Team 7 1-4
Issue one is one of my favorite issues of comic books. It’s a combination of several things: Aron Wiesenfeld art is excellent, and Trevor Scott’s detailed inks take it to a whole other level. I love how this issue looks. This comic also came at a time in my life as a comic reader (high school) where the idea of a dream team of Wildstorm characters sharing a military past on an elite special forces unit was supremely cool and exciting. Chuck Dixon’s script, showcasing these badasses at their very best, totally works for me. It’s just an A+ effort all around for me.
I had this hanging on my wall in high school |
All of Weisenfeld's pinup are pretty sweet. |
I mean, look at this! |
Great action, great inking... |
The rest of the series is a tremendous let down in comparison. I put most of the blame on John Dickenson and Scott Williams, whose work clearly demonstrates the difference inkers can have on a penciller’s work.
...compared to this not-as-good splash. Same penciler, different inker. |
If only the last three issues lived up to the awesomeness of the first. Alas.
Regret buying: No
Would buy again: Yes
Would read again: Yes
Rating: Pure joy for issue 1, Nice for the rest.
Aqua Leung
I think I bought this graphic novel by Mark Andrew Smith and Paul Maybury when it first came out back in 2008 based on the strength of strong reviews. Then it sat on my to-read pile until TODAY. It’s not even that I wanted to read it but never got around to it; Something about the cover, or maybe the first page kept me from wanting to read it for THIRTEEN YEARS.
That came to an end today when I realized that it was an Image book and would slot in perfectly to the box I just finished. So does it deserve my decade-long skepticism?
Yeah, it does. The art’s a mix of Bryan Lee O’Malley and Darren Warren Johnson, which isn’t bad on its own, but it doesn’t really fit the “fantasy under the sea coming of age war epic” this is going for. Maybury also has some storytelling issues, there are multiple points where I couldn’t tell what was happening on the page. I also had to keep reminding myself that this was an underwater story, because nothing about the art ever made it look like it was taking place in the ocean; If the dialogue hadn’t told me, I’d have thought that this was set on the surface of an alien planet.
Smith has some storytelling issues of his own. It’s a rote “boy learns of his true parentage and trains to fulfill the prophecy that will unify his people” adventure with some really big monsters. Meh.
Well, at least I can finally stop seeing this on top of my pile and feeling vaguely guilty about not reading it. Cutting.
Regret buying: Yes
Would buy again: No
Would read again: No
Rating: Didn’t suck
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