THE CLOVEN

cloven

AUTHOR: GARTH STEIN / ARTWORK: MATTHEW SOUTHWORTH / PUBLISHER: FANTAGRAPHICS / RELEASE DATE: JULY 30TH

 

Author Garth Stein is known for projects from an intriguing point of view. His 2008 novel, The Art of Racing in the Rain, is told from the perspective of a dog, and hung out on the New York Times bestseller list for three years. It remains to be seen if the writer’s newest project, The Cloven – a graphic novel with artist Matthew Southworth, a fellow Seattle resident – will reach such lofty heights, but the conceit behind the story is certainly fascinating.

Conceived as the first book of a trilogy, The Cloven: Book One, takes many familiar trappings and repackages them in a new and exciting way. Anyone who has seen the likes of such fare as Escape from Witch Mountain, Project X, or Flight of the Navigator knows how this all goes, in terms of general story arc: there’s the story of a young child created in a lab, raised by a scientist who loves him, the eventual bad turn, then the escape, and finally, the finding of fellow lost ones and hopefully building a new life and relationships.

However, what makes The Cloven so exciting is the way in which Stein and Southworth tell their story. Cutting back and forth between the past and the present allows the pair to tell two stories simultaneously, while never losing any of the pacing and action, which makes The Cloven such a page-turner. It helps that much of the story is set in the Pacific Northwest in which both of the story’s creators live, allowing them to craft a tale which feels like they intimately know every detail. The areas of wilderness and the nooks and crannies of the city of Seattle aren’t something drawn from Google image searches or Flickr galleries, but are places both the artist and writer have been to. The sense of place is palpable.

And what would a story such as this be without its unique protagonist? Here, we have James ‘Tuck’ Tucker, a genetically-modified ‘human organism’ who is a cross between a human and a goat – a ‘Cloven’. Conceived in ‘a privately financed, top-secret laboratory on Washington state’s Vashon Island’, Tuck’s story is one of love and affection until, suddenly, he is captured and returned to the lab, from which he makes a daring escape, thanks to his unique abilities. The tale from there turns to his attempts to evade and hide from those who wish to dissect him, and the eventual discovery of a clan of other Cloven.

It’s when Tuck discovers others like himself that the story really takes hold. Although it’s filled with action and intrigue and Southworth’s cinematically-inspired artwork, up to that point, Stein’s story is by-the-numbers action sci-fi. Once Tuck joins up with the Cloven, however, the story begins to take a turn, and one can feel the joy and excitement fairly leaping off the page. The Cloven becomes something akin to an examination of place and culture, and the sense of movement from Southworth’s depictions of the Cloven’s nightly runs through the city’s parks and streets lets the reader feel as if they’re right there beside them.

What really makes the story work is the little details, however. Whether it’s Tuck asking someone, “Is that a mint chimichurri sauce on the lamb?” or Dr Langner yelling, “You have to hold the goddamn baby!” at other, clueless scientists when a Cloven is born, these are what make the story hit home. They’re the real reactions of real people in otherwise oddball situations, and they take a story about genetically-modified human organisms and keep it from going into technobabble or action cliches.

Props to Southworth for rendering some dialogue as artwork, as well, rather than relying solely on lettering. The way in which the words sometime crowd into the edges of panels or explode beyond their confines elevate certain scenes – such as Langner’s yelling – into images the reader can almost hear.

Sadly, The Cloven ends just as it’s getting good, but there are two more books yet to come. The audience is definitely left wanting more, in this case, and here’s to hoping that the next couple instalments slake that thirst.

HARLEY QUINN: BLACK+WHITE+RED #1

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FORMAT: DIGITAL | RELEASE DATE: OUT NOW

DC’s latest Digital First comic series is Harley Quinn: Black+White+Red, a spin on the classic Batman: Black & White anthology format. As you can probably guess, this time it’s all about the Clown Princess of Crime, with each issue handled by a different creative team and told in monochrome – except for the occasional dash of red.

B+W+R kicks off with an issue that should please fans as it serves as a sequel to Stjepan Sejic’s terrific Harleen limited series. Harleen: Red catches up with the former Dr. Quinzel in Arkham Asylum, now locked in one of its cells – er, rooms – after her descent into madness. But somehow the colour red will prove key to her escape.

Sejic’s work, on both the scripting and the artwork, is as strong as ever. The tale mirrors Harleen in some neat ways and, while there’s no space to really dive into Harley’s psyche like he did before, the comic definitely checks off a couple of things fans desperately wanted to see. With Sejic not working on a fully-fledged follow-up to Harleen any time soon, this issue is an unexpected treat and kicks off this new series on a high. Future issues will feature work from many DC greats – including Harley’s co-creator Paul Dini – so the quality should hopefully continue.

JUDGE DREDD: CONTROL

dredd

FORMAT: DIGITAL | RELEASE DATE: OUT NOW

When you’re as liberal with issuing the death sentence as Judge Joe Dredd (about the only time Dredd has ever been described as liberal), it becomes hard to accrue a good rogues gallery. Aside from the immortal, invincible Dark Judges and the occasional parallel universe Caligula or Rico, almost everyone else is long gone, at the bullet of Dredd. That, or simply aged out of business. Even Mean Machine Angel got old and went away, in the end.

And now a new threat arises, and from within the ranks of the Justice Department, no less. Enter SJS Judge Pin; a creepy, demented serial killer, with Dredd in her sights. Rarely has Dredd been so completely helpless as he is here, captive at the mercy of Judge Pin. Complete with hallucinations of old enemies, this story bears some similarities to Garth Ennis’s Goodnight Kiss, bolstered by an even better villain and its ties to such recent stories as The Small House and Titan. Dredd stories have always straddled genres well, and this is a great serial killer horror story.

The Control trade also comes with a handful of other shorter stories from creative team Rob Williams and Chris Weston. These are a bit lighter in tone and a lot sillier (particularly its Klegg tale), but no less appreciated. Make no mistake though, Control is the Judge Pin show. One of the best antagonists Dredd has faced in recent years, she may be late to the party, but Pin is an all-timer.

COLLAPSER

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FORMAT: TRADE PAPERBACK | RELEASE DATE: AUGUST 8TH

A new breed of superhero battles his greatest enemy yet – anxiety! When DJ Liam James receives a black hole in the mail from his estranged mother, it jumps out of the box and takes up residence in his chest (think Preacher, crossed with Green Lantern). This grants Liam wacky, cosmic superpowers – all the better to spin records and fight crime. Or, in this case, aliens and a Trump-esque wannabe dictator.

Collapser, from DC’s Young Animal imprint, is the closest thing to proper Vertigo comics fans have had in years. At the same time, it feels fresh and relevant to modern readers (especially the high-anxiety millennial audience). This self-conscious hip-ness might alienate some, but what do you expect from a line of books curated by My Chemical Romance guy Gerard Way?

The writing itself is something of a mixed bag. While the dialogue and characterisation itself is essentially fine, the book is overly reliant upon internal dialogue; big, black bubbles which take up the bulk of artist Ilias Kyriazis’s gorgeous panels. Distracting, repetitive and annoying, it’s like reading an angsty millennial Frank Miller, and makes Liam a difficult hero to get on board with. All the same, its cosmic sci-fi game is strong, and Kyriazis’s artwork is simply tremendous. Somebody put this guy on a Green Lantern book, fast!

Collapser is one of the freshest, most vibrantly alive books we’ve had in years. Like its angsty, manic protagonist, it’s a little much sometimes… but what’s more old-school Vertigo than that?

DCEASED: DEAD PLANET #1

Dceased

REVIEWED: SINGLE ISSUE + DIGITAL (REVIEWED) | RELEASE DATE: OUT NOW

It’s hard to keep a universe of super-powered, bloodthirsty zombies down and, in the case of DC’s DCeased, it’s as though they barely even tried. Not content with the prequel and mid-quel stories of The Unkillables, A Good Day to Die, and Hope at World’s End, now Tom Taylor’s DC zombies get their proper sequel.

Having taken over the mantles of their parents, Damian Wayne is now Batman, and Jonathan Kent is donning the red-and-blues as Superman. With Earth left to the infected, the survivors eke out a living in the stars, led by President Lois Lane and the other few surviving superheroes. And then comes a distress call from Cyborg (last seen beheaded at the end of DCeased), prompting this brand new Justice League’s return to Earth.

If it feels like we never even left, that’s because we barely did. Diluted by DCeased’s spin-offs, Dead Planet already feels tired. There are also unfortunate similarities to the Marvel Zombies’ various sequels, spin-offs and reboot, inviting more unfair comparison than this first issue can bear. Which is a shame since, taken in a vacuum, it’s an engaging return, with strong character work and an interesting hook – what if there was a cure? The artwork too, is as exciting, dynamic, and grotesque as ever, and this debut issue’s pivotal battle is up there with the series’ best.

Dead Planet is essentially more of the same, but when ‘the same’ refers to Tom Taylor’s excellent DCeased? Sure, we could stand to take a little more.

NAILBITER RETURNS

FORMAT: SINGLE ISSUE + DIGITAL (REVIEWED) | RELEASE DATE: OUT NOW

After 30 issues and a fairly definitive end, one would be forgiven for thinking we’d seen the last of Charles Warren and Nailbiter. But you can’t keep a good slasher – sorry, butcher – down, and Nailbiter returns in Image Comics’ Nailbiter Returns. On the basis of this first issue, the town of Buckaroo is in fine form.

Creators Joshua Williamson and Mike Henderson certainly are too, and Issue #1 is as gripping as the series has ever been. Serial killer Edward Warren and cop Sharon Crane are missing and, judging by the blood all over Sharon’s bathroom floor, the outlook isn’t good (see #30). This first issue follows daughter and Buckaroo survivor Alice as she seeks the help of Agent Finch in finding her mom. The gang’s back together and, with a neat plot twist, this sequel bursts out of the gate with a fresh mystery and angle. It’s a gripping start, and Henderson’s artwork has never been better; especially during the grotesque opening sequence, featuring a mystery victim getting their eyes burned out with acid. The writing, too, shows growth, particularly in its characterisation of Alice and Finch. This is more than just picking up where Nailbiter left off – it feels like a sequel, and its own story. If you haven’t already read those original books, pick them up right now – Nailbiter is one of the greatest horror comics we’ve ever read.

After the horrifying twists and turns of the original, one would be foolish to expect its sequel to give much away at this stage. But it’s good to be back in Buckaroo and in the company of old friends again. Which is an odd thing to say about a comic book like Nailbiter Returns – an amped up, ridiculous Hannibal meets Twin Peaks – but here we are. Welcome back.

THE JOKER 80TH ANNIVERSARY 100-PAGE SUPER SPECTACULAR

FORMAT: SINGLE ISSUE, DIGITAL (REVIEWED) | RELEASE DATE: OUT NOW

The Joker is the greatest of Batman’s enemies. The most iconic, the most twisted, most beloved and most overused of Batman’s enemies. 80 years since his debut, the Joker now stands almost independent from his nemesis – the most iconic comic book villain of all time. For the Clown Prince of Crime’s birthday, we get this collection of stories – love letters from such luminaries as Scott Snyder, Brian Azzarello, Dennis O’ Neil, and Paul Dini. Joker fans are in for a treat, but specifically those who enjoy his nastier, darker modern antics. Opening with a grisly horror story by Scott Snyder and Jock, the tone is set early.

Things don’t lighten up much from there, and nor do they get better. It’s the same punchline, over and over again, with little variation or insight into the character himself. With eight decades-worth of history, Joker has had almost as many (if not more) personalities and reinventions than Batman himself – it’s a shame this should be so focused on his modern iteration as a terrifying, unstoppable monster, and genius. What, no love for the Laughing Fish guy? The sole exception is Denny O’ Neil and Jose Luis Garcia-Lopez’s Introducing the Dove Corps, which is lighter in tone and a bit sillier. It’s a fun return to a more old-school Joker, but sadly not one of O’ Neil’s better works. Better this than What Comes After a Joke? though, which introduces Mr. J’s new sidekick, Punchline. Mad Love it ain’t.

This collection looks good and does contain a handful of gems (particularly Tom Taylor and Eduardo Risso’s Birthday Bugs), but it’s a repetitive and forgettable book with little to say beyond cheap shocks and scares. Super-Spectacular is so edgy readers should be careful not to cut themselves on its (100) pages. Why so serious?

THE BOYS: DEAR BECKY #1

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FORMAT: SINGLE ISSUE + DIGITAL (REVIEWED) | RELEASE DATE: OUT NOW

Buoyed by the success of the television adaptation of his hit comic book series, Garth Ennis returns to the world of Wee Hughie and his off-brand capes for this half-sequel, half-prequel story. Dear Becky #1 picks up twelve years after the events of The Boys. An older, more cynical Wee Hughie is back in Scotland, soon to be married. The relative stability of his post-Boys life comes crashing down with a blast from the past courtesy of Billy Butcher, in the form of a letter from the big man himself, hidden inside his late wife’s diary. To get to that, however, readers must first sit through almost ten pages of the worst impulses of Garth Ennis.

The Boys was always among the least subtle of Garth Ennis’s work, a book in which his gross-out humour and cynicism was allowed to run rampant, overshadowing whatever smarts it did have. The TV show did a good job of dialling this back, focusing instead on brutal action and satire. Dear Becky is a reminder that, for better or worse, The Boys belongs to Garth Ennis. And so, before we get to its amusing but unsettling Shazam! takedown, readers are treated to nine pages of Garth Ennis’s views (via Wee Hughie) on everything from gender to Brexit and even the Coronavirus, including multiple uses of the word ‘woke’, transphobic slurs, and a character stereotype straight out of Little Britain. This is (mostly) well-intentioned but rambling nonsense, and only Ennis’s masterful writing of pub conversation and salty banter between chums makes this any different from one of your dad’s ranty Facebook posts. 

As of Issue #1, Dear Becky is more of the same. Even the art, by Russ Braun, is near identical to that of original series artist and co-creator Darick Robertson. Fans of The Boys at its The Boys-iest will find plenty to enjoy here, while others will be turned off by its immaturity and bad-taste diatribes. Business as usual, then. The Boys are back in town and, with them, Garth Ennis, at peak edgelord Garth Ennis.

BIRDS OF PREY

Birds of Prey

FORMAT: SINGLE ISSUE + DIGITAL (REVIEWED) | RELEASE DATE: OUT NOW

Stop us if you’ve heard this one before… split up with and independent from the Joker, Harley Quinn takes to the streets of Gotham, teaming up with vigilantes Huntress, Black Canary, and cop Renee Montoya to bring down a gang of violent, vengeful criminals. Following in the footsteps of last year’s Harley Quinn spin-off Birds of Prey (and the Fantabulous Emancipation of… no, still a stupid title, not writing that), Brian Azzarello brings the Birds of Prey to DC Black Label. Having created some of the darkest, grittiest Batman stories ever told, Azzarello is a great comic book writer – but is he the right person for a Birds of Prey book?

Off the bat (heh), this is a lighter, fluffier story than readers might be used to from Azzarello, similar in tone to Cathy Yan’s film. It’s also one of the least try-hard Black Label books, and feels more like the DC Universe proper than any of the other Joker/Harley-centric comics out there. At 100 pages, Birds of Prey feels truncated, and Azzarello is forced to squish a lot of story into relatively little space. This, to the detriment of the book’s villains – a gang of boring cartel stereotypes with no personality or dimension. The book’s stars are given more to work with, but it’s all surface-level, without much to say. Those hoping for more of a dive into the Birds of Prey’s personalities may be disappointed… nope, it’s just Harley Quinn, taking the spotlight again. 

The book’s biggest success is in the artwork by Emanuela Lupacchino and Ray McCarthy, whose action is slick and cinematic, and does a great job in creating a blend of both movie and comic book universes. This is essentially just a rehash of the film, created to entice fans into picking up a comic book – but it’s a very good-looking one. Birds of Prey is a gorgeous, fun action romp, but doesn’t do much to challenge its characters or writer. Movie fans looking for a quick fix are in for a treat, but otherwise, this book is disappointingly superficial.

SUPERMAN SMASHES THE KLAN

FORMAT: PAPERBACK (REVIEWED), DIGITAL | RELEASE DATE: OUT NOW

This is the latest release in DC Comics’ line of graphic novels aimed at the Young Adult market. As strong as this line-up has been, Superman Smashes the Klan is by far the outstanding title in the series to date. As can safely be assumed from the title, this is DC’s take on the ugly spectres of racism, bigotry and hatred, and stars the ultimate immigrant / refugee, the Last Son of Krypton, in a tale that makes for some uncomfortable reading at times – and rightly so. It hits a disturbing real-world problem head on.

Author Gene Luen Yang takes his inspiration from a storyline that was featured in The Adventures of Superman radio show in June 1946. The Lee family move to suburban Metropolis from the Chinatown area and are met with casual verbal racism thinly disguised as banter from their neighbours. This quickly escalates to having the white-robed Knights of the Fiery Kross (who bear an uncanny resemblance to a real-world hate group we won’t mention here) plant a burning cross on their lawn and throw a petrol bomb through their window. As in the radio show, the story is set in post-war America, during the Golden Age era of superheroes – a time when Superman didn’t fly, he leaped and ran on telephone cables to get where he was needed. In a satisfying element of the story, it’s the family’s young daughter who reasons that he could fly if he wanted to – he’s subconsciously pulling himself back to fit in better with the public. Essentially, Superman’s not achieving his full potential to downplay his powers. Of course, when he does embrace his full range of powers, the Klan waste no time in denouncing him as an alien (foreign) threat. And people begin to listen as hate and fear spread faster than any virus.

This is a skilfully-told story, illustrated by Manga artist Gurihiru, that blends the all too real cancer of intolerance with a fictional comic book superhero. It offers no quick solutions, but offers some wisdom and philosophy that will hopefully take root among the readership. Forget the Young Adult blurb on the cover, this story is for everybody.