by Beausephus
DOC SAMSON 1I'll admit, I bought this issue based solely on my fond recollection of Peter David's late 1980's run on The Incredible Hulk. It was before the Las Vegas Mr. Fixit era, or any of the stumbling blocks that have plagued the Hulk as a title since then. Back then it was a confused, lonely Hulk sitting on a rock in the Badlands asking himself probing questions like, "Why no one like Hulk?" as he strokes a wild hare or a butterfly lands on his shoulder. Then, of course, out of nowhere comes a missile and nukes the entire landscape. But out of the flames, or dust, or smoke, emerges the Hulk, all scowling and gritted teeth, getting stronger as he gets more and more enraged.
Now, the guys who were always up Hulk’s purple tatters were the...ummm...Hulkbusters. Yeah, I know. But their boss was Doc Samson, green haired, super strong, psychiatrist with an alternating mad-on for Hulk and a desire to help poor Doc Banner trapped inside the jade giant.
So what does this have to do with the all-new Doc Samson #1? Not a whole helluva lot. Nothing, in fact.
Apparently Doc Samson is the super shrink to the capes and tights set, even Nick Fury has him on speed dial.
With pretty art, and well intended story that's equal parts smash-em-up action and supernatural tomfoolery, DOC SAMSON seems to be serving too many masters with no real idea as to what each master wants. He's got a hodge podge team of misfits, and this title seems to want to establish Doc and his crew as the scientific supernatural problem solvers of the Marvel Universe. I look at DC's new team books like Villians United or Shadowpact, and I see examples of niche teams working, based mainly on the reinvigorated b-list characters in their ranks. DOC SAMSON would have fared better had it done a little more of that...at least it would have made me want to buy issue 2.
JSA 81This is the only time in a year where I was actually happy to read JSA. Ever since Alex Ross started his pretty painted portrait covers JSA had been cruising along at pace of a bored snail. Why did I keep reading it? My love of the characters and the faith that Geoff Johns would pull this wreck of a title out of the tailspin it's been in for the past few months.
Apparently, Mr. Johns is busy elsewhere in the DCU.
So it is with hesitation that I bought this issue. My comic pusher, saw my hesitation, and asked if I was going to drop the title. I said, probably. He nodded, adding that such was the popular opinion of the book. How did Johns alienate the fans that once made JSA a huge book? Well, it was the lack of stories such as the one found in this issue.
The heart of the JSA is just that...it's emotional core, the generations of heroes with links to all corners of the DCU. JSA is a family, but with the more universe spanning, magical realm jumping adventures they had the more the teams ceased to be just that and became another boring team book. The confident art of Don Kramer and Leonard Kirk has been dependable, but ultimately uninspiring and undynamic.
This issue feature Dale Eaglesham on pencils, and it's like a breath of fresh air into the series, even the colors seemed bolder. Johns focuses on the whimsical duo Stars and S.T.R.I.P.E. Every bit of familial drama that once filled the pages of JSA was instantly re-infused. I actually cared about the characters, and I was excited to look at the pages. it was superhero melodrama at it's finest. It was the best JSA story in a long time, and sadly, it was only for one issue.
DETECTIVE COMICS 815I recently got rid of a few long boxes of comics. Many of the Detective Comics in those boxes were from the post-No Man's Land era of Batman, when the titles had a definite perspective and stylistic approach. The Batman title was the more super hero style adventures, while Detective was the just that, the crime solving Dark Knight. Scott McDaniel was on Bats and Shawn Martinbrough was penciling Detective. Martinbrough's art was like that of Michael Lark's recent flashback scenes in Captain America- retro before Darwyn Cooke made it hip. It might not have worked all of the time, but it was at least a dynamic bold direction.
the last 16 months of DETECTIVE have given us 2 parts of the misdirected and cloudy "City of Crime" storyline and some asinine "War Games" tie that had to do with the Joker and the world's most uninteresting criminal foil, Black Mask. David Latham’s lamentable turn at combining his Stray Bullets noirish tendencies with a superheroic mystery was an over-extended fill in run.
And now, as the "One Year Later" reboot looms ever closer, Detective fills it's pages with a fairly more straightforward Batman/Bruce Wayne adventure. In fact, this new issue reminds me of the classic Batman comics from the seventies when Bats and Bruce were not so separate, and the Dark Knight needed both identities at times. (In fact, when is the last time we even saw Bruce Wayne as a character in Batman or Detective? And I mean, besides as Batman with the cowl off...)
This issue of Detective is a nice turnaround from not only the style but also the entire tone that Detective has been mired in for the past year.
DAY OF VENGEANCE SPECIALOf all of the Infinite Crisis Mini Series, I enjoyed Day of Vengeance most of all. I have always enjoyed the second-class citizens of the super hero world, those smaller costumed heroes overshadowed, usually with good reason, by the bigger named, franchise players. Day of Vengeance takes a few of these nobodies and turns them into heroes in their own right on their own terms. Writer Bill Willingham is a spectacular comic book writer. he knows where the butter and the bread should meet to appeal to fans of all types.
Witty dialogue and strong characters? Check.
Imaginative plot with momentum and direction? Check.
Slam bang Kirby style action? Check. (It's a comic book, folks, not high literature.)
While this issue was supposed to tie up loose ends and answer the questions raised in the wake of the Mini and Crisis, all it does is raise more interesting questions that make me want more.
First of all, Juntiniano is back, handling the art, and damn, can this guy draw. His dynamic poses and expressive faces make his work a veritable Whitman Sampler for the eyes. I will miss his pencils in the upcoming Sahdowpact series, but look forward to whatever is next on his plate. (I mean check out his Dr. Fate throughout the issue. Ka. Boom.)
This one shot is obviously meant to reinstate the Marvel family as the premier icons of the magic community in the DCU and perhaps Cap can start down the path where his potential as a character can be exploited. A new Dr. Fate, and a more involved Phantom Stranger only add delectable spices to the pot of magic that is bubbling, toiling, and troubling all over the coming effects of the Crisis.