Over the last month I have read several comic books/graphic
novels that have been offered for free for kindle or on Comixology. Here’s a some of the highlights.
Overwatch Series – This comic series, offered for free, is
based on the video game of the same name.
It is a game I haven’t played.
The comic series, spanning ten issues, is pretty damn good. There are quite a few woman characters,
several of whom are women of color. The
series also covers several morality questions – what is good, just, right. The series also uses characters who are
older. The artwork is pretty good as
well. While eight of the issues are
basically character studies with action, the last two issues deal with
Halloween and Christmas, and so are somewhat a guest star list type of
story. Familiarity is with the video
game is not needed to read these, though they should be read in order. This is because a character in one is the
mother of the central character in the following issue. While the series does offer a must know
cliffhanger, it is resolved in the ten issues.
Various Batman Comics - Overall the Batman comics were what you would
expect from Batman, and yet, they were in some ways the most
disappointing. The Rebirth first issue
was good, though perhaps straining at the very loose sense of reality that holds
things together. The sequence involving
passengers on a plane was, in particular, really great. Neil Gaiman’s Batman in Black and White was
clever, if not as clever as it thinks it is.
But the taste of Batman was soured by two freebies, the 10c Adventure
and Gotham Adventures.
Batman
and the Ten Cent Adventure is not as bad as Gotham Adventures. The basic set up is that Bruce Wayne is
framed for a murder. The story is told
from the viewpoint of his bodyguard. A young
woman who reminds a bit of Black Canary.
She was Wayne’s bodyguard until she discovered his identity as Brue
Wayne and then she became is crime fighting partner, just don’t call her
Robin. Her voice tells the story so we
get very much of Wayne worship and of course, she is in love with him, though
he doesn’t know it. And poor Bruce had
to break up with his true love which he does by inviting her to his mansion so
she can walk in on him when he is with some other women. Of course, then he stalks her when he is
Batman because that is so romantic.
You see
my problem.
Source ComiXology |
Gotham
Adventures is worse, even though it features the extended Bat family. That comic opens with Batman, Robin, and
Batgirl chasing the Joker. Robin gets
delegated to help some woman, and I am not really sure what Batgirl does
because she doesn’t have anything to do with Batman catching the Joker. The Bat group take Joker back to the Batcave
because there is a bounty on Joker’s head.
Nightwing shows up and gets a few lines.
Finally, after several pages, Batgirl actually gets to speak. Everyman had lines, mostly several, before
Batwing gets even one. She is left to
guard the Joker, who of course knocks her out.
If it was Alfred getting the drop on the Joker the shit would have hit
the fan. While she is knocked out, the
Bat men are all doing heroic things. So,
one woman, who can’t even guard a prisoner who is handcuffed. It’s a shame really because it is leaves a
sour taste in the mouth, and stops what would have been a pretty fun comic read
from being so.
Various Wonder Woman Comics – So these include Wonder Woman
Rebirth (FCBD editions and #1 itself) as well as DC Super Hero Girls. The Rebirth issues are very interesting and
good. And guess what, one of the FCBD
editions has two men talking about a woman and her relationship to one of
them. That is just awesome. Really awesome. In particular, what I enjoyed about the Rebirth
idea was the concept of storytelling and retconning which WW’s Rebirth
storyline seems to directly tackle. This
is wonderful because all the multiple origin stories get a tad confusing.
There
was also an older Wonder Woman, apparently after Crisis of Infinite
Worlds. This is interesting because
Diana Prince is no longer Wonder Woman, at least in name, though the villains
still see her as such. Which shows you
that villains know better. And this
raises a question. I have not read
mainstream comics for several years. But
I do know that have been quite a few times when Diana Prince has lost the title
of Wonder Woman (once to her mother). I
know that in the last few year, Marvel’s Thor lost his hammer to a woman, and
Iron Man is, wonderfully, a young black woman but my question is this - do any male super heroes lose their status or
title as much or more as Wonder Woman has?
Why Wonder Woman? I’m not trying
to be snarky, I am legitimately curious.
How does this break down? Anyone
know?
Source ComiXology |
The Super
Hero girl comics are cute, and intended it seems for a younger audience. The two I read where actually the same story,
one just longer than the other. The
story concerns summer break where Wonder Woman and Bumble Bee go to Mount
Olympus. The cast is multi-ethnic,
though a bit strange – why Poison Ivy – but the series does show the girls
working together and being there for each other. Though, why Batgirl sightsees as Batgirl I
don’t know.
I mean how does this work? |
There were some surprises in this comic freebie read – Red Sonja
0, written by Michael Avon Oeming and Mike Curry was actually quite good,
despite the costume that makes no sense
and seems to have a magical power to stay still and not show X-rated bits. Red Sonja Vol 4, #0 was not as good, in fact
it was just annoying, with more teasing of body parts. Damsels: Mermaids was also quite good and a
wonderful take on Andersen’s Little Mermaid.
Honesty, this might just be my favorite version.
Of course, not much has changed in comics. Women, in particular the heroes, are usually
drawn with Triple DDD bust sizes and a middle that couldn’t house a liver or
intestine. The men are buff too, let’s
be honest, but they at least have some room for internal organs.
Where does the food go? |
This is particularly distracting in Grimm
Comics because the story telling is good there, but the female characters so sexualized
that it is nerve wracking. The explanation
seems to be Neverland, a spin off, because the Wendy character was actually
dressed. The Godstorm spin off was good
too - Zeus mediating on fatherhood was
really great. The expection to this is Jem and the Holograms - though there the real sized, curvy women are the only minority characters as well. The white women are still super skinny. It does easily pass the Bedchel test though.
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