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The Sword #20 – Review

by Joshua Luna (writer, layouts, letters) and Jonathan Luna (art)

The Story: Malia further manipulates the media and public opinion as Dara races to New York City to confront her.

What’s Good: It’s great to see an issue of the Sword on the racks again.

The opening scene may very well be the strongest bit of the book.  I enjoyed the Lunas’ putting Dara’s previously indisputable hero status into question.  It really adds a very unique tone to this final arc, while also encouraging the reader to look back on the rest of the series.  We’re forced to re-examine Dara’s progress, and it’s hard not to be struck by how much she’s changed and what she’s become.  That said, the Lunas leave much of this up to the reader, and I do feel some of their trademark flashbacks would have further augmented this element.

I also enjoyed Julie’s suggestions of the Sword almost being some sort of addiction.  It adds a darker feel that the book definitely benefits from.  Certainly, it adds another layer of complexity to the series.

On the action-front, there’s a scene involving Dara’s battle with a pair of fighter jets that’s a great deal of fun.  While I know not everyone is a fan of the Lunas’ work, they do know their way around an action scene.  It’s insane, bordering on over-the-top, but as with many of the Sword’s better action scenes, it works all the better for these reasons.

Justin’s dialogue was also particularly strong this month.  As the series grows darker, Justin provides that necessary comic relief, very effectively deadpanning the book’s grandstanding while highlighting many of the more impressive, super-powered moments.

What’s Not So Good: While the action sequence is good, there are a few botched faces on Jonathan Luna’s part.  One headshot of Julia crying out is unforgivably bad.  At other times, characters’ faces simply don’t carry the emotion they should.  When characters are caught in more rueful, subtle emotions, Luna often draws them far too close to a neutral expression.

Also, I can’t help but be irritated by Joshua Luna’s writing of the “crowd dialogue.”  Luna has opted to present the crowd noise around Malia in the form of a few select quotes being bubbled without a speaker.  This is already a bit ham-fisted on his part, but the actual content of this pseudo-dialogue can unfortunately only be described as moronic.  The quotes just sound far too stupid and thus expose themselves too fully for what they are: Luna’s method of capturing developments in public feeling regarding Malia and Dara.  This “crowd noise” is a weak method of accomplishing this as is, but Luna’s poor writing of these faceless characters doesn’t help any.  I wish he stuck purely to the newscasts.

That being said, Luna’s actual dialogue in this month’s newscasts isn’t great either.  As was the case with the crowd’s dialogue, the quotes are simply too obvious in their authorial purpose.  For this reason, they lack believability and the people speaking feel more like narrative tools than human beings.

Finally, while the Lunas have really done well with their use of flashbacks throughout the series, this is not one of those times.  The flashback isn’t bad, but it’s nowhere near the standards the Lunas have set for themselves.  The moral lesson is weak and uninspired, and the whole situation depicted feels clichéd.

Conclusion: An inoffensive issue that is a bit rough around the edges.

Grade: C+

-Alex Evans

WCBR’s Picks Of The Week

Kyle’s Top Picks


Best of the Past Week: None – Since it turned out to be a far busier week than I ever could have anticipated, I, unfortunately, was unable to get anything read (or reviewed).

Most Anticipated: Dark Avengers Annual & Empowered one-shot (Tie) – The artwork for the Dark Avengers Annual is being done by Chris Bachalo, one of my favorite artists.  For that reason alone, the Annual earns an easy spot in the “Most Anticipated” slot.  The Empowered one-shot is the first Empowered story done in the traditional comic book format.  Adam Warren’s smart, funny, and sexy superhero series has been fantastic from the very start so I fully expect the special Empowered one-shot to be one of the best things on the shelf this week.

Other Top Picks: Black Widow& The Marvel Girls #1 (Salva Espin won me over during his run on Jeff Parker’s Exiles series), Deadpool Team-Up # 898, Psylocke #2, Seige: The Cabal, Strange #2, Uncanny X-Men #518, X-Force Annual, Hack/Slash #28, Haunt #3, Supergod #2

DS’ Top Picks


Best of the Past Week: Blackest Night #5 was a really strong book, but Greg Rucka’s work on inventing an authentic, real person in Batwoman (in Detective Comics #859) is setting the standard this week in tight, controlled, effective writing.

Most Anticipated: Blackest Night: The Flash #1 – Geoff Johns brought us Blackest Night and Flash: Reborn. Blackest Night: The Flash #1 (of 3) promises to be outstanding for those two reasons.

Other Top Picks: Blackest Night: Wonder Woman #1 (of 3), JSA All-Stars #1, Ghost Riders: Heavens on Fire #5, Superman: World of New Krypton #10, The Great Ten #2, Dark Avengers Annual #1, Fall of the Hulks Alpha #1, Hulk: Winter Guard One-Shot, Strange #2, Uncanny X-Men #518

Alex’s Top Picks


Pick of the Week: Powers #1 – Despite another great issue of Detective Comics and the strongest Madame Xanadu book in months, Powers just did everything right.  In the span of 22 pages, it fully encapsulated more or less everything that has made the series so good over its lengthy, if sporadic, run.  Revealing flashbacks, gritty cop drama, superheroes, human drama, and excellent, distinctive noir artwork meet once again in what is essentially a reprise of an Eisner winning formula comics fans have grown to love.

Most Anticipated: Siege: The Cabal #1 – It’s an event comic and frankly, it’s not even an event I’m all that thrilled about, save for the fact that it promises the end of Dark Reign.  This comic shouldn’t have me salivating, and really, it doesn’t.  But the solication for it seems to hint that they’re going to reveal who Osborn’s mystery partner and man in the shadows is.  In the end, I’m still you’re average sucker and my overwhelming curiosity has gotten the better of me.  Marvel, if that solicitation text was a tease, I’m going to be absolutely irate.

Other Picks: Scalped #33, The Sword #20, Thor #604, Sweet Tooth #4, Uncanny X-Men #518, Jack of Fables #40

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