Comics

Comic Rack

Hmm, we’re about to talk about comics so it must be Wednesday!  Welcome to the RazorFine Comic Rack boys and girls.  Pull up a bean bag and take a seat at feet of the master as we look at the new comics set to hit comic shops and bookstores today from DC, Marvel, Dark Horse, WildStorm, Vertigo, IDW Publishing, and Image Comics.

This week includes Astro City: The Dark Age, Booster Gold, Brit, The Evil Dead, Gen13, Gotham Underground, New Exiles, The Sword, Wonder Woman, and the first issues of Fantastic Four: The Lost Adventure, Gutwrencher and X-Force.  Also don’t forget the truckload of new graphic novels including Connor Hawke: Dragon’s Blood, Exiles Vol. 16: Starting Over, Spider-Man: Back in Black, Sub-Mariner: Revolution, Time Masters, Transformers: Beast Wars: The Ascending and much, much more.

Enjoy issue #59

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Introducing The New Captain America

Steve Rogers may be dead, but Captain America lives on.  Cap’s former sidekick Bucky Barnes picks up the mantle of his mentor in the newest issue of Captain America.

Captain America #34
Custom Rating

“Steve isn’t leading the way up the battlefield.  Yet I can almost feel him here.  But he’s guiding me now…instead of haunting me.  I can’t be him.  No one ever could.  But I can make him proud….in my own way.”

Okay, so the fact that Bucky Barnes is the new Cap isn’t a surprise (except maybe to those who didn’t realize Rogers got himself shot and stopped breathing a few issues ago).

Steve Rogers’ former sidekick turned Soviet assassin is now faced with the hardest task of his life – filling the shoes left by his friend and mentor.  With the unspoken support of Tony Stark, S.H.I.E.L.D., and the Black Widow, Bucky goes where those like Wally West have gone before – trying to live up to the legacy of a true hero.

Issue #34 begins with a nice, though wordy, recap of recent events allowing readers who haven’t kept up the the story some background.  Steve Rogers is dead, and Bucky Barnes has accepted the role of Captain America, and the mission to track down the Red Skull.  Bucky dons a modified version of the costume along with adding a few choice weapons including a gun to Cap’s trademark shield.

Bucky is successful in his first venture out by stopping terrorists from robbing the National Gold Reserves, but his victory is shortlived as Tony Stark makes a startling discovery, perhaps too late, about the Red Skull’s whereabouts and his next move as rogue S.H.I.E.L.D. agents, under the Red Skull’s command, perform a public relations nightmare live on television.  Bucky may have one a battle but it seems the Red Skull is winning the war.

This isn’t your father’s Captain America.  I still am disappointed in the death of Steve Rogers, whose unique perspective and view on life, although perhaps hard to write, was a large piece of the foundation of the Marvel Universe.  Bucky’s Cap is one that fits seamlessly in the post-Civil War world, but lacks the heart and soul of the man who he replaces.  At times Captain America might have seemed old-fashioned and even antiquated, but he also harkened back to a time, not that long ago, when beliefs and patriotism was prized rather than marketed.  Call me nostalgic, but I’ll take Barry Allen over Wally West, and Steve Rogers over Bucky Barnes.

Even with these reservations I still enjoyed the issue and the respect they offered up to Rogers’ memory.  Hopefully this will continue and remain a mainstay in the character and the series (as Allen’s spirit has been in The Flash).  I’m not sure I like where this new Cap may lead us, but after this well-crafted introduction I’m willing to give him a chance.  Hey, at least he’s better than the last replacement.

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Adolescent Radioactive Black Belt Hamsters

Don Chin’s band of super hamsters (parodied off the famous turtles) return to action in the new Dynamite Entertainment monthly series by Keith Champagne and Tom Nguyen.  Hamsters Assemble!  Here’s our review of the first issue.

Adolescent Radioactive Black Belt Hamsters #1
Custom Rating

“If your daddy knew how stupid you are, he’d trade you in for a pet monkey.”

A parody of a parody.  Created by Don Chin and Parsonavich, the Adolescent Black Belt Hamsters were a parody of Eastman and Laird’s Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, and the near endless slew of action films, in the late eighties.  With the new turtle film (read our review) breathing life back into the franchise the hamsters also return for a new series from Dynamite Comics.

The five hamster team is comprised of Rock, Arnold, Jean Claude, Steven, and Lucy.  All are named after the action stars they resemble (and are often spouting catch-phrases).  Who did you expect them to be named after?  Famous artists?  In the first issue the team is called back to the Himalayan monastery which is under siege by a horde led by the reborn Genghis Khann.

Filled with action, bad puns and quotes from a variety of films including T2, Hard to Kill, Under Siege, and several others, this isn’t a comic for everybody.  But, for those like me who grew up with these films, many of these moments will bring a smile to your face.

This first issue deals mainly with introducing the team, with a short glimpse at our villain.  In order to accomplish this the issue, aside from the training scenes, is a little light on action before the real fight begins on the last few pages.  But with these final pages leaving two of the heroes near death, one attempting flight without wings (never a good idea), and the others surrounded by an army, I think we’ll see the furry fists fly in the second issue.

Writer Keith Champagne is obviously having fun here playing with the characters, especially Steven who gets most of the best scenes early on (are you a closet Steven Seagal fan, Mr. Champagne?).  The humor does seem a bit forced at times, but that’s to be expected in a first issue.  I was also pleased with the art by Tom Nguyen which gave a humanity to the characters while also playing up the absurdity of it all.

This isn’t a great issue or a must-read by any means, but it’s different and a little refreshing from the recent offerings of the bigger comics companies.  And now that my beloved Zoo Crew (check them out) has once again gone into forced hiatus and hibernation (read more here), I guess I’ll have to rely on some hamsters for a sense of whimsy (mixed, of course, with some high-octane action).  Here’s hoping Steven pulls through, if you’re gonna’ kill one how about the Rock (I’m already tired of him laying the Smackdown), and they are given an opportunity to live and fight for a few more days to come.  Now, if they could only come up with a catchy theme song…

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Comic Rack

Hmm, we’re about to talk about comics so it must be Wednesday!  Welcome to the RazorFine Comic Rack boys and girls.  Pull up a bean bag and take a seat at feet of the master as we look at the new comics set to hit comic shops and bookstores today from DC, Marvel, Dark Horse, WildStorm, Vertigo, Dynamite Entertainment, IDW Publishing, Devil’s Due Publishing, and Image Comics.

This week includes Amazing Spider-Man, Army of Darkness: Long Road Home, The Boys, BtVS Season 8, The Circle, Detective Comics, Justice Society of America, Silver Surfer: In Thy Name, The Vinyl Underground, Witchblade, and the first issues of Abe Sapien: The Drowning, Clandestine and Halloween: Night Dance.  Also don’t forget the truckload of new graphic novels including Batman: False Faces, Essential Avengers Vol. 6, Forgotten Realms: Hafling’s Gem, Incognegro, Indian Jones Omnibus Vol. 1, Outsiders: Five of a Kind, Superman 3-2-1 Action,  and much, much more.

Enjoy issue #58

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RazorFine Presents – Thanos

Welcome to yet another issue of RazorFine Presents Comic Spotlight as we take a look at comic heroes, villains, and everything in between.  This week, for the first time, we shine the comic spotlight on a villain.  Created in the early 1970’s by Jim Starlin, Thanos of Titan, an Eternal with almost unlimited intellect and power, would threaten the universe for decades on a mission to serve and win the heart of his mistress, Death.

Thanos

Name: Thanos

1st Appearance: Iron Man issue #55 (1973)

Final Appearance: Dies (again) in Annihilation issue #4

N/A

“From knowledge springs power, just as weakness stems from Ignorance.”

Thanos, in many ways, is one of the most tragic characters in the history of the Marvel Universe.  Born on Titan to a race of Eternals, Thanos would grow into a bitter and power-hungry young man.  Early on Thanos became infatuated with Death and a desire to earn her pleasure and respect; Thanos pledged his life to her cause.

From the nuclear bombing of his own homeworld, to the murder and dissection of his mother, to his attempt to destroy all life in the cosmos, Thanos is consumed by a desire to prove himself in the eyes of Death.  First using the Cosmic Cube, and later the Infinity Gems, Thanos would be thwarted time and again by the like of Captain Marvel and Adam Warlock, who would turn the Mad Titan to stone and free the universe from his wrath, for the time being.

Thanos would be resurrected by Death in The Silver Surfer to be her new champion, and become a thorn in the side of the Sentinel of the Spaceways.  Once again he acquired all of the Infinity Gems in the short two-part mini-series Thanos Quest and combined their power to reach a level of omnipotence in The Infinity Gauntlet mini-series.  His godhood however was short-lived and Thanos would retreat into seclusion

Over the next several years Thanos would appear throughout the Marvel Universe sometimes as hero, sometimes a villain, but always with an agenda all his own.  Finally Thanos allied himself with Annihilus during the Annihilation mini-series for the simple curiosity of wondering what effect his destructive force will have on the universe.  Eventually Thanos would have enough and turn on Annihilus, however he would be killed by Drax the Destroyer who has hunted the Titan for years.  But don’t mourn too deeply for him; in death Thanos would be granted his fondest wish and become the consort of Mistress Death.

Thanos is a mix of power, science, and mysticism.  Imbued with keen intellect, super-human strength, enhanced reflexes and endurance, and near invulnerability, Thanos was a serious threat to whoever stood in the way of his latest scheme.  His acceptance of both magic and science allowed him to combine the two to enhance his natural abilities, to teleport of long distances, and to travel through time and alternate dimensions.  Thanos would also appear on the short-lived Silver Surfer cartoon in “The End of Eternity” (a three-parter featuring the death of, well, everything) and the series final episode “Soul Hunter.”

I’m a fan of the character, in fact I will admit to owning a little Thanos Infinity Gauntlet action figure.  With the exception of Green Lantern, one thing Marvel does consistently better than DC is the cosmic high-minded and far-reaching adventure.  Thanos is is a big piece of that legacy from his early years battling Captain Marvel to his “final” moments in Annihilation.  In fact he is so important and influential Marvel Comics Online voted him #1 on their list of Marvel’s Greatest Cosmic Characters, beating out characters like The Silver Surfer, Nova, Captain Marvel, and Galactus.

For those interested reading some of the Mad Titan’s adventures I would recommend The Infinity Gauntlet trade paperback (the sequels aren’t as good, but are worth a look), and the Silver Surfer: Rebirth of Thanos trade paperback featuring his return from the dead in the early 1990’s.  There are also several good Internet sites dedicated to the anti-hero including Thanos: The Mad Titan.

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