Saturday, January 23, 2016

The Battleworld Series

            Well everyone, Secret Wars is FINALLY over, only a mere three months after it was scheduled to end after countless delays and an additional issue produced to wrap everything up and by now the All New All Different Marvel lines are well underway.  But before we take a look at those series, I wanted to take a look back at all the Battleworld series that I had the chance to read and give some thoughts on each series as a whole.  I do have to warn whoever reads this, however, that there will be varying degrees of spoilers in this post.  I won’t give away the endings or any big act three twists but in order to properly talk about why some of these books do or don’t work some things that happen later in the series needs to be addressed.   So strap into your seats folks because this is going to be a long one.  These are my thoughts on the Battleworld Series.


Secret Wars

            I’ve gone over my distain of this series quite a few times but I do feel that some it bears repeating if for no other reason than maybe, just maybe, the writers will take their heads out of their asses and acknowledge that they screwed this one up and use it as a model for how not to do an event comic.  Yes, the art is great.  Yes, Issues 1, 2, and 9 are legitimately good and the covers by Alex Ross are some of the best artwork that I’ve ever seen for a superhero comic.  But this just doesn’t make up for the slog that was Issues 3 through 8, where actual storytelling and character development took a complete backseat to issue upon issue of exposition for exposition’s sake with no real plot or pacing that just decides to skip ahead a few months to the climax where people are rebelling against Doom for undefined reasons and where the Cabal that survived the destruction of the Ultimate Universe is working with the survivors of the main Marvel Universe for, again, undefined reasons.  Beyond that, there really isn’t much to say without digging deeper into each individual issue and pointing out everything that is wrong with it but that’s a series of post for another day.  It’s just a poorly written mess that completely botched what was a pretty good concept and is ultimately a poor way to start the new Marvel Multiverse.  Thank God the actual series resulting from this are on the whole pretty good.

Verdict
Burn


Future Imperfect

            A reoccurring thing you’re probably going to read in this post is that “this series started out really good but was undercut by a non-existent second act or a third act that had been almost completely cut out or both” and the Future Imperfect series is easily the obvious example of the latter.  The storyline in question takes place in a Battleworld territory where a third World War has more or less wiped out all of the major superheroes save for the Hulk, who now rules over his own city as a brutal dictator and calls himself The Maestro as a resistance force attempts liberate the city from his tyrannical rule.  At the start of the story, The Maestro is able to infiltrate the rebel’s base, take down many of its soldiers before encountering its leader; General Thunderbolt Ross who had been transformed into The Thing.  After a fight where the two cause a good amount of destruction to the city, the two decided to join forces in order to find a secret weapon that will give the Maestro the power to overthrow God Doom and allow him to become the ruler of Battleworld
            The premise is, as you read, very solid and offered up all kinds of possibilities.  Would the two bitter old enemies be able to keep their cool in order to achieve a common goal?  Would Ross be able keep control over his resistance army given his new partnership with The Maestro?  Does the Maestro really intend to honor his end of the deal when/if he has defeated Doom?  Will this secret weapon actually allow him the power to defeat a man who literally has the power of the Beyonders at his disposal?  Unfortunately none of these things are brought up or satisfyingly explored.  You have a few throwaway lines where some of Ross’s men question the wisdom of working with The Maestro and Ross himself making it clear that they aren’t friends but the whole thing just plays out like a treasure hunt road trip where at the end of each point on the map they have to fight a boss before reaching the final prize, lacking any real character development or elaborate storytelling that might have made this endeavor more interesting.  A lot of this has to do with the length of the story.  It’s very clear that this story was intended to be a much longer one and if I had to guess a lot of the questions I just brought up were probably plot points in the original drafts but were ultimately cut due to the restraints everyone had to put up with for a five issue series.
            Ultimately the comic is not poorly written or drawn by any means.  The twists are very well done, the initial world building is fantastic and the art work is nothing short of incredible but you do get the feeling that a lot is missing and when the series ended I found myself thinking about how great it could have been if it was allowed two or three more issues to flesh out its story a bit more.  As it is, the story is just okay and worth reading if you’re in-between issues but I wouldn’t exactly go out and hunt down every issue for it.
Verdict
Browse



Secret Wars: Battleworld and Secret Wars Journal

            There really isn’t a whole lot to say about these two series as they are both anthology comics that’s quality in both writing and artwork vary from story to story.  It’s worth reading for the good stuff and you will always get a good story out of it one way or another.
Verdict
Read



Thors

            What do you get when you have various Thors of parallel dimensions working as cops trying to solve a murder mystery?  An otherwise pretty solid comic that was only bogged down by things that was out of the creative team’s control.  The story in question follows a number of Thors, mainly Ultimate Thor and Thor the Unworthy, (the Thor of the main Marvel Universe who lost his ability to hold his hammer), as they attempt to solve the murder of a number of women who all happen to be the same person over the various dimensions.  What follows is a solid murder mystery full of twists, betrayals, red herrings, and a surprisingly deep reasoning behind the murders, all backed by solid artwork that is visually appealing, drawing upon inspirations from both Film Noir and the more traditional Asgardian aesthetics of the comics.
If Thors is the victim of anything, it’s the victim of a release date that was obviously meant to run parallel with that of Secret Wars and was constantly delayed as a result, killing a lot of the series’ thunder, (no pun intended).  It’s not at all helped by the fact that the second half of the last issue literally ties into Issue #7 of Secret Wars and seems to do so out of the blue without any real build up to it.
In the end, despite its release problem, it’s a solid comic.  The mystery is good, the interactions between the Thors is solid, all the characters have real depth to them and is backed by very solid artwork and I recommend giving it a read.
Verdict
Read



Deadpool’s Secret Wars

            Out of all the Battleworld Series, this one was the most surprising, especially given that the premise of the series wasn’t all that appealing to me.  As I’ve stated before, I wasn’t that big of a fan of the original Secret Wars and to be honest Deadpool has never been all that appealing to me as he comes off more as that annoying friend everyone seems to have who constantly makes bad puns and pop culture references to the point that you want to smack him.  But, surprisingly, it works in this series.
            Taking place during the original Secret Wars, this series focuses on Deadpool as the main protagonist as he fights, puns, and sleeps his way through the highlights of the Secret Wars series, offering new twists and perceptions as to what happened in the crossover event.  Beyond that, however, there really isn’t a whole lot to say about it.  The art work is really good and is vastly superior to the original while staying true to its original designs and the humor is fantastic with every pun hitting at just the right moment with the art work to complement it.  It’s a ton of fun and I could not recommend it highly enough.  Give it a read.
Verdict
Read

Old Man Logan
            Oh dear lord, this comic.  If there was one enormous disappointment in the Battleworld series, it was easily the Old Man Logan series.  Apparently taking place after the events of the original Old Man Logan story arc by Mark Millar the series started off promising when it seemed to follow up on the events from that fantastic story.  But then he discovers a head of an Ultron unit and then the thing turns into a road trip comic as he travels through the various realms of Battleworld.  Unfortunately, that’s really all it is.  Wolverine gets thrown from one realm to the next, enouncing various versions of characters in the Marvel Universe that either want to kill him, imprison him or tell him that he is destined for some bigger journey, all the while just kind of taking everything in with an indifferent disposition.
            I get the impression that this was intended to be a road trip story of self-discover for Wolverine; where he finally lets go of the horrible things that he did before the events of the original Old Man Logan arc as well as discovering more of Battleworld’s secrets and the fact that he has a greater journey ahead of him.  This all good in concept but it forgets that this was quite literally his entire arc in the original story making everything that happened in this story feel redundant and repetitive.  It also doesn’t help at all that the comic itself doesn’t really have much in the way of a story arc.  At the start of Issue #2, he’s wondering around the various realms of Battleworld without any real purpose and that’s how it ends as well.  There aren’t any reoccurring antagonists, plot points or supporting characters to help Wolverine along the way, making the entire series, quite literally, a plot-less road trip full of characters that we encounter once and are never mentioned again. 
            It’s not at all helped by the fact that the artwork is an eyesore.  I generally try not to call out particular styles of art as negatives, (different strokes for different folks), but this one just asks for it.  While the artwork does do its job of keeping events in a coherent order, the art itself can only be described as distorted.  It tends to change from setting to setting, (kudos on creativity on that), but each time the images on display are always distorted, with the earlier issues containing artwork that appear as if a constant sandstorm is going on, covering all the images and issues towards the end only using yellow, red, white and black in very strange ways to color the images that makes everything appear as if it were a dream sequence or something.  It’s not something that I would necessarily call bad but it seems inappropriate for this series, especially how the art style contradicts the other series where these characters appear.
            In the end, Old Man Logan was easily the most disappointing series of the Battleworld Series and by the time it was half way through the idea of reading it was one that filled me with a depressed resignation.  The story never went anywhere. Wolverine didn’t seem to be all that phased by the adventure when all was said and done and the artwork was just an eyesore.  Ordinarily it could easily be written off as a disposable Wolverine story but the fact that they had to make this a continuation of an otherwise great storyline makes it all the more insulting.  I am interested in seeing what they have in-store for this character in the new Marvel universe, but this series is only meant for kindling.
Verdict
Burn



Planet Hulk

            This is a series that is perfectly acceptable for what is, even if it doesn’t aspire to be much.  The story follows a version of Captain America as he travels through a Battleworld Zone known as Greenland with his faithful T-Red companion, Devil and a Hulk creature known as Doc Green, as he attempts to rescue his friend Bucky from a Greenland ruler known as The Red King.  What follows is a perfectly serviceable road trip comic where the three encounter and fight their way through various creatures, Captain and Doc argue about morality and ultimately arrive at the main fortress of The Red King where a few twists are revealed, (some more predictable then others), and the fates of our main characters are ultimately decided.  As I said, it’s perfectly acceptable for what it is.  The artwork is good, you find yourself invested in the main characters’ struggle, and it ends on appropriately bittersweet note.  I say give it a read if you have nothing else better to do but don’t expect the next Watchmen out of it.

Verdict
Browse



Spider-Verse

            Oh dear lord.  Aside from the awful artwork I really don’t have anything to say on this series.  It has a good setup to what could have been a potentially great series but seemed content to just have the characters mull around discussing their shared memory problems while other characters went back and forth from being bad guys to questionable allies to bad guys again all the while supported by the laziest artwork I’ve ever seen in a modern mainstream comic.  Don’t waste your time with it and I refuse to waste any more of mine on it.

Verdict
Burn



The Amazing Spider-Man: Renew Your Vows

            It’s good.  Read it.  It has fantastic artwork, knows how to play the family angle in all the right ways, shows why Peter being married, having a child and being is probably not a good idea and gives us an interesting new villain for our main characters to fight.  Check it out.  It’s a fun book.

Verdict
Read



Armor Wars

            Now here is yet another a comic that had a fantastic setup but couldn’t quite follow up on it due to it being a five issue miniseries.  The story takes place in the city of Technopolis; a massively polluted city where people can only survive by staying in Iron Man suites where Tony Stark himself rules and follows a series of events that were caused by the murder of this world’s Spider-Man.  At first it seems like it’s going to be a story of corporate espionage instead of the traditional Heroes V.S. Villains story but sadly this isn’t the case.  Talking about it at length is unfortunately not possible because the series is built around twists that start roughly halfway through the story and continue on until the end but I can say that while the twists are good, they ultimately can’t help but undercut the promise of the initial setup.  The artwork is appropriate and serviceable, given the setup of the city, but it can’t help but feel overdesigned, yet still somehow fails to leave the reader with anything all that interesting to look at outside of the novelty of seeing Wilson Fisk and a Thor powered Rhodey running around in Iron Man armor.  Still, when all is said and done, it’s certainly not a bad series and I say take a look if you have some spare time, provided that you can ignore just how much better it could have been.

Verdict
Browse



Civil War

            Aside from Old Man Logan and Secret Wars itself, this was the series that clearly had the most promise to it but only succeeded in being one of its biggest disappointments.  The premise is simple.  The Marvel Civil War continued but rather than actually being about a civil war between the various super heroes led by Captain America and Tony Stark, the series instead decides to be about Tony investigating an assassination on a woman who was determined to bring about peace between the two while Steve begins preparations for an all-out attack on Tony’s forces.  The problem is that the whole thing feels like the ending to a much more interesting story.  Throughout it, they talk about an ongoing war that essentially split the country in half, with Stark gaining the eastern parts of the U.S. while Rogers gained the western half all the while with Tony convincing the other nations of the world to view Captain America’s west as a rouge state and refuse to trade with them.  And to me that sounds like a much more interesting story then discovering who offed the peace ambassador at the tail end of the war.  Even ignoring all of that, the story itself isn’t terribly interesting, featuring a plot that consists of only said war preparations on Rogers’s side and a subpar mystery on Stark’s side that has such a lackluster payoff that you’ll find yourself rolling your eyes in indifference at.
            In the end it’s certainly not the worst story that I’ve read in the various Battleworld series but it was one that simply failed to register any type of emotional response from me, and to be honest, that easily the worst thing any kind of art can do.
Verdict
Ignore



Years of Future Past

            And finally we have Years of Future Past, a comic with a premise so overused that I’m genuinely shocked that anyone even bothered to use it in 2015.  The premise is essentially that President Kelly, a human antagonist of the X-Men, has turned the world into that of Days of Future Past, minus the Sentinels ruling everything, and the older mutants plan on using the younger ones as a means to turn popular opinion, (and perhaps Kelly’s) towards the idea that not all mutants are bad while the sentinels continue to hunt them and other rouge mutants.  The key problem with this series is that it’s essentially using a setting that has been used far too many times over the past thirty years and fails to stand out from the crowd, lacking the time traveling intrigue of the original Days of Future Past and Terminator franchise and fails to portray an interesting war between the Sentinels and mutants.  In truth, there is probably more to say about this comic but in all honesty, I can barely remember a thing about it so I can’t imagine it’s really worth your time either.
Verdict
Ignore



            And that wraps up my thoughts on the various Battleworld series.  Some were good, some were bad, some were great but a lot of them simply felt pointless.  I get the impression that if these series had been allowed to last a few more issues they could have been truly great stories in their own right as opposed to being simply okay ones.  As it stands, the new All New Marvel universe is now in full swing and so far the lineup has been impressive.  While I’m not sure that Marvel really needed to do this whole Secret Wars thing to reboot their universe, (as it stands, most of the series are virtually unchanged), the good series were more than worth my time and made the whole thing worthwhile and I despite their apparent redundancy, I still recommend that you give them a read.
            So until next time, please be sure to follow the site, like the Facebook page, and follow me on twitter.  Until then, let’s hope that the future of Marvel remains bright.

Wednesday, January 6, 2016

2015 Favorite, Biggest Surprises and Biggest Disappointments


            Well everyone, 2015 has come and gone and 2016 has arrived.  We’ve had our share of ups and downs, box office bombs, massive hits, controversies and surprises and like everyone else it’s time for me to say just what I think constitutes as the best and worst in the year.  Unfortunately the year proved to be a busy one for me due to a move, school, a change in jobs and trying out game mastering for DnD for the first time and I’ve had neither the time nor the money to see every movie, play every video game, or read every comic book to come out this year.  So whereas most people would do a top 5 or top 10 lists I’m limiting my choices to one in categories of Personal Favorite, Biggest Surprise and Biggest Disappointment.   So without further delay, let’s see what I loved, what surprised and what disappointed me.


Movies

Personal Favorite
Mad Max: Fury Road

            In spite of a few noticeable hiccups like Terminator: Genisys, 2015 was a heck of a year when it came to reviving franchises from the 80s and early 90s but for my money Fury Road is easily the best of them.  Tom Hardy was the perfect choice for the titular character making us all but forget the man who originally played the role.  Charlize Theron’s turn as Furiosa made for a great co-lead and surprised us all by taking over the role as the main character.  The plot, though simple in nature, was loaded with a surprising amount of depth.  The action sequences were easily some of the best of the year, combining old school practical effects with modern special effects and editing techniques.  All around, it was a kickass movie that was surprisingly smart and I can’t wait to see what’s next for these characters.

Biggest Surprise
Jurassic World

            After one subpar sequel, one terrible one, and 12 years of development hell I really wasn’t expecting this movie to even come out, much less be any good.  The fact that they chose Chris Pratt as the lead, (yes he was good in Guardians but I wasn’t convinced he would be good for this), and the trailer showing that the main bad dinosaur would be a mutant hybrid didn’t exactly help matters.  In the end, the movie was pretty silly coming off more as Jurassic Park fan fiction, with most of the characters coming off as parodies of their stock roles, deaths that more often hilarious then horrifying, and an final fight against the mutant dinosaur that was so stupidly awesome that for a moment I thought I was watching Pacific Rim or something.  But I’ll be damned if the whole thing didn’t work.  It may pale in comparison to the original’s Adventure/Horror atmosphere, but for what it is the movie was a lot of fun.  Chris Pratt was entertaining in the lead role.  His relationship with his Raptors was entertaining and in some ways cute and the final battle was just so much fun.  I can’t honestly say that I think the movie deserves as much money as it made but for what it was it was a fun ride.



Biggest Disappointment
Crimson Peak

            There were plenty of movies that disappointed and/or sucked but most of them we can probably say that the movies in question sucking was something that we saw coming.  With Age of Ultron there was no way it had any chance of surpassing the first Avengers or even The Winter Soldier and Guardians in terms of quality.  The Terminator franchise is one that no one seems to care about anymore and the new Fantastic Four movie not being any good was something that everyone knew about months before the movie even came out due to the steady trickle of rumors of production problems plaguing the film.  But then we have Crimson Peak, the latest outing from Guillermo del Toro; a man with an insanely impressive film resume doing a haunted house movie.  And it wasn’t any good.  Outside of two admittedly great performances by Tom Hiddleston and Jessica Chastain and some interesting looking ghosts, the movie disappoints in nearly every other regard.  Marketed has a horror movie, the film fails to provide any legitimate scares and is truly more of a predictable, subpar murder mystery and if the so called twists aren’t told to the viewer outright in the first act it’s so heavily imply that they may as well have told you.  I honestly do believe that del Toro is easily the most underappreciated living director of this generation but this movie almost made me rethink that position.  Almost.

Video Games


Personal Favorite
The Witcher 3: The Wild Hunt

This was kind of a tough one as there were three games that I really wanted to put in this spot.  Bloodbourne was a game I’ve sunk a lot of hours into and have thoroughly enjoyed, even with its insane difficulty.  Fallout 4 has also proved to be a fine game even if it does lose a lot of its steam the moment you get to the Institute.  But for me, The Witcher 3 is the best game of the year.  With great graphics, fantastically written characters, a campaign that both rewards and punishes you for your actions and a slew of monster hunting quests that have you acting as much as a detective as a warrior the game offers the absolute most you will get out of any game this year.  To put it simply, it’s everything that Dragon Age: Inquisition tried and failed to be and everything that Skyrim wasn’t interested in being.  Check it out.


Biggest Surprise
Game of Thrones: A Telltale Game

Since the release of the first “season” of their Walking Dead game, Telltale is a development company that has quickly devolved into making games that consist almost entirely of QTEs and has very obviously over extended itself, dipping its hands into a few to many franchises all at once, (Minecraft Story Mode anyone?) and at first their Game of Thrones game seemed to be just another middling Telltale game.  And to be fair, this game is not one of their best outings.  Once again we have a game that only gives you the illusion of choice, that’s gameplay amounts to QTEs and a story that pales in comparison to the media it’s based on.  But, when all was said and done, I found myself completely invested in the struggles of House Forrester and wanted to see them succeed in their struggles against their enemies and it really does capture “crap happens” effect of the source material as well as the idea that a lot of your investment in these places and characters amounts to little in this cruel world.  All of the characters are interesting and go beyond being the Jon Snow stand in or the Rob Stark stand in, (although they do get close at times), and have the kind of depth that you really wouldn’t expect in a licensed game.  Although the game is kind of hard to give a glowing recommendation, it makes for a decent filler story while you wait for the next book or show season to come out.


Biggest Disappointment
Batman: Arkham Knight

In this category I was torn between this game, Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain and Star Wars: Battlefront.  Ultimately I felt that Battlefront was undeserving of this spot mostly because I saw it being mediocre the moment EA announced its revival and the fact that DICE would be developing it, (Battlefront 4 anyone?) and the game’s actual poor quality and lack of content is an obvious result of large chunks of the game being carved out for DLC; a practice so cliché for big shooters at this point that I think most people are just numb to it.  With MGSV what we had was a very solid game and what was lacking was clearly the result of Konami’s poor business decisions and the apparent conflict between Kojima and Konami executives.  While this is good fodder for an article on gaming controversy it doesn’t make the game any less good, even if it is easily the weakest MGS installment.
  The reason I opted to go with Arkham Knight however was because, when you got right down to it, the developers simply failed to make a compelling title or a satisfying ending to the Arkham series.  The game’s many problems included a PC version that was utterly unplayable at launch and a lackluster, by the numbers Batman vs. Scarecrow storyline with an insultingly predictable twist.  The gameplay relied WAY to heavily on tank battles and side missions that had you doing the same things over and over again and failed to take advantage of the interesting and unique villains that populate the Batman mythos.  All of this was rounded up an ending that was so unclear as to just what happened it negates any emotional impact that it was supposed to convey, walled off by an infuriating 100% completion condition that would drive anyone up the wall.
All around, 2015 was full of disappointing games but this one was the one that hit the hardest for me.  It’s not a bad game by any means but it was hands down the one that let me down the most.



Comics
Before I go any further on this section I should disclose that I’ve only read Marvel comics this year.  That’s not to say that DC doesn’t produce great comics but I’ve simply fallen so far behind on DC’s that catching up has proven to be a very difficult task, and while I do intend to cover DC’s series this year none of their products will be appearing in this section.  So with that said, let’s get this show on the road.

Personal Favorite
The Amazing Spider-Man: Spider-Verse

Technically this one is kind of cheating, seeing as how half of the Spider-Verse event came out in 2014 but Marvel’s turnout was so lackluster this year, mainly due to the Secret Wars event, (makes you think I should expand my horizons doesn’t it?), that the answer as to what would be my favorite of the year was always obvious to me.  Featuring probably the most unique crossover event that I’ve ever had the pleasure of experiencing, the Spider-Verse event had everything that most events both have and lack.  The characters were all three dimensional and had some degree of development, the interactions between all of these versions of Spider-Man range from dramatic to heart breaking to hilarious, and it gave us an insane but interesting storyline that manages to capture the complexity of the character and Spider-Man mythos as well as its ludicrous nature.  It’s the best kind of crossover that there is and I couldn’t recommend it enough.  Check it out.



Biggest Surprise
Darth Vader

I’ve already talked about this one in a previous post and my feelings on it stay unchanged.  But it should suffice to say that this was a comic that was a lot better than it had any right to be, providing a new and interesting cast of characters, art work that perfectly captured the mood, challenging obstacles for Vader to overcome and answers questions that I, quite frankly, didn’t even think to ask.  If you have to buy one Star Wars comic I recommend this one.  It is worth your time and money.



Biggest Disappointment
Secret Wars

Oh dear.  Where do I even start with this one?  Should I talk about the insane number of production delays?  Should I talk about how all of this was supposed to be over in October but will now be ending on the 13th of this month?  Should I mention that the series was originally 8 issues but was extended to 9?  Should I go over the fact that the event series has continued even though the rebooted Marvel Universe has already started with several fantastic series?  Is it worth mentioning that it doesn’t actually have a plot?  Should I go over the fact that more than half the series is prolonged exposition explaining how things work while failing to have a coherent narrative?  Should I mention that the characters have no apparent arc or development?  Should we talk about how the whole thing just skips from the exposition issues right to climactic battle issues?  All are worth mentioning and all are the reason why this comic sucks and has been the biggest disappointment of 2015’s comics.  Seriously, BURN THIS SERIES AND NEVER ALLOW IT TO BE REPRINTED AGAIN!



And that wraps up my personal picks for my favorites, biggest disappointments, and biggest surprises.  This year will be one to feature a lot more content and hopefully bring more readers and I am determined that one way or another, this will be a great year.

So until next time please follow the site, like the Facebook page and follow me on twitter and let the new year begin!  It's going to be a good one.