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Posts Tagged ‘Brian Buccellato’

Untold Tales of Blackest Night #1

November 16, 2010 Leave a comment

November 16, 2010

Title: Sea of Fear
Writer:
Peter J. Tomasi
Pencils:
Patrick Gleason
Inks:
Sandra Hope
Colorist:
Brian Buccellato
Letterer:
Steve Wands
Cover:
Ethan Van Sciver
Editor:
Eddie Berganza & Rex Ogle
Publisher:
DC Comics

What, you thought just because Blackest Night ended like eight months ago that DC was done with the franchise? Not long ago they released this one-shot, featuring “lost” tales that could have been told at various points during the main saga. Peter Tomasi and Patrick Gleason present the book’s framing sequence, in which Sinestro Corps member Lyssa Drak begins to examine the lost pages of the Book of the Black, to discover what happened to some of the characters who didn’t get the spotlight in the main title. It’s an effective enough framing sequence, one that fits in well with the character and the various Corps and gets us into the short stories easily.

Title: Deleted Scene(s) From Blackest Night
Writer:
Geoff Johns
Pencils:
Ivan Reis
Inks:
Oclair Albert
Colorist:
Rod Reis
Letterer:
Nick J. Napolitano

The first two short scenes are literally “deleted scenes,” each of which was presented in script form in the “Director’s Cut” edition of Blackest Night #1. Both of them are really very strong. We’ve got a Ragman scene, where Nekron attempts to raise all of the hundreds of souls that make up his patchwork suit of rags. In the second scene, a group of villains from Keystone make a suicide pact to escape the swarm of the Black Lanterns and join the “winning side,” but a miscalculation thwarts their plans. These scenes were both excellent and fit well into the framework of Blackest Night, but I can see why they were left out. Neither of them advanced the main plot – they’re nice and add color, but aren’t necessary. A one-shot like this is a perfect place to feature them.

Title: The Evolution of Species
Writer:
Adam Schlagman
Pencils:
Jason Fabok
Inks:
Ryan Winn
Colorist:
Alex Sinclair
Letterer:
Travis Lanham

The first full story in the book is an Animal Man tale with a nice twist. The dead chosen to rise were those that would get the strongest emotional reaction from our heroes, so Buddy Baker finds himself trying to save his son from a rampaging horde of extinct animals. It’s a clever idea, but Schlagman doesn’t stop there. He follows through Animal Man’s adventures throughout the Blackest Night, including the point where those heroes who returned from the dead were all turned into Black Lanterns and, later, into White Lanterns. The Black Lantern Animal Man makes a couple of disturbing proclamations, and it would be interesting to see if anyone is planning to follow up on the items he drops here.

Title: A Losing Battle
Writer:
J.T. Krul
Art:
Ed Bennes
Colorist:
Brian Buccellato
Letterer:
Rob Clark, Jr.

J.T. Krul, who wrote the magnificent Blackest Night: Titans miniseries, picks up where that left off in his Donna Troy story. This feels very much like an epilogue to that miniseries, featuring a Donna who has been “infected” by her own dead child. Dove tries to cure her, but the story follows through to the point where the Black Lanterns attacked. While this story is structured well, and Krul is very good with the characters, this story feels very superfluous. No real new insight is gained or added to the concept.

Title: Blackest Nightmare
Writer:
Jeremy Love
Art:
Brett Booth
Colorist:
Andrew Dalhouse
Letterer:
Steve Wands

The Scarecrow takes center stage in the next story, which shows us the moment he’s chosen to join the Sinestro Corps. This story, while also superfluous, is at least really cool. Sinestros have to face their own fears before they instill them in others, and digging into Scarecrow’s psyche to see what he’s afraid of works well. It’s not particularly surprising, mind you, but the execution is good and Booth’s art fits the character.

Title: An Incident on Korugar
Story and Art:
Ethan Van Sciver
Letterer:
John J. Hill

Ethan Van Sciver, co-creator of the multiple Corps, takes a rare turn as a writer this issue. When he and Geoff Johns were creating the Sinestros, he brought forth a lot of new character ideas, including Karu-Sil, who here faces her own Black Lantern (during the tentative peace treaty with the Green Lanterns) and unwittingly reveals a lot about her own past. This is probably the strongest story in the book, giving us some real meat for a character that’s only gotten a few minor appearances to date.

The book is fun, and a couple of the stories do give us some interesting background information. Ultimately, though, it doesn’t really feel needed, so it’s hard to give it a higher rating.

Rating: 7/10

The Flash (2010 Series) #4

August 13, 2010 Leave a comment

August 6, 2010

Title: The Dastardly Death of the Rogues Part Four

Writer: Geoff Johns
Art:
Francis Manapul
Colorist:
Brian Buccellato
Letterer:
Sal Cipriano
Cover:
Francis Manapul
Editor:
Eddie Berganza
Publisher:
DC Comics

The Flash’s journey through Brightest Day continues, but he may not be too happy about that fact. He’s being chased by a group of “Renegades,” cops from the future who take their gimmicks from Barry’s present-day Rogues Gallery, who are accusing him of the future murder of one of their members. Captain Boomerang, one of the Brightest Day back-from-the-dead, seems to have gained the power to conjure up exploding boomerangs from thin air, making him a bit more deadly, and the rest of the Rogues have a top-secret plan of their own that’s bound to cause trouble for Barry.

This has really been a solid story, and this issue’s revelation about why Barry would possibly kill Mirror Monarch is a great one. Let’s not forget that Barry has killed before (Professor Zoom, specifically), and let’s not forget what exactly the impetus for that killing was. Johns clearly hasn’t forgotten. In addition to having a great writer, Francis Manapul is quickly becoming one of the great Flash artists. There’s a scene towards the beginning of the book involving a helicopter that I already rank among the all-time great super-speed tricks put on the comic book page. It’s an absolutely brilliant moment that’s dazzling to read.

Although I’m certainly among those waiting to see Wally West’s return to this comic book, to say that Johns isn’t bringing his A-game with Barry would be lunacy. This is fantastic.

Rating: 8/10

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