Showing posts with label Tobin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tobin. Show all posts

Monday, November 18, 2013

POBB: November 13, 2013

Pick of the Brown Bag
November 13, 2013
by
Ray Tate

If you haven't seen it yet...a must view official seven minute prequel to Doctor Who "The Day of the Doctor"...I'll wait for you to come back, and you're welcome.



My thoughts on this important moment in Doctor Who appear at the end of the column.

Greetings from the Pick of the Brown Bag.  In this blog, I review the week's best and the worst comic books.  For this installment, I'll be observing Batman, World's Finest, Rocket Girl, Smallville and first issue fantasy Umbral.  I'll also look at the new graphic novel Bandette and the film Thor: The Dark World.  First though, warnings about the current Justice League of America, Batgirl and Nightwing.  

Justice League of America repeats the previous issue.  J'onn and Stargirl attempt to escape the same prison incarcerating the Justice League.  At least, that's how it must work.  Whatever the case, this is just a dull, beautifully illustrated exercise of spinning wheels in place.  It's entirely skippable.  Deja vu.

Batgirl and Nightwing so far claim the prizes for the most irrelevant and least entertaining "Year Zero" tie-ins.  It took a lot of effort to push last week's Action Comics out of first place, but they managed it. The artists however cannot take credit in this dubious honor.  Both art teams put their all into stories that deserved the effort of untalented kindergartners with Crayolas.   


Nightwing takes place before prima donna circus brat Dick Grayson becomes Robin.  The stand-alone draws upon the blackout instigated by the Riddler in Batman.  When the blackout hits, Gothamites panic like lemmings.  The chaos leaves Dick in charge of some kids who become de facto Teen Titans.  The by-the-numbers tale factors in four dead characters--The Graysons, Raymond and Raya--to make the trip down memory lane extra superfluous.

Batgirl trumps Nightwing.  Marguerite Bennett turns what could have been an innocuous survival story, outcome assured, into a vehicle for dank cynicism.  Barbara Gordon must lead her yet to be cracked brother and innocent Gothamites through the hurricane, that Superman failed to stop or mitigate, to safety.  Every bit of the journey, inconsequential.

The flashback could have been made better and more memorable very easily.  All Bennett had to do was reveal that the character Babs met during the hurricane had been Batman in disguise.  This would have negated the dystopian vision, foreshadowed the inevitability of Babs' transformation into Batgirl and through the shared history of Batman and Batgirl, embodied the whole with (gasp) relevance.  Instead, we're stuck with this thing.  You know what.  Just.  Fuck.

After reading of my disappointment, you just might be willing to give up.  Don't worry though.  There's a big bright light coming up on the horizon.  It's the reflection beaming off of the Batmobile.

My reaction?




Fan-tas-tic!


In the proper "Year Zero," Batman has never been better.  The "old" version of the Batmobile bears the superior technology conceived from Bruce Wayne's brilliant mind while alluding to the lines of the 1930s Roadsters Batman used to drive.  

The Batmobile is the source for the first moment of the sense of wonder that Batman instills.  The optimism and technopolis World's Fair type of futurism contrast the horror of Gotham's villains.  The villains of Gotham are a stain on a progressive society.  They're not products of the civilization they despise.  Rather they seem more like invaders or viruses.

Scott Snyder and Gregg Capullo reintroduce Dr. Death to new 52 mythology.  The original Dr. Death was a monocled, goateed mad scientist.  Most people remember his cackling like mad while his lab burned to the cinders.  However, the lesser known sequel provided Snyder's and Capullo's inspiration.



For the day, that was pretty gruesome.  He's much worse looking now.  The monster's nasty murders immediately attract the Dark Knight to the scene, as well as the police that intend to pursue Batman.  This includes Jim Gordon.



Snyder reveals new information regarding Jim Gordon and why Bruce doesn't trust him.  It all originates from the murder of Thomas and Martha Wayne as well as the undercurrent of corruption in Gotham City police.



Whereas all the other "Year Zero" books appear to be using the disasters that befell and in some cases will befall Gotham as their focal points, Batman only uses the blackout and the impending hurricane conditions as a backdrop.  Snyder and Capullo concentrate on establishing Batman as the hero of Gotham City in the most stylish way possible.  There's just no comparison.



World's Finest continues the hunt for the new 52 Tattooed Man, who Paul Levitz introduced last issue as a Tattooed Woman with a grudge against the fashion industry.

Helena and Kara investigate tattoo parlors in search of a lead.  Kara though has another purpose.  With her powers in flux, she attempts to get a tattoo.  The results are expected.



This scene leads to more of that terrific interplay between the crimefighting partners and a reveal that explains why Helena wears a more modest costume than the post-Crisis Huntress.

The team splits up later in the book.  Helena quickly finds the Tattooed Woman conducting her arsonist graffiti, and Power Girl schedules a flight into space to saturate herself with sunlight.

The scenes could be in any superpower based book, but what really puts these moments over is how Levitz deals with each as instructed by the characterization of his champions.  The savvy businesswoman Karen Starr secures her secret identity in a realistic, humorous manner, but not before she has a comedic conversation with the pilot of the shuttle.

Huntress abandons a visceral fight against the Tattooed Woman to save her friend because she knows as invulnerable as Kara may be superheroes still need help.  She learned that from Batman.  Furthermore, the clockwork timing by artists R.B. Silva and Scott McDaniel mirrors the history of the legacies.  Huntress reacts in an eye-blink.  She's that fast.  She's that prepared.  Although afflicted, Kara moves with confidence and ignores risk.  All  of these elements pool together for yet another solid issue of World's Finest, the most consistently entertaining cape and cowl book DC publishes.



Bryan Q. Miller concludes his introduction of Wonder Woman to the pages and universe of Smallville.  Faust set Hades free, but in so doing he unleashed the wrath of Wonder Woman and attracted the attention of Superman.  



In this issue, Hades gives Superman two choices, neither of which he can abide by.  So he picks door number three.  In so doing, The Man of Steel preserves his honor while demonstrating that bad asses can wear primary colors.



Wonder Woman caps off this superb finale with comedy and genuine emotion.  The entire story earns my highest  recommendations, and if you haven't picked it up by issue, get the trade.  You won't be disappointed.  In case you're counting, that's two Smallville stories that are essential reading.  One debuting Batman and Babs Gordon.  The other Wonder Woman.  Both tales effortlessly energize these old heroes for a new audience.



Some People Can Make Anything Look Good

The second issue of Rocket Girl is as good as the premiere.  We open with our title hero Dayoung breezily making pancakes for her physicist hosts Allison and Ryder.  



One of the tropes that always tires me is when a time traveler finds the future or the past an alien culture in which he or she cannot cope.  Sure.  A time traveler might be confused a little by the monetary systems or some pop culture fads, but by and large, what we have now is really a reiteration of the past.  

This blog for instance was once on the usenet before the world wide web as we know it.  In the past it might have been in a free newspaper or a pamphlet or on the back of a penny dreadful.  In the future, who knows it may be an injection that can be read on the skin.  The point is that the future isn't indecipherable and our ancestors weren't completely ignorant.  The best time travel stories such as those in Doctor Who, Star Trek, Time After Time and Warlock all feature savvy time travelers, capable of comprehending the future or the past.  In Rocket Girl pancakes are forever, as they should be.  Dayoung quickly dopes out the twentieth century means to make them.



Rocket Girl of course is more than pancakes, and Dayoung is in the past for a reason.  This issue we discover what time laws have been broken, and our heroine relays just how much she's willing to sacrifice to see history preserved.

It turns out that the Quintum Corporation created a real paradox, and the cover-up extends to the high.  Dayoung represents a group of dedicated teens that are the only ones that can be trusted in the future.  At least that's how its supposed to play out.  Dayoung has traveled back in time essentially to preclude her future.  That's really an extraordinary selflessness.

Along the way, Dayoung alters time and space by simply being in the past, and she doesn't stay meek.  She attracts attention, from the news and the police, and interferes.  She's saving lives that might have been lost if history took its proper course.  

Amy Reeder's illustration is exuberant and inviting.  She choreographs Dayoung's limber flight path, undercutting criminal episodes with knowing comedy.  Dayoung completely overpowers the modern criminal in terms of gray cells and dynamics.

I'm a tough sell when it comes to fantasy.  Anthony Johnston's and Christopher Mitten's Umbral looked low on magic and high on gorgeous artwork.  So, I gave it a try and liked what I read.  



The story takes place in a mythical realm of kings, queens, princes, sorcerers and thieves.  Young Prince Arthir is a friend of Rascal a femme fingersmith.  She possesses a magical mist, which the Prince wishes to use in a bit of magical experimentation...ah, you can just smell the star-crossed loving in the future, except, it won't be that simple.



Johnston surprised the hell out of me by turning the fairy tale promise of a happy ending inside out and instead creating a gripping adventure.  



At the same time, he casts intriguing characters expressing invigorating dialogue that carries the reader smoothly through a gorgeous tableau of rich, colorful designs.



Paul Tobin's and Coleen Coover's Bandette is exactly as I hoped it would be.  The graphic novel presents an escapade starring the infamous Bandette, a young master thief who is also on the speed dial of Inspector Belgique.  Bandette you see steals from criminals and doesn't truck with murder and hostage taking.  She enjoys the thrill of thievery and outwitting her opponents and their lackeys.


Of course, there's always a danger in such a character coming off as arrogant, but it's difficult not to enjoy Bandette's exploits given a joie de vivre so evident in Colleen Coover's delightful cartoons.  Her style hasn't changed an iota from Banana Sundays, X-Men First Class or Small Favors.  

Coover's Parisian scenery and the many trophies in Bandette's possession however exhibit heretofore unexpressed detail in her artwork.  These environs and ill gotten goods enrich the freewheeling mood and attitude of Bandette.  It really reads like an all-ages European strip, inspired by sixties heroines like Batgirl.  Tobin and Coover even borrow a tactic from Babs.



The plot however could be interpreted as darker than one might expect. Absinthe a gang leader who doesn't care for Bandette's niceties intends to eliminate her once and for all.  As such he hires an assassin, trains snipers on her, and indeed a very disturbing murder may have occurred off panel.  

His intentions are enough to engage Bandette's friendly rival thief Monsieur, who does not want to see this particularly colorful bon vivant femme fatale removed from the chessboard.  Bandette in turn concocts the perfect means to fight back against Absinthe, and Tobin rather than propose a team up between Bandette and Monsieur offers a witty alternative that breathes some originality into the typical caper.  Also of note, Tobin's repartee often comments on the chestnuts to be found in more serious treatments of the same things that occur in Bandette.  While this contest of theft would indeed be marvelous to watch, readers will need to unfortunately wait until the next volume.  Bandette whets the appetite.


Saturday Afternoon at the Movies  


As usual the mainstream critics are wrong.  Thor: The Dark World was exciting, funny and moving in parts.  Best of all it was unpredictable.  Once again, the team behind and before the camera remind us that the Asgardians are not truly gods but long-lived aliens.  Thus, Thor is in reality science fiction, and this sequel more obviously so than the previous movie.  Laser pistols and Asgardian swords and shields all gel nicely.  

Chris Hemsworth portrays a Thor that thinks not just slams with his hammer.  Furthermore, all that depth the willful son of Odin gained from the first movie doesn't just get thrown away.  The filmmakers build from it.  Tom Hiddleston's Loki was a marvel, and Christopher Eccleston--the Doctor--presented a totally alien evil.  

There's more activity and range from the Warriors Three, Sif and Frigga--who honestly had to be Rene Russo.  Natalie Portman imbues Jane Foster with a constant scientific curiosity, and her chemistry with Hemswroth makes the legendary love between Thor and Jane a living, breathing thing.  Definitely stay for the scene after the credits.  Unlike most Marvel films, Thor sets up Guardians of the Galaxy early.  The very last scene after the credits is part of the movie you just saw.  It's the reward. 


Thoughts About 
Doctor Who 
"The Night of the Doctor"


Unlike some of the other mini-episodes produced for Doctor Who, "The Night of the Doctor" wasn't just a lark.  It instead offers a decisive moment in the unbroken continuity of Doctor Who.  

I was elated and sad when I heard McGann's voice.  "I'm a doctor.  But I'm probably not the one you were expecting."  I suspected that we would see Paul McGann's Doctor regenerate in the 50th Anniversary episode, and I knew that I would feel more than a twinge of regret.  


I liked the idea of the eighth Doctor still being out there somehow, in a limbo television realm where he doesn't regenerate.  Of course, that's silly.  I knew the eighth Doctor regenerated since the ninth debuted in 2005.


Seeing Paul McGann as the Doctor again was just wonderful.  He has always been a favorite Doctor.  So, although he basically loses in this episode; fails to impress upon Cass that he's a nice Time Lord, dies in the crash because he stubbornly refuses to leave her, caves in to the demand that he end the Time War, abandons his position as a renegade, "The Night of the Doctor" still feels like a triumph.  A proper return, an acknowledgement that Paul McGann's Doctor is the first truly new Doctor, if you catch my drift.  Paul McGann's Doctor deserves to regenerate, even if it's painful for a fan to watch.

The Doctor Who 1996 special--you really can't denigrate it by calling it the TV Movie anymore thanks to David Tennants' Doctor Who specials--foreshadows so much of how we define Doctor Who today.  Its glossy look.  Its far better special effects.  Its speed.  Its dramatic content and the context of Doctor Who.  


Paul McGann's Doctor was the first to take a romantic interest in his companion.  The Doctor mentions a handful of companions in "The Night of the Doctor."  I'm a little miffed that he didn't add Dr. Grace Holloway's name to the mix, but I suspect that was due to real-world legal issues rather than preference.  It's very easy for Grace to appear in comic strips or comic books, but nettlesome for her to actually return to Doctor Who.  I feel so cheated out of a Paul McGann and Daphne Ashbrook Doctor Who series.  I don't blame Russell T. Davies for introducing the Doctor as a clean slate, but I do blame Fox and the BBC for dickering over Doctor Who in the interim.

Paul McGann's Doctor planted a great big boot to the stones of the self-proclaimed canonical books by revealing a secret.  "I'm half-human, on my mother's side."  Christopher Eccleston would imply that he was a father and a grandfather in the first series.  We see Time Lord children in David Tennant's series.  Matt Smith's Doctor explains that Time Lords became that way because they reproduced in the Time/Space Vortex.  All taboo in the books of the nineties.  Oh, and although the Doctor lists his Big Finish Audio companions.  He doesn't include any of the companions made for the books.  There's that high pitched shriek again.

But enough of the real...Let's talk fiction.  "The Night of The Doctor" lays out some juicy allusions for old Doctor Who fans.  The Doctor's ensemble is based on the Wild Bill Hickock costume he stole in 1999 after he regenerated.  The Doctor actually uses his sonic screwdriver.  In Doctor Who 1996 it remained in his collected possessions bag until Chang-Li returned it to him at the end of the adventure.  The Doctor's thwarted by a Dead-Lock Seal, sound defense against Time Lords.  Sonic technology though perhaps not invented by the Time Lords certainly is one of their trademarks.  

The Doctor and the TARDIS look considerably more haggard presumably as a result of being unwelcome by his people again.  He and the TARDIS looked quite good in 1999, and at that point, he was still in the Time Lords' good graces, relatively speaking.  


The Doctor crashes on the planet Karn, introduced in the classic Tom Baker episode "The Brain of Morbius."  The Sisterhood of Karn are not Time Lords but allies and under Time Lord protection.  The Sisterhood employ the chemicals condensing from the Sacred Flame.  The chemistry grants them eternal life, should they choose it.  

The Doctor helped the Sisterhood in the past, but that was only after they intended to sacrifice him in order to reignite the flame.  So the Doctor's lack of trust in "The Night of the Doctor" is perfectly understandable.

The elixir triggers the Doctor's regenerative process.  This is the second time that the Doctor's natural abilities had to be triggered by an outside force.  The first occurred when the third Doctor "died" from radiation poisoning, and one of his Time Lord teachers hidden on earth kickstarted his regeneration.

After the Doctor regenerates, the so-called War Doctor looks at his reflection and sees a young man.  The War Doctor we meet at the end of "The Name of the Doctor" is an older man.  This would suggest a very long war indeed.  

There's an insider's joke here as well.  During "The Brain of Morbius" the Doctor wrestles against the title Time Lord using a device, similar to the one that the Master exploited to steal the Doctor's remaining lives.  

During the mental wrestling match, all the Doctor's faces appear, but a multitude of other faces--mostly from the crew--also manifest.  The thirteen incarnation limit was introduced after the episode by Robert Holmes in "The Deadly Assassin."  

The wrestling match has long been a thorn in the side of the continuity obsessed.  Fortunately, there are enough faces to suggest that Morbius is simply losing and perhaps one of the younger faces is the first Doctor just as a young man.  In reality, the crew had no idea that "Deadly Assassin" would  limit regeneration.  So, here on Karn, we're faced with another conundrum: a phantom incarnation or a true Doctor that bumps the incarnation count to twelve. Nice one.


Monday, July 8, 2013

POBB: July 3, 2013


Pick of the Brown Bag
July 3, 2013
by 

Ray Tate

This week the POBB bids a fond farewell to Jim Kelly: the first black martial arts master in movies, remembered best for his role in Enter the Dragon and his remarkable hair. 


After his discovery, Kelly starred in several Blaxploitation flicks like Black Belt Jones but also participated in bigger budget studio films such as the western Take a Hard Ride, a personal favorite.  Jim Kelly didn't have a long career in movies, but Kelly is now immortalized on DVD. 


Comic books covered this week in the POBB include Action Comics, Ame-Comi Girls, Batwing, Bionic Woman, Detective Comics and The Owl.

An unctuous business man makes Bruce Wayne an offer in not one but two Bat-related books.

The first position occurs in Jimmy Palmiotti's and Justin Gray's freewheeling Batwing.  Grave things do occur in the new Batwing's title, but the execution is anything but dour.  The bug like Marabunta attack Lucas Fox's family and kidnap his father, Lucius, yet let me emphasize.  He's abducted by insectoid criminals.


We can thank the Nolan Batman films for turning Wayne Foundation money manager Lucius Fox into Batman's Q.  I never liked that aspect of the new Batman mythology, and I'm not crazy about it in the new 52 either, which at least excuses the hitherto unknown function by blaming it on the total reboot.  I like it when Batman makes his own stuff.  Oh well, at least the new universe doesn't preclude Batman taking a part in the inventive process.

Anyhow, swallowing this lump, we can enjoy Lucas Fox discovering his father's secrets, which is admittedly a nice moment.  Apart from that, Batwing just goes to all sorts of places you don't expect, like the red-headed hottie's car. 


Photography by Eduardo Pansica and Julio Ferreira, makeup Paul Mounts

This is kind of a Spider-Man move.  Only Spidey would have ended up with a trucker, shaped like Sal from Futurama.  


Palmiotti and Gray give Batwing a kind of believable luckiness.  Of course, he doesn't pursue the possibilities offered.  He has other things on his mind.


Yes, that's homage to the 1960s Batman television series, only the angle presents the tried and true as way cooler, and it works.  There's something just extremely refreshing in the way Batwing and Batman interact.  

The second offer for a piece of the Wayne comes from E.D. Caldwell of Caldwell Enterprises.  The vacuum filler of Luthorcorps.

While I dislike the idea of Lucius Fox becoming Batman's Q, I loathe every aspect of Batman Inc.  This was the stupidest idea I've ever seen, especially for somebody trying to protect his secret identity.  Unfortunately, I'm stuck with it.  

At least, I don't have to think about it in Detective Comics, since Batman Inc. isn't part of the story.  I draw upon it because writer Jon Layman parallels and perhaps parodies the idea with the Wrath.  E.D. is very clearly if not the actual Wrath, certainly connected.

The Wrath and the Wrath "Family" are cop killers which have personal reasons for hating the law, in the same way Batman despises crime, and to keep with the theme of the flip-side of the coin, the Wrath does not have a pep talk for failure.


The Wrath also appeared in a different form during the final days of the pre-Crisis, but the things these two avatars share are few.

In the early 2000s, Dynamite Publishing with modern painting phenomenon Alex Ross decided to bring the public domain superheroes such as the Black Terror, the Green Lama, Miss Masque and the original Dare-Devil back to comics.  This wasn't the first resuscitation for the heroes, but it was the most enduring.  Project Superpowers, lasted 21 issues, and succeeded in spinning off several mini-series.  

The Owl is the latest foray in the public domain barrel.  Many would consider The Owl a true scrape of the bottom.  The Owl after-all was a dopey 1940s knock-off Batman from Dell Comics, and I wouldn't be surprised if Dynamite isn't trying to capitalize on the success of Scott Snyder's and Greg Capullo's Night of the Owls in Batman.


Whatever the reason, the Owl is back.  The newly tweaked Owl was briefly seen in Project Superpowers.  Though we never knew what was in store for the old hero.

For those not in the know, we learn in Project Superpowers that all the 1940s public domain heroes were locked away in Pandora's Urn.  The Fighting Yank realizing he had been duped into confining his former comrades releases all.  When the heroes return, they return changed.  The Black Terror is a little bit nuts now.  Miss Masque can now take the image of anybody she chooses when she wears her domino namesake.

In the premiere, we discover the Owl now possesses a blackout power, like Dr. Mid-Nite's blackout bombs but more expansive.  More importantly he also amassed perspective.

Writer J.T. Krul and Ross distinguish Nick Terry, real identity of the Owl, from every incarnation of Batman by making Nick a man out of time, longing for his partner Belle, the Owl Girl.

Krul furthermore highlights a difference between the eras.  All the heroes from Project Superpowers come from the 1940s, and this was an era of equality.  

Men didn't treat women like porcelain dolls in the 1940s.  Rather, they saw them as true partners.  Women had more freedoms before and during World War II.  Women, not serving as nurses, doctors and WAFs, in fact took over most of the jobs the men had before they went to war.  

When the men came home, women were persuaded, if not outright fired, and pressed into stereotype roles.  By the 1950s Rosie the Riveter became Rosemary the Homemaker.  


It isn't surprising to see the Owl Girl as a reporter on level footing with then detective Terry.  You really get a sense of Terry's loneliness through these beautifully illustrated sepia flashbacks.  It's an honest bereavement.  He's not missing a possession.  He's not missing Belle for selfish reasons.  The 1940s heroes are all portrayed as forward thinking individuals, and the Owl is no different.

The Owl sacrificed and fought during World War II.  He genuinely loved another.  These points of interest in his persona conflict with the cynical detectives of the modern era.  The Owl naturally seeks a job in the police force, where he's best suited and there he meets and connects with a woman looking for a missing man. 


Krul appears to be foreshadowing private investigation in the Owl's future.  He seems not to appreciate any red tape such as the twenty-four hour rule for missing persons, and the scene offers a good establishing shot in terms of future plotting and characterization.

At night, the Owl hunts the modern criminal, and finds him lacking in even the most basic codes.  This is reflective of how older felons, a generation mostly long gone, see the younger turks.  The Owl is not alone in his foray.

The new Owl Girl, if she is that, is a very nineties looking hero, and I'm glad to say that dark age is mostly gone.  With the new 52, DC returned their champions back to their heroic essences, but this Owl Girl serves as a reminder and an intriguing plot development.

Scott Lobdell wastes no time in making Action Comics his book.  Though you would get a richer reading experience by adding this title and Superman to your subscription list, you still don't have to.  Action Comics is user friendly, and the exposition is mostly seamlessly woven into dialogue.

Fresh from his breakout from STAR Labs and his takeover of HIVE, Hector Hammond goes out to inspect HIVE's Deathstar.  He runs into something hilariously nettlesome.


The chap that just punted Hector Hammond is new character Straith, First Knight of Pax Galactica.  This fun-loving fellow for a change is on the side of good, and he promptly makes his mark literally.


I weeped with laughter.  Hammond is so pissed off that he contacts Superman, who as Clark Kent, a moment ago escorted his blog writing partner Cat Grant to an amusing gala.  

Hammond rationalizes that Superman would be interested in anybody who could do such damage to HIVE.  Superman of course attempts a friendly salutation, but he gets nowhere fast, and kicks himself as he battles the First Knight.

Tyler Kirkham's artwork never really sent me before, but with colorist Arif Prianto he fits right in with Superman, mostly now defined by Kenneth Rocafort.  

The back up story by Frank Hannah and Tom Derenick is a pleasant time waster in which Jor-El meets Lara under bellicose circumstances.  

We know what happens to the doomed planet and the doomed parents to be, but the story doesn't wear out its welcome, and it's fun to see Lara as a military counterpoint to Jor-El's scientist archetype.

Pamiotti and Gray reintroduce Hawkgirl and "Adam" Strange in Ame-Comi Girls.  The story condenses the life of Shayera Thath into one thick story.  The tale opens with young Shayera being scolded for fighting on the behalf of downsider Katar Hol.  This establishes Shay's tomboy nature and contrarian attitude toward her stepmother.


Horacio Domingues and Randy Mayor give these moments an almost Disneysque spin in the artwork.  The team illustrate Shay as a spindly youth with an uncanny Don Bluth styled visage.  I was reminded of a cross between Princess Ariel from The Little Mermaid and Penny from The Rescuers

Within a few pages, Palmiotti and Gray jump ahead.  Hawkgirl marries Carter and joins the police as an act of rebellion against her stepmother and to honor her father.  On a fateful day, the Hawks find themselves under attack.  Tragedy strikes in the form of Sinestra--the feminized Sinestro, and Hawkgirl vows revenge.
Gray and Palmiotti now separate their cosmos from what's known.  Thanagar goes the way of Krypton, but in an ingenious move, the writers employ a traditional trope of the Silver Age, Adam Strange's Zeta Beam, in a novel way.

Through the Zeta Beam Hawkgirl meets Alana Strange, and artist Ted Naifeh elegantly embellishes her origin.  Palmiotti and Gray tie in Alana's birth with a classic supporting character and a bit of superbly employed earth history.  

Amelia Earheart became the symbol of women in flight, but she wasn't the only female pilot out there.  A number of aviatrixes formed the Ninety-Nines, of which Earheart became President.  The organization is more than a flight club, and the message has not changed: 

"advancement of aviation through education, scholarships and mutual support while honoring a unique history and sharing a passion for flight."

Ideally, the Ninety-Nines of the past, much more in the news then, promoted international sisterhood through a feminist freedom, and it's rather appropriate that one of the Ninety-Nines provides Alana's human side.  Highly recommended for fans of history, Adam Strange, Hawkgirl or just female superheroes in general.


On the Bionic Woman television series, the Fembots counted as the Jaime Sommers' number one foe.  They however were mere robot duplicates of targeted females.  


Paul Tobin for his second Bionic Woman storyarc reintroduced the Fembots as enslaved A.I. Emphasis on intelligence, for the Fembots recognized Jamie as the mother of their kind, and saw her autonomy as something to aspire to.  This newfound life led Katy, a Fembot to seek out Jamie in order to lead a revolution.


Another writer might create a big budget, sound and fury spectacle in which Fembots and humans battle it out in number for dominance.  Not Paul Tobin.  Tobin understands the Bionic Woman.  Even on the old series, Jamie resigned from OSI, leading to a Prisoner-like hunt followed by a detente in which she gained her freedom by working for OSI on a contractual basis.  Jamie was tired of spy games and the violence that comes with such espionage, and that's not the kind of person who would lead a bloody coup.

Rather she takes appropriate names and  instead brokers an uneasy peace between humans and Fembots.  In the process, Jaime embarrasses a lot of airbags in the world government, much to the amusement of Steve Austin and Oscar Goldman.


Juan Antonio Ramirez perfectly captures Jamie's attitude as a pragmatic pacifist.  He expertly times the bionic action, as well as the comedy.  Sometimes at the same time.  Ramirez as usual deserves special credit for spreading a gamut of multiple expressions for the identical faces of the Fembots.  In addition he bestows to each singular personality.  Do not miss The Bionic Woman.