Friday, June 21, 2019

Review: Infinity Watch Vol. 1

Infinity Watch Vol. 1 Infinity Watch Vol. 1 by Jim Starlin
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

So continues an infinite round of Infinity storylines that began with Infinity Gauntlet. In what is probably the longest-running title Adam Warlock ever graced, a collage of cosmic deities commands our golden protagonist to give up the Infinity Stones. Sort of. He winds up dispersing them to a group of colleagues uniquely disqualified to hold them. We have the usual gang from Jim Starlin's gallery--Warlock, Gamora, the troll Pip, Moondragon and Drax the Destroyer, plus a jaw-dropping choice to hold the Reality Stone. These stones are not supposed to be used in unison ever again; yet in their first story, all the members of the Watch with the exception of Warlock are captured and used in an inane revenge plot. and this won't be the last time that happens.
I think what this collection suffers from most is the weakness that plagues comics to this day: once a year, during the summer, every storyline gets dropped for four or five months in order to participate in the annual Cosmic Catastrophe that all comics have to tie into. This happens twice, four issues tied into a separate miniseries, which is intended to force you into buying yet another graphic novel collection to know what exactly the F--K is going on!
Even worse, the thing that always happens with a Starlin series continues here, ie, we're forced to endure a rotating roster of artists, inkers, colorists etc. of varying talent, leaving the impression of an inconsistent visual style. Now Angela Medina-Terry Austin-Ian Laughlin are magic; Tom Grindberg-Bob Almond & Laughlin less so. I wanted to love this, but the sum is less than spectacular. 3 out of 5.

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Review: Dreaming the Beatles: The Love Story of One Band and the Whole World

Dreaming the Beatles: The Love Story of One Band and the Whole World Dreaming the Beatles: The Love Story of One Band and the Whole World by Rob Sheffield
My rating: 4 of 5 stars



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Saturday, June 1, 2019

Review: Cosmic Odyssey: The Deluxe Edition (Cosmic Odyssey

Cosmic Odyssey: The Deluxe Edition (Cosmic Odyssey Cosmic Odyssey: The Deluxe Edition (Cosmic Odyssey by Jim Starlin
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Meh.
They have one of these every year. Another overwhelming cosmic force has to learn the error of its ways. On the grand scale of things its passable entertainment, not as memorable as what Starlin would do with the Infinity Gauntlet three years later, or even Batman: A Death in the Family which ran concurrently with Cosmic Odyssey.
The best parts are the small ones; Batman's interactions with Forager, which made his sacrifice all the more painful, and the moral abyss John Stewart tumbles into after his arrogance leads to the destruction of an entire world.
Well, fans always say Thanos and Darkseid are similar-looking villians, and now Starlin has written for both of them.

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