
By: James Robinson (writer), Javier Pulido (artist), Hilary Sycamore (colorist)
The Story: Vampire pirates—you all knew it had to happen at some point, right?
The Review: Even though the current line of DC titles has a lot of variety to it, you can’t help noticing how much of the storytelling is confined to the U.S. of A. Of course, comics across the board from every publisher tend to be America-centric, which is mostly fine by me, since I love America (wink!). But you know, there is a whole rest-of-the-world out there, and it seems a waste for the vast bulk of titles to use it for nothing more than the occasional backdrop.
So by far the most exciting feature of The Shade has been the opportunity afforded us to not only visit different periods and countries, but actually stick around for a while and get to know the place. What Robinson has been doing brilliantly is establishing settings outside the continental United States that feel like living, breathing, fully-realized worlds all their own, as if they’ve been in existence all along and we’re only just now dropping in to see them.
Nowhere is that more apparent than Robinson’s handling of the foreigner superheroes he’s brought into his story. Now, it’s one thing to conceive a character, attach a few random powers, and call him/her a superhero; it’s another thing to give them depth and roundness, with enough interesting substance to make them compelling by their own rights, not just as ciphers to your protagonist. On Batwing, Judd Winick popped out a new hero, one after another, in nearly every issue, and not a single one felt accessible or succeeded in resonating with you. Here, within a few pages, Robinson makes La Sangre a heroine so fresh, fascinating, and just plain cool that it makes you want to search desperately to see if she has a secret ongoing feature somewhere.
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Filed under: DC Comics, Reviews | Tagged: Darnell Caldecott, DC, DC Comics, Hilary Sycamore, James Robinson, Javier Pulido, La Sangre, Richard Swift, Spain, The Shade, The Shade #5, The Shade #5 review | 9 Comments »