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Batgirl #4 – Review

By Bryan Q. Miller (writer), Tim Levins & Lee Garbett (pencillers), Dan Davis, Aaron Sowd & Trevor Scott (inkers), Harvey Richards (assistant editor), Michael Siglain (editor)

The Story: As always, Miller makes his themes (in this case, the title “Field Test”) do double duty. Stephanie Brown is field testing her new high-tech Batgirl costume. Barbara Gordon is helping monitor the suit while giving advice, but when she has to deal with something, Batgirl herself is field tested against someone well out of her league.

What’s Good: If there’s one issue that can vouch for Miller’s writing, it’s Batgirl #4. The plotting and thematic ideas are always tight, but my hat remains off on his character work. His characters are just fun to follow. The back and forth between Barbara and Stephanie is solid, as Miller packs his dialogue with personality. Stephanie’s running self-deprecation could get tiresome in another character, but when put together with her natural exuberance and fun, it works, with lines like “And this Batgirl doesn’t sing – not in front of people anyway” and “I’m almost fifty percent sure nothing could go wrong.” I’m also waiting to see where this romantic tension between Batgirl and the young detective is going to go.

Art team has changed a bit. Tim Levins has replaced Scott and Hope in the driver seat with Lee Garbett. The art is clear, the expressions tell the story and the poses are more natural. The layouts also seem to be evolving positively. The final battle page between Batgirl and the villain is a funny and well-told stack of panels.

What’s Not So Good: The superhero skeleton of the story is nothing original. Batgirl’s encounter with this super-villainess is pretty forgettable, but I’m wondering if the search for something truly field-expanding is what Batgirl readers are looking for when they buy this book. Would something truly original to the field (think the teen angst of Lee/Ditko Spiderman, the gritty noir of Miller’s Daredevil or the soap opera of Claremont’s X-Men) fit within a book whose focus is the fun of watching a flighty, occasionally quixotic teenager turn herself into a real superhero? But if ground-breaking work is not in Batgirl’s future, will the series survive? Sales estimates for issue #3 from Diamond are around 37,000, which is pretty respectable for a new book, so Michael Siglain has some flex before making any serious decisions, but Miller has got some work ahead of him to convince readers that Stephanie Brown matters, without losing the fun of what makes her great.

Conclusion: Batgirl is an entertaining book and very accessible to the new reader. This is what mainstream comics do well. But I hope that Batgirl does not get lost behind a lot of other books that are also delivering mainstream stories.

Grade: C+

-DS Arsenault

Secret Six #15 – Review

by John Ostrander (writer), J. Calafiore (artist), Jason Wright (colorist), Sean Ryan (editor)

The Story: Deadshot is having some problems. He’s having control issues with his homicidal tendencies. So he calls in an old confidante and has a chat. The story follows themes back and forth in time, to his formative years and to his first meeting with Batman. The only question is: Does he get his control back? Given the history of Deadshot and of the Secret Six, we really shouldn’t be sure about anything.

What’s Good: This story compels from beginning to end. Ostrander obviously knows what Deadshot is about and what his demons are. We get to look over his shoulder through this whole issue. DC has been doing a number of these stand-alone, single-character examinations lately and has been doing a good job. I liked the confidante character, who is someone we probably need to take us through Deadshot’s tortured past and see it with normal eyes. I also like the parallels he found in everything that Deadshot brought to the table.

On the art side, J. Calafiore really makes me love this book and I’m really happy that he’ll be back for issue 17 as well. Calafiore also has a good sense of how Deadshot needs to be shown on the page and the right camera angles to show bullets, blood, close ups, blood, sinister expressions, and blood. He’s not perfect, but I never got comfortable with Nicola Scott and Doug Hazlewood, so Calafiore is an improvement in my opinion. The sort of plastic feel that Scott and Hazlewood established has softened into something much warmer and more human here. The postures are more natural and the layouts tell a lot of story on their own.

What’s Not So Good: Some of Calafiore’s art is still a bit rough. The expressions he uses to show emotions are sometimes stiff. Considering how many people get shot in the head in this book, I also would have responded better to an artist able to show nerveless bodies responding to gravity. The falling corpses here shared the same stiffness I saw in the expressions.

As a stand-alone interlude, this book works, but it felt a bit detached from the series. Deadshot refers to story elements that happened almost a year ago, but he and the Secret Six are just coming off of a pretty traumatic experience with the slavers that nearly split them apart only an issue ago. This and the blunt ending, leading into nothing, make me believe that although this story is fun for the SS and Deadshot fans, the casual readers have an excuse to not get it, because it won’t have any effect on the continuity. I hope this is a minor point, but considering that Secret Six is hovering around 25,000 in circulation through Diamond (direct sales, doesn’t include subscriptions), DC maybe shouldn’t be taking too many reflective moments and should jump back into the action and the multi-book arcs.

Conclusion: This is a good, bloody character study for Deadshot fans and Secret Six Lovers, but it didn’t make itself a “must-buy”.

Grade: C

-DS Arsenault

BREAKING NEWS: Big Delays for Comics Shipping 6/25/08

From Diamond Comics…

DELAYED TITLES ORIGINALLY SCHEDULED TO SHIP ON JUNE 25

The following titles will arrive with customers’ July 2 shipments.

ITEM CODE TITLE
FEB082148 76 #4
MAR083847 A G SUPER EROTIC ANTHOLOGY #83
APR082192 ALETHEIA #2
APR082328 ANGEL REVELATIONS #2
APR083558 ARCHIE AMERICANA SER TP VOL 08 BEST OF 60S BOOK 2
APR083573 ASPEN SHOWCASE ASPEN MATTHEWS #1 ALE GARZA CVR
APR083572 ASPEN SHOWCASE ASPEN MATTHEWS #1 TALENT CALDWELL CVR
APR083624 BART SIMPSON COMICS #42
APR080248 CARTOON NETWORK BLOCK PARTY #46
MAR080223 CROSSING MIDNIGHT #19
APR080205 DC UNIVERSE SPECIAL REIGN IN HELL 80 PAGE GIANT
APR084185 DEVI TP VOL 04
APR088230 DIAMOND DATELINE JUNE 25 2008
APR080043 FEAR AGENT #22 1 AGAINST 1
MAY085074 GAME TRADE MAGAZINE #101
MAY085073 GAME TRADE MAGAZINE #101 FREE COPIES
FEB080060 GANTZ TP VOL 01
APR082175 GIMOLES SECRETS OF THE SEASONS TP
APR082367 HOUSE OF M TP AVENGERS
APR080177 HUNTRESS YEAR ONE #4
MAR080231 JACK OF FABLES #23
APR083723 JIM BUTCHERS DRESDEN FILES #3 (OF 4) WELCOME TO THE JUNGLE
APR080213 JSA CLASSIFIED #39
MAR083875 KOLCHAK NIGHT STALKER O/T LIVING DEAD INCV #2
MAR083874 KOLCHAK TALES NIGHT STALKER O/T LIVING DEAD #2
APR080266 MADAME XANADU #1
APR080267 MADAME XANADU #1 VAR ED
APR082369 MARVEL ATLAS TP
APR084085 NEOZOIC #5
FEB080062 OH MY GODDESS RTL TP VOL 09
MAR083877 PHANTOM #24 CHECKMATE PART 4
APR082212 PILOT SEASON ALIBI #1
MAY080005 PREVIEWS ADULT VOL XVIII #7
MAY080006 PREVIEWS CATALOG PACK EXTRAS VOL XVIII #7
MAY088005 PREVIEWS CATALOG PACK VOL XVIII #7 RETAILER EDITION
MAY080003 PREVIEWS VOL XVIII #7 CUSTOMER ORDER FORM
MAY080007 PREVIEWS VOL XVIII #7 RET ORD FORM FREE EXTRAS
MAY088003 PREVIEWS VOL XVIII #7 RETAILER ADULT SUPPLEMENT
MAY080008 PREVIEWS VOL XVIII #7 RETAILER ORDER FORM EXTRAS
APR080260 PROGRAMME #12
APR082203 PROOF #9
SEP073874 QUEEN & COUNTRY DEFINITIVE ED TP VOL 01
APR080259 SECRET HISTORY THE AUTHORITY HAWKSMOOR #4
APR083568 SONIC X #34
APR088282 SPIDER-MAN BY ROSS FOLDED PROMO POSTER
APR082377 SPIDER-MAN BY ROSS POSTER
APR084039 STEPHEN COLBERTS TEK JANSEN #1
APR080262 SUPERNATURAL RISING SON #3
APR082162 VIX #1
APR084042 WASTELAND #18
FEB084191 WRITE NOW #18
MAR082283 X-MEN LEGACY FINCH PANORAMA POSTER

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