Tuesday, April 23, 2013

This week's picks!

Bit of a hectic week, what with my vacation and all. Still got it in just under the wire though and now, to complete the week (the morning that I start the new week), let's delve into my overall picks. I think I want to add a couple things to the "this week's picks" posts. Not a hundred percent sure what that's going to be yet. I'm thinking at least of highlighting favorite covers or art or something. I don't know. Maybe favorite scene. Maybe a favorite panel. I don't know. Maybe I'll do a few things. Or maybe I'll pick three comics and I'll be done. I guess we'll all have to wait and see, hm?

Captain America 6
This was a tricky pick for me. Obviously I'm biased where ever Cap is concerned but even with that, it's hard for me to point to this issue and say it was the best issue I've read of this series. I don't know that it is (not that that would mean it's undeserving of this list) and I'm not sure it beats out some of the other strong books this week. However, it stuck with me more than any other book this week and it was the one that I most constantly looked back on. Actually, all three books I've chosen this week are ones that, after I finished reading (and I read each of them twice), I found myself thinking back to at any given moment. For this book, it was the angry Cap characterization I talked about at length in my review. I've talked about how much I like this book and how I appreciate the desire to look at Cap from different angles. He's been around for seventy years, it's not easy to come up with no approaches to the character. However, it's strange that simply "being angry" counts as a new approach. Make no mistake though, it definitely does. And it comes off strongly but appropriately in this issue. I think the next issue will be more on that lines with Cap angrier than ever and possibly crossing a few lines here. It's exciting territory for Remender to enter with Steve. And this book might stick with me more than it sticks with others simply because I like Cap over most other heroes but the fact is it still stuck.

Daredevil 25
Like with Captain America, this book stuck with me because it featured the lead character feeling something new. Not necessarily entirely new for his long history (as with Captain America) but new enough and one that's not typically seen out of the main character. Cap got angry. Daredevil gets scared. This is the issue we've been building up to for a long time now. In fact, we're not all the way there even yet, but we've gotten right to the breaking point. Now Matt has to deal with a mysterious figure in the shadows who knows everything about him and knows everything about his powers. On top of that, he's created Ikari, a near-clone of Daredevil but with sight on top of all his other enhanced senses. It begs the question of whether or not Ikari's sight is also enhanced. Maybe it doesn't. Maybe it just begged me that question. I don't know. Anyway, it's interesting to see Matt paired up against someone who matches him so completely. It's not like Bullseye, who is as obsessive as Daredevil and maybe just a hair more unhinged. Ikari's powers are exactly like Matt's because they are Matt's, only Matt didn't anticipate how good he'd be with them. On top of that, the art continues to be fantastic and the colors match the book perfectly. It's particularly impressive because I didn't feel, reading it, that Matt was conveniently toned down in his abilities or anything of that nature, or that Ikari was getting impossibly lucky. It felt like Matt came in strong and was just outmanuevered. Maybe he would have been more successful if he didn't start off as confident, but that's how Matt would have entered the fight. It's another great issue and it's another great demonstration of how Waid understands the character.

X-Men Legacy 9
Another great entry for X-Men Legacy that proves what Spurrier and this book are capable of. It starts with a reference to Watchmen, a fitting reference that connects David to Dr. Manhattan and asks a well-informed comic audience what it would take for David and his power to disconnect from humanity in the same sorts of way that Jon Osterman did. The book then promptly goes on to ask if killing a once-hero to possibly save hundreds of mutants IF David's visions are accurate. We tend to believe David, as he's our focal point for this book and we know he's capable of powers that would allow him to accurately see the future, but it's worth questioning. Even if it IS true, is Ruth wrong in saying that they can't stop Aarkus before he comes to Earth? Is there no other way? You could start trying to get into it a little deeper, asking if maybe David couldn't have tried a little harder. Yes, he needs to stop Aarkus from destroying mutants. Yes, if all else fails, maybe it's worth incapacitating him to do it. And yes, it does seem Aarkus has gone a bit mad without any sort of filter, anyone to bounce his ideas off of and talk to. But he's not so far removed that David couldn't have maybe brought this to Wolverine and Wolverine couldn't have simply checked in with Cap and said "hey, your old bud the first Vision? We're not totally sure on this, but we think he might hate mutants. Could you maybe check with him and see? Maybe stop him from genocide, if you could? Thanks." But, at the same time as I say that, there's a voice in me screaming that David wouldn't think like that, that he wouldn't bring the X-Men or Captain America into it. It's entirely possible that he wouldn't dig into Aarkus' history beyond the basics. So now he's the judge and it's definitely worth Ruth asking how he could think himself worthy of that weight. Another great issue.

Best cover:
This was actually a really tough one. I went in thinking it was going to be one book, then remembered a handful of other worthy covers (including both X-Men Legacy, which always deserves mention for its cover, and Daredevil) and then ULTIMATELY decided to go against even my first thought (Venom), only to settle on this one. I've really liked the Thunderbolts covers so far and I've loved the color scheme of the team. This matchup of the brutality and tension between Deadpool and Punisher while also perfectly fitting in with this line of covers and the colors the book has centered on. Making the background the standard T-bolts red too was an interesting choice but it worked really well. Deadpool is still defined well enough and both his belt-buckle logo and Punisher's bloody shirt stand apart enough to draw attention to the images. On top of that, it definitely draws the eye to the cover and gives people an idea of what's to come. For those not reading the book, there's still not really a way for this cover to attract attention. Exciting cover.

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