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Post by coffeeaddict on Nov 16, 2017 23:44:28 GMT
James Bond, the Main Range Dynamite Entertainment comics specifically. Vargr, Eidolon and Black Box. Got to say, I'm impressed. I didn't think I'd enjoy them as much as I did. I have a great fondness for cinematic Bond, but literary Bond is a bit sketchier and that's largely down to Fleming's own ideological slant. Kingsley Amis's novel, Colonel Sun, was a far less roughshod in that regard while still retaining the aesthete of a Bond story. It's definitely one of the better continuations and the comics seem to have followed that thoroughfare. This interpretation is very much Fleming's Bond, but without the rather nasty bigotry and dogma. I could easily see him being played by a colder Henry Cavill. The first story, Vargr, feels very much like it could've been taken from the first half of the canon, sometime before From Russia with Love. And yet, it doesn't shy away from its contemporary setting. The twenty-first century is front-and-centre with chemical therapy, surgical prosthesis, genetic virology, the list goes on. All in all, it feels rather small scale, despite the global ramifications of the villain's plot. Kurjak himself leaves quite an impression, especially in his final scene. Quite twisted, but hardly larger-than-life and with an explication that's disturbingly simple. Eidolon I don't think I enjoyed as much, but that's largely down to its depiction of SPECTRE. Its exploration of the divide between MI5 and MI6 was quite interesting though. As was its reinvention of Bond's friendship with Felix Leiter and the CIA as "frenemies" who he seems to have a hot-cold relationship with. It makes his character far more memorable. Unfortunately, the story itself just seemed to feel a bit too routine, there was a much needed additional dimension that just seemed to be missing. Black Box has got to be my favourite, it's much closer to the post- Dr No "man fighting with giant squid" school of Bond tales without going overboard. Just a touch of hyperbole to make it fun. Genji feels like a mild exaggeration of the classic Information Age shadow broker. The link between knowledge and power is just an upload away. His hired assassin, No Face, allows for Bond to make an important distinction between being cold on the outside and dead on the inside. The "Bond girl" of this particular outing, Selah, even prompts a bit of exploration in her devotion to morals juxtaposed with 007's devotion to duty. She reminds me a little of Melina Havelock from For Your Eyes Only, a character who exists more than just as someone for Bond to court, and it's a welcome addition. All in all, it's shaping up to be something rather good. I'd definitely recommend Black Box to anyone interested in picking up the series. It uses its darkness to say something rather meaningful about scars and it manages to be rather fun to boot. They are fantastic. Be sure to pick up Hammerhead and the Felix Leiter books. There's a Moneypenny series too.
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Post by rran on Nov 26, 2017 5:56:02 GMT
Dan Dare # 1
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Post by whiskeybrewer on Nov 27, 2017 12:59:52 GMT
Aliens: Defiance #10
Iron Maiden: Legacy of the Beast #1
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Post by coffeeaddict on Dec 4, 2017 21:55:44 GMT
Read James Bond: Felix Leiter and Anno Dracula - 1895: Seven Years in Meyhem. Both were excellent. I hope Titan does more Anno Dracula comics.
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Post by omega on Dec 6, 2017 8:53:07 GMT
Just Nightwing #34 today. Some aesthetic observations, the Rebirth banner on the top is gone (and that means the story arc is no long there either) and the sidebar is more in line with what Marvel are doing. There's more pages inside promoting upcoming storylines including a Super Sons of Tomorrow crossover between Superman, Super Sons and Teen Titans titles which promises to be "a 5-part game changing crossover event". Like the Superman books haven't had enough of those already (in the last six months we've had Superman Reborn and The Oz Effect, both with Superman as the focus and Doomsday Clock has just started). Thank god some of these titles ship twice monthly.
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Post by rran on Dec 12, 2017 8:41:44 GMT
I would like to try some Star Wars comics from the Rebellion era - somewhere around post Revenge of the Sith and pre New Hope. Any suggestions or recommendations?
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Post by Deleted on Dec 27, 2017 2:50:51 GMT
Can't wait for my copy of Phoenix Ressurection to arrive in the mail. I've been reading a lot of collected X-Men and I can't wait to see Jean return. So, it looks like Jean and the Phoenix are going to be done from the X-Men: Red #1 cover.
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Post by Deleted on Dec 27, 2017 12:07:00 GMT
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Post by Deleted on Dec 31, 2017 3:38:20 GMT
A Doctor Who comic story by Dan Abnett called Cuckoo. Who in the 1990s fascinates me because it developed its own style and ethos that ended up wholly distinct from the programme it was based on. The series didn't remain in stasis, staying as it had since 1989, it evolved, matured and grew with the times. This tale seems almost like a distillation of everything that would have been considered Who-ish in 1994. Not remarkable like Pureblood (which opened up the Sontarans in a way not seen until maybe Shakedown) or Emperor of the Daleks (which has all the hallmarks of what JMS called a Wham Episode, particularly with Up Above the Gods...), but an interesting sidestep all the same. We've got a Seventh Doctor whose arrival in the TARDIS scares the hell out of a small boy sent down into the cellar. He's concerned not with the petty politics of 1855 Earth, but instead with the wider fabric of history and has arrived with a mission and express intent. Ace is battle-hardened and far less tolerant of others' condescension than even her younger self would likely be. Benny is, as she was always, the most human of the three and the most overtly compassionate with the people they meet. The villain of the piece has a surprisingly three-dimensional motivation that is coloured by his alien values and biases. And lastly, it deals with a heady subject matter, in this case -- prejudice. Towards gender and species both. They did a surprising number of these comic stories that linked directly into the NAs and it's remarkable juxtaposing the straightlaced, almost Sapphire and Steel pre-1995 stories with the post-TVM -- for want of a better word -- bounce of the Pratchettesque adventures of the Eighth Doctor. The gear change here is remarkable. Not bad, not by any stretch of the imagination, but still quite revelatory. We go from a cast of anti-heroes in an increasingly nasty universe to, well, something far less grim. There's still consequences and grotesqueries, sure, but there's an optimism there wasn't before. I have to wonder if the TVM had something to do with that...
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Post by Deleted on Jan 9, 2018 13:38:59 GMT
Will defiantly be picking up Exiles. Grizzled Kamela Khan is defiantly an intriguing proposition
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Post by Deleted on Jan 14, 2018 22:51:29 GMT
Haven't received last week's comics yet in the mail, but: PHOENIX RESSURECTION IS GREAT, GUYS. I know it's all about the journey, BUT OH MY GOD, WHAT A JOURNEY. Also: you guys really need to pick up Rogue and Gambit. It's a mature take on Gambit and Rogue's relationship from both sides. I'm saddened about Iceman winding down, but I understand why. I'm guessing Older Bobby will move to X-Men: Red?
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melkur
Chancellery Guard
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Post by melkur on Jan 14, 2018 23:01:42 GMT
Ok, they're graphic novels, but over the past week or so I've read Alison Bechdel's autobiographies 'Fun Home' and 'Are You My Mother?'
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Post by Deleted on Jan 14, 2018 23:23:30 GMT
Guys, if we want new characters, we REALLY need to support them. I'm picking up Silencer, Sideways and Brimstone.
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Post by Deleted on Jan 16, 2018 10:31:28 GMT
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Post by Deleted on Jan 16, 2018 17:22:11 GMT
A graphic novel for me too. This time, it's the collected Grey Area: This Island Earth from 2000AD. This is how it all started, the story of a colossal holding area housing all manner of aliens hoping to visit earth. Very pertinent, very relevant and very enjoyable. Hopefully there'll be more volumes to come.
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Post by whiskeybrewer on Jan 17, 2018 13:01:02 GMT
Alien: Defiance #4
Iron Maiden: Legacy of the Beast #2
Doctor Who: The Lost Dimension #8 Omega Wow what an ending and it actually worked and weaved in everything from previous issues except the 2 pointless specials in between bar the Jenny stuff.
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Post by omega on Jan 17, 2018 23:12:17 GMT
Alien: Defiance #4 Iron Maiden: Legacy of the Beast #2 Doctor Who: The Lost Dimension #8 Omega Wow what an ending and it actually worked and weaved in everything from previous issues except the 2 pointless specials in between bar the Jenny stuff. The problem with Lost Dimension ironically was that it was too long. As you say the two Specials were pretty much padding. I did appreciate that each TARDIS team in the ongoings got their own issues, as it helped the pacing immensely.
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Post by whiskeybrewer on Jan 18, 2018 13:18:32 GMT
Alien: Defiance #4 Iron Maiden: Legacy of the Beast #2 Doctor Who: The Lost Dimension #8 Omega Wow what an ending and it actually worked and weaved in everything from previous issues except the 2 pointless specials in between bar the Jenny stuff. The problem with Lost Dimension ironically was that it was too long. As you say the two Specials were pretty much padding. I did appreciate that each TARDIS team in the ongoings got their own issues, as it helped the pacing immensely. If they'd cut the specials and put the Jenny stuff in the final pages of other issues, it would have worked better
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Post by rran on Jan 18, 2018 14:11:13 GMT
The problem with Lost Dimension ironically was that it was too long. As you say the two Specials were pretty much padding. I did appreciate that each TARDIS team in the ongoings got their own issues, as it helped the pacing immensely. If they'd cut the specials and put the Jenny stuff in the final pages of other issues, it would have worked better I’m yet to read the last two issues
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melkur
Chancellery Guard
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Post by melkur on Jan 18, 2018 16:52:50 GMT
If they'd cut the specials and put the Jenny stuff in the final pages of other issues, it would have worked better I’m yet to read the last two issues Aside from a few pages here & there when I was at Forbidden Planet, I've yet to read it at all! If FP have a copy of it, I'm planning on getting the two-part 'omnibus' when I'm next in London...
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