shaxper
CCF Site Custodian
Posts: 22,860
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Post by shaxper on Aug 6, 2017 0:00:42 GMT -5
Pssst...Make sure to check out the Advance Warning Thread before jumping in with your selection!5. Dream, of the Endless (1989-1996)By: Neil Gaiman and others Originally published in: Sandman (1989) #1-75 The story of a god seeking to reclaim his place in the universe and in his own ideological worldview provides powerful characterization, stunning art, and (most importantly) ideas and concepts richly borrowed from and built upon a vast array of classic stories, from Homer, to Sherazade, to Shakespeare, as well as the dark punk mindset of the 1980s, all told with the cynicism of the Post-Alan Moore comic book industry. And yet, somehow, in spite of Gaiman's immense knowledge and influences, none of it ever comes off as the slightest bit pretentious. Gaiman has an unbridled love for this stuff and, thus, when he homages it, he does so with the utmost respect and passion, never just to say he did it. Thus the series is smart, mature, and encapsulates so much of the best of humanity's collective imagination without ever feeling like it's trying too hard to do so. Truly some of the smartest and most imaginative stuff ever written in comics.
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Post by Deleted on Aug 6, 2017 0:43:28 GMT -5
5. DC: The New Frontier by Darwyn Cooke (2004) includes issues #1-6 Darwyn Cooke is a master storyteller and this story he tells is about as perfect an iteration of the DC oeuvre as I can imagine. He takes all the toys from all the DC editorial toyboxes that the editors jealously guarded and kept separate throughout the early Silver Age and weaves them together to tell a gripping, moving, and thrilling tale of adventure, heroism and friendship. There are highs and lows, joys and tears, victories and losses, and a whole lot of humanity at its best and worst on display throughout. The plot slowly unfolds and allows us to get to know each of the dramatic personae on many levels as the tapestry weaves together, but then the threat kicks into high gear and the heroes emerge to take action. We see the spark of heroism, lit, nurtured and bloom in each of the characters from their introduction to the climax and denouement of the story. Masterful storytelling, masterful characterization, and masterful art are all on display from Cooke. Some may see it as a love letter to a lost past or a condemnation of the present, others as a tribute and a shot across the prow to proclaim that hope still lives, and others still will see it differently form their own point of view and summation of their experiences, but however you see it, make sure you do see it, read it and hopefully ultimately treasure it. -M
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Post by Icctrombone on Aug 6, 2017 6:35:48 GMT -5
5. The Fall of Hank Pym
Avengers # 211-230 Writers : Jim Shooter plus others Artists- 8 in all
When I started to read comics back in the late 60’s , My team and my heroes were the original Avengers. The founding 5 were all great to me but I always had an attachment to Giant-man/ Hank Pym. I never saw him as weak or inferior, I saw him as one of the equal members of the assemblers and a powerhouse in his own right. Add to that, his scientific knowledge and the great storylines that he was a part of, and I always enjoyed seeing him in the book. Along comes issue #211 the return of Jim Shooter to the book and things are about to change. That book is a recruitment drive book of which the Avengers have from time to time and it was a fun book weeding out the heroes that wanted to stay and leave. When the dust clears ,the founding 5 plus Tigra are left. There’s a seemingly throw away line in that issue where Hank says that his research is going nowhere. This will loom large in the following issues. Starting with the next issue we see that Hank is a troubled man that is angry and has resentment. This is a new one for me. On several occasions he lashes out to the others about his place in the team and the respect he’s not getting. It Turns out he feels inferior and has something to prove, but it goes all wrong when he attacks an opponent that stopped fighting , while in his first mission back, and reignites the conflict. The following issue has him undergoing a court marshal for those events but , in his paranoia, he feels he’s going to be kicked out of the team and he builds a robot to attack them during the hearing so he could save the day. Jan finds out what he’s planning and tries to stop him and then what happens next is the slap heard around the world.
Of course the hearing goes badly as a unhinged Pym raves like a nutjob and when the Avengers see that Jan has been given a black eye, he unleashes the robot. No one is able to subdue the adamantium creature and even Hank is blacking out from the onslaught until Jan saves them all by hitting the off switch which was built into the robot. A disgraced Pym leaves and thus starts the nightmare for poor Hank. Jan divorces him, He’s jailed for stupidly trusting a former villain and all the while, the rest of the Avengers are heart broken and don’t really know what to do. Despite this run having a revolving door of creative teams, I couldn’t wait for the next months issues. From June 1981 to January 1983 these were the people that worked on the title: Writers- Jim Shooter, Steve Grant, Dave Micheline, Alan Zelentz, Roger Stern. Artists- Gene Colan, Alan Kupperberg, Bob Hall, Alan Weiss, Don Perlin, Greg Laroque, Sal Buscema, Alan Milgrom. There were an army of inkers but the names that I mostly saw in the credits were Dan Green, Brett Breeding and Joe Sinnott. I dare say that most of the picks in this years 100 best sagas have great creative teams that stayed on for the entire run, so despite the army of people on this story, I loved it and still seek it out every few years.
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Post by sunofdarkchild on Aug 6, 2017 6:52:46 GMT -5
Demon Bear Sagaby Chris Claremont published in 1983 New Mutants #18-20 Back before the X-Men and Wolverine became so overexposed as to become jokes (how many teams is Wolverine been on at the same time?) the idea of a spinoff X-Men series was actually exciting. New Mutants was good, but it took a while to take off. Claremont shook things up a bit with new cast members like how the all-new X-Men team brought new life to the franchise in the 70s. But it was the change in artist that truly set New Mutants apart from everything else on the market. Bill Sienkiewicz began his memorable run on New Mutants with this arc, and he defined the iconic looks of several characters and creatures which had appeared beforehand, from Magik's signature bangs and now-medieval soul-sword to the rather creepy Demon Bear itself. In addition to the standout art, the story is Claremont at his best, with horror and fantasy mixed with personal drama and extremely high stakes. There's a reason this story is being adapted for the first New Mutants movie.
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Post by Arthur Gordon Scratch on Aug 6, 2017 7:25:20 GMT -5
Lucky in Love Book 1: A Poor Man's HistoryScript by George Chieffet Art by Stephen DeStefano While I don't know anything about George L. Chieffet this bio in the book states he mostly is a poet), DeStefano is one of my favorite aftists, one whom I collect every single piece of comics I can lay my hands on, a good chunk of his work being published by DC within their cartoon books publications. Him and Bill Wray (another favorite) are frequent collaborators, all sharing a love of the animation craft rarely seen since the first couple of Ren & Stimpy seasons, to which they collaborated if memory serves right. So when Fantagraphics announced this book, I was extatic! You could say that his style stands right at the crossroads of Harvey Kurtzman and Tezuka, which for me is a dream come true! The story follows the life of Lucky throughout three decisive times of his life, with war often being in the background. It's a bittersweat tale, iften taking dark turns, but it's always highly entertaining. A volume 2 was supposed to happen, but I guess that after a decade of silence or so, I must have been one of the few readers who cared about this. As sad as that is, this volume remains to be cherished years after years, so I hope some of you like it too. Hence the title, the book contains some nudity and sexual acts (mostly non explicit felatio), and it's a shame I can't show some exemple here, since those pages are probably the most stunning. Anyhow, I hope you'll enjoy this.
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Post by Deleted on Aug 6, 2017 8:29:30 GMT -5
#5Doctor Strange: The Oath #1-5 (2006). Written by Brian Vaughan. Art by Marcos Martin.By the Hoary Hosts of Hoggoth...this was a great story! Magic based heroes are hard to write IMO. However Vaughan hit this one out of the park. This story had Strange team up with Night Nurse. Vaughan nailed the different characters (Strange, NN & Wong) perfectly. The concept behind the story was well done. The action. The magic. Everything about this series was near perfection. Including Martin's simple yet detailed art. Aside from Lee/Ditko this remains my favorite Strange story in recent times. Added: I also wanted to comment on Vaughan's pacing. The story's pace called for 5 issues. I was happy at the time it came out that he was allowed to keep it at 5 issues & not "pad" it to 6-8 issues. However I also hoped that it would turn into an ongoing. I may be wrong but I think this series was BKV's last non-creator owned work.
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Post by hondobrode on Aug 6, 2017 9:36:18 GMT -5
Lucky in Love Book 1: A Poor Man's HistoryScript by George Chieffet Art by Stephen DeStefano While I don't know anything about George L. Chieffet this bio in the book states he mostly is a poet), DeStefano is one of my favorite aftists, one whom I collect every single piece of comics I can lay my hands on, a good chunk of his work being published by DC within their cartoon books publications. Him and Bill Wray (another favorite) are frequent collaborators, all sharing a love of the animation craft rarely seen since the first couple of Ren & Stimpy seasons, to which they collaborated if memory serves right. So when Fantagraphics announced this book, I was extatic! You could say that his style stands right at the crossroads of Harvey Kurtzman and Tezuka, which for me is a dream come true! The story follows the life of Lucky throughout three decisive times of his life, with war often being in the background. It's a bittersweat tale, iften taking dark turns, but it's always highly entertaining. A volume 2 was supposed to happen, but I guess that after a decade of silence or so, I must have been one of the few readers who cared about this. As sad as that is, this volume remains to be cherished years after years, so I hope some of you like it too. Hence the title, the book contains some nudity and sexual acts (mostly non explicit felatio), and it's a shame I can't show some exemple here, since those pages are probably the most stunning. Anyhow, I hope you'll enjoy this. I'm familiar with DeStefano but not this work. It looks really good !
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Post by hondobrode on Aug 6, 2017 9:58:51 GMT -5
# 5 - Cerebus # 26-50 High Society by Dave Sim I haven’t read these issues since they were first published, but I remember my dad, two of my brothers and myself passing around the copies and enjoying them greatly. We had all enjoyed the BWS-inspired Conan parody of the early issues, but this is where things shifted gears. Cerebus goes from barbarian to politician and it’s hilarious with characters inspired by Groucho Marx, a generic Marvel-style superhero rip-off that is seen here as Moon Roach, and the infamous Fleagle Brothers, a send up off Warner Brothers’ Yosemite Sam. Genius. This is truly a unique reading experience that deserves revisiting again and again. I haven’t read the entire Cerebus 300 issues, but plan to. I’ve heard from many others this is some of the best. I’d find it hard to believe that there is better, but Church & State was also outstanding.
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Post by Deleted on Aug 6, 2017 11:00:43 GMT -5
#5Doctor Strange: The Oath #1-5 (2006). Written by Brian Vaughan. Art by Marcos Martin.Magic based heroes are hard to write IMO. However Vaughan hit this one out of the park. This story had Strange team up with Night Nurse. Vaughan nailed the different characters (Strange, NN & Wong) perfectly. The concept behind the story was well done. The action. The magic. Everything about this series was near perfection. Including Martin's simple yet detailed art. Aside from Lee/Ditko this remains my favorite Strange story in recent times. The fact this is now 10 years old and eligible boggles my mind and makes me feel even older than I usually do. I didn't even think of it because I had no notion it had been 10 years since it came out. Ugh. -M
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Post by thwhtguardian on Aug 6, 2017 13:36:45 GMT -5
Batman: Gotham by Gaslight Written by Brian Augustyn Penciled by Mike Mignola Inked by P. Craig Russel DC, 1989 It's hailed as the first Elseworlds book but it's just another in a long line of imaginary stories from DC, where the writers would take readers on wild journeys with familiar characters in wildly unfamiliar settings. There are a lot of great ones out there but Gaslight is by far my favorite; it's premise is simple, "What if Batman existed at the end of the Elizabethan era and fought Jack the Ripper?" but the execution is where it shines. Mignola and Russel gave the whole affair the feel of a classic, black and white noir film; the pacing is slow to begin with and explodes at the end and in between the tension is thick enough to cut with a knife...and it's all done visually.
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Post by coke & comics on Aug 6, 2017 15:11:21 GMT -5
5 Sandmanby Neil Gaiman & friends Sandman #1-75 and some tie-ins “The Lord of Dreams learns that one must change or die, and makes his decision.” It's a story about change. It's a story about dreams. Including the dreams of what you think you want. "But he did not understand the price. Mortals never do. They only see the prize, their heart's desire, their dream... But the price of getting what you want, is getting what you once wanted." And it's a story about stories. The story told in microcosm can be found in issue #19, "A Midsummer Night's Dream", in which Shakespeare performs his play before the fair folk on whose stories it is based. The other stand-out story, which again jumps straight to the heart of the themes of the book, is issue #50, "Ramadan", in which the Sultan of Baghdad realizes that he is presiding over the greatest era of his kingdom, and that all things must change.
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shaxper
CCF Site Custodian
Posts: 22,860
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Post by shaxper on Aug 6, 2017 15:29:20 GMT -5
“The Lord of Dreams learns that one must change or die, and makes his decision.” It's a story about change. It's a story about dreams. Including the dreams of what you think you want. "But he did not understand the price. Mortals never do. They only see the prize, their heart's desire, their dream... But the price of getting what you want, is getting what you once wanted." And it's a story about stories. I spent hours doing my write-up, and damn if I don't like yours better.
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Post by Arthur Gordon Scratch on Aug 6, 2017 15:49:05 GMT -5
“The Lord of Dreams learns that one must change or die, and makes his decision.” It's a story about change. It's a story about dreams. Including the dreams of what you think you want. "But he did not understand the price. Mortals never do. They only see the prize, their heart's desire, their dream... But the price of getting what you want, is getting what you once wanted." And it's a story about stories. I spent hours doing my write-up, and damn if I don't like yours better. But is it actually his? I seem to have already read those sentences Edit : oops, yes actual Gaiman quotes, but I'm sure the the rest is his.
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Post by Deleted on Aug 6, 2017 18:03:19 GMT -5
#5Doctor Strange: The Oath #1-5 (2006). Written by Brian Vaughan. Art by Marcos Martin. The fact this is now 10 years old and eligible boggles my mind and makes me feel even older than I usually do. I didn't even think of it because I had no notion it had been 10 years since it came out. Ugh. -M Same here. I LOVED this story & thought it would NOT be eligible. I was pleasantly surprised that it WAS eligible (#5 cover date 4/2007).
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Post by Deleted on Aug 6, 2017 18:04:18 GMT -5
The fact this is now 10 years old and eligible boggles my mind and makes me feel even older than I usually do. I didn't even think of it because I had no notion it had been 10 years since it came out. Ugh. -M Same here. I LOVED this story & thought it would NOT be eligible. I was pleasantly surprised that it WAS eligible (#5 cover date 4/2007). I might have to fit it into my honorable mentions... -M
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