil with a Sword wages battle against Kulan Gath and his intent to destroy the world.  This time around though he has help in the form of an enchanted obsidian blade and kaiju styled death gods. 



The blade is the mcguffin threading the whole of this superbly written series by Ron Marz.  It's gorgeously illustrated by Walter Geovani greatly missed on Sonja's eponymous book, and as a result the free for all pitting Sonja, Vampirella, Eva, Dracula and Athena--The A Team--as well as Herbert West the Reanimator against the death gods under Gath's control is a feast of color and dynamism.

Prophecy however isn't just an art book, like this week's Aquaman, for example.  The premiere opened with Sherlock Holmes investigating a murder, involving the obsidian dagger.  In this issue, Marz follows through with Holmes racing to nab the culprit, a huge surprise guest star.  Athena, not one of Marz's own characters, never the less makes a very characteristic speech, followed by some good snark from West.  In other words, Prophecy doesn't just offer a kaleidoscope of good times, it perfectly blends the characters for a time-hopping escapade that intrinsically makes sense.

5










Clashing artwork proves detrimental to Doctor Who and Star Trek the Next Generation.  J.K. Woodward paints over Gordon Purcell's artwork, and as a result, he undermines such potential events as the Doctor meeting Guinan.  The story seems to discard the shocking amalgamation from last issue, but Who fans will be pleased to see the Cybermen making the Borg their bitches.  



On the whole though, compared to the opener and last issue's awesome fourth Doctor meets Kirk vignette, this chapter in the unexpected team up between Picard and the Doctor lacks oomph.  A pity because Tony Lee and Purcell set up a beautiful scene for Amy Pond as she explains why the Doctor's so special to her.

3






Man, I'm hating this.  I was never a big fan of Watchmen, but I am a huge aficionado of Darwyn Cooke.  The more I read these things, the more I think Cooke is experimenting at reader expense.

I peg Cooke as a creator that pinballs from extremes.  For that reason, his superhero stuff is so amazing and charming, no matter the subject.  Case in point, he did a King Faraday story for Solo in which the CIA agent falls for a bamboozle by two beautiful lesbian spies.  Hilarious.  Likewise, his artistic reinterpretation of a classic Batman story was laugh out loud funny.  You're laughing with Batman as he plays with a group of murderous thugs that seem to have misplaced their keys.  Cooke understands that nobody actually likes King Faraday, and any member of the Justice League is like an atomic bomb, when dropped on low-level criminals.  

At the other end of the spectrum, Cooke can go hardboiled with Parker.  He can express chilling violence and vicious men doing horrible things.  He can demonstrate the worst of womankind turning people into unwitting dupes.  He can the utilize the ultimate equalizer death, without hope or fairness.  Then, there's Before Watchmen.

This issue deals with Cooke's creation Silhouette, a lesbian hero that makes one wish Cooke were detailing the new exploits of Modesty Blaise.  Silhouette seemed like a neat character.  The only character in this miniseries worth following.  The trouble is that Silhouette also known as Ursula happens to be in a Watchmen book, and as a result, she becomes tainted by Watchmen nods to "reality."  She's stuck in a photo-shoot with Sally, and this drifts off into the photographer's Irving Klaw bondage fantasy pairing the two in a bizarre spanking session.

When we get to Silhouette's serious crusade against child predators, she becomes overwhelmed by the odds.  Of course, perhaps it's all in her head, and she's just another damaged hero that Watchmen likes to deconstruct.  The dead little girl could have been her doing, during her hallucination.  That's bad enough, but for no reason at all Silhouette's naked breast appears in a panel that almost mocks the juxtaposition technique in the original Watchmen.

Now, I'm no prude, and the shower scene might be the best scene in a low budget film, but what the hell is that breast doing there! It's like we're sailing on calm waters, and then lo! The U.S.S. Mammary arises on the horizon.  Crap! Crap! Crap! Crap! Crap! Crap!  The breast undermines the whole gravity of the scene! Darwyn Cooke, or no, I've had it with Before Watchmen.



In the last book on the docket, John Byrne really surprises in Trio.  Critics have been calling Trio the parallel universe version of Byrne's own Fantastic Four.  Now, I have also identified the similarities, but I didn't actually see this as a drawback.  At least it's fun, and there's a payoff in each issue, unlike Jonathan Hickman's convoluted FF.  I wanted to like that book so badly.

In fact, using the FF as his starting point, Byrne has been differentiating the Trio with each issue.  For instance, the Trio all have different ethnic histories.  Rock is a little black kid.  Paper is Asian.  Scissors is Arabic.  The Trio also are not an independent group.  Rather the military sponsors them, and there's a definite early Metal Men feel to story now.



When Nautilus shows up, you think Namor, but after this adventure, you'll think otherwise.  Jackasses plague humanity in Trio.  People aren't as happy to see the team as they would be if they were the FF, and that results in surprising twists.  

The big bad on the cover is a very interesting Nazi villain from another universe, and Byrne has a lot of fun characterizing the super-powered goose-stepper.  Not his first, he did a very baleful version of the Red Skull for Captain America/ Batman.  So there is an example where you can contrast.  As you may expect, the art is just remarkable, especially with the paper stock, bringing out the depth in Byrne's illustration.

4

Whew! That was a biggie.  Next week, more comic book reviews, and maybe an interview with Hastur if another Republican opens his filthy mouth.


Saturday, August 25, 2012


Pick of the Brown Bag

by 

Ray Tate

Congratulations to Representative Todd Akin for nabbing the Republican Tiara of Sphincterhood.



We at the Pick of the Brown Bag hope one day that he'll be hogtied and anally gang-fisted by the American Bar Association, thereby finally proving that yes, you can be "legitimately raped."

Unlike women who Akin apparently believes can transmute their genitalia into something like this…



In a Vagina Dentata, Baby

…men sadly have no natural defense against sexual violations. So, lie back and try to enjoy it if you can, Congressman.  Remember any offspring resulting from such traumas are "broken gifts."  Wait, what? I'm being informed that men cannot get pregnant.  

Dude? Really?

Well, color my face red.  I guess I'm just as ignorant about the human body as Congressman Akin.  Thank goodness neither of us are on the United States House of Representatives Committee on Science, Space and Technology.

All right, all right.  All kidding aside.  This poor excuse for a man needs be working for the local Girl Scouts car wash.  He should never have held any office, let alone a Congressional seat.  Missouri, this is your second chance to remove a bone stupid cyst.  Don't blow it.

Let the Games Begin


All-Star Western #12


This is basically Black Tullulah's issue of All-Star Western as she goes hog-wild against the Crime Bible Cult.  The Cult foolishly captured she, Jonah Hex and Professor Arkham last issue and decided to torture them rather than end their lives right then and there.  Well, it's a common flaw in villainy,  one that the Cult will regret--that is of course if any of them survive the night.

Tullulah kills without remorse.  She's near unstoppable, and it's a pleasure to see her rip through the Cult and their corrupt cohorts on Gotham City PD.  While this is a bloody chapter in the story, artist Moritat isn't interested in presenting torture porn to the reader.  Rather, his imagery is similar to the giallo, the stylish genre of Italian mystery that also influenced the spaghetti western.  With an aesthetic quality to blood flowing across the screen and poetry in the shedding of life, the giallo makes murder artful. 

True murder is ugly.  There is no art or style to it.  It's humiliation and violence all wrapped up in a diseased shroud.  If you see it on the news, you look away.  If you see a graphic in the paper, you wince.  Take a look at old photos of Jack the Ripper's victims.  You'll see no saucy beauties, nor will you see delicate rips to the throat and a spatter of blood perhaps cgi'ed into a butterfly.  There's just death.

Some might argue that's disingenuous, but then the entirety of cinema and any entertainment is at its heart a lie that we accept to spice up our lives.  There is no, never was, a spy like James Bond.  Even Riley, the so-called Ace of Spies on whom some say James Bond is based, is fabricated for the Sam Neil PBS series.  The banalities of life are reduced to cut to the chase.  The wrongness of taking a life evaporates if the killer does so with gusto.  Black Tullulah has gusto.

Writers Jimmy Palmiotti and Justin Gray do however give each player a moment in the sun.  The usually timid Arkham explodes words against his captors, and because of his psychological insight, he strikes hard.  Jonah Hex pushes Alan Wayne to make a decision that will shape the Wayne Legacy for years to come, and in the end result in the Batman.  The Wayne blood runs true in All-Star Western, and while Tullulah slays in inventive ways, Hex still gets a few shots against his enemies.

5


Batman Dark Knight #12

The story in Dark Knight plays as you expect with the Scarecrow's origin virtually unchanged, albeit bloodier, and common insights into Batman's past.  

The Scarecrow captured Batman last issue, and we find out that the cunning straw man abducted Commissioner Gordon as bait.  The Commissioner wasn't his goal at all.  Using a gag first exploited in The Simpsons but having a real world basis, the Scarecrow drugs Batman and forces him to re-experience the loneliness of his childhood.  Yeah, we've kind of seen this before, but the punchiline gives this book...

4

Scarecrow drastically misreads Batman, and once again because it's the new 52, Batman's emotional history doesn't result in a traditional outcome.  When Gregg Hurwitz and David Finch pull the reveal, the music swells, and we realize that we're in the hands of masters, not of fear but characterization.

The Flash #12

In The Flash, the eponymous Scarlet Speedster's rogues almost combine forces to gain the Golden Glider's revenge.  Lisa Snart owes her life to the Flash and her brother Captain Cold.  In a previous issue, we discovered that Lisa lay dying, and the electromagnetic pulse that crippled Central City interfered with her recovery.  Cold blamed the Flash for the emp but in subsequent issues we discover the Flash to be innocent.  In fact, his running prevents things like that from happening.  Thanks to the Flash, Lisa got better, and somewhere down the line she became the Golden Glider.

The original Golden Glider fixated on the Flash because he allegedly killed her psychotic boyfriend the Top.  Her shtick involved skating in the air, but as goofy as that power might have appeared, her rage made her extremely dangerous.  She was just as nuts as the Top.  Maybe a little more.

The new 52 Golden Glider represents a drastic departure from tradition.   Her figure skating routine was an honest one.  Lisa Snart was a former ice dancer.  This Golden Glider does not skate.  Her powers appear quite different, and the Top is not involved.  

Lisa seeks revenge against Dr. Elias, the brain guy that at first seemed to be the Flash's ally but as fast as you can say Professor Hamilton, turned on him in an eye blink.  

Still the Flash can't let Elias die because the Speedster's just too darn good.  However, Golden Glider wants her pound of flesh, and she just may get it because while she threatens Elias, the Flash's other rogues run distraction after distraction.

Golden Glider hates her brother Captain Cold.  She plans to kill him as part of her plan, but other rogues haven't boarded the Glider special.  Some are opportunistic.  Others are merely addressing debts.  This variety of rationales complicates the plot even more and sets up an outstanding cliffhanger.



Francis Manapul is also back on art duties with Brian Buccellato, the pastel colorist and co-scripter.  Their return educes an ethereal Glider to pages and pages of angled and fluid panels that increase the pace and enhance the mood.  

The complete redesign of the rogues updates them without changing their essence, and it's kind of nice to see that the Rogues still exhibit more ranges of emotion than snarling to lunatic.   

5





In this issue of Justice League Dark, Jeff Lemire attempts to flesh out the team members and play with DC's history of magic and sorcery.  I'm not exactly spoiling this comic book, since it's not really a plot-based issue, but for those wanting to preserve all the surprises, Justice League Dark earns...

3

It's by no means a bad book, but it's a setup/establishing issue.  Dark might be a good jumping on point for new readers, although I do have a few qualms with some of the dialogue and behavior of the characters.

Lemire first explains Dr. Mist.  Dr. Mist was created by E. Nelson Bridwell and Ramona Fradon for The Super-Friends comic book as a kind of quasi-Doctor Strange.  He existed to sense and explain some weird happenings and recruit the Justice League to combat something nasty.  Post-Crisis, Dr. Mist sans super-hero accoutrements became the leader of the Global Guardians, the team's individual members also created by Bridwell and Fradon for The Super-Friends.  

The new 52 Dr. Mist is very much like the new 52 Mr. Terrific.  However, shattered by the loss of his wife, Dr. Mist turned to the occult rather than science, and unlike Mr. Terrific, Dr. Mist believed that he would find a way to bring his wife back from the dead.  It's this belief that catalyzes Dr. Mist's betrayal of the League and his throwing in with Felix Faust, himself the partner of another Big Bad hidden in the shadows and pulling the strings.

That Big Bad knows John Constantine, which isn't really saying much because the new 52 is a tabula rasa.  It honestly wouldn't be any revelation to me if the shadow man did turn out to be an old enemy from the Constantine files, since I've never been a fan of Constantine.  So, I wouldn't know any of his enemies if I tripped over them.  That said there is one figure suspiciously missing from the usual suspects in sorcery, and that's Dr. Thirteen.  My other thought is Lemire pulling a Valeyard, where the figure is an evil future version of the cad.

In All-Star Western a miscreant highway man on the gallows curses the turn of the century Dr. Thirteen and all his descendants.  In the real world, curses are bunkum.  In the new 52 however magic works.  So, who's to say?  Perhaps the curse corrupted the Dr. Thirteen that would have been, and the new 52 modern day Dr. Thirteen is in fact a villain.  Given that Dr. Thirteen was really just a nondescript foil for the Phantom Stranger, merely a lame take on Scooby-Doo, the blackening of his soul is an improvement of sorts.

Black is my favorite color in Justice League Dark.  I've always been a fan of Black Orchid, the original super-hero version, that is, originated by Sheldon Mayer and Tony DeZuniga in Adventure Comics.  She's the Tigra of the group.

In this issue, Orchid doesn't do much but look pretty in Michael Janin's and Ulises Arreola's brushstrokes.  The awkward conversation she has with Constantine in which she tries to find out his standing with Zatanna suggests a personal interest in him, and frankly, I find that repellent.  She can do much better.  For example, I understand that Grant Morrison will be re-introducing Krypto on earth soon.  

Anyway, Zatanna and Deadman offer the best from the group.  Their away team offers the reader humor and a natural comarderie that may involve a history with the League or an association with Batman.  Whatever the reason, their dialogue made me smile.

Speaking of history, we discover what happened to some of the magic users from DC comics.  Zatanna's father Zatara suffers a different fate; that's not a pun.  Dr. Fate does not appear on earth one.  Dr. Occult shows up in a pivotal cameo, and Lemire also mentions Sargon the Sorcerer, one of the low-rent magicians that made his mark by appearing in the Alex Toth treasury edition of The Super-Friends.  Yes, everything does seem to lead back there, doesn't it?

I've been a fan of Alan Davis' artwork since he debuted in Detective Comics.  Technically, he started on Maze Agency--a massive favorite series of mine that also launched the career of Adam Hughes--but we didn't see that until years later.  

Most will remember his cute depiction of Catwoman, and why not? She was genuinely cute.  However, when Batman loses her to the Joker's machinations, Alan Davis cuts loose with one of the fiercest Batman depictions in comic books.  

After that Davis went on to illustrate Batman and the Outsiders and co-creating Looker.  With so many gals on that team, the title sealed his reputation as a master of the cute.  That's really not a bad way to be remembered, but Davis is more than that, and in this week's Wolverine Annual he reminds you that his artwork can be quite affecting.



I forgot that Wolverine actually can feel pain, but the seasoned Alan Davis taps into his youthful self's spirit--the same kind of drive that created such a bracing Batman--and combines that energy with the professional story crafter facet that he has honed over the years on such titles as Justice League: The Nail.  

It's not just that rendering of Wolverine that makes you feel for the Canuck, nor the masterful illustration of the mutant's struggle to rise in that last panel.  Kay's reaction to what's happening to Wolverine injects more potency into the tapestry.  The fact that the admittedly egocentric Kay can empathize with Logan impacts dramatically and defies the shallow persona she displays with the brilliance of a peacock's tail.

It's this fusion of artistic talent with experience in visual narrative that gives Wolverine it's…

5







Big Dog Ink was kind enough to send me the first issue of Ursa Minor.  Imagine a world filled with werewolves, vampires and fairy folk.  Throw them all together in a blender.  Puree.



It's not that Ursa Minor lacks any good ideas.  The switcharoo that's central to the plot is elegant and inspired.  The creators depict vampires as the cunning, diabolical top rung of the undead legions, as they should be.  The way a waitress fends off these vampires is clever, and the full color art's solid, although some might be offended by the T & A.  It is a strip club after all, and this isn't an all-ages book.

My main problems with the story spring from the prolonged origin of this world.  I really didn't need to know any of narrative in the opening pages.  The creative team should have begun at the strip club and let the reader figure things out.  We really didn't need to know that some werewolves conducted an assassination years ago to unwittingly instigate a supernatural purging by humans.  We don't actually know why the lycanthropes assassinated the President anyway.  Did the Commander-In-Chief slap them on the noses with a rolled up newspaper when they were pups?

In any case, it's too early to tell whether I like Ursa Minor or not.  The characters are a little thin, and none of them make an immediate impression.  That may change as the story progresses, but right now, I'm giving the debut.







And there you have it.  The first issue of the new Pick of the Brown Bag.  If you like what you see, come back again next week.