Tag Archives: Comic Books

Summer Reading Wrapup

With summer officially over, it’s time for some stub reviews!

Return of the King by J.R.R. Tolkien
I finally understand all the popular complaints about Tolkien’s writing style. Although his descriptive passages were often quite dense in Fellowship of the Ring and The Two Towers, they at least directly related to what was going on in the story. Return of the King is when I frequently found myself realizing I had no idea what was actually happening and had to backtrack through several tangents of random description before finding any actual narration. Although Tolkien’s verbose style never bothered me previously, here it did dramatically impact my ability to enjoy the book. I was able to enjoy the book, but it was a bit of a chore to get through. I don’t know if I’ve ever said this about a book before, but here it is: I liked the movie better.

Shadows in Flight by Orson Scott Card
At this point, the Ender’s Game series has been going on for so long that you’d think it would only have two options: stagnation or radical departure. Shadows in Flight is proof that this series suffers from neither. And it even delivers one of the series’ signature moments of understanding when one of its main characters literally sees through an alien’s eyes. It remains unconscionable to me that someone with the intolerant views that Mr. Card has so often espoused writes so often and so well about understanding someone with a completely different perspective, but he somehow does so brilliantly.

Resistance (Rising, #1) by Laura Josephsen
In the interest of full disclosure, yes: I do know the author. But that’s really just an added perk. This is exactly the kind of book I want to read more of, but Amazon.com doesn’t exactly have a search filter for, “Yeah, I’d like a fantasyish book with a distinctive setting that gives it flavor without overwhelming it, but which is actually mostly focused on developing characters and relationships and has really great pacing and this sort of tone which I can’t really think of a good word for.”

(Here it is on Amazon, or the Kindle version is only $4.99)

Batman: The Dark Knight Returns by Frank Miller and Klaus Janson
I really wish someone had explained to me that I needed to read this before seeing The Dark Knight Rises. After reading this, I now know where most of the plot of the film came from, and actually have a greater appreciation for it as a loose adaptation of The Dark Knight Returns that actually is more true to the spirit of Batman than the comic it’s adapting. (Yeah, I went there.)

The Dark Knight Returns has an almost cinematic quality to it. I admire Miller’s work here and I understand this comic’s significance in the evolution of Batman, but I’m also glad that this interpretation of the character did not survive wholesale in later iterations. Instead, this is what Batman would be like if he had been created by Frank Miller (including all of his awkward hangups about women and politics.) I will say that I like the noir flavor and think it works quite well for Batman, I just think it would’ve worked better if he had acted more like… Batman.

So, in short, this is a brilliantly composed comic and I think I might hate it.

Fifty Shades of Grey by E.L. James
You know what? No. This is getting its own entry.

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First Class Sequel to Take Us to Days of Future Past

So, Bryan Singer has officially confirmed that the X-Men: First Class sequel will be titled X-Men: Days of Future Past, to be released in 2014. Now, obviously it would be irresponsible for me to wildly speculate about a film that isn’t even in principal photography yet, whose script isn’t even finalized yet, so I’m not going to do that.

… yeah, okay, clearly that’s exactly what I’m going to do. You already knew that, right? Good. For those who are unfamiliar with the story, “Days of Future Past” was one of the most popular storylines in the original run of Marvel’s The Uncanny X-Men. It was also adapted as a fan-favorite arc in the X-Men animated series. In both versions, someone (an older Kitty Pryde in the comics, Bishop in the animated series) comes back in time from a dystopian future in which the world is ruled by mechanized Sentinels and mutants have largely been either exterminated or imprisoned. In both cases, the tipping point is the assassination of Senator Robert Kelly, which sets off anti-mutant hysteria.

I am really excited to see what direction this project goes in, but I do have some pretty serious reservations even at this stage about the many things that could go wrong. The most immediately apparently concern I have is that X-Men: First Class already blatantly contradicted the previous films in the series, so what we’re essentially doing here is adding time travel to a film universe whose timeline is already royally messed up. (What could possibly go wrong?)

Another obstacle I see here comes from the biggest non-continuity-related flaw with X-Men: First Class: it was an absolute mess of characters, many of whom barely spoke a line. And it seems like a lot of characters are “missing” from the current cast to make this storyline really work.

On the other hand, imagine if they brought back Patrick Stewart or Ian McKellen. Or both. Or other members of the original films. It would be really amazing to see them tie the movie universe together like that (existing continuity errors notwithstanding.) One of the most amazing things about First Class was the way Michael Fassbender and James McAvoy were able to step into Sirs Ian McKellen and Patrick Stewart’s shoes. Now that that’s worked so brilliantly, imagine having all four of them (or some combination thereof) on the screen at the same time. Maybe that isn’t the direction Singer and Vaughn want to go, but the possibility exists!

I actually love the fact that Singer is taking this risk, invoking this fan-favorite storyline. I obviously have some concerns, but I also have a lot of faith in this creative team, especially starting at the top with producer Bryan Singer. (To this day I wonder about “what could’ve been” with his version of Phoenix rather than Brett Ratner’s.) So while I am concerned about all the things this film could do wrong, there’s really no reason not to think just as much about how many things this film could do right.

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My Favorite Superhero Films. #12: V for Vendetta (2005)

Amazingly, my two lists have caught up with each other, so I can start alternating between the two!

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#12: V for Vendetta (2005)

Alright, things are starting to get pretty serious now, because we’re getting into the part of the list where I could easily see any of these being my favorite film of all time. (Yeah: that part of the list starts at number twelve. Have I mentioned that superhero movies have gotten good?) I expect this entry to be fairly controversial. There is justifiable debate as to whether V for Vendetta can properly be considered a superhero film. Furthermore, there are serious questions about its efficacy as an adaptation. I intend to address both.

V for Vendetta is, at its core, about a character, “V” (Hugo Weaving) who puts on a mask in order to fight injustice. We are introduced to this character as he saves a woman, Evey (Natalie Portman) from being raped by two members of the secret police. In the film’s very first scene, it simultaneously introduces the primary conflict of the film (a corrupt, fascist government) and deliberately riffs on the superhero motif by placing V in the traditional role of rescuing an innocent from harm. Furthermore, when his origin story is revealed, we learn that he gained enhanced abilities due to medical experiments carried out upon him by the government.

The easy protest here is that V’s enemy is not the criminal elements of society, but rather the “legitimate” power structure in place. But when that structure is in itself not only corrupt, but actually a clear and present threat to its citizens, wouldn’t a superhero quickly find herself or himself struggling against that very government? Sure, it might be a much shorter struggle if that superhero were someone like Superman. It might not actually be all that different if he were Batman, but we’ll get to that. V’s goals are political, so his tactics often end up being political. He blows up a building, then hijacks a propaganda broadcast intended to cover up the incident as a demolition to expose it for what it really was: a sign that the fascist government of Britain is not invincible. He uses this as a rallying call to the people of Britain to rise up against their government, telling them to meet him next fifth of November outside the Houses of Parliament.

V becomes a symbol. When a huge contingent of citizens does show up outside of the Houses of Parliament a year later, they wear the same Guy Fawkes masks as V. When Evey is asked V’s identity because she had seen beneath his mask, she replies that he is “all of us.” My one real complaint here is that Evey herself did not directly take up the mantle of V, as she did in the graphic novel. Moreover, V’s belief that she will be the primary builder of the new society to take the place of the old one that he tore down is not even hinted at.

This provides a nice segue into my next defense: this film as an adaptation. Although I did have a problem with those omissions in Evey’s character, I didn’t have a problem with the broader changes that have bothered a lot of fans, and Moore himself. Moore’s original story was a response to British Thatcherism, and how easily he could see a state becoming fascist in the aftermath of, say, a nuclear war between the United States and Soviet Union. The atmosphere in which this film was released was quite different, with very few (if any) people supposing a nuclear war to be imminent. The descent into totalitarianism here as depicted in a montage late in the film is consequently much different, but believable to modern audiences. What made the graphic novel brilliant is also what made the film brilliant. Namely, a terrifyingly believable depiction of a society sliding into fascism and being lulled into complacency about the freedoms being stripped from them and the horrors going on around them, only to be shaken from their complacency by a determined genius and his brilliantly-crafted plan.

There are certainly advantages the graphic novel had over the film. The film must unfortunately sacrifice some of the complexity of the graphic novel. Because of the much greater “screen time” afforded to the graphic novel medium, situations and characters are developed at a much slower pace, making his genius much more shocking when things begin “clicking” into place. One of the most dramatic examples is in the chillingly brilliant scene where we see every thread of V’s plan beginning to fall into place framed by V’s game of dominoes. Much more than the film, the graphic novel astonishes us with V’s brilliance.

But the film gets so much right, it’s difficult to fault it for what’s really an inherent disadvantage the medium must overcome, not a failing of this film in particular. Like the graphic novel, the film has a way of humanizing and personalizing big themes. One of the most horrifying (and believable) elements of the original story is the way in which the fascist government rounded up “undesirable” minorities and imprisoned or executed them. The graphic novel personalized this by having an imprisoned Evey read the story of a lesbian actress (Valerie Page, played in the film by Natasha Wightman) who was dragged off as part of the government’s purges of minorities. The film preserves this section word-for-word, and also depicts Evey’s boss (Gordon Deitrich, played by Stephen Fry) as a closeted homosexual who is deeply afraid of discovery. Both the graphic novel and film managed to vividly confront us with our vulnerability to those in power, should they decide to strip life and liberty from those it finds “undesirable.”

The acting in this film was brilliant. Hugo Weaving gave V the dramatic weight the larger-than-life character needed, and this is one of the strongest performances I’ve ever seen from the talented Natalie Portman. Stephen Fry and Natasha Wightman personalized the horror of being helpless to stop a powerful government from stripping you of everything (including your own life) because of something deeply personal about yourself. And Roger Allam was brilliant as Lewis Prothero, “The Voice of London.” Prothero is a clear nod to propaganda apparatuses like Fox News and Rush Limbaugh.

This film explores huge themes both on the grand scale they naturally seem to lend themselves to, and (arguably more effectively) on a smaller, much more personal scale. It is a deeply moving film, and easily one of my favorite films of all time. The only thing that stops it from being much higher on this list is that it already exists in a superior film (the graphic novel version), and that when composing a list like this I must confess a bias for films whose identities as superhero stories are less ambiguous.

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My Superhero Movie Wish II

A few months ago, I wrote that if I could see one comic book franchise made into a film, it would be the original Alpha Flight team in a The Avengers-style blockbuster. While I confessed that this was clearly not ever going to happen (I’d honestly take an animated film at this point, which I’m also probably not going to get), there is another (much more realistically possible) superhero film I’d love to see happen: Spider-Woman.

Much like Nightwing from the DC Comics universe, Spider-Woman is another comic book character I “loved” before I knew very much about her. Admittedly, my experience with the character is still pretty limited (Spider-Woman: Origin, the Marvel: Ultimate Alliance video games, and poring over her Wikipedia page for her character history), what I’ve seen, I’ve loved.

Jessica Drew has the potential to be an iconic female superhero. Whichever origin story you use (the original one of a spider-based serum to save her from radiation poisoning, or the newer technology-based one from Origin), Jessica is actually recruited by the bad guys first, namely HYDRA. (We’ve already seen them in the Marvel Cinematic Universe thanks to Captain America: The First Avenger, and it would hardly be a stretch to have remnants of them still active in the future, right?)

This actually gives us a pretty intuitive “in” to introducing the character to the Marvel Cinematic Universe. Have her as a villain (perhaps a minor one) in one of the (hopefully) inevitable Avengers sequels, or better yet in the Hawkeye/Black Widow spin-off everyone (including me) wants. Actually, there’s my superhero movie wish. Can you imagine how badass a fight between Black Widow and Spider-Woman would be? Let’s do that.

Then, after her first appearance as a villain, Spider-Woman (like she does in the comics) becomes a S.H.I.E.L.D. agent (giving you excellent material for her own spin-offs) and eventually a member of the Avengers, giving both fans and Joss Whedon another female face to be excited about. (The hidden subplot of The Avengers is that I’m astonished Joss was willing to work with just one female main character, but unsurprised he responded by making her one of the most badass characters in the film.)

Spider-Woman also acts as an agent of S.W.O.R.D. at one point, a S.H.I.E.L.D.-offshoot that Whedon himself actually created during his run at the helm of the Astonishing X-Men comics. This might make the character even more appealing to Whedon, and hopefully improves her chances of appearing in later installments of Marvel’s Cinematic Universe. Because if there’s one flaw with The Avengers, it’s that it needed at least one more female main character. Not that I think it really could’ve pulled that off in the first installment, but now that the other characters have been well-established, I don’t see any reason why they can’t go there now.

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Speaking of Optimism and Superheroes

X-Men gay wedding! And it’s going to be in Astonishing X-Men, by far my favorite running series of Marvel comics due to the team–Cyclops, Emma Frost, Beast, Wolverine, Colossus, Kitty Pryde (in its initial run), newcomer Armor, occasional appearances by Storm–and its emphasis on character interaction and development, which in a pleasant surprise stuck around even after Joss Whedon left. I’m going to need to go ahead and find my way to a comic shop tomorrow.

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My Superhero Movie Wish

Now that The Avengers has made every comic book fan (including yours truly) experience big screen ecstasy, it felt like the right time to share this. If I could have Hollywood make one superhero movie they’re definitely not going to make, it would be Alpha Flight.

Alpha Flight is a team of Canadian mutants (how often do you get to say “Canadian mutants”?) and other superhumans in the X-Men universe.

The team is led by James “Mac” MacDonald Hudson, a.k.a. Guardian, and also at times known as Weapon Alpha or Vindicator. He is, essentially, the Canadian equivalent of Captain America, and as such his costume would easily be the coolest thing you could possibly wear to a hockey game. His powers, like Iron Man’s, are actually the product of his own brilliant engineering, thanks to his skin-tight powersuit.

Two team members very familiar to X-Men fans are Jean-Paul Beaubier (a.k.a. Northstar) and Jeanne-Marie Beaubier (a.k.a. Aurora). They are twin brother and sister. Aurora is a deeply intriguing character, suffering from multiple personality disorder. She and her brother are mutants who possess the powers of super-speed, flight, and intense light generation (tell me that wouldn’t be cinematically awesome.) Their powers actually come from manipulating molecules, giving them nearly unlimited potential.

And then there’s that other little thing about Northstar: that he’s one of the very few (and also the very first) openly gay superheroes. And you can’t possibly ignore the fact that his powers were basically invented for dazzling a date.

Equally intriguing characters round out the original team. There’s Walter Langkowski (a.k.a. Sasquatch), a scientist who can transform into a beast, making his powers rather reminiscent of the Hulk.

Unlike many equivalent American teams, Alpha Flight also includes a nod to Canada’s diverse heritage with two characters strongly associated with First Nations. There’s Michael Twoyoungmen (a.k.a. Shaman) who is a magic wielder (and if you don’t think that would work in the Marvel movieverse, I invite you to watch Thor), and Snowbird, a superhuman descendant of the Northern gods (again, see Thor if you think this strains credulity too much.) Her powers include transforming into white-furred versions of any native Canadian animal, and other magical powers.

There are a number of reasons why this would be an incredibly awesome film. On the level of a traditional superhero movie, there are several powers represented here that would be dazzling on a superficial/special effects level. And the added presence of magic would add an entire dimension to the Marvel filmverse that’s only been hinted at in other films.

As alluded to earlier, however, a potentially greater strength of this film would be the way Canadian heritage would be explored. Not only are two of the characters representative of First Nations people, but the characters come from all over Canada. Guardian is (unsurprisingly) from Ontario, while Northstar and Aurora are from Montreal, Sasquatch is from British Columbia, Shaman is from Alberta, and Snowbird is from the Northwest Territories.

Showing each of these characters’ backstories would give an excuse for the filmmakers to explore many locations in Canada, and show how rich Canadian culture is. This would be, frankly, superb since many American audiences think of Canada as simply vague northern neighbors who use the word “eh?” and like to watch hockey.

Of course, this film is never going to be made, but I hope you at least enjoyed my rather detailed explanation of why I would like it to be.

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