Thursday, July 3, 2014

Moon Knight 5, Iron Fist: The Living Weapon 4

Moon Knight 5
Ellis (w) and Shalvey (a) and Bellaire (c) and Eliopoulos (l)


A young girl has been kidnapped by a crime family. She's being held in the fifth floor of a six story abandoned building by a dozen or so guards. Moon Knight makes his way to the fifth floor.

I put down every issue of this series going "this book is awesome." It's a number of things and I think that it's a number of things I've already talked about with this book. Each issue gives a slightly different flavor and the flavor of this one is a far more brutal and less mystical one. Khonshu only plays a role insofar as his tie to Moon Knight. There are no spirits and there are no curses. This one is just Moon Knight making his way through a series of thugs who stand no chance against him. It is brutal and it is devastating and it is truly a phenomenal comic. As ever, one of Ellis' strengths on the book remains his understanding of how to keep quiet during the action and how to let Moon Knight's terseness speak volumes. Declan Shalvey does a phenomenal job both with the still moments and with the intense action just as Jordie Bellaire does a stellar job setting the tone. Check this issue out.

Total Score: 5/5


Iron Fist: The Living Weapon 4
K. Andrews (w, a, and c) and Caramagna (l)


In a flashback to before Danny left for K'un Lun (on his present journey), we see a night between Danny and Brenda where she, having lowered his defenses and seen through his false callousness, gets him to confide in her, at least a little, and talk to her about his parents. That night, his mother, a monstrous skeleton not unlike the father he ran into at the end of last issue, comes to him while he sleeps and scolds him for looking back at her when she told him not to, for watching her get ripped apart. Brenda stays through his whole episode and calms him back to bed, though it's still a restless night. In the present, his maybe-father/monster insults his connection to Lei Kung and compares it to his connection and perceived failure to his own father. Danny raises his iron fist to strike with the power of Shou-Lao, K'un Lun, and the tree of immortality only to find that, with those destroyed, he has no power.

Danny's demons are very real and they're facing him down one by one. Andrews, on top of his phenomenal art and strong writing, has a real sense of tone and character for this book. The flashback to time spent with Brenda isn't necessarily what the audience is expecting but, after reading it, it feels like it's exactly what we needed. He's not a callous jerk, he's not humorless because Andrews has decided that's who Danny has always been, he's just a guy with a lot going on and a public face that differs from his private face. If you had fears that maybe this was signifying a massive shift in who Iron Fist has been in the past, I think you can relax. It might be a bit of a shift, perhaps leading to someone who's a bit darker underneath, but it's not anything that shouldn't be expected. Really solid book, very compelling art, perhaps a little risqué for younger readers. Only in America could I call this book risqué because it has sexual themes whereas I called MOON KNIGHT awesome and brutal with no such warning. Pretty weird, right? Guys, I have observations like this for DAYS. LOOK AT THAT COVER, EVERYONE. GOOOOOOOOOD week for covers and this is likely the best one.

Total Score: 5/5

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