Dean’s Top Picks

Best of the past week: Fantastic Four #605.1 – I probably should give this to Saga #3 and can’t believe that I’m giving any honors to an issue with art by Mike Choi (because his art was very pedestrian in this issue), but Jonathan Hickman did enough to get it over the hump. The story is basically an alternate history that shows Germany winning World War II and what a Nazi Fantastic Four would look like…..only to see that this story was really about one of the many Reed Richards from the Council of Reeds. Very clever.
Top 5 this week:
1). The Unwritten #37 – I can’t wait to see what this story does next. We’ve finished the “War of the Words” storyline that had all kinds of big events for the characters. Last issue we had one of those done-in-one issues featuring that foul-mouthed bunny rabbit. So, this issue will finally show us where the main story will go. Lots was accomplished in the finale of “War of the Words” and I’m very curious to see if this series acts like it is going to wrap up OR if it will settle into another long story cycle.
2). Prophet #25 – If you’re looking for trippy science fiction storytelling, Prophet is the place to be. We’ve now moved beyond our “wasteland Earth” setting of the first 3 issues into more of a space opera. The storytelling and art have both been wonderful in this series so far.
3). Mind Mgmt #1 – Matt Kindt doing a monthly comic series?!? Sign me up. This is the guy who gave us the excellent OGN’s Super Spy, Revolver, and 3 Story, as well as the art on the OGN The Tooth–and did that great fill-in arc on Sweet Tooth a few months ago. I don’t even really care what this is about. I’m just excited to see how Kindt does with a monthly comic (much the same way I was eager to see how Jeff Lemire would do with Sweet Tooth when it launched a few years ago).
4). Elephantmen #39 – Last issue brought in a character I never thought I’d see in the contemporary Elephantmen storylines: Yvette! And, that’s after years of seeing her character in these old flashbacks about “the war”. Elephantmen never disappoints….it’s always interesting, the art is always pretty and the production values are unparalleled.
5). Hero Comics 2012 – An original TMNT story by Kevin Eastman? An original Elephantmen story by Richard Starkings with art by Dave Sim? With a J. Scott Campbell cover? Plus, lots of other goodies from name creators and all the profits benefit the Hero Initiative? These Hero comics are always good and the money goes to a great cause.
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Alex’s Top Picks

Pick of the Week: The Manhattan Projects #3 – It was between this and Saga, but ultimately, the awesome, European, Heavy Metal style artwork totally won me over. Top this with ridiculously kooky characters, and you have a winner. However, what made this issue special was that Jonathan Hickman actually made the bombing of Hiroshima comedic. Seriously. That alone is a massive achievement. It was certainly irreverent, which can be said about this series in general, but not at all tasteless. Between this and that FF done-in-one with Spidey and Johnny as room-mates, Hickman is showing himself to have a surprisingly great handle on comedy.
Picks: First up would have to be Justice League Dark #9. Next to Catwoman, JLD was the biggest disappointment of the new 52 for me. I loved the concept, the characters, and the art, but the book just wasn’t clicking for me, much that having to do with the glacial pacing. Now Jeff Lemire, a guy on my “buy anything he writes list” is taking over. JLD is a winning concept and Lemire should be the man for the job.
Next up would be Fantastic Four #606. With his major story wrapped up, Hickman seems to be spending the rest of his run with done-in-ones, each with a clear creative idea. This week takes the team to Wakanda and if the done-in-ones last month were any indication, this should be fun.
Secret Avengers #27 continues what is so far my favourite AvX tie-in. It’s last-stand heroism, the return of Mar-Vell, cosmic adventuring/politics, double-crosses, and Renato Guedes putting out some of the best work of his career.
Batman Incorporated #1 seems like a bit of an outsider these days, as Scott Snyder has so firmly taken control of the Bat-verse. Still, it’s Grant Morrison doing his thing, which should provide a nice counter-point to Snyder’s Batman and provide a high-quality bat-book sans owls.
Finally, while I said that Justice League Dark was among the disappointments of the new 52, The Flash has been one of the nicest surprises of the relaunch. It’s been nothing but lush artwork and old school gleefulness from Manapul and Buccellato. The Flash #9 sees the Flash end up in Gorilla City, which is just the sort of wacky, old school “comics” thing that this creative team seems to dig. Better still, it’ll mean Grodd, a sentimental favourite of mine.
Filed under: Picks of the Week | Tagged: Batman Incorporated #1, Elephantmen #30, Fantastic Four #605.1, Fantastic Four #606, Hero Comics 2012, Justice League Dark #9, Mind Mgmt #1, Prophet #25, Saga #3, Secret Avengers #27, The Flash #9, The Manhattan Projects #3, The Unwritten #37 | Leave a comment »