Comics

Sunday, June 21st, 2009 03:15 pm
caddyman: (Miracleman)
[personal profile] caddyman
Bozhe Moi, I think my brain is finally giving out. Or at least my imagination.

I have been reading comics for over 40 years and depending on my my mood, I like everything from the Sunday funnies to the darkest of the new reality stuff that seems to be melding increasingly with American style superheroes. I like European bande dessinée and Japanese manga (though the latter less so). Increasingly, as I get older, though, I like the modern takes on the original four-colour American comic books, the stuff that seemed inexplicably glamorous, colourful and exciting when I was nine and ten years old, compared with British comics such as the Beano and the Dandy; though I loved the weekly Valiant, that my Uncle Des used to buy and give to me a week later and TV21 was up there with the US stuff, but used characters from my favourite TV shows.

My recent favourites, other than reprints of much-loved classics, have undoubtedly been Grant Morrison's All-Star Superman, which was a fine mixture of classic four-colour story-telling, with an indulgent and knowing modern smile. The artwork drew (pardon the pun) on both the golden and silver age classics, but also with a bande dessinée overlay. Above all they were fun, which is what comics are supposed to be.



I have just read Grant Morrison's Final Crisis in a hardback collection. It is a testament to the man that the style is so different to his work on All-Star Superman, but I have to say that where his imagination, combined with that of artists JG Jones and Doug Mahnke took off, mine just fell and scuffed its knees. I read the book over several days rather than devour it in a sitting. I found it entertaining and visually stunning, but I think I understood barely a jot of what was going on other than it is a colossal confrontation using Kirby's Fourth World as the backdrop and the usual 'Crisis' formula of combining all the disparate versions of the DC multiverse heroes in one huge slugfest.



It was too much for my poor aging brain to cope with; I need something simpler though whether my next read, the collected Classwar by Rob Williams will fit the bill, I'm not sure...

(no subject)

Date: 2009-06-21 05:13 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] littleonionz.livejournal.com
Your comic fu is powerful.

(no subject)

Date: 2009-06-21 06:15 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fen-wolfchile.livejournal.com
I've not read final crisis but I've recently read infinite crisis which also confused me beyond belief, not one I would describe as fun really.

(no subject)

Date: 2009-06-21 06:21 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] caddyman.livejournal.com
Years ago I read Crisis on Infinite earths the first time that DC tried to tidy up its continuity by assigning different iterations of the same character(s) to 'alternative' realities. That was quite entertaining and intended to be a one-off re-set. Of course, since then they seem to have had any number of 'crises' in which they can bring all of the various continuities together for a romp.

Final Crisis is the first I've read for many years and egads it was busy and confusing!

Pretty, though.

(no subject)

Date: 2009-06-22 07:38 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ed-fortune.livejournal.com
I avoid the Crisis titles, they're jumbled mess most of the time, and shaggy god stories the other half.

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