Sunday, December 15, 2019

Letter to MAD #11, Feb 2020

MAD #11, Feb 2020

Yuck! I hated it all!

Idiots!

Please send me a new copy of MAD #11, Feb 2020! I hated it. And the vomit inducing odalisque of Mueller soiled my magazine.  I can’t hang this off the roller, my guests use that bathroom.

MAD Unredacts--oh, Alfred, there you are!--started out swell if you’d uh just blacked out the bucktoothed one, but nOOOooo. Not as boring as the actual redacted reads so look at that fantastic Table of Contents, so succinct, legible, informative, factual, filled with thematic content and surrounded by by conscious and deliberate thematic design.  Here we have everything, beautiful hilarious art, political statement, legalism, eye-catching color with hormone inducing associations. As if the spirit of Mr. Gaines had reached out from the cover and grabbed me by the throat screaming “BUY THIS MAG YOU DOPE! Logo, Sergio, crafted elements suggesting hand work alongside traditional informational signals styles, fonts, typefaces, upper and lower cases, spacing, and the brilliant and final COVER ARTIST Mark Summers, with its powerful title and respectful capitalisation, the perfect cherry on this issue!

I liked the rest of it. (More Table of Contents!)

El Griffo

Slackjaw TX 7XXXX

Sunday, February 17, 2019

Review: Batman: Black Label's "Batman: White Knight"

“The Joker Goes Sane!”

...reads the tag line on the back cover of Sean Murphy’s written and pencilled “Batman: White Knight, an initial offering of Detective Comics’ ne Black Label imprint designated for stand-alone stories not intended to fit in continuity and written for grown-ups.  Without any “Batman’s junk” junk, Murphy manages to create a Batman tale with depth, and the Black Label imprint allows him to change the Batman world in a way that 80 years of serial hasn’t allowed. While there is no story that hasn’t been told about Batman, like syndicated television, each story arc must end up back at the status quo so next month we can see more Batman. But the Black label imprint is specifically designed to quarantine stories from mainstream continuity, so, here we go.

One year ago, the Joker accuses Batman of being the worst of the supervillains in Gotham and swears to prove it through the use of a psychosis suppressant drug that will allow him to revert to his original self, Jack Napier.  As Napier, he pursues a campaign to incorporate Batman’s gear and technology into the Gotham constabulary and to eliminate the vigilante elements of the Batman clan’s crimefighting. Only Batman remains absolutely sure the Joker is still a danger while his allies, Jim Gordon, Nightwing, Batwoman, and Batgirl turn against him. Just remember, this is Batman.

Batman created many of his own villains and over nearly a thousand monthly issues, has not managed to deliver Gotham from its ills, and this is what Sean Murphy explores.  He even manages to make Joker plausibly sympathetic without sacrificing internal logic or mainstream continuity. Handling both pencils and writing allows him a creative freedom that allows one to doubt Batman but lead to a satisfying and iconoclastic finish.  Each character’s journey seems natural and logical as they allies and fans begin to doubt Batman and embrace Napier, and Murphy addresses Harley Quinn as two different women more directly and sensibly than readers have seen so far.

While Murphy’s pencils and inks give voice to his specific vision, Matt Hollingsworth’s colors subtly reinforce the more somber tone of this tale and maintain the expression of Murphy’s extensively dry-brush technique, resulting in an eminently worthy addition to the the caped crusader’s ouvre.

Good comics!

Saturday, February 9, 2019

Pillar to Post Issues 22-38!

Black Scientists:

38 issues and every one a Kirbyverse! Imagination fuels existence! My mutated brain, that thinks so much bigger, swelling on layers of layers of layers (I'll have mine with Onionity, thank you) just like the Eververse. I mean, thirty-eight issues of mind bending audacity!

Matteo just cranking out unique design like an eye-treat pinata, cuz what ya gonna do with Remenders brains splattering all around, try to draw it all, I guess, and apparently succeeding.  Like with Paul Pope, I have to up my eye game, can't hardly see how anybody draws in such an idiosyncratic style while reading so clearly, and its just gotten smoother and measured and coarse and chaotic, Remender's nuts concoction of narrative gets amped up to a zillion. 

Remender just throws giant trope pearls into a stew, dropping cavalry realities and subsuming threats like a reality vomiting Marvel and DC crossover giant baby (uh, that doesn't sound like the way I enjoy this book...) It's as if all of imagination is trying to kill Grant McKay.

For a guy whose life went down the turlet like a swirlin turd since the second he pushed the button, Grant's adventure is high drama and fun at the same time. And, as we have learned from a pig farmer from Prydain; it must be adventure because Grant is so miserable so much of the time.

Anyway, centipede death cult, Zirite infestation, fluffy foul-mouthed demon-gods, and Grants, so many Grants, its the grandest Bandersnatch, the choicest Choose Your Own, its any and all of them. 

God, so many individual covers and pages to fawn over, but got comics to read. See you guys again!

Wednesday, February 6, 2019

Manifest Destiny 19-36 Letter

Gentles:

Here we are again and i can't tell you enough how proud i am of this book! Three years of consistent high adventure, weird creatures, repellant history and layers of mystery. That's a high bar. Usually, i trust in low expectations for my happiness, so you guys are gonna ruin me!

"Sasquatch" was painful and luridly grotesque, i guess we will not soon see the end of atrocities that even well intentioned peoples can justify, but i am sure grateful that you guys don't romanticize just the fine elements of such campaigns as have been common in our history. In each case, the sasquatch, the ferzon before and each other later, Dingess, you've managed to make credible and plausible motivations in the members of the mission.

Roberts and Gieni continue to deliver differentiable character design, and a masterful manipulation of page layouts, detail and negative space like the well experienced engineer/artists they have become. I recently reread from issue 1 through to 36 and this facility is one of the greatest strengths of this title. Creature design, authenticity, and consistently powerful covers make Manifest Destiny a regular feast.

While the three different mission timelines was a bit confusing, once i twigged, they created a tremendous interest in the real history and introduced several interesting and psychological, as well as psychodelic, themes that feed perfectly into the long "winter without monsters" of which some complaint has arrived in this letter col.  Don't worry, these stories are fantastic! I loved Irene's revenge without need a translation. And that final confrontation between York and Jensen is great.  I hate that rat-faced bastard, Jensen! Don't dare kill him off.

So, on now to the resolution of Navath, the aftermath of York's mercy, and whatever-the-hell is going on with that latest arch!

'til next time, make mine Manifest Destiny (ya see what i did there? We'll miss you, Stan.)

Griffin Mauser
(like the monster; like the gun)

Sunday, February 3, 2019

Ok to Print Black Science 1-20


Griffin Mauser griffin.mauser@gmail.com

Sun, Jul 17, 2016, 11:30 AM
to writeremender
Gentles:
Been reading since number one; Remender's name was enough to get me to subscribe as I had just discovered Fear Agent.
Black Science ain't funny; it ain't Fear Agent; it is Fantastic!
Frankly I was completely baffled for the first few issues; how alienating to find Grant suddenly everywhere; it's like I am in the middle of a David Lynch movie. But, by issue six I discovered that this is exactly how Grant must feel, and all the dimensionauts. Suddenly it's meta (you can claim it if  I can find it)!
I was unsure about Scalera's pages, too, but after recognizing Grant as ape and as praying mantis, I was convinced.  At first panels seem filled with violence and chaos, and they are, but it reads.  What I see is what I am supposed to see and how Scalera makes it work so well I will never know.
 This is great science fiction with a frantic and exhausting pace; when will they get a little rest? And being lost in infinite worlds is only half their trouble; the rest is being human!
I don't know how much you guys still got in ya, but I intend to read it all.  Thanks for a great time!


--
Griffin (like the monster) Mauser (like the gun)

Manifest Destiny Lettercol as of Issue 21



Griffin Mauser griffin.mauser@gmail.com

Thu, Aug 11, 2016, 3:52 PM

to manifestdestiny
Well, what to say? Twenty-one issues and I am still here every month braggin on you guys. I will miss the Fezron, and wonder about the Sasquatch.  You continue to deliver on both ends; fabulous monsters and intricate relationships within the party. I hope you don't get skipping over encounters; you guys kinda raced through some fine adventures before getting into the Sasquatch.
What's up with Sacajawea and the baby?
Nice cover motif for the arc; an excellent opportunity to show off Gieni's colors. 

God, what do I want that you don't give me? You already got me going back to research the real history. Any chance of tall tales making an  influence? Meat any tough fur traders out there? Beavers?
I love you guys and your book!
Onward!

-- 
Griffin (like the monster) Mauser (like the gun)