Cover Of The Week

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Winner for this week…?  Eh, not a strong week, but this is the best cover of the Batgirl series thus far…by a mile. The uniform almost looks good here.  Almost.  Nguyen can make almost any cover good.

Additionally, this should have made last week’s Cover Of The Week a three way tie…but I didn’t get it until this week.  So I still have to give it credit.  It’s hard to compete with Jamie Hernandez.

 

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Any other week, either of these covers could have handily beat everyone else I think…but since they’re up on the same week, they’re just going to have to share.

First up, Rafael Albuqurque’s incredibly iconic and interesting Superboy #1. Let me be clear…I have absolutely ZERO interest in Superboy.  ZERO.  I still bought this comics.  The color choices here, combined with composition and straight up beautiful figure work sell this SO HARD.  Nice job boys.

Also brilliant is Mike Allred’s awesome I, Zombie #7.  These covers have been a bit hit and miss for me, but when they are hits, they are home-freaking-runs.  This is AMAZING.

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Comics this week was a crazy high and low bag.

I read some stuff I really liked more than usual this week:  Zatanna #6 has finally turned a corner for me and turned into a book I might just like – mostly due to some gorgeous Jesus Saiz art – I hope he stays on.  I thought Dini stepped it up here as well as the story was more fun and had much more pop (and much less borderline sexist weird stuff) than the previous 5 issues.  Here’s hoping it holds.

The Hellboy/Beasts of Burden one-shot was hilarious, adorable, and more fun than 98% of comics I read…how I wish this book existed as an ongoing…or at least another/a new mini-series.  Jill Thompson’s art is spectacular and Evan Dorkin (with an assist from Mike Mignola) nailed the story.

Madame Xanadu #28 was a nice strong close to the ‘extra sensory’ series, it’s too bad MX isn’t going to continue (this issue confirms that #29 with Wagner and Reeder is the last)…especially as by the end of this issue I was super intrigued to see the continuation of character Charlotte’s story.  Nice work by both Matt Wagner and guest penciller Marian Churchland.  Greg mentioned in his What I Bought column that this issue is a blatant rip off of Chew…which I believe, but as someone that doesn’t read Chew and only kind of vaguely knows the premise, it didn’t really bother me.  Also, as someone who has had (for more than 10 years now) a very specific idea for a novel and who recently found out that someone else is shortly publishing a book with a VERY similar very specific idea…I guess I feel like this kind of thing probably happens all the time.  I agree with Greg that it’s odd DC/Vertigo would publish anyway…but what do I know?

Additionally, though I don’t usually read Action Comics, Death’s guest appearance was fun in Action Comics #894 and showcased some lovely art by Pete Woods.

Clay Mann continues to deliver an X-Men (and especially a Rogue and Magneto) I really enjoy looking at in X-Men Legacy #241, though I confess that I did not love how this arc wrapped up.  But it wasn’t bad, just my expectations were perhaps too high for the cliffhanger I was left with in #240.

The Supergirl Annual #2 while not super interesting to me (annuals rarely are), was well done and the pencils by Matt Camp were quite good (also, Amy Reeder cover for the win!).

On the other hand: Superman #704 was a cliche borderline offensive trainwreck – on both the writing and art front.  I don’t even read Superman regularly and this book felt like a retread of thoughts and ideas…just cliche filler, penciled atrociously. 

Black Widow #7 was wonderfully written, but full of objectifying imagery (that’s also pretty fucking ugly…which is quite a feat) and at one point (the last page) was so bad it had me laughing out loud at the absolute sexist ridiculousness of it.

Detective Comics #870 felt really off to me in the writing.  In my personal take on Batman, which in fairness I have created personally by picking and choosing which stories I consider canon to who Bats is, Batman rarely every speaks in exclamation points, which this issue is littered with.  Even if not every reader sees eye to eye with my version of Bats, can we at least agree that Batman doesn’t just go around yelling ALL his dialogue?   Additionally the story felt like something we’ve seen a million times before. Really, the villain became a villain because something horrible happened to someone he loved?  Never seen that before. /sarcasm.  Also, I don’t mind revisiting the idea of “did Bats create the villains, or did the villains create Bats” but you’ve got to do something interesting with it or it just feels like noise.  This felt like noise.

Wonder Woman #604 continues to be definitively not good and uninteresting and the art slips with every issue – not that I was every really on board with the art anyway – the giant pushed up boobs really annoy me, as do some of the action poses – and I’ve mentioned the costume sucks too, right?  Yeah, I thought so.

Uncanny X-Men #529 is so ugly that despite being interested in some of the things Fraction is doing, I just have to drop it…it’s scarring my eyes and I worry for their future if I keep reading this ugly ass book.  It’s gone.

However, Uncanny’s ugliness is nothing compared to X-Men Curse of The Mutants: Mutants vs Vampires #2 (of 2, thank god) which though it has cute, fun, nearly wordless short (Call Me Santo by Simon Spurrier and Gabriel Hernandez Walta) and a fun reprint of Uncanny 159 (by Claremont and Sienkiewicz) also has two of the most offensive, myopic, ignorant short stories I’ve read in comics recently. 

Flesh Fangs and Burnt Rubber by Mike Benson is a fucking nightmare that basically equates hunting (and killing) hot vampire chicks with wooing a woman and falling in love (and falling out of love).  Equating falling out of love with beheading a hot vampire is fucking offensive and ignorant and doesn’t take half a brain to figure out not to fucking print.  Gambit, who I loved as a 15 year old girl and have slowly been falling out of love with over the years, has NEVER looked like a bigger asshat than in these 6 or so pages, which is saying a lot.

And then we have Skin Deep, a story written and drawn by Henry Chaykin, which I was delighted to see featured Xi’an Man Coy, a character always underused.  And if this story existed in a world (or medium/genre) in which women weren’t treated as sexual objects 24/7, that must always look an exact and perfect stereotypical way in order to be considered worthy of existing 100% of the time then maybe it would be a funny little tale.  But since it’s set in a world in which women are treated this way all the time, I find it offensive and unnecessary to try to do a funny insignificant short that makes light of significant issues and clearly didn’t take the time to work towards finding some insight into a real woman’s life, motivations, and pressures, but instead boils it all down to “gotta look good in the costume, gotta lose a few pounds”.  It’s poorly researched and lazy work that’s fairly offensive when set in the current context of women in comics.*

So all that said, among the good book and bad books there were too many good covers this week to pick just one, but I narrowed us down to three four:

#1.  This Mark Buckingham Madame Xanadu #28 is GORGEOUS.  It’s one of my favorite covers of the year, hands down.  And I guarantee it will be showing up in my 52 covers of the year list next summer.

#2. Jill Thompson’s cover to the Hellboy/Beasts Of Burden one-shot, which I think we can all agree is just MADE OF AWESOME**:

#3.  I am LOVING these gorgeous Travel Foreman covers for Black Widow.  And Frankly, I loved his Sif cover this past year as well, it even made my 52 covers list.  He’s got a great style and he’s surprisingly good so far with keeping the objectification to a minimum:

#4.  A bit of a cheat because I didn’t actually buy the book, though if my shop had had this variant cover available, I would have.  I don’t buy Secret Avengers because despite my very high interest in Valkyrie, I just can’t get past the Mike Deodato art.  But the variant cover of Valkyrie on Secret Avengers #6 by Jelena Kevic Djurdjevic (confirmed by commenter James – thanks!) is just lovely.    It’s a simple cover but I just love it…the boob plates ALMOST work even.  :)

I so wish someone would give Valkyrie an ongoing with a great writer and artist, I’d be so excited by it:

Also, while we’re here…how amazing would a Valkyrie penciled by Chris Bachalo be?  OH GOD. WANT!

*of note is that Batman: Bruce Wayne The Road Home: Oracle #1, was sold out at my shop, so I can’t say one way or another, but chatter on the twitter leads me to believe I might be pissed…time will tell…

**it’s also worth noting that Mignola’s Hellboy/Beasts of Burden cover is quite fantastic as well.

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It’s no secret that I’ve been loving the hell out of Fiona Staples DV8 Covers for the Brian Wood & Rebekah Isaacs Gods & Monsters mini-series, and this week is no exception.  A beautiful cover featuring what’s turned into one of my favorite characters – Freestyle – that I hope is not going to bite it.  Please please please Brian!

It’s also of note that while I ended up going for a panel of the week not from this book (that post goes up Tuesday 10/26), this entire goddamn book could have been scanned and posted as Panel(s) of the week.  It is BEAUTIFUL.  Rebekah Issacs’ not only renders her characters exceptionally but she has a real gift for storytelling and stunning action set pieces.  Much of this series has been set in an “undeveloped civilization” and has featured warring tribes battling on epic natural battlefields…and Isaacs has just delivered a completely compelling and really cinematic visual experience.  Overall it has been an amazing series, and I can say without a doubt is one of the best written, best drawn books I have read this year.  I’ll miss it immensely when it ends next month.  If you haven’t been reading it, I urge you to seek it out and if you can’t find it or can’t afford it, make sure to pick up the trade April 2011.

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This Massimo Carnevale offering for Northlanders #33 is an easy win this week.  The use of light is just awesome.

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Easy choice this week as Mark Buckingham continues his awesome run of Madame Xanadu covers for the “Extra Sensory” storyline.  Great color choices and stylized imagery.

Madame Xanadu #27:

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Not that wildly impressed with the covers to anything I bought this week, but the cover to Batman Detective Comics is pretty sweet.  I like the nice balance of darks and lights, the stylized figures, off-center action/composition and the use of graffiti, which is surprisingly under used in comics as a visual device, all make a pretty nice looking picture.

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Our second ever Cover of the Week – and no surprise that it’s going to the sublime Cliff Chiang and this fantastic stylized Batman.  Covers like this are what comics are all about to me…and perhaps most importantly, I haven’t been reading Justice League Generation Lost, but Chiang’s last two covers (see #9 at the bottom) convinced me to pick it up this week…of course there’s a huge disconnect between the exterior and interior art…but it’s almost always going to be a let down if you’ve got a Chiang cover and non-Chiang interior art.

Fantastic cover. I wish more comics could be like this.

Cliff Chiang's Justice League: Generation Lost #10

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So I’ve been working on an exciting two part post for She Has No Head! over the last month, and in the process it had me thinking a lot about comics covers – which is saying a lot as I already think about comic covers quite a bit thanks to my monthly Cover Solicits In Three Sentences Or Less posts.  But int the spirit of “Panel Of The Week” and trying to be more positive and find more things I love about comics (ah, why does only the hate come so easy!?) I’ve decided to do a best cover of the week as well.  I’m basing this, like Panel Of The Week, solely on comics I buy…so it’s entirely possible that there will be another better cover (even in my eyes) for the week…but if that book didn’t rate a buy I’m not going to consider it eligible.  This may be a bit unfair…but hey, I make the rules…and there are so few instances in which I get to say that in life…that I’m just going to revel in it.  :)

So welcome to our first ever, Cover Of The Week on 1979 Semi-Finalist.

And right off the bat I’m going to set a terrible precedent and give cover of the week to two covers…

MORNING GLORIES #2

Morning Glories has been selling out like crazy and I have to say…it deserves it.  It’s a pretty good book so far.  It’s smart and has some nice unexpected twists and turns.  The characters are kind of designed to be stereotypes, but then twist nicely and subvert some of those ideas.  Additionally, while I love some long slow drawn out deconstructed comics…this is moving at a breakneck pace (but not too fast that they’re screwing it up) and it’s kind of refreshing.  A TON has happened already and both issues have ended on fairly awesome cliffhangers.  It would be great if the interior art was better and more consistent, but it’s good enough to not get in the way.  Also, this cover rocks.

DV8: GODS & MONSTERS #6.

Ironically, though all of Fiona Staples covers for DV8: Gods & Monsters have been outstanding, this is probably my least (or second least) favorite of the bunch and yet it’s still awesome enough to get cover of the week.  Fiona has been doing an amazing job and this excellent graphic representation, which nicely reflects what’s going on in the book (and has the lovely white space I so crave) is a home run.

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