What do you get when you cross Spider-Man with the Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt? You get Silk.
Marvel Comics' Silk has become one of my favorite series. It's unique and offers some character development that a lot of series don't. Besides fighting crime, there's the mystery of Silk's life in a bunker, adjusting to life outside the bunker, where her family is now, and her weird sexual connection to Peter Parker. She's Asian, too, which gives some diversity to Marvel's superhero line-up.
The art seems a bit too cartoonish, but it's a well-written series. Check it out!
Friday, October 28, 2016
Teen Titans vs. Champions
With the two Teen Titans series set in the New 52 Universe that truly sucked (not to mention the even worse Ravagers spin-off), I had hopes that the latest Teen Titans series set in DC's Rebirth would return to its New Teen Titans roots, or would at least resemble Geoff Johns' fantastic 2003 series. I've read the Teen Titans: Rebirth #1 issue, and I'm disappointed to report that it doesn't get much better, folks.
Gone are Bunker, the new Power Girl, Wonder Girl (?), and Superboy, with additions of Starfire, the new Kid Flash, and Damian replacing Tim as the Robin on the team, but it still doesn't have that spark or character chemistry that the 1980s or 2003 series had. Everyone just seemed bratty with shitty dialogue, just like the New 52 Teen Titans. This was DC's big opportunity to do something great (again) with the Teen Titans...and they sadly fucked it up (again).
At the same time, I also read (and compared) the first issue of Marvel's new Champions series, which features teenage versions of Avengers characters. Champions captured the spirit of the original 1960s, 1980s, and 2000s Teen Titans (and TV's Young Justice) that DC's "Rebirth" of the Teen Titans should have. Fed up with the adult Avengers, the teenage Ms. Marvel, Totally Awesome Hulk, time-traveling Cyclops, Miles Morales' Spider-Man (boy?), Nova, and Vision's daughter Viv, form their own team. The dialogue isn't cheesy or forced, and the first issue provides a great banding together of members.
Because the Teen Titans were always my favorite growing up, I hate to admit that in the contest of Teen Titans vs. Champions, Champions wins hands down.
Gone are Bunker, the new Power Girl, Wonder Girl (?), and Superboy, with additions of Starfire, the new Kid Flash, and Damian replacing Tim as the Robin on the team, but it still doesn't have that spark or character chemistry that the 1980s or 2003 series had. Everyone just seemed bratty with shitty dialogue, just like the New 52 Teen Titans. This was DC's big opportunity to do something great (again) with the Teen Titans...and they sadly fucked it up (again).
At the same time, I also read (and compared) the first issue of Marvel's new Champions series, which features teenage versions of Avengers characters. Champions captured the spirit of the original 1960s, 1980s, and 2000s Teen Titans (and TV's Young Justice) that DC's "Rebirth" of the Teen Titans should have. Fed up with the adult Avengers, the teenage Ms. Marvel, Totally Awesome Hulk, time-traveling Cyclops, Miles Morales' Spider-Man (boy?), Nova, and Vision's daughter Viv, form their own team. The dialogue isn't cheesy or forced, and the first issue provides a great banding together of members.
Because the Teen Titans were always my favorite growing up, I hate to admit that in the contest of Teen Titans vs. Champions, Champions wins hands down.
Labels:
avengers,
champions,
cyclops,
dc comics,
hulk,
kid flash,
marvel comics,
ms. marvel,
new 52,
new teen titans,
ravagers,
rebirth,
robin,
spider-man,
starfire,
teen titans,
teenage superheroes,
writing
Josie and the Pussyvampires
I previously wrote about my dislike for the new Afterlife with Archie series when it first debuted. After reading a couple of issues, I dropped it.
I picked up the standalone issue of Afterlife with Archie #10 because it featured a spooky rendition of Josie and the Pussycats, and I have a lifelong affinity for them that stems from my childhood when I watched their fabulous short-lived cartoon series. I have to admit that I. FREAKING. LOVED. IT.
The premise is that Josie and the Pussycats are vampires who have been hit musical successes (in their own way) in every decade, but then they fade into obscurity before reinventing themselves the next decade. This fascinated me, and I loved the issue. My only disappointment is that this was a one-off issue, and I don't think there are plans to incorporate them into the regular series' storyline.
I'm still not reading Afterlife with Archie every month, but if they ever bring back Josie and the Pussycats (or give them their own series that could take place in any decade), I definitely will.
I picked up the standalone issue of Afterlife with Archie #10 because it featured a spooky rendition of Josie and the Pussycats, and I have a lifelong affinity for them that stems from my childhood when I watched their fabulous short-lived cartoon series. I have to admit that I. FREAKING. LOVED. IT.
The premise is that Josie and the Pussycats are vampires who have been hit musical successes (in their own way) in every decade, but then they fade into obscurity before reinventing themselves the next decade. This fascinated me, and I loved the issue. My only disappointment is that this was a one-off issue, and I don't think there are plans to incorporate them into the regular series' storyline.
I'm still not reading Afterlife with Archie every month, but if they ever bring back Josie and the Pussycats (or give them their own series that could take place in any decade), I definitely will.
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