
By: Ann Nocenti (story), Cliff Richards (pencils), Rebeca Buchman, Juan Castro, Le Beau Underwood, Phyllis Novin (inks), Pete Pantazis (colors)
The Story: The Dagger Clan try to prove that the size of one’s sword really doesn’t matter.
The Review: I always find it a little risky when a creator mentions how he was inspired by this-or-that or so-and-so in his latest project. Most of the time, he’s referring to some seminal work of the past, which is now held up as a standard for all works to follow. Not that this is his intention, but why invite that comparison? It just raises fans’ expectations and skeptics’ eyebrows that much higher, and a story tends to suffer in the process.
In nearly every interview I’ve read of Nocenti talking about Katana, she’s referred to Seven Samurai as a source of inspiration. I find this rather amusing because not only does the substance of this series bear no resemblance to that legendary film (except, perhaps, for Katana being a samurai—sort of), but nothing in the tone nor the structure of Katana evokes the spirit that made Seven Samurai special. This title already suffers from its own shortcomings; it can only look even worse when beheld next to a masterpiece.
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Filed under: DC Comics, Reviews | Tagged: Ann Nocenti, Cliff Richards, DC, DC Comics, Juan Castro, Katana, Katana #3, Katana #3 review, Killer Croc, Le Beau Underwood, Pete Pantazis, Phyllis Novin, Rebeca Buchman, Tatsu Toro | 3 Comments »