Path: ...!weretis.net!feeder8.news.weretis.net!newsfeed.xs3.de!nntp-feed.chiark.greenend.org.uk!ewrotcd!news.eyrie.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail From: dvandom@eyrie.org (Dave Van Domelen) Newsgroups: rec.arts.comics.misc Subject: Dave's Comics and Manga Capsules for September 2024 Date: Mon, 30 Sep 2024 03:16:26 -0000 (UTC) Organization: Coherent Comics UnInc Message-ID: Injection-Date: Mon, 30 Sep 2024 03:16:26 -0000 (UTC) Injection-Info: hope.eyrie.org; logging-data="12833"; mail-complaints-to="news@eyrie.org" X-Newsreader: trn 4.0-test77 (Sep 1, 2010) Originator: dvandom@eyrie.org (Dave Van Domelen) Bytes: 36437 Lines: 537 Dave's Comicbook Capsules Et Cetera Generally Monthly Picks and Pans of Comics and Related Media Standard Disclaimers: Please set appropriate followups. Recommendation does not factor in price. Not all books will have arrived in your area this month. An archive can be found on my homepage, http://www.eyrie.org/~dvandom/Rants Now to apply for tenure, which doesn't mean much in Texas anymore. Items of Note (strongly recommended or otherwise worthy): The Glass Scientists vol 1-2 In this installment: Watchmen Chapter 1, Moon Girl's Lab, Easygoing Territory Defense by the Optimistic Lord: Production Magic Turns a Nameless Village into the STRONGEST FORTIFIED CITY vol 3, Go Go Loser Ranger vol 11, The Great Cleric vol 11, Tank Chair vol 1, Chainsaw Man vol 16, Delicious in Dungeon vol 11-14, Delicious in Dungeon Adventurer's Bible, The Glass Scientists vol 1-2, Failure To Launch: a Tour of Ill-Fated Futures, Fantastic Four #23-25, Vengeance of the Moon Knight #8-9, Ultraman x Avengers #1 (of 4), My Adventures With Superman #3-4 (of 6), Gatchaman #2-3, Vampirella #671, Power Rangers Infinity One-Shot. A bit of a side note since I'm noticing a pattern in some of this month's reviews: sometimes thinking more deeply about a piece of entertainment makes me like it less. The "Spirit of the Staircase" is that situation where, on the stairs outside a theater, thinking about what you just saw results in finding flaws. It was enjoyable at the time, but once you're out of the immediate moment, it's hard to remember why you thought it was so good. And that's going to happen sometimes, definitely more often when you deliberately go back to the metaphorical staircase to think about something a few hours or days later. There's several things below that were perfectly good entertainment at the time, but upon writing the reviews, I find myself lukewarm at best. And that's okay. There's other times when looking more deeply reveals even more to like, even if I'm risking that I might like the fanfic I'm creating in my head about the work and the themes and stuff I'm seeing weren't put there by the creator. This is, admittedly, kind of a bad month for fault-finding, but don't worry, I'm not turning into a grump or anything along those lines. "Other Media" Capsules: Things that are comics-related but not necessarily comics (i.e. comics-based movies like Iron Man or Hulk), or that aren't going to be available via comic shops (like comic pack-ins with DVDs) will go in this section when I have any to mention. They may not be as timely as comic reviews, especially if I decide to review novels that take me a week or two (or ten) to get around to. Watchmen Chapter 1: DC/WB - Okay, a two-movie adaptation of the original comic, leaning HARD on Dave Gibbons being involved to give it legitimacy. If you can put aside the "not enough legitimacy" issue, it's a pretty good adaptation on a technical level. It uses things that animation can do that comics can't do in order to compensate for some of the things comics can do but animation can't (or doesn't do well). There isn't quite the density of background information the comics provided, but they do a very good job of getting the worldbuilding done. While CG, they did a decent job of making it look like 2D cel animation in the style of Gibbons (they couldn't resist making Rorschach's mask blatantly CG so it looked more "impressive" though). The voice work was generally competent, although I do wonder at the choice to have Jeffrey Combs in it voicing someone other than Rorschach (the Rorschach voice acting was pretty pedestrian). If you're wondering about the pacing, the cliffhanger point is Rorschach's capture by the police, although they did admit to shuffling the order of a few things in the Making Of featurettes. On a craft level, recommended. But it's not so good that I'd suggest anyone set aside any ethical stance against giving DC money for a non-Moore Watchmen project. Price varies by store and format. Moon Girl's Lab: Marvel/Disney+ - While we wait for the third season, Disney+ dropped (which I wasn't really paying attention, so not necessarily this month) a batch of 3-5 minute shorts built around Schoolhouse-Rock-style edutainment songs and not really telling much in the way of stories. If you skip the repeated end credits, you can get through all of them in half an hour. The animation is up to the show's standards, but the songs are...well, they're no Schoolhouse Rock, and some of the situations are painfully contrived to make the lesson work. The science varies from questionable to simplistic but essentially correct, so it doesn't really do a great job on the education side either. Neutral. Digital Content: Unless I find a really compelling reason to do so (such as a lack of regular comics), I won't be turning this into a webcomic review column. Rather, stuff in this section will generally be full books available for reading online or for download, usually for pay. I will also occasionally include things I read on Library Pass (check to see if your public library gives access to it), although the interface can be laggy and freeze sometimes. Nothing this month. Manga Collections: With manga collections coming to dominate my reading habits, I decided to formally split them off from Trades (informally they'd already been split for a while). A LOT of stuff in this category arrived right at the end of the month, making it a bit of a rush to get them read in time for a September column. Easygoing Territory Defense by the Optimistic Lord: Production Magic Turns a Nameless Village into the STRONGEST FORTIFIED CITY vol 3: Seven Seas Entertainment - And now we take a turn into strangely innocent yet still creepy harem manga as Lord Van (10 years old in body, 30-something in mind) acquires a couple of potential brides who are suitable for his apparent age while he keeps mooning over his hot nanny (and knowing it's Inappropriate). The cliffhanger of last volume is resolved with a speed and ease that most of the defenders find unsettling...and the other regional powers find downright CONCERNING. And that's where most of the actual challenges of this volume come from, dealing with their neighbors who were pretty sure there was just a tiny hamlet with nothing of value, not the STRONGEST FORTIFIED CITY. Van has to at least be present for diplomacy with both demihumans and a representative of the guy who used to nominally control his new territory, and alliance by marriage is glaring at him from multiple angles. I suspect one of my concerns with the series (that Van isn't really changing production magic's status in general, just being massively OP himself) might dovetail with one of the bridal prospects, although that may just be hopeful thinking (it'd solve not just my objection, but also give Van a way to relate to one of the girls other than potential marriage). Anyway, this is more or less a taking stock pause, with Van's preparations and earlier work paying off and going more to the background as he has to focus more on his (considerable) people skills instead of his bottomless font of mana. Recommended. $13.99/$17.99 rated Teen 13+ (mostly fantasy violence and some implausibly large breasts) Go Go Loser Ranger vol 11: Kodansha - Bits and pieces of the origin of the Dragon Keepers come out in flashbacks that motivate the monster-lovers, founded in part by a Keeper who resigned in disgust. A bit of an Omelas situation is at the root of things, so while the corruptness of the Keepers has been apparent from volume 1, it's clearly not a thing that developed over time, they were rotten from the word go. A devil's bargain to defeat invaders, sure enough, but a house of lies nonetheless. Otherwise, lots of fight scenes with characters either introduced last volume or otherwise kinda background...definitely something that would've been easier to follow in color. Recommended. $10.99/$14.99Cn rated Older Teen 16+ (violence and dismemberment, a bit of body horror) The Great Cleric vol 11: Kodansha - Luciel should start a support group with Lord Van and Yuna (Bear Girl), for isekai protagonists who just want to have a nice comfortable life and instead keep finding the reward for a job well done is another job. This arc continues Luciel's growth from the Best Salaryman to an actual leader who has to trust in his subordinates and think beyond the job he's given. (And know how far he can trust certain subordinates...those dwarves need a very very short leash.) The plot also advances a little more quickly in terms of the labyrinth near Yenice than I'd expected, but the reason for rushing it worked pretty cleanly. I do wonder if Broccoli Lion decided to accelerate the story, or at least wrap up a chunk of character development arc that they'd been getting tired of. Recommended. $12.99/$17.99Cn rated Older Teen 16+ (violence, but I think they're just staying consistent with other volumes that have more innuendo) Tank Chair vol 1: Kodansha - Okay, this is very bloody and gruesome and not particularly serious. Think Marshal Law's setting, full of criminals and gangs who functionally have superpowers via genetic splicing and cybernetics and stuff, with everything looking very uncomfortable for the user. The protagonists are escapees from an assassin school who have gone freelance in a particularly nasty slumtown, with the older brother being the talented one until he takes a bullet for his sister and goes into a coma. The only thing that can awaken him is when he senses "murderous intent" (this is later shown to be more of a psi ability, using parts of his brain not affected by the bullet, and it is apparently a common enough talent that there's known, if usually fatal, ways to make yourself undetectable by such a sense). So his loving sister does what any sibling would do...hook him up to an armored wheelchair with a costume that's a clear Kamen Rider riff and remote-control him into dangerous situations as physical therapy, convinced that if he encounters a sufficiently strong Murderous Intent it might snap him out of the coma permanently instead of just for a little while. If you can't find humor in a guy in a wheelchair spinning around rapidly enough to slice a monkey-guy into many horizontal chunks, you should probably avoid this. Like, avoid it a LOT. I cannot stress that enough. While only done in black and white, there's as much gore and ultraviolence as in the most indulgent Marshal Law stories. And even more body horror. If you're not bothered by that sort of thing in your fiction, this is worth checking out. $13.99/$18.99Cn rated Older Teen 16+ but I think they may be lowballing it. Chainsaw Man vol 16: Viz Media/Shonen Jump - More of the past friends and foes of Chainsaw Man, whom Denji doesn't know from Adam ("Why do strangers keep talking to me?") are coming out of the woodwork. Denji also gets a new...handler...and is recruited by the Church of Chainsaw Man, but not to be, you know, Chainsaw Man. It's a very confusing time for Denji, loads of mixed signals and teasing. Plotwise, it's kinda like that for the ========== REMAINDER OF ARTICLE TRUNCATED ==========