Comic books

Beard: Horror comic slices through its rivals

Written by Jim Beard | | news@toledofreepress.com

Fans of Avatar Comics’ Crossed think of “The Walking Dead” as a comedy. Since 2008, the infamous comic book horror series has offered an even bleaker, grimmer and more violent alternative to the usual zombie fare, and returns with its creator once again at the helm in a new installment. One Toledo comic retailer explained that with no new episodes of “The Walking Dead” in your immediate future, Crossed may fill that same hole — and you may never go back.

“The world of Crossed is by all means worse than that of a zombie apocalypse,” said Jim Collins, owner of JC’s Comic Stop. “With zombies, they are, for the most part, unthinking forces of nature. The Crossed are forces of nature, too, yet anything but unthinking. A plague has brought this horror, and causes a person to become the very worst thing you can imagine. They are bloodthirsty, cannibalistic, sadistic and murderous. Among other things, there’s bestiality … whatever the most evil, vile thoughts a person can have, the Crossed virus brings it out a thousand-fold. The name ‘Crossed’ comes from the rash/wound that forms like a cross on their faces.

“This comic is not for the weak or easily offended. It will offend you. The newest issue, Crossed: Badlands No. 25, takes place in England and is as good a jumping on point as any. If you like seeing humanity at its absolute worst, Crossed is for you.”

Creator Garth Ennis has said that he never intended to roam past the initial 10-issue story from 2008, but that other writers saw new possibilities and continued with his blessing. Crossed now claims five volumes plus a webcomic and a 3-D special. As one might imagine, there’s even been talk of a movie. Avatar has made a name for itself as a publisher of cutting-edge, mature readers material, such as Ferals, Stitched and works by comics legend Alan Moore. Crossed has climbed to a top spot on its roster, most likely fueled by the zombie-mania of the past few years as well as the phenomenon that it may now be surpassing in terms of sheer horror,“The Walking Dead.”

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Comics Rack

Beard: Comics deliver ‘what if?’ scenarios

Written by Jim Beard | | news@toledofreepress.com

Some of the best fiction places the reader in a “what if?” scenario that not only challenges them for answers but delivers a heaping helping of terror. Two such recent comics have intrigued Jim Collins, proprietor of Toledo’s own JC’s Comic Stop. One of them even hitting a little close to home; In Snapshot No. 1, from Image Comics, the lead character works for a comic book store.

“It starts out in San Francisco with Jake Dobson riding his bike through the park,” Collins said. “He finds a smartphone in the grass, picks it up and, after going into work, decides to open it up to see what kind of photos might be on it. He makes a shocking discovery: photos of what appears to be a killing. Suddenly the phone rings and he makes his first mistake … he gives his name. If you find a phone with pictures of a murdered

individual on it, don’t give them your name!”

After finally going to the police, Jake’s trouble deepens as the “murdered” man in the photos appears to reclaim his phone. Jake then decides to go to the “dead” man’s apartment to ask him some questions.

“What happens next is just the start of this four-issue miniseries,” Collins said. “This is intriguing enough to want to see how it all ends. One drawback is that it’s in black and white and the art is very plain.”

Perhaps the big daddy of all “what if?” comics is The Walking Dead, also from Image and coincidentally airing new episodes of its spinoff TV series. The Walking Dead No. 107 is one of the most anticipated issues in a while,” Collins said. “At the end of the last issue the villain Negan, who has Rick’s son Carl, tells Rick he can’t wait to see what he has done to his son. This series continues to show that the most dangerous around are not the zombies themselves, but those that should be banding together to ensure mankind’s survival.

“If you’re watching the TV series and not reading the comic, you truly do not know what you are missing. Buy the trades or the hardcovers to catch up and you’ll thank yourself later.”

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Comics Rack

Beard: New comics deliver terrifying ‘what if?’ scenarios

Written by Jim Beard | | news@toledofreepress.com

Some of the best fiction places the reader in a “what if?” scenario that not only challenges them for answers but also delivers a heaping helping of terror. Two such recent comics have intrigued Jim Collins, proprietor of Toledo’s own JC’s Comic Stop, one of them even hitting a little close to home: In Snapshot #1 from Image Comics, the lead character works for a comic book store.

“It starts out in San Francisco with Jake Dobson riding his bike through the park,” Collins explains. “He finds a smart phone in the grass, picks it up and, after going into work, decides to open it up to see what kind of photos might be on it. He makes a shocking discovery: photos of what appears to be a killing. Suddenly the phone rings and he makes his first mistake … he gives his name. If you find a phone with pictures of a murdered individual on it, don’t give them your name!” After finally going to the police, Jake’s trouble deepens as the “murdered” man in the photos appears to reclaim his phone. Jake then decides to go to the “dead” man’s apartment to ask him some questions. “What happens next is just the start of this four-issue mini-series,” says Collins. “This is intriguing enough to want to see how it all ends. One drawback is that it’s in black and white and the art is very plain.”

Perhaps the big daddy of all “what if?” comics is The Walking Dead, also from Image and coincidentally just kicking off an all-new season of its spin-off TV series. “The Walking Dead #107 has to one of the most anticipated issues in a while,” notes Collins. “At the end of the last issue the villain Negan, who has Rick’s son Carl, tells Rick he can’t wait to see what he has done to his son. This series continues to show that the most dangerous around are not the zombies themselves, but those that should be banding together to ensure mankind’s survival. If you’re watching the TV series and not reading the comic, you truly do not know what you are missing. Buy the trades or the hardcovers to catch up and you’ll thank yourself later.”

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Comics Rack

Marvel delivers holiday hat trick

Written by Jim Beard | | news@toledofreepress.com

It’s an age-old problem: You want to hook someone with a comic book, but somehow issue No. 332 just doesn’t inspire his or her devotion. Luckily, Marvel Comics just put out three brand-new No. 1s, all part of its recent Marvel NOW! series relaunches. Doubly-lucky, Jim Collins of JC’s Comic Stop says they’re more than worth the cover price.

“The new Fantastic Four No. 1 by Matt Fraction and Mark Bagley was very enjoyable with an old-time Marvel feel,” he said. “This has the possibility to be the best the Fantastic Four has been in years. You have Reed doing his whole scientist thing, Ben getting punked by the Yancy Street Gang, Johnny trying to have a date in the Negative Zone and Sue trying to be a mom in this not-so-normal family — oh yeah, there’s dinosaurs, too! Fraction may have found his calling on this book, and Bagley’s art is as top-notch as it can be. This guy was born to draw comics!”

Thor: God of Thunder No. 1 wasn’t quite the Thor comic Collins was expecting.

“Writer Jason Aaron has gone back to Thor’s roots as a god,” he said. “There’s nothing ‘superhero’ about this issue. It starts out in 893 A.D., jumps to the present day, and ends ‘many millennia from now.’ After answering a plea from a universe far away, Thor makes a discovery of lost gods that have been slaughtered, and those responsible are only beginning their god-killing spree. This takes us into the future, where it appears that Thor is the last of his kind. Esad Ribic’s artwork is much like Bagley’s on Fantastic Four; it makes you swear there’s no one better suited to illustrate the Odinson’s tales.”

Rounding out the triumvirate is Indestructible Hulk No. 1 by Mark Waid and Leinil Yu.

“Waid is no stranger to top characters and shows he can write old Jade Jaws with the best of them,” Collins said. “This picks up after the events of Avengers Vs X-Men, when Bruce Banner has come to the conclusion he can’t be ‘cured’ of the Hulk and would rather be working for S.H.I.E.L.D. than always hiding from them. Yu’s art works well in this first issue and I hope that they can get him to stay on the comic for several years.”

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Comic Books

Do comic books — and comic book stores — have a future?

Written by Jim Beard | | news@toledofreepress.com

It’s a funny world. Audiences happily buy tickets to see “Marvel’s The Avengers” and “The Dark Knight Rises” and later shell out even more dough for the DVDs and Blu-rays and related video games. They thrill to the news of a “S.H.I.E.L.D.” TV series, a Wonder Woman film, and sequels to “Thor,” “Captain America” and even “Ant-Man.” License holders rake in profits in the billions of dollars worldwide — while at the same time the source material, the lowly comic book, continues on its downward spiral into obscurity and obsolescence.

Think about that. The three Christopher Nolan-Christian Bale Batman films have garnered billions of dollars in worldwide ticket sales, yet an issue of the Dark Knight’s signature title, Batman, sells a tiny fraction of those numbers. According to www.comichron.com, a website that tracks comic book sales, 2011’s Batman No. 1, a relaunch of the classic series, sold 218,000 copies, then dropped to 133,800 by issue No. 4. The dichotomy between the films and their “parent” is staggering, especially when one considers that without the latter, the former couldn’t exist. The reasons behind this are many and varied and much of it has to do with society’s ever-evolving use of technology.

Jim Collins is owner of JC’s Comic Stop in Toledo.

Industry veteran and longtime writer/editor Mark Waid, who has written for Superman, Justice League, Spider-Man, Archie and many more, said that very same emerging technology may be the comic book’s savior.

“In the past, I’ve not found [the gap between the films and the books] unusual in the least because so few of the people who actually see these films have had easy access to one of the 1,800 or so places in the U.S. that comics are sold,” he said. “But with the digital revolution so firmly under way and digital comics sales doubling every few months, I have higher hopes for the future for audiences to visit the world of comics when all they have to do is open their Web browser or their mobile device.”

Ethan Van Sciver, one of the most popular modern comic book artists (Green Lantern, Superman/Batman, New X-Men and The Flash: Rebirth), said the superhero concept itself is a potential problem for comic books. He noted the “chastisement” the industry gave itself in the 1990s for producing almost nothing but books featuring costumed crimebusters. After that, a movement to make comics more diverse seemed to say that “your Average Joe just didn’t like super-heroes,” though that may have been proven false by the success in recent years of superhero films.

“As it turns out, the evidence shows that almost everyone loves superheroes,” Van Sciver said. “They just lack the gene that lets them connect with them through panel-by-panel visual storytelling. It takes a special kind of person to understand the language of comic books, and to immerse themselves into that world.

“I don’t think the time will come when the success of the movies will lead to a real boost in comic sales long-term, but what I do believe is that the movies will be the new catalyst for the next generation of comic book readers. I found comic books because the Christopher Reeve ‘Superman’ films had a big impression on me as a child, and I already loved to draw and to read. Comic book fans will always be a small minority, a fraction of the public at large. But they will always be there.”

The history of translating film success to comic book sales has been a roller coaster since Batman enjoyed a boost from his infamous 1966-68 TV series.

From 1965 to 1966, Batman sales nearly doubled, from 454,000 to 899,000. But by the end of the decade, his wings were once again clipped to a measly 355,000. Conversely, a decade later the Man of Steel saw little surge in his sales power after “Superman: The Movie” hit theaters. He was selling just 235,000 copies on average in 1977 – by 1979 Superman had creeped up to 246,000. Today, the Avengers comic sells around 67,000 units, despite its spinoff film becoming the third-highest grossing movie in history.

Again, why the disparity? Though comics still carry the stigma of being “kiddie” fare, in truth they haven’t really been for kids since the late 1960s and early 1970s. The average person on the street might be surprised by the barriers that have been struck down in the past four decades, allowing for themes, situations and language that would have been swiftly censored in the golden age of the 1940s and ’50s. Back then, a comic book was aimed at children and sold on the average of a million copies each issue — and had little competition for its entertainment value. Today, why bother with unmoving, static images on paper when you can see a film, watch a TV show or play the latest video game?

Toledo’s comic shop owners and managers tend to agree with the industry creators. Ed Katschke of Monarch Cards & Comics calls the medium a “niche market designed to appeal to a smaller demographic group,” not to a mass audience.

“Their true value lies in the strength of their core concepts,” he said. “Once these concepts have been shown to be appealing to their niche market, it is easy for creators in other mediums to see how they can be expanded to a larger audience. And while all of these different mediums often have elements in common, they are also different enough that their presentation brings out different strengths in assorted concepts. A comic book is not a movie which is not a TV show, but a strong idea like Superman can be adapted to work well in any of these mediums.

“Serialized fiction can be a hard sell for regular book vendors and it is even more difficult in regards to the monthly publishing schedule of most comics,” Katschke said. “Comics will always remain a niche market, albeit one that will always exist if for no other reason than to continue feeding other mediums with entertaining characters and concepts.”

“I find it sad that those films make that kind of money and the comics industry sees so little reward,” said Jim Collins, owner of JC’s Comic Stop. “There’s nothing to drive them to want to read the comics. Warner/DC tried with “Green Lantern” by inserting a plug for its books, but it was at the very end of the film. It was throwing us [comic retailers] a bone, so they could say ‘we tried.’ I have seen crossover sales from “The Walking Dead,” but I believe it’s because they push its graphic novel source. I’m glad for the sales, but it really ticks me off saying ‘graphic novel,’ because it came from a comic book. It’s like they’re afraid to use that name.”

The current comic industry’s output has perhaps never been more diverse but the strange lack of true advertising to a potentially wider audience only lends even more shame to the story of its growing impotence. It’s a well that filmmakers continue to plumb for ideas, though little of their success bounces back to the source.

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Comics Rack

DC delays comic in wake of shootings

Written by Jim Beard | | news@toledofreepress.com

Some days, you just can’t buy a Batman comic. “Out of respect for the victims and families in Aurora,” DC Comics made an official request to all comic retailers to postpone the sale of  Batman Incorporated No. 3 for one month, citing “content that may be perceived as insensitive in light of recent events.” Comic books shops across the nation had already received the issue in question, making the industry giant’s concerns more a request than an edict; presumably, no sanctions will be imposed on any retailer that sells the book before the new on-sale date of Aug. 22.

“While I am as horrified as the next person by the event in Colorado last week, I have to confess that I see little connection between James Holmes’ killing spree and the Batman franchise, movie or comics,” said Ed Katschke of Monarch Cards & Comics. “This issue of Batman Incorporated has absolutely nothing within its pages that refers directly or indirectly to any sort of civilian massacre. This leads me to suspect that DC is either oversensitive to the point of being ridiculous or cynically trying to raise public interest in its comics through an empty gesture. Rather than offer up a fictional character as a sacrificial goat to this tragedy, I suggest we lay the blame squarely at the feet of its perpetrator.”

Jim Collins of JC’s Comic Stop concurs.

“I saw no reason to delay the book,” he said. “In fact, we have ours out for sale. They said it was out of respect for the victims, but if Warner/DC wanted to do something out of respect for the victims, how about not having ‘The Dark Knight Rises’ shown for the rest of that weekend or delay it for a month? Oh, that’s right, they would have lost hundreds of millions at the box office, so make the comic shop the ones you punish with a comic that sells, what, 60,000 copies? Having us not put the comic out is meaningless. I’ve had no one inquire about the comic and, by the way, it’s far less violent than the recent issue of Batman: The Dark Knight that has children kidnapped and tortured.”

With the shooter’s alleged claim to be a certain famous Bat-villain, one wonders what that might mean for an upcoming high-profile Joker story in October’s Batman No. 13. Time will tell just how sensitive the venerable company truly is — or how lucrative its native homicidal maniac can be.

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Comics

DC comic wields power of Grayskull

Written by Jim Beard | | news@toledofreepress.com

Despite the buzz of “Forward” in the air these days, it’s nostalgia that drives us as a society, most notably in pop culture. Take that little known cartoon, “He-Man and the Masters of the Universe,” which ran from 1983 to 1985 — who would have imagined that almost 30 years later we’d be excited for a new  “He-Man” comic book series? DC Comics, that’s who. And not only do they want to please the old-school Eternia fans, they want to move forward, too.

“He-Man and the Masters of the Universe No. 1 is from writer James Robinson and artist Philip Tan,” said Jim Collins of Toledo’s own JC’s Comic Stop. “This is not your father’s He-Man. The story starts out with Prince Adam, who is not a prince but a lowly woodsman. He seems pretty content with his life, cutting trees and taking care of his elderly sire. However, he does feel there is more out there for him on Eternia.

He-Man

“As he ventures out he encounters Beast Man who seems to know much more about Adam than he himself does. Adam proves he doesn’t need to be He-Man — yet — to outthink and defeat the muscle-bound Beast Man. Along the way he befriends a bird named Zoar and they continue their adventure unaware that the evil Skeletor is keeping track of him. This new series has the potential of being something the cartoon series, in my opinion, never was … great.”

Zombies can also appear under the guise of nostalgia, seeing as how we’ve been fascinated with them for hundreds of years. The Walking Dead, the comic that inspired the TV series, is so old now that it may actually count as nostalgia to look back at its landmark 100 issues.

“Walking Dead No. 100 is a milestone for the ‘Little Series that Could’,” Collins said. “Hard to believe it’s up this high, but it’s true. Written by series creator Robert Kirkman and longtime series artist Charles Adlard, there’s a total of nine different covers for No. 100 to celebrate this achievement.

“Part Four of the ‘Something to Fear’ story promises to be one of the most brutal and violent encounters that Rick Grimes and his band of survivors have had to deal with yet. Rick has decided not to give in to a gang promising protection and this issue is a direct reaction to that. Now, that’s a bold statement considering what has come before with the classic Governor/prison storyline. For myself, as I’m counting out this week’s inventory, the world will come to a stop once I find this issue. I cannot wait to — pun intended — eat it up.”

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Comic Books

May 5 is Free Comic Book Day

Written by Jim Beard | | news@toledofreepress.com

If there’s an equivalent to a national holiday in the comic industry, it’s Free Comic Book Day. For the past several years, on the first Saturday of May in comic shops across the country, thousands of die-hard fans and interested newbies have lined up at their favorite comic book emporiums to get free swag and revel in the joys of the hobby.

Toledo comic shops are once again preparing for the onslaught of customers this Saturday, May 5. JC’s Comic Stop on Reynolds Road is giving away the special free books and will also sport sale proces on many of its usual items. Proprietor Jim Collins said he is looking forward to seeing everyone who attended last year and will heavily promote the Comic Stop’s eBay and Facebook pages. Over at Monarch Cards & Comics at Key Street and Heatherdowns Boulevard, manager Ed Katschke will mix in free cookies and pizza with his Free Comic Book Day offerings, “while supplies last.”

Two of the exclusive free titles this year have caught the attention of the two comic book gurus.

“The one I think is very cool would have to be ‘Mouse Guard,’” Collins noted. “Why? Well, it’s a hardcover, for one, and if I would have known this when ordering I would have ordered lots more. This is one slick book. Contents features “Mouse Guard,” “Labyrinth,” “Time of the Dapper Men,” “Rust,” “Cursed Pirate Girl” and “Cow Boy.” Anyone that is hoping to get one of these had better be at the shop first thing on Saturday — I only ordered 12!”

“Many of the Free Comic Book Day titles this year are aimed at either general audiences or younger readers, but there is one that is guaranteed to appeal to older readers,” Katschke said.

“DC Comics will feature a preview chapter of its much-anticipated adaptation of the novel ‘The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo.’ Adapted by horror novelist Denise Mina and illustrated by Leonardo Manco and Andrea Mutti, this title goes a long way toward showing the comic industry has more to offer than standard superhero fare for the discriminating reader.”

Other Free Comic Book Day titles include such properties as “Star Wars,” “Transformers,” “Avengers,” “Yo Gabba Gabba!” “Dune,” “Smurfs,” “Voltron Force,” “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” and “Animal Planet.”

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Marvel co-publishes ‘artist edition’ with rival

Written by Jim Beard | | news@toledofreepress.com

As the old saying goes, keep your friends close and your enemies closer. Industry leader Marvel Comics has taken that to a new degree by allowing rival IDW Publishing to print a new high-priced “Artist Edition” honoring one of Marvel’s legendary artists and characters. According to IDW, an “Artist Edition” prints famous stories scanned in color from the original artwork at full size so that fans may see all the “paste-overs, blue pencils … editorial notes, art corrections” and more from the actual pages.

The new “John Romita’s The Amazing Spider-Man” edition of the series has Jim Collins of JC’s Comic Stop pretty jazzed.

“What makes this a must-have?” he asks. “First, it’s the size of the original art, 12-inches-by 17-inches, 152 pages and contains scans of the original art from Amazing Spider-Man Nos. 67-69, 71, 75, 84 and some unpublished covers from the time period, too. John Romita may not have been the first Spider-Man artist — that honor will always be Steve Ditko’s — but Romita made the character his own and Spidey went to a different level with his artwork.

“This collection is a tribute to that which was Romita’s Spidey. Looking through this masterpiece takes me back to when I was lucky enough to have had these issues as they came out from 1968 to 1970. It also makes me wish I owned some of these pages myself — fat chance since the average page from this collection would set you back several thousands of dollars.

“I want to make copies of the pages from this book so I can frame them. The storytelling is very powerful and does not rely on the colorist to pretty up the art. This is the truest form, as raw as raw gets. So, if you claim to be a Romita or Amazing Spider-Man fan and this edition is not yet in your collection … shame on you. Go out and purchase it; do it today.”

The next two volumes of IDW’s “Artist Edition” feature the legendary Will Eisner’s “The Spirit” and Marvel’s “Daredevil: Born Again.” Sometimes you just need a little help from your friends — or your rivals.

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Comics Rack

New comics picks: past, present, future

Written by Jim Beard | | news@toledofreepress.com

I’ve said it many times before: there’s never been a more diverse selection of themes and topics in the comics industry than right now. Jim Collins of Toledo’s own JC’s Comic Stop has new titles in his current picks that encompass a movie tie-in celebrating one of the most legendary and venerable superhero teams of all and a mature-readers book that echoes the UFO paranoia of the 1950s with a topical, modern edge.

“Those who want to be ahead of the curve when the ‘Avengers’ film drops would want to read this,” Collins said of The Avengers Prelude: Fury’s Big Week No. 1. “It gives some great insight into the forming of the group as everything comes together. You see the search for Captain America, the disturbance in New Mexico involving Thor, inside info-dealing with Tony Stark from the ‘Iron Man 2’ film and more. It’s a fun read and it should prove to make the ‘Avengers’ film that much more enjoyable. However, if you’re thinking of picking up this comic, I would not wait too long — I suspect that not many copies are going to be found in the area.”

On the DC Comics side of the pool, the company’s Vertigo imprint is launching several new titles, one of which has piqued Collin’s interest over the others.

“Saucer Country by writer Paul Cornell and artist Ryan Kelly deals with a New Mexico governor, Arcadia Alvarado, running for the office of United States president and dealing with immigration issues, budgets cuts and, oh, lets also throw an alcoholic ex-husband into the mix, too,” he said. “Sounds like that would be enough to make a good comic, but wait, there’s more! On the way to campaigning, Arcadia has an encounter that leaves her with horrible, hazy memories and she feels an even greater need to become president, if only to expose the ‘truth’ and save the world. So, if you’re into alien abduction and dirty politics set in the Southwest, this comic may very well be for you.”

Among the other new Vertigo titles hitting this month is The New Deadwardians, an alternate-reality Edwardian London where almost everybody is either a zombie (the masses) or a vampire (the elite) and Heaven help you if you’re a normal human stuck in the middle.

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