
By: Paul Dini (writer), Cliff Chiang (artist), John Kalisz (colorist), Adam Beechen (feature writer), Jamal Igle (feature penciller), Robin Riggs (feature inker)
The Story: What better way to treat the puppet that’s going to kill you than invite him to your home? Also, Zatanna, junior sorceress, learns braces can really get you down.
The Review: Magic is an enormously potent sowing ground for stories. Because it can do and be pretty much anything, it’s limited only by writer’s ingenuity—and by the writer’s skill. Too often, especially in superhero comics, it gets used as story fodder for the characters, or a deus ex machina to explain away anything the writer can’t figure out more tangibly. Because of magic’s elastic nature, writers have to create some physics for how it works in their stories. When they don’t, magical stories easily become unconvincing, confusing, or just plain random.
Paul Dini may be starting to apply some rules to magic in Zatanna’s world—a good thing, especially for this particular character. No two writers have ever portrayed her powers the same way, with the possible exception of her backwards-talk, and even that doesn’t get consistent treatment. Despite all her many appearances throughout the years, you still don’t really have a handle on her abilities, and that’s partially because in the DCU, magic is so elastically defined by all the writers who have tried to use it that there’s no sense of order to it at all.
You can see this disorder every time Zatanna uses her powers in this issue, which always leaves you with a bunch of nagging questions. For example, with her infamous “pots” spell, does she freeze time around the person? Are they paralyzed? If they’re paralyzed, how come the puppet can still talk? Is it because he’s magicked already? Can people think in this “deppots” state? How long do they stay that way? What are the spell’s limitations? Sure, you can just accept it for what it is, but you’re sure to be bothered when it pops up again and works a different way.
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Filed under: DC Comics, Reviews | Tagged: Adam Beechen, Cliff Chiang, DC Comics, Giovanni Zatara, Jamal Igle, John Kalisz, John Zatarra, Paul Dini, Robin Riggs, Shadowcrest, Zatanna, Zatanna #9, Zatanna #9 review, Zatanna Zatara, Zatara | Leave a comment »