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Iron Man, Captain Britain & MI-13, Agents of Atlas, Secret Warriors, and The Reunion

Here’s the first of what will probably be a regular feature here on the ol’ Curtis Andersen Super Blog! I’m doing my last two weeks worth of books. See you in the comments!

Iron Man. My favorite and, even if I slack off on writing comic reviews, I will always do my best to review this one. Invincible Iron Man started it’s new volume when the movie came out, so this is only issue 11. Matt Fraction is on writing duties and he has promised a VERY tough year for the Golden Avenger. So far he is delivering on his promise. As part of the Dark Reign story line Tony Stark (Iron Man)and Maria Hill (ex-deputy director of S.H.I.E.L.D.) are on the run. As promised by the cover Tony fights War Machine (his best friend James Rhodes for you newbies), Maria stumbles on a dangerous secret while trying to recover information for Tony and Pepper Potts tries out a new gift that Tony left for her before he went on the lamb. I enjoyed this issue, but it is part of a bigger story arc so it is worth buying the other issues or waiting for the trade. Tony is running around in his “Heroes Return” armor which, while one of my favorites, keeps being touted as being “old” and really outmatched by everything that gets thrown at it. I like that Fraction makes such a big deal about how quickly tech can go out of date, but it was only a couple months ago that Tony was fighting the end of the Secret Invasion in his classic armor, and that seemed to hold up just fine against an alien advanced civilization. A nit pick for sure, but still. I love Salvador Larroca on art and next issue Shell-Head fights Namor, the Sub-Mariner! If you like Iron Man at all you should be buying this series!

Captain Britain & MI-13 is a great UK-centric book! One of my favorite cities in the world is London and the fun and magic of the country is very present in this series. Paul Cornell is writing and Leonard Kirk is penciling. Paul is English and it definitely shows. Right now Dr. Doom and Dracula (yes THAT Dracula) are attacking Earth from a castle on the moon. It’s AWESOME! Our heroes are the MI-13 division of the UK government. That’s the super hero division. All of the UK’s super heroes fall under its jurisdiction. Pete Wisdom is their leader, but Captain Britain is the figure head. Cap B has a new power set now where his abilities are all dependent on his self confidence, which is a neat device, although so far we’ve really only seen the ramifications of that in one issue. The other heroes include Blade, Spitfire, The Black Knight and a new character named Excalibur. This is a fun book that is easy to pick up no matter what number it is. I strongly recommend grabbing this one and adding it to your pull list.

Written by Jeff Parker and art done by Carlo Pagulayan and Gabriel Hardman & Elizabeth Dismang Breitweiser, Agents of Atlas is new to me. It follows characters that used to be part of the Marvel Universe when the company was still called Atlas comics. Now they use the device that they work for a group called Atlas, but the meta-knowledge makes it more fun. It would take me a really long time to explain it all here so I’m linking you to the Wikipedia article here! This book is also part of the Dark Reign storyline and an old Iron Man villain just joined the ranks so I’ll definitely be reading this arc.

Secret Warriors Nick Fury: Agent of Nothing is an AWESOME spy book! Brian Michael Bendis and Jonathan Hickman are crafting a hell of a mythos! In this issue we see Hydra come back to full power and a secret gets revealed that shakes Fury and the whole concept of SHIELD to the core. I do have some complaints about this book: I’m not a huge fan of the art. Caselli is good, but I’m not personally a fan of the “soft corner” style that he does. Also, I’m really not sure who most of the characters are even though there was an entire special issue dedicated to saying who they are. What I do know is that they are the children of older heroes, kids that really didn’t want to embrace their powers. It makes for an interesting dynamic. Regardless, I’m going to keep getting this book at least through the first story arc.

The Reunion Limited Series sees the return of Hawkeye and Mockingbird of West Coast Avengers fame! Mockingbird has a secret she’s keeping from her (ex?)husband, Hawkeye and AIM is involved. Really all the super heroing is just an excuse to bring back together one of the greatest comic book couples of all time. I only recommend this one for Avenger fans. I have a feeling that this one is going to get pretty geeky and continuity heavy so that’s my take for what it’s worth.

See you tomorrow!

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Watchmen

Went and saw Watchmen last night at the Century 25 in Anaheim at the 12:05am screening. I was teaching so Rene and I got there at around 10:45pm. Our friends, Dean and Alex, had gotten there hours earlier to wait in line, but ended up drinking at the Lazy Dog Cafe instead. So when Rene and I got there the line was REALLY LONG!

Fortunately we did not have to wait in that line. Turns out, due to a bit of mass confusion and a “sheeple” mentality no one actually checked which line they should be standing in past a certain point, so all four of us were able to get a great place in line, all without actually cutting in front of anyone. It was cool.

Originally I had intended to add pictures of us in line and at the theater, but we forgot to take pictures. Then I was going to do stick figure drawing of the line portion, but I really don’t have the time for that. Maybe next time.

So we got into the theater and saw the trailers. Of all the one’s we saw my favorite was for The Hangover. Damn that movie looks funny! I felt bad for the Seth Rogan trailer that came after, it had so much to live up to.

Watchmen: I thought that it was a great adaptation of a comic book that I was pretty sure would be near impossible to film. Here’s the short version for people that don’t want spoilers:

Good movie! Really captures the spirit and feel of the book. A little hard to follow for people who don’t know the story – at least that’s what I was told. The movie is long.

Here There Be Spoiler!!!!!!

I’m writing this review assuming you’ve read Watchmen by Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons. If you haven’t then you should! Get it here!

The opening fight where The Comedian is murdered set a great bar for the action in the rest of the movie. Being a comic reader for literally decades I take it for granted that heroes are good at what they do. You don’t really need justification as to how they manage to survive year after year fighting people that are determined to kill them. You just expect that the hero is going to survive because they have a book that needs to come out again next month. Even well-known brawlers like Captain America and Batman only need to spend a few panels to convince comic readers that they are good at what they do. One of my favorite parts of the movie as a whole were the fight scenes. I really got a visceral feel for how these people fight to stay alive. During the whole opening fight, even though I knew exactly how it would end, I was on the edge of my seat watching it all go down. I flinched when he went out the window and from that point on I was trembling with excitement!

As I mentioned in the short version, I was really pleased with how well the comic was adapted. The opening credit sequence that covered the whole history of super-heroes was concise and packed with information. I know there are little details I missed because there were several little details that I barely caught when I watched it the first time. Mr. Synder layered this movie just like Alan Moore layered the book. There are so many little things that gave me nerd-gasms, it’s impossible to list it all, but this leads to one of the biggest problems I can see with the movie – there’s an awful lot geek inside jokes. If you haven’t read the comic, like Rene, then there are things you just don’t get. Also, it’s a lot of information to try and keep straight. It is not a casual viewer movie.

Now I cannot put myself in the place of a person who hasn’t read the book. From the other reviews that I have read it seems to be pretty 50/50 good and bad. I think that this is a tell-tale sign of how much this movie was made for us geeks, which makes me nervous. The expectations on this film are HUGE! With both Iron Man and The Dark Knight doing so well last summer this film has the pressure of having to perform. If it doesn’t there will be plenty of people that will line up to talk about how it never should have been made and if it does work then, as much as it is already happening, comic properties – especially the older ones – will be bought until they are all optioned. I will turn all of my scripts into comics so that I can sell a few more movies. Regardless, if it isn’t accessible then people won’t see it and that would be a shame.

There are changes throughout the film where it differs from the book. The biggest of these is the ending. While I understood why the big squid had to be cut, I was also wondering what they would do instead. The solution was so simple and I really liked it – a lot. It tied up a few of the sub-plots that I thought I would miss. I didn’t.

I feel like this is getting a bit long so I’m going to jump into what I liked and what I didn’t.

What I liked:
– The fight scenes. I felt like each one was a fight for life and they were wonderfully graphic. If you had the job of super-hero this is how you would have to fight to survive.
– The attention to detail. I will have to watch this movie many times to catch it all.
– The effects. My disbelief was completely suspended.
– The love scene. Not for obvious reasons. I felt like it was treated with the same kind of passion as the fighting and was equivocally graphic. They fight hard, they play hard. I saw it as a metaphor for Night Owl’s love for his job. How he really came alive as a hero.
– The adaptation.

Now my complaints:
– Pretty geeky. Lots of inside jokes and details that the casual viewer might not catch. I.E. Bubastis – the cat with the horns. Not in much of the movie and then the audience is expected to care when she is killed in the end. That seemed hollow without seeing her more.
– Changing tone. The tone of the film changed sometimes from gritty to tongue in cheek. I am one of the people that felt that “Hallelujah” was not the greatest choice for the love scene.
– The end. After the whole conspiracy is revealed and Rorschach dies I was done. The movie was finished for me so seeing the Dan, Laurie and Sally ending – which was too long in my opinion – was totally anti-climactic.

OK, that’s how I feel about Watchmen. I look forward to your comments and any conversations that may arise.

See you tomorrow!

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