As a homer for Valiant, I support things I like as Art while recognizing the good a company can do for the media of sequential art in who creates the stories. As a teacher in a rough neighborhood in South LA, I am keenly aware of social inequities that many of my students encounter daily.
One of my favorite characters in the Valiant stable is Amanda McKee, AKA Livewire, a techno-path, or, a powerful telepathic being who can remotely control any electronic device.
The series starts up after the events of a cross-company major event that saw Livewire use her powers to shut down the entire United States. Planes crashed and people died in other ways, and Livewire became Public Enemy No. 1. She loses her powers by the end of the first issue, and regains them after a few issues.
Anyway, I always offered Valiant the benefit of the doubt when it came to why an awesome black woman hadn't helmed her own title---that The Story didn't lead to a Livewire title yet and not because a black woman could carry a title.
Now that have a black woman leading a title written by, in a shocking twist of events, a black woman. Score one for equity in sequential art and Valiant.
Here are the first four issues with the pre-order covers that my LCS orders for me:
Go Vita Ayala!
Monday, March 25, 2019
Sunday, February 17, 2019
Days of Hate Finishes
The speculative fiction story about an armed insurrection within the United States has finished up.
Called Days of Hate, the story was created by Ales Kot and Daniel Zezelj, two Slavic dudes who grew up separately during the dissolution of Yugoslavia and watched how normal society can break down into sectarian warfare and ethnic cleansing.
They've mentioned that they were beginning to see the same rumblings here in the US, and were inspired to create.
The story follows four characters, two of which are a seemingly estranged lesbian couple. One is being routinely interrogated by a smarmy, Trumpian acolyte, slick-haired and oozing evil like a fifties-era movie-Nazi. The other half of the lesbian couple is busy in the underground, setting bombs and blowing up fascist meetings. Her partner is a non-white dude, apart from his family, whom he misses badly.
The first six chapter were split up from the second six by a few months.
When I saw a preview of issue 1's cover, I immediately recognized Daniel Zezelj's work. I became a fan of his back when Starve was released. I'm not exactly sure what it is about his compositions, but I dig it.
There is a level of comeuppance near the end and a murky future going forward, and the point is made: the kinds of feelings and statements that lead down the road to sectarian warfare and ethnic cleansing can only be faced and addressed by sane and sober people with differences talking about those differences.
It's good and a cultural marker, like its spiritual sibling, Calexit.
Called Days of Hate, the story was created by Ales Kot and Daniel Zezelj, two Slavic dudes who grew up separately during the dissolution of Yugoslavia and watched how normal society can break down into sectarian warfare and ethnic cleansing.
They've mentioned that they were beginning to see the same rumblings here in the US, and were inspired to create.
The story follows four characters, two of which are a seemingly estranged lesbian couple. One is being routinely interrogated by a smarmy, Trumpian acolyte, slick-haired and oozing evil like a fifties-era movie-Nazi. The other half of the lesbian couple is busy in the underground, setting bombs and blowing up fascist meetings. Her partner is a non-white dude, apart from his family, whom he misses badly.
The first six chapter were split up from the second six by a few months.
When I saw a preview of issue 1's cover, I immediately recognized Daniel Zezelj's work. I became a fan of his back when Starve was released. I'm not exactly sure what it is about his compositions, but I dig it.
There is a level of comeuppance near the end and a murky future going forward, and the point is made: the kinds of feelings and statements that lead down the road to sectarian warfare and ethnic cleansing can only be faced and addressed by sane and sober people with differences talking about those differences.
It's good and a cultural marker, like its spiritual sibling, Calexit.
Wednesday, January 2, 2019
The Things That Get Made
On a winter break trip to my LCS I found the following collection:
The artist Carlos Ezquerra was the original artist for Judge Dredd, which was created a few years after this, from 1977.
Yes, that's correct, El Mestizo, a boy born enslaved, one parent black, one Mexican, only to return to the States to play Yojimbo with the Union and the Confederacy, is the creation of a pair of Englishmen.
Reading it is weird as well, since at that time in the UK the dialogue and copy is all printed instead of handwritten.
I'll return to comment more once I've finished it. It's an interesting look at "America and American," and very like the Italian comic Tex in that way.
The artist Carlos Ezquerra was the original artist for Judge Dredd, which was created a few years after this, from 1977.
Yes, that's correct, El Mestizo, a boy born enslaved, one parent black, one Mexican, only to return to the States to play Yojimbo with the Union and the Confederacy, is the creation of a pair of Englishmen.
Reading it is weird as well, since at that time in the UK the dialogue and copy is all printed instead of handwritten.
I'll return to comment more once I've finished it. It's an interesting look at "America and American," and very like the Italian comic Tex in that way.
Monday, December 17, 2018
Ninjak's Second Ongoing Series Finishes
Ninjak's second iteration with the revamped Valiant, Ninja-K, has finished up, as their Livewire title gears up for release.
Here are the four separate ongoing titles that have featured Ninjak over the years, dating back to 1993/4:
The second was conceived after the sell-off to Acclaim, and is actually better than we fans generally give it credit. Maybe it should be called something else entirely and not be considered when speaking about Ninjak (which is how the practice is now).
Anyway, here's one espionage-comic fan pouring out a little for a homey.
UPDATE: Ninjak returns in July 2019 in what appears to be titled "Killers."
Nice
Here are the four separate ongoing titles that have featured Ninjak over the years, dating back to 1993/4:
The second was conceived after the sell-off to Acclaim, and is actually better than we fans generally give it credit. Maybe it should be called something else entirely and not be considered when speaking about Ninjak (which is how the practice is now).
Anyway, here's one espionage-comic fan pouring out a little for a homey.
UPDATE: Ninjak returns in July 2019 in what appears to be titled "Killers."
Nice
Wednesday, November 21, 2018
Farel Dalrymple's Prequel Mini-Series Finishes
I picked up in its entirety Farel Dalrymple's prequel to his GN "The Wrenchies" called Proxima Centauri:
Through the six issue mini-series, we follow the main character Sherwood as he tries to escape an inter-dimensional ship and return to his brother and the school/organization that trains these young children/warriors for the fights they'll be engaging in in their future and their world.
To say that this series is cohesive, or makes a ton of sense, or makes sense in some way, would be stretching the definition of the word. The art is interesting if not spectacular, but I could see some fans call it spectacular.
I was sold on the idea that it was "psychedelic," but after reading it I feel like the term has been applied for lack of a better one.
I try to find stories that are weird and out there for their own sake, and this fits, but it also doesn't strike me as one that should be handed over to the fans-of-weird-shit-but-not-always-on-the-lookout-for-comics in my life. I was hoping it would fill that category, but I found it somewhat unfulfilling.
Regular fans of sequential art in the superhero vein certainly won't be interested in the title, and I'm sure Farel and Image know as much. Weirdos like me who are game for weirdness and ideas labeled as "psychedelic" probably either loved it for found it unsatisfying for a litany of reasons. Fans of the art style or of Dalrymple's work itself, would surely be fans of this mini-series.
I didn't dislike it, specifically, but I didn't fully love it either. Just like a weak or mediocre mushroom trip.
Sunday, October 28, 2018
Dialogue-less from France
I picked up a discounted graphic novel at my LCS the other day:
It was marked at $4.99, when the cover price was twenty bucks more. It takes place in a dystopian future society in which there are two competing corporate overlord companies that make life rather lame for the denizens. Or so it seems.
On the cover in this preceding picture is a briefcase that, when opens, houses another dimensional realm, like more of the ship of the aliens that crash land in the opening scene. It is decided that it should be used by the blue company/overlord against the red/black company/overlord.
The scenes play out in an episodic form until you can tell that they are all related.
Another very creative element is that there is nor dialogue in this graphic novel: the story unfolds in action only, and that underscores that it was written by Frenchmen Lucas Varela.
It was a gem discovery, for sure.
It was marked at $4.99, when the cover price was twenty bucks more. It takes place in a dystopian future society in which there are two competing corporate overlord companies that make life rather lame for the denizens. Or so it seems.
On the cover in this preceding picture is a briefcase that, when opens, houses another dimensional realm, like more of the ship of the aliens that crash land in the opening scene. It is decided that it should be used by the blue company/overlord against the red/black company/overlord.
The scenes play out in an episodic form until you can tell that they are all related.
Another very creative element is that there is nor dialogue in this graphic novel: the story unfolds in action only, and that underscores that it was written by Frenchmen Lucas Varela.
It was a gem discovery, for sure.
Tuesday, September 11, 2018
Seventeen Years On...
I picked this up for a buck a few years back at my local Dollar Bookstore:
The collection has dozens of artists and their reactions to the attacks. All are very somber, as you can imagine. Some are very angry as well, and that also makes sense.
Many of my high school students weren't yet born seventeen years ago, so that kinda ties down the space.
Anyway, it's a timely piece, having been created and released by mid-2002. It's an artifact of a moment, for sure, cultural detritus.
The collection has dozens of artists and their reactions to the attacks. All are very somber, as you can imagine. Some are very angry as well, and that also makes sense.
Many of my high school students weren't yet born seventeen years ago, so that kinda ties down the space.
Anyway, it's a timely piece, having been created and released by mid-2002. It's an artifact of a moment, for sure, cultural detritus.
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