• Categories

  • Archives

  • Top 10 Most Read

The Amazing Spider-Man 2 – Movie Review

It’s just one shock after another for Peter and Gwen… Welcome to our review of (500) Days of Summer, Part III! I kid, but barely. The last Amazing Spider-Man
was so enamored with the gentle, oddball romance of Peter Parker and Gwen Stacy that at times the superheroics felt like an unwelcome intrusion into the story. That doesn’t change in this second outing, even though we have twice—some might say thrice—the number of villains cackling for attention here.

[Major spoiler ahead! Read at your own risk!]

I can understand the desire to put so much focus on the Peter-Gwen relationship, since she is, as she always is, doomed to die by the end of the film. The inevitable, as loudly broadcasted as it is early on (her valedictorian speech concludes with a call to heroism: “Even if we fall short, what better way is there to live?”), still has enough weight to be devastating because we spend so much time enjoying their sincerely cheesy brand of chemistry. But even in this, the film’s strongest point, there’s some shoddy construction.
Continue reading

Avengers Academy #14 – Review

By: Christos Gage (writer), Sean Chen (penciller), Scott Hanna (inker), Jeromy Cox (colorist), John Denning (assistant editor), Bill Rosemann (editor)

The Story: Electro attacks France’s main science institute while most of the full-fledged Avengers are away. The kids need a chance to prove themselves and Electro isn’t the baddest guy in town. When they get there, though, it turns out he ain’t alone. The kids don’t do too bad, though, all things considered.

What’s Good: Gage did one thing every great writer must do. He made the heroes active. They wanted something. They wanted it bad, and we the reader can sympathize: they want to prove themselves. They’re not asking for a free lunch. Just put me in the game coach. I like them already. This situation also creates a lot of tension, because when has any battle plan survived contact with the enemy? I love how well the trainees do against the Sinister Six and I have to say, I really like the ending. For a while, when I saw how they got the bad press and all, I was thinking “Oh great. Another thin persecution story. Seen it.” But Gage tricked me. That wasn’t the end. The end was about stepping up to the plate morally that was the big climax of the book. The fight, for all that it was a great superhero donnybrook, was really just a plot device to get to the personal growth made by a surprising number of people at the end. What am I saying about the writing? Gage was right on target.

And, I have to say, after my first exposure to the Chen-Hanna-Cox team, I’m loving the art. The fine lines leave a lot of room to fill the panels with detail, which I love. The credit page is a pretty good example of this. From top to bottom, the big panel is brimming with the external accoutrements of the Avengers Mansion, the backgrounded and framing characters, the tight line of those arguing, with some intense Giant-Man action thrown in as background. That is visual storytelling! And Cox’ colors are beautiful and clear, with the bright spots attracting the eye to the important parts of the page. I also enjoyed Chen’s slanting camera angles and overlaid panels. His layouts and choices of borders (or not) kept the pages from ever feeling the same. Chen and team made it feel like there was so much action going on that it could only be layered. And a PS: I loved the texture of Reptile and Rhino when they slapped down.
Continue reading

Design a site like this with WordPress.com
Get started