Saturday, April 28, 2007

The Invisibles Vol. 3 #11: 'Satanstorm: Part 2: Cold Britania'

Volume III continues with an issue that has pretty much all the strengths and weaknesses of the first one. The art is still great, the vibe is really fun, but I’m missing the core characters and we don’t have the density of the late era Volume II issues. In each Volume, things amp up gradually, starting out with comparatively light storylines and culminating in stories that are incredibly complex thematically and huge in emotional impact. This one’s no exception, and it’s a bit jarring to go from the heights of Kissing Mister Quimper to the relaxed atmosphere of this book. But, I still really enjoy the issues and respect Grant for making such a bold change of tone.

I've taken down my posts on The Invisibles because they're all coming out in book form. The book, Our Sentence is Up, features revised and expanded versions of each blog post, covering every issue of The Invisibles, plus an extensive interview with Morrison himself. Visit your local comic store and order a copy now!

Thursday, April 26, 2007

The Invisibles Vol. 3 #12: 'Satanstorm: Part 1: Common People'

After the comfortable group vibe of Volume II, Volume III is a bit jarring. All the characters we’d grown attached to are gone, we’ve got the stylized art of Phil Bond, and all of a sudden return to a plotline that was seemingly abandoned a long time ago. The first time through, it was very frustrating. I just wanted the old crew back together, on rereads, once I know what to expect, it’s more interesting. There’s a lot of crazy stuff going on here, and, while not as strong as Volume II, it certainly has its merits....

I've taken down my posts on The Invisibles because they're all coming out in book form. The book, Our Sentence is Up, features revised and expanded versions of each blog post, covering every issue of The Invisibles, plus an extensive interview with Morrison himself. Visit your local comic store and order a copy now!

The Invisibles Vol. 2 #22: 'The Tower'

The Volume closes with another masterpiece, that wraps up the loose ends of ‘Black Science 2’ and gives us a kind of resolution for the Volume’s central moral conflict. As something of a cleanup issue, this one isn’t normally hailed as a series highlight, but it is one for me. There’s a ton of great stuff here, Jack’s vision, the King Mob/Mason dialogue, and some final resolution for Boy. This is essentially the end of the line for the series we knew. Volume II was all about a tightly focused look at a small group of characters, and that’s why I love it. We get to know these people so well, and see the world through their eyes. Volume III, while great, is less intimate. I respect Volume III, but I love Volume II. The series was never as emotionally powerful as it was here, and without Robin, things just couldn’t be the same. Boy is gone, the team is fractured, this is the last time we’ll see them together, and it’s a nice farewell....

I've taken down my posts on The Invisibles because they're all coming out in book form. The book, Our Sentence is Up, features revised and expanded versions of each blog post, covering every issue of The Invisibles, plus an extensive interview with Morrison himself. Visit your local comic store and order a copy now!

The Invisibles Vol. 2 #21: 'All Tomorrow's Parties'

‘All Tomorrow’s Parties’ is one of the best issues of the entire series, and the most emotionally affecting. This one issue really makes me believe in King Mob and Robin’s relationship, it’s only when they must separate that they realize how special they are to each other. On top of this grand sadness, we get some great insights into Robin’s past, and some critical thematic stuff for the series as a whole. Not a bad haul for 22 pages.

We open with Robin’s hallucinogenic memories of different times, her entire life collapsed into a couple of pages. It’s interesting that Satan is one of the figures she sees, is she remembering him from what happened in ‘Arcadia’? That probably makes the most sense. I’m a bit confused about what Robin we’re seeing on the title page. I’d guess that this is Robin when she left the future and returned to 1988....

I've taken down my posts on The Invisibles because they're all coming out in book form. The book, Our Sentence is Up, features revised and expanded versions of each blog post, covering every issue of The Invisibles, plus an extensive interview with Morrison himself. Visit your local comic store and order a copy now!

Wednesday, April 25, 2007

The Invisibles Vol. 2 #20: 'Black Science 2: Part 4: Schroedinger's Cats'

This issue is one of my top three in the entire series, along with the next, ‘All Tomrrow’s Parties,’ and the final issue, ‘Glitterdammerung!’ The other two issues all about hopping through time, taking advantage of the series’ richly developed cosmology to craft something that could only be done in a serial work like this. This one is like the ultimate action movie climax, filled with crazy action and wonderful concepts. Weston’s art is amazing, and some new information in this issue brilliantly blurs the line between fiction and reality, reader, writer and character.....

I've taken down my posts on The Invisibles because they're all coming out in book form. The book, Our Sentence is Up, features revised and expanded versions of each blog post, covering every issue of The Invisibles, plus an extensive interview with Morrison himself. Visit your local comic store and order a copy now!

The Invisibles Vol. 2 #19: 'Black Science 2: Part 3: Pavlov's Dogs'

This issue kicks things into high gear, with some of the craziest images Weston has conjured to date, it’s the start of a four issue run that’s as strong as any in comics history. These issues are dense, challenging and most of all, energizing. They leave you full of joy at the possibilities of storytelling. These are simultaneously as thematically rich as any issues in the series’ run, and as surface shiny. It’s Morrison’s great work ever, and that’s really saying something....

I've taken down my posts on The Invisibles because they're all coming out in book form. The book, Our Sentence is Up, features revised and expanded versions of each blog post, covering every issue of The Invisibles, plus an extensive interview with Morrison himself. Visit your local comic store and order a copy now!

Tuesday, April 24, 2007

The Invisibles Vol. 2 #18: 'Black Science: Part 2: Einstein's Monsters'

The cover of this issue is great, really creepy looking, and fitting perfectly with what’s going on in the book at this point. Unfortunately, we’re missing Chris Weston on art once we get inside the book. Ivan Reis does a pretty good job of filling in, but reading the series in trade, it’s pretty clear that whatever rushing was done to meet the monthly schedule wasn’t worth it. It would have been better to let the artists take their time, and put out the best book possible. With a book like this, I’m assuming most of the audience was pretty devoted, and a one month delay wouldn’t make a huge difference in readership. Yes, it’d be frustrating, but in the long run, it would be worthwhile....

I've taken down my posts on The Invisibles because they're all coming out in book form. The book, Our Sentence is Up, features revised and expanded versions of each blog post, covering every issue of The Invisibles, plus an extensive interview with Morrison himself. Visit your local comic store and order a copy now!

The Invisibles Vol. 2 #17: 'Black Science 2: Part 1: Newton's Sleep'

‘Black Science 2’ is the climax of Volume II, the fusion of the best qualities of Volume I and Volume II. The original ‘Black Science’ was all about showy cool, a totally overwhelming sensory experience. Here, we’ve got all that, but there’s also another thematic layer, more empathy and emotion. The more aggressive, violent Invisibles ultimately fail, while Fanny and Jack, who can see beyond the war, succeed in creating real chaos, and forwarding the cause....

I've taken down my posts on The Invisibles because they're all coming out in book form. The book, Our Sentence is Up, features revised and expanded versions of each blog post, covering every issue of The Invisibles, plus an extensive interview with Morrison himself. Visit your local comic store and order a copy now!

Monday, April 23, 2007

The Sopranos: 'Remember When' (6x15)

“Remember When,” much like the series as a whole, deals with people who are past their prime, and the generational conflict between emulating and denigrating ones elders. It’s an intense hour, with a lot of strong material, but it’s also a weaker episode than the two that opened the season. But, I don’t think there’s ever been a bad Sopranos episode, and the only frustrating thing about this one is that it means we’ve got to wait a week to see the next one.

I’ve been rewatching the first half of the season on DVD, and I think a large part of what gave it its bad reputation is the fact that it was just so frustrating to have to wait a week between episodes. Watched all in a row, they flow really well, and quite a lot happens. But, particularly with the season finale, I think people just needed more to carry them over the year hiatus. The season, particularly the second half, was a lot tighter than I remembered it, and stands with anything else the series has produced.

As for this episode, much like “Soprano Home Movies,” it begins with something from the past coming back to haunt Tony, in this case, his first kill. The shadow of past events has hung heavy over this entire season, each episode featuring an obsessive rehashing of past traumas that the characters just won’t let go. Ever since the first episode, Tony has talked about how he got into something that was on the way down, and more than ever, the glamour of mob life is disappearing. Tony’s major concern about Paulie is that he doesn’t have a legitimate source of income, would Johnny Boy Soprano have thought about that? Maybe, but Tony would have never saw that side. All that’s left to him is the cool guy standing in front of a cool car.

The series’ initial hook was that Tony was just like you, he had a wife, kids, suburban house, only he was in the mob. With this season in particular, we’ve seen the mob as just like any other business, struggling with corporate expansion, and reduced to increasingly pathetic jobs, like stealing plumbing fixtures in this episode. They’re putting in so many hours, are they getting something they wouldn’t get from working regular jobs? I think part of it is that they’re all addicted to the danger. When Tony and Christopher stole the wine back in “The Ride,” it wasn’t for money, it was because they were bored. In theory, couldn’t Tony legitimately buy plumbing fixtures and resell them?

The reason he doesn’t do that is partially because of family tradition. He’s been raised with certain values, inherited something from his parents, and couldn’t think of any other way of making a living. Also, he does get some benefits, lots of gifts and the luxury of not reporting to a regular office. He does get to make his own rules, and be his own boss. These people have been immersed in a system where all they do is take so long they can’t do any real work. Taking someone else’s money is still a lot of effort, but it’s somehow more satisfying than real labor.

This need to hustle lingers in Junior, even when he’s in prison. The poker game is simultaneously really sad, and a bit inspirational. Junior is making the best of his situation, and for the first time since “Members Only,” he has some agency, even taking on an apprentice to help him. The Junior plot was good, but depressing. It’s not a fun world to spend time in, and watching Carter’s attachment to Junior turn violent was tough.

When I first saw that we were spending so much time with a new character, I wasn’t too happy, but the plot justified its time. With only six episodes left, it’s starting to get to that point where digressions are tough to take. The fewer number of episodes left, the stronger they have to be to justify their presence in the series at this point. A lot of people are speculating this is the last we’ll see of Junior, and if so, it’s a sad, but appropriate end. He’s finally been numbed, all his rage gone, accepting of his fate. The critical moment for me was when he calls Carter Anthony, indicating that he does think of Tony as a son, and even though he’s asking for an apology earlier in the episode, it’s primarily because he just wants to see him again. I would like to see him and Tony have one more scene together, I’m not sure why it would happen, but it’d be nice.

Speaking of sadness, we went deep into Paulie’s world in this episode, and found nothing but loneliness and memories. He tells stories about the past compulsively because he doesn’t have any attachments in the present. The scene with Beansie and Tony was the highlight of the episode for me, as Tony realizes that Paulie loves him because Tony is all he has. I don’t think Tony has looked up to Paulie for a long time, but it’s only now that he realizes how far past him he’s gone. It’s hard to see a former mentor like that, and recognizing just how pathetic Paulie really is is what drives Tony to contemplate killing him on the boat.

Now, it’s unclear whether he is thinking about it, or just wants Paulie to think he’s thinking about it. I’d argue that he wouldn’t do Paulie like that, and it was more a scare tactic. He was testing him with the 90 pound mole joke discussion, and when Paulie wouldn’t talk, his confidence was reassured. It’s odd that he’ll openly talk about killing people, but won’t admit to tell Johnny Sack about the joke. I suppose only one of those acts is a violation of the mob code.

At the end of the episode, Tony tells Carmela that guys like Paulie are the reason they can live in luxury. He works and sends his money up to Tony, and that’s what buys them their stuff. I also think Tony is a bit defensive because he recognizes just how little Paulie has. I’m not sure if what happened strengthened their relationship, or left Tony disgusted by just how far his former idol has fallen.


So far this season, the FBI has been a constant presence, and there’s constantly increasing pressure on Tony. Back in season one, he seemed to be having a lot of fun, now, it’s all work. Even when he’s sleeping with the girl, he’s worried about what she knows about him. He’s forced to borrow money from Hesch, and with New York in turmoil, things will not likely improve.

So, this episode wasn’t the series’ strongest, I’d have loved to check in with Christopher, but I liked the way the two stories complimented each other, and it closed on a sad, haunting note. A lot has been set up, I’m just left wondering if it will ever really pay off. I think it will be impossible to really judge this season until it’s finished. Are all these occurrences building to something, or are they just haphazard events that will lead to a stopping point rather than a climax. I don’t want to see Tony arrested or die, but I do hope that we get a definitive narrative conclusion, some kind of payoff after all this.

The Invisibles Vol. 2 #16: 'Brit Pop is Dead'

‘Brit Pop is Dead,’ much like the previous issue, has some great moments, but never quite gels into anything more than a tease for the end of the volume. There’s so much deception going on here, rereading it, I was left trying to remember what exactly Mason’s scheme was. So, there is some element of discovery. His stuff is the highlight of the issue, not exactly fleshing out the character, but showing more of his surface...

I've taken down my posts on The Invisibles because they're all coming out in book form. The book, Our Sentence is Up, features revised and expanded versions of each blog post, covering every issue of The Invisibles, plus an extensive interview with Morrison himself. Visit your local comic store and order a copy now!

Sunday, April 22, 2007

Crusade: 'War Zone' and 'Racing the Night'

Just a quick note, I’m watching the show with this order, there’s so many floating around, and I can’t really judge for myself which is the best until I’ve seen the show. But, it was recommended, and I’ll roll with it. Onto the series…

The spinoff is always tricky territory. How can you simultaneously please fans of the original series, and create something original that can attract new viewers? This conflict seems to be at the core of JMS’s issues with TNT during the production of the series, and it’s also a tension inherent in the series itself. After a five year journey through Babylon 5, do we have the energy left to invest in another five year saga? Does JMS? We’ll never know for sure, since the show was cut down before its time, but I’ve still got a ways to go, and so far, I’ve been pleasantly surprised with how Crusade’s been going.

That said, I don’t know that Crusade would have ever grown into a show as strong as Babylon 5. I think there’s a basic flaw in the premise, which is pretty much the same as Star Trek and most other sci-fi shows. While the Drakh plague provides a structural element, a goal, it doesn’t change the fact that the series’ premise will inevitably lead to a threat of the week, which will presumably be dealt with in the episode, and then left behind. While there can be interpersonal growth, I don’t think we could ever have the sustained build of the Narn/Centauri War or the Shadow War. Babylon 5 provided a center for action, and even when things spread across the galaxy in the later seasons, the characters weren’t on the move, they were in developed places where story could be built.

Now, it’s obviously difficult to assess a series from two episodes, after two episodes I wasn’t a fan of Babylon 5, but I could see the potential for something great. Here, I think the series is pretty good, but I don’t know that it could ever be much more than that. The strength of Babylon 5 was never the standalone plots. It was the way narrative arcs crescendoed over seasons, leading to these massive battles like ‘The Long Twilight Struggle’ or ‘The Fall of Centauri Prime.’ That’s what made the series special for me.

The other thing that made it special was two characters: Londo and G’Kar. Right from the first episode, they outshone the makeup and created fully believable, charismatic, morally ambiguous characters. As I mentioned many times in my reviews, the human characters very rarely captured my interest, primarily because they lacked any real sort of moral ambiguity. It’s early to say, but so far, nobody’s jumping out with G’Kar/Londo potential.

Galen would be the obvious point of interest, and was set up well in A Call to Arms, but so far, he’s been there just to be ambiguous and intercede at a crucial point in the story. He reminds me a lot of early Kosh, but having him do stuff like save Gideon in ‘Racing the Night’ makes it difficult to justify his lack of involvement at other times. I’d rather see him fully involved, but with some limits on his power. He is the most charismatic character here, and I want to know more about him, but I worry that he’s going to be used as a crutch for the writers.

Captain Gideon has a bit more attitude than Sheridan or Sinclair, and Gary Cole is certainly a stronger central presence for the series than Michael O’Hare was. I think JMS learned a lot about writing believable characters during his time on Babylon 5, and this show feels much more real, and much fresher than the early days of Babylon 5. That makes sense, it was six years later, but it’s also a result of his growth.

The other character I’m most interested in so far is Dureena. She’s the most morally ambiguous figure, and is a type we haven’t seen before in the B5 universe. I’d like to see her relationship with Galen further developed, in ‘Racing the Night,’ we find out that she wants technomage training, and I’m guessing that she would have become Galen’s apprentice if the series had went on. I’m getting a very Jedi vibe from Galen, and I think it would have been cool to explore his techniques in a more in depth way. As it is here, she’s mainly in an action role, which works fine. She’s definitely a post Buffy heroine, particularly reminding me of Faith.

One of my major issues with the first two episodes, if any episodes can actually be called first in this screwy ordered series, is that they both feature a variation of JMS’s obsession with archaeological digs, and ancient cultural objects found via excavation. This showed up occasionally in Babylon 5, showed up a lot in the TV movies, and now returns again. It seems like the premise of the series will allow JMS to rely a bit too much on the random ancient civilization plots to provide material for episodes.

The production value throughout was a lot higher than most Babylon 5 episodes. Effects have come a long way, and ‘Racing the Night’ in particular had a lot of impressive sequences. However, I think there’s more stuff designed just to show off the effects, like Gideon’s ride through the city. The best effects moments in B5 were the ones that actually forward the narrative, here JMS is using them more for spectacle, and the effects aren’t good enough to justify that.

The weakest effects are the Drakh in ‘War Zone,’ looking like really lame costumes, and the PPG blasts aren’t much better. Having the major foe be so goofy looking takes you out of the world of the story. But, in general, it’s a big improvement from even the best work on Babylon 5.

The credits of the show were an interesting change of pace from B5. The goal seems to be to provide a lot of quick exposition about the show’s premise, and it does that effectively. I like the tie in to the Vorlons/Shadows, with the questions “Who are you” and “what do you want.” I was surprised to see Captain Lochley in the credits, she hasn’t turned up yet, but presumably she’ll be in a bunch of episodes down the line.

I approached the show as something totally different from B5, so I take references to the universe as a bonus, not an expectation. It was really cool to see the Brakhiri and Drazi back at the beginning of ‘Racing the Night.’ I think B5 ended at the right time, so it’s not like Buffy, where I was desperate to see some more of the characters. Other than Londo, I have no particular need to see the people from Babylon 5. It’d be a nice bonus, but it’s not a necessity. The only character who would really fit on the show is Marcus, but alas, he was cut down before his time.

Reading about ‘War Zone,’ it’s clear that JMS was not happy to have to make this episode. On the one hand, I totally sympathize with his anger at network meddling. He’d proved that he could make a popular show, and if left to his own devices, Crusade would have probably kept a lot of the B5 audience. However, I also think he’s a bit of a petty guy, going back to B5. I don’t know the full story about Keffer back in season two, but it seems like he refused to develop this character and then killed him off just to spite the network. Watching season one, I was thinking that he could have used a Han Solo style character, with some attitude, and maybe he should have used the studio suggestion to his advantage, not done something that was somewhat baffling for a viewer, have this guy around for a while, not develop him, then kill him. You can see similar behavior when he puts in the title at the end of ‘Deconstruction of Falling Stars,’ giving a petty chastising to all the critics who said the show wouldn’t survive.

Now, I don’t know the full extent of the TNT involvement, maybe it was really awful, but I can’t help but think that he could have run with their requests, not just bitched about them. If they wanted him to make an episode introducing the characters, then use it as a chance to give some more in depth characterization. Certainly, these people still had a ways to go in ‘Racing the Night.’ I’d imagine his resistance had at least some part in the show being cancelled. Of course, it’d probably be better to go down with the show he wanted to do then compromise his vision. But still, I think there’s some midground between total rejection and online bitching at TNT, and just accepting their suggestions outright.

All this and I feel like I’ve barely touched on the episodes themselves. I was entertained, but not wowed. I feel like B5, even at its worst, had a sense of purpose and build. Here, it’s good in the moment, but I don’t know that it will all click into something bigger. B5 had a closed universe, a few groups who we got to know in depth. Here, it’s such a big world, I feel like we can never get that mastery. And that’s the ultimate flaw I see with the series as it moves forward. Of course, it never actually did move forward, so it didn’t become a problem. If nothing else, it’s a huge jump in production values and acting from the vast majority of B5.

The Invisibles Vol. 2 #15: 'The Philadelphia Experiment'

After the overture last issue, ‘The Philadelphia Experiment’ goes a bit more in depth, setting up the major issues at play in the Volume closing ‘Black Science II.’ There’s a lot of brilliant stuff in this issue, but it’s a bit restricted by the need to set up so many plot points.

We open with Takashi, now a total believer in the possibilities of the time machine. The opening instruction, “Imagine we could move in time the way we move in space” is all about creating in the reader this 4-D perception of time. Reading the series through this time, I see a lot of moments that seem designed to ease the reader into this view of time, and I’m totally following what he’s saying. But, I remember reading the series for the first time, it took me until the revelation of the time worm in 3.2 to fully understand this concept. I got that Robin could jump through different times, but I didn’t realize that they were all one until then. But, all these hits throughout the series are part of creating that mentality....

I've taken down my posts on The Invisibles because they're all coming out in book form. The book, Our Sentence is Up, features revised and expanded versions of each blog post, covering every issue of The Invisibles, plus an extensive interview with Morrison himself. Visit your local comic store and order a copy now!

The Invisibles Vol. 2 #14: 'Only Lovers Left Alive'

A quick note first, I've got some non-Invisibles posts coming up later today, including the first review of Crusade, a look at the new Sopranos, and tomorrow, a look at the new Heroes. But, for now, more Invisibles.

Kissing Mister Quimper is my favorite book of all time. This may seem ridiculous, to say that the sixth volume of a comic book is better than everything written in the previous thousands of years of human existence, but I can think of nothing else ever written that is simultaneously so emotional, so cool, so thought provoking, so challenging and mind expanding. Rereading this book for the first time, I was stopping on nearly every page just to put the pieces together and attempt to fully comprehend what I was reading, and by the end I thought I understood what Morrison was saying. Volume III quickly obliterated that idea, but my love of the Volume persists. This is The Invisibles to me, everything great about the series contained in one volume....

I've taken down my posts on The Invisibles because they're all coming out in book form. The book, Our Sentence is Up, features revised and expanded versions of each blog post, covering every issue of The Invisibles, plus an extensive interview with Morrison himself. Visit your local comic store and order a copy now!