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Post by rberman on May 5, 2019 15:45:29 GMT -5
Mister Miracle: The One That Got AwayWarning: This thread will look at the 2017 Mister Miracle maxi-series with the benefit of hindsight. As such, spoiler alert!Mister Miracle was the most intriguing character in Jack Kirby’s Fourth World. Debuting in his eponymous title in 1971, he was Scott Free, son of the benevolent Highfather Izaya of the good planet of New Genesis but fostered to the evil Darkseid in infancy as part of a peace treaty. He grew up in torture under Granny Goodness, learned to be a “super escape artist,” and eventually took up a Houdini profession on Earth while constantly battling Darkseid’s forces and human allies such as the Intergang organized crime network. Along the way he picked up a girlfriend Big Barda, a towering warrior queen inspired by Kirby’s wife Rosalind, and another escapee from Granny Goodness’ torture pits. Rosalind may not have been seven feet tall on the outside, but she was hugely supportive and protective of her workaholic husband. Later writers would separate Scott and Barda from each other and/or the Fourth World milieu which gave them their best moments. In 2015, Geoff John’s “Darkseid War” story ran in Justice League #40-50. It contained a death and resurrection for Darkseid and a breakup for Barda and Scott. This has been followed up recently (cover date April 2019) with Female Furies #1, which depicts Barda and her colleagues working for Darkseid, as we’d expect in continuity with the Darkseid War: But our intervening Mister Miracle series by Tom King and Mitch Gerads (who previously worked together on The Sheriff of Babylon) mentions none of these recent developments, apparently starting in a Fourth World whose continuity would have not surprised Kirby. Scott and Barda live in an apartment on Earth, and he works as an escape artist. As for other related characters, well, let’s just see…
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Post by rberman on May 5, 2019 15:59:29 GMT -5
Mister Miracle #1 (October 2017)Creative Team: Story by Tom King. Art and color by Mitch Gerads. Prelude: The trade volume opens with a twelve page summary of Scott Free’s backstory. It’s framed as a television story with bombastic Kirby narration. The Story: The bombastic narration continues over a grim scene. Scott Free is lying on the bathroom floor, bleeding profusely after slitting his wrists. Later he’s taken to the hospital, treated, and eventually released. (No mandatory psychiatric stay? We have no evidence that he feels any better.) He’s in the hospital at least a few days since his beard starts growing. It will get longer each issue. He watches a Mister Miracle cartoon on TV; the image has a wavy TV distortion effect that we’ll be seeing regularly. While dying, he hallucinates about his young self in a regular school, having an argument with his teacher about whether he had drawn God. Note the twin yellow circles on the kid’s shirt. This page's art will appear much later in the series in a new context. Orion shows up in Scott and Barda’s apartment, beats up on him for a few minutes and then BOOMs back to New Genesis. Hey, why are Barda’s eyes brown instead of blue? (See below for a rare Kirby close-up confirming her blue eyes.) Are we in some dream or alternate universe? Did Scott survive his suicide? Barda's eye color will be a major issue throughout the series, so much so that I have a whole section about it down below. Yes, really. Still later, Izaya and Scott stroll the beach while Barda sunbathes and surfs the internet on her Motherbox. Izaya says that a highly placed New Genesis spy in Darkseid’s camp reports that Darkseid has achieved the Anti-Life Equation. Scene change: Oberon puffs a cigar as he helps Scott test some Thanagarian handcuffs. When Barda enters the room, Oberon is gone, and Barda reminds Scott that Oberon died from throat cancer a month prior. OK, things are getting pretty weird. Over the course of several pages, the menacing report that “Darkseid is.” comes more and more frequently to the nine panel pages. After appearing on one page five times, it consumes the whole next page with its ominous message. Orion appears via Boom Tube and reports the murder of Izaya by Darkseid, and his own ascendancy to the throne of Highfather. The bombastic narration returns on the final page as Barda and Scott, dressed in their costumes, enter the Boom Tube for New Genesis. Closing quotation from Kirby’s MM #1: Each issue ends with a series of captions quoting directly from the teaser caption at the end of one of Kirby’s issues of Mister Miracle. The new King/Gerads story often juxtaposes ironically with Kirby's captions. This one accompanies a full page of Scott and Barda entering a Boom Tube with “And so the act goes on—to other Satanic and sinister situations simmering with mounting magnitude to juggernaut jousts with the super escape artist’s greatest adversary… Death! He will always be seconds away – swift! Relentless! Final! Follow Mister Miracle! Enter the next trap…” My Two Cents: Whew. OK, the first issue of any series is often the hardest to summarize, and this one is no exception. It’s loaded with exposition and plot development and mysterious visual and text clues that will be unfolded over the rest of the series, so skipping any of them is a bad idea. Tom King is working in the "pay attention to everything" school of Grant Morrison in such things. Scott Free trying to commit suicide may seem like an extreme beginning, but it’s not the first time he’s been accused of having a death wish. Oberon said much the same long ago. Isn’t that what all comic book characters do – throw themselves at death for our entertainment? So the question for Scott Free will be whether he wishes to escape life, or whether he wishes to escape death. Because, whichever he chooses, as the master escape artist, he will succeed. Morrison has also done a couple of stories in which a dying character hallucinates the whole story that follows. One was the Phoenix story "Here Comes Tomorrow" in New X-Men. In Morrison's Seven Soldiers: Mister Miracle #4, suicide was the method by which a crippled Mister Miracle escaped “the life trap,” as part of a larger story in which Mister Miracle, like Jesus, escaped death after dying rather than before. But that story was light overall in the New Gods elements, whereas this one is already heavy with Kirby’s characters. The scene of Orion beating up on Scott, and Scott getting up to receive more, recalls a similar one in the Sheriff of Babylon. Here as there, it's an alpha-male competition between social unequals; the lower ranked person can show defiance by not staying down. In each case, a woman intervenes between the two men, who would probably have continued indefinitely. The television-style prologue at the beginning of the trade volume appeared in the B&W “Director’s Cut” of issue #1 but not the regular first issue. The narrator goes waaaay over the top with a propagandistic narrative of how wonderful New Genesis is, and how horrible Darkseid is. Seems like we’re being set up for some irony that maybe the good guys are not so great as we’re being told. You probably noticed that a poster of Kirby’s original Mister Miracle #1 cover hangs framed over Scott’s sofa. What is the status of that series within this series? History or fiction? This first issue keeps the cast manageably small with Scott, Barda, Orion, Oberon, Izaya, and the offstage threat of Darkseid. Barda’s Eyes: Blue or Brown? So the part where Barda’s eyes are the wrong color... before writing this series, Tom King ended up in the Emergency Room with a panic attack. He felt like he was dying, and he told Paste Magazine that after getting home, everything seemed a little different: Barda's eyes will flip back and forth in color throughout the rest of the series, just one of the many examples of unreality which will remind Scott what has really happened to him.
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Post by rberman on May 6, 2019 9:29:07 GMT -5
Mister Miracle #2 (November 2017)Opening quotation from Kirby’s MM #2: Accompanying a scene of Scott killing an Apokolips soldier: “Death lashes out for MISTER MIRACLE – super escape artist! But it is not the end, friend! What lies ahead is to be dreaded even more – a trap sprung by a mind not of this Earth! The terrible – inescapable… X-Pit! Also—to know her is to hate her – Granny Goodness!” And true to Kirby’s promise, this issue by King does indeed deal with Granny Goodness, just as Kirby’s #2 issue did. The Story: Mister Miracle engages in a series of successful but exhausting wars across the surface of New Genesis. Every victory is followed by a new assignment. One night, Metron appears – or was it a dream? – with a cryptic message that seems related to the story last issue about the boy who drew a picture of God. What does it mean? Orion sends Barda and Scott to kill Granny Goodness, leader of the Apokolips troops on New Genesis. She raised them both as children, if by “raised” you mean “tortured.” She receives them warmly with dinner and chat. That night when Scotts sneak into Granny’s pavilion to kill her, she claims that she is Izaya’s spy within Darkseid’s inner circle, and that Orion is trying to get Barda and Scott killed on this mission. She also suggests that the prophecy of Darkseid being killed by his son refers to his adopted son Scott rather than his biological son Orion. Before the conversation goes further, Barda barges in and bludgeons Granny to death. Closing quotation from Kirby’s MM #2: A page of Barda and Scott entering a homegoing Boom Tube is accompanied by the full text of the caption below about the Paranoid Pill. My Two Cents: Tom King is clearly drawing on his CIA experience in Iraq here. There’s no sense of victory, just an endless series of bloody efforts that fails to alter the landscape meaningfully. This endless cycle of victory-without-finality in both comic books and real life warfare was a major theme in Tom King's 2012 superhero novel "A Once Crowded Sky." Here's a scene involving the Soldier of Freedom, a Captain America stand-in who goes through cycles of freezing and thawing to serve in each new American conflict: Worse, the commanding officer (Orion in Scott's story, someone else in King's own life) is all wrapped up in building his own prestige at the expense of his minions’ morale. Tom King continues to break us in gradually on Kirby’s characters. This issue adds Granny Goodness, Lightwave, and briefly Metron and Stormforge. Last issue had a lot to accomplish and relatively little space for mood. But from this issue on out, we’ll see a recurring artistic choice: extreme decompression, with a single image held for multiple panels to build suspense. This is fine as a “space for time” technique in the collected volume, but it would drive me batty if I had been reading this story in monthly installments. One of the many reasons that I don’t read comic books in monthly installments. They’re written for the effect of the trade collection anyway. Granny Goodness feeds Barda and Scott a meal of rectangular food chunks. This hearkens back to issue 6 of the original series, in which Scott ate such food in an Apokoliptic flashback. There’s a fascinating scene in which Scott can’t figure out how to turn on the New Genesis shower. He’s covered in filth from fighting, and we see the shower is not functioning. Yet Motherbox says it’s on. A moment later, Scott emerges from the shower, now clean, still unable to verify that it was ever turned on. With little moments like this, Tom King is setting us up to reject any analysis of this series which determines any of its events as either true or false within the story. The narrator is unreliable. Dream logic is in play. If you expect a typical American narrative, look elsewhere; we’re more in the mode of some Truffaut film where a clown may prance through the scene at any moment. Artist Mitch Gerads sticks to classic nine panel grids almost exclusively, and he’s great with faces and postures. He also uses digital effects extensively throughout the series. Oddly, Gerads provides the alternate covers but not the main covers. Tom King has said that the nine panel grid is supposed to go with the theme of escape, creating prison bars between the reader and the character: “to give you a sense of that claustrophobia. To give you a sense of what it is to be trapped, not only in the themes and the words, but in the actual panel structure.” Gerads also makes a fascinating choice to go retro with the use of (probably digital) Ben-Day dots for shading, instead of just using a darker tone. (cropped to keep the art SFW) His rendition of Barda has real heft, more a powerbuilder physique than a sized-up waspish waif. Barda’s Eyes: Blue or Brown? Brown, for now.
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Post by rberman on May 7, 2019 8:14:42 GMT -5
Mister Miracle #3 (December 2017)Opening quotation from Kirby’s MM #3: Accompanying a page of Scott awakening (from a dream of Oberon sawing Granny Goodness’ head from her corpse?): “It’s Dr. Bedlam calling! And he’s going to spring a trap that is as simple and foolproof and sinister as his own existence! Read what lies in store for – Scott Free. Super escape artist! Open the door of Terror!! And drop the Paranoid Pill!” The Story: Forager visits Scott at home, pleading with him to foment a coup against Orion, who is recklessly throwing millions of troops away. Lightray BOOMs onto the scene, incinerates Forager for treason, and BOOMs away as quickly as he came. After some time on Earth doing his escape artist thing, Scott is summoned back before Orion, who beats him up while raving about being the face of God. As the beating continues, The image of Orion’s face begins to glitch. Does this just represent Scott losing consciousness, or is it another challenge to the reality of the story? Closing quotation from Kirby’s MM #3: The text of the final caption below accompanies a page worth of Orion’s face getting progressively more glitchy. My Two Cents: Again, the Orion story seems very much ripped from recent history in the Middle East, with non-American lives not counted very highly in figuring the cost of peace. I can’t say enough about Gerads’ art; just take it for granted that it’s impressive all the time. Big Barda really seems immense, as in this scene of Scott spooning her. Tom King must have a thing for the number 37. It appeared in The Vision as the oddly specific count of the times that Vision helped the Avengers save the world. Its first appearance in this series is in the Instagram handle of an admirer who gets a selfie with Scott and Barda. Funky Flashman makes his first appearance. He’s Scott’s manager in his Earth job as an escape artist. (Scott reminds Barda that he’s not "performing"; he is actually escaping death.) Funky is a huckster, a Kirby character inspired by his former partner Stan Lee. In the Kirby scene below, his fake beard and toupee are falling off after a misadventure. Kirby may mock Funky and his servant Houseroy (representing Roy Thomas as Stan Lee’s lapdog), but Kirby’s style of bombastic captioning seems very much in Stan Lee’s carnival barker spirit. Scott thinks of the Anti-Life equation in terms of a corruption of the soul, the source of sin if you like. He sees it in his own suicide attempt and in Orion’s haughty and reckless manner. But Scott’s virtue is that he recognizes the problem, where Orion does not. Barda’s Eyes: Blue or Brown? Barda is either asleep or wearing sunglasses this entire issue. But Gerads and King are careful to give us exactly one panel in which to see that her eyes are brown.
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Post by rberman on May 8, 2019 6:58:51 GMT -5
Mister Miracle #4 (January 2018)Opening quotation from Kirby’s MM #4: Scott is lying in bed while Barda argues with Lightray: “But Scott Free has already dealt with Doctor Bedlam! That’s why Scott is jammed in a heavily bound trunk! Victim of the most bizarre trap ever conceived by evil design! Of course, from the cutaway below it would seem the danger is negligible! Lesser escape artists have been trussed this way without eliciting fear! And Scott free is Mister Miracle! Super escape artist. Well, just hold on to your hackles, cats! Continue on! And you’ll see what an uncommon and deadly trap this really is!” The Story: Lightray announces that Scott is being put on trial for treason. Scott asks for the trial to be held in his apartment. Orion appoints himself as prosecutor, defense counsel, and judge. The outcome of the trial is predictable. In confessing Anti-Life within himself, and accusing Orion of also harboring Anti-Life, Scott has shown himself to be an agent of Darkseid, and thus a traitor who must be executed. Under questioning, Scott confirms that he hates anything and everything and has killed himself out of hate. Scott snaps and assaults Orion, bloodying his nose. Orion declares that Scott must report to New Genesis in three days for execution. Scott’s Shirt: Scott's casual wear appears to consist entirely of comic book T-shirts. Most of them are Justice League member logos. For now, it’s Green Lantern time. He wore a Batman shirt last issue, but I forgot to mention it. Closing quotation from Kirby’s MM #4: This one accompanies a page worth of Big Barda hugging a sobbing Scott with “Big Barda! Bold, barbaric, and still quite a problem as her story unfolds! And why not? Doesn’t she come from Apokolips, where Holocaust is a household word!? Isn’t she bait for the next overwhelming, mind-shattering trap waiting for… Mister Miracle? You bet she is!” My Two Cents: The course of the trial is very Randian, with Orion forcing every question into a false dichotomy which a capable defense attorney would have torn to shreds. But Scott doesn’t put up a fight, whether because he knows he can escape any deathtrap or because he no longer cares whether he escapes. One of Orion’s accusations to which Scott answers “true“ is “You killed yourself.” Yet many readers went through this whole series missing the point that Scott is dead. Throughout the trial, the image glitches, as if we are (or someone is) watching this whole scene on television. The effect intends to remind us that this story is not “real.” It is subject to distortion artifacts. Barda’s Eyes: Blue or Brown? Yes.
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Post by rberman on May 9, 2019 5:14:47 GMT -5
Mister Miracle #5 (February 2018)Opening quotation from Kirby’s MM #5: Several pages into this story, as Scott and Barda prepare to have sex: “But destiny is on the move with even stranger events! For there are other arrivals from the dread and dismal world of Apokolips! Creatures of Power! Dedicated to destruction! And vengeful to a lethal degree never before seen on the Earth! Their objective is simple – and yet, complex! Their orders read—Trap and destroy Scott Free! Mister Miracle! Super escape artist!” The Story: How does Mister Miracle spend his three days of freedom prior to being executed on New Genesis? He and Barda go to Graumann’s Chinese Theater in costume (Barda wears her red Wonderbra from Kirby days) and leave their marks in the wet sidewalk. Then he goes a few squares over and compares his hands to the handprints of Jack Kirby, embedded in the concrete during the Fourth World period of his creative life. Kirby's hands are bigger. Funky Flashman insists on tagging along and talking constantly. He's enthusiastic but somewhat befuddled, calling Barda "Big Barbara." Funky gives away the thesis of this series for those who have not been paying attention: Mister Miracle is dead by suicide, but he can either choose to escape back to life or not; whichever he wants. And either way, viewers (readers) will be entertained. The establishing shots flicker and wave with unreality. Scott and Barda return to their apartment and engage in bondage play, intermittently overlaid with the video distortion effect. Scott's crucifixion pose represents his upcoming unjust execution at the hands of Orion. Visiting the grave of Oberon Kurtzberg(!), Scott mainly thinks about joining him in death. They go for a stroll by the lake. They get snarled in I-10 rush hour traffic. Their car must be British, since the steering wheel is on the right. Just another way that Scott is a contrarian. I don't know enough about cars to recognize the make or model. They return home for another round of lengthily yet discreetly depicted sex with occasional distortion effects. Funky Flashman arrives with two New Genesis guards to enthusiastically escort Scott to his execution. But Barda bashes in the heads of both guards, and then Funky. Yeah, that’s gonna leave a mark. Scott’s Shirt: Not only does he wear a Flash shirt for much of this issue, but he also uses his celebrity powers to win Barda a giant Wonder Woman kewpie doll at the carnival. In this reality, the Justice League only exist as merchandise. Closing quotation from Kirby’s MM #5: This one accompanies a page worth of Big Barda bludgeoning two New Genesis guards and Funky Flashman. 'You know him! I know him! Everybody gets to know a “Funky Flashman!” The question is: “Do we need him?” This can become a desperate issue—if a “Funky Flashman” can decide your fate! Watch Mister Miracle get taken! By the con’s con-man! The funkiest agent of them all!' This summarized Jack Kirby's feelings about Stan Lee in the early 1970s. My Two Cents: Wow, there’s a lot happening in this issue. One of Tom King’s stylistic choices is that scene transitions always coincide with page transitions. And this issue has more and briefer scenes than many in the series. Big Barda gets to deliver Funky the blow that Jack never gave Stan in real life, as far as I know. Yet Kirby’s bombastic narration style seems very much lifted from the Stan Lee playbook. Oberon… Kurtzberg? This is of course Jack Kirby’s true surname. I can’t find any significance in the dates on his gravestone, except that the death date confirms Barda’s previous comment that Oberon died recently. The escape-themed epitaph goes for humor and does not resemble Kirby’s actual tombstone. The only hint of Kirby's profession on his own stone is the crown representing his title of "King." Lounging on a hillside, Scott and Barda have a length discussion about Descartes’ proofs of the existence of man and God, and Kant’s attempted refutation thereof, and the possible critique of Kant. It’s good to see Tom King putting his philosophy degree to good use. Similar dialogue about God’s necessary existence as the Demiurge occurs both in The Sheriff of Babylon and The Omega Men. Barda’s Eyes: Blue or Brown? They switch back and forth several times, even changing on the same page. It’s often subtle, just a dash of color in a relatively small picture of her iris, but it’s very deliberate all the same.
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Post by rberman on May 10, 2019 6:29:37 GMT -5
Mister Miracle #6 (March 2018)Opening quotation from Kirby’s MM #6: While incinerating the soldiers’ corpses: “And now we switch to the pigeon marked by ambitious, enterprising Funky! It’s none other than that handsome, hard-working and death-defying Scott Free! Whose ambitions and strange enterprise are an outgrowth of an even stranger origin! Yes, it’s a mysterious pigeon that waits for the vulture’s swoop! And what will happen in the moment of the kill, opens wide the door for a shocking glimpse of – the real world of Mister Miracle! Super escape artist.” That’s what this issue gives us: a tour of New Genesis, the real world of Mister Miracle. The Story: Scott and Barda incinerate the bodies from last issue and take a Boom Tube to New Genesis. They fight their way through soldiers, traps, and monsters. On the way they have a long, intentionally banal conversation about how Barda wants to remodel their apartment to carve out an additional bedroom… for the baby. This is her way of saying… They finally arrive at Highfather’s throne room for execution by Orion – but Darkseid is there. He’s just killed Orion, and he takes a Boom Tube away. Closing quotation from Kirby’s MM #6: This one accompanies a glitch page worth of Scott and Barda standing over Orion’s corpse. “What kind of world is it – that spawns the gods of evil and lesser beings with horrible hang-us? You’ve seen some of its nasty products! Now come along with Scott Free and Big Barda! – and take a fairful glimpse of… The Apokolips Trap!!” That fits, given Darkseid's brief appearance. My Two Cents: A much simpler issue than last time. I couldn’t find any deeper meaning in the conversation about apartment renovations; it was just the sort of quotidian transactional interaction that married couples have. It also made an excuse for dialogue that wasn’t just expositing the action of their fight across New Genesis. Maybe this is a good time to talk about the “adult content” in this series which is “Rated M for Mature.” Most of it is adult in the good sense of a story about the concerns of flesh and blood people, like depression and marriage. There’s quite a bit of violence, including decapitations and plenty of spattering blood. There are the two sex scenes from last issue, framed without nudity, and occasional bare buttocks. All of the vulgarity and profanity are bleeped with the usual classic Dingbats. A strikingly PG choice, and I’m not sure what it means, but there it is. Is Scott censoring himself? The refrain “Darkseid Is” entered King’s mind during a conversation in which cartoonist Julian Lytle kept saying, “Darkseid is.” It comes from Grant Morrison’s JLA #13 (1998), in the final splash page on which Darkseid enters the story: He expands on similar thoughts in the first 2.5 minutes of this SyFy interview: Barda’s Eyes: Blue or Brown? They are blue, in the only non-distorted close-up of her face in the whole issue.
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Post by rberman on May 11, 2019 22:57:23 GMT -5
Mister Miracle #7 (April 2018) Opening quotation from Kirby’s MM #7: While driving to the hospital: “Would Scott be so foolhardy as to return to the nightmare world from which he escaped? Yes, good friends! It still has roots that must be cut! Roots that could reach to earth and destroy all that Scott has learned to love – his friends! His craft! His new life! And besides – death has the same face – whenever he strikes at – Mister Miracle!" This issue does bring back his roots, with some visitors from Apokolips. The Story: Nine months pass in the flash of an eye. Scott takes Barda to the hospital for delivery of their baby. The Female Furies, Barda’s Apokoliptic crew, show up at the hospital to hang out nonviolently. Relatives. Whaddyagonnado? There’s a brief, time-filling scare when the fetal heart tone monitor isn’t properly adjusted, and the baby’s heartrate can’t be verified. But it’s adjusted, and everything is fine. Bernadeth has a gift for Scott which should have all readers invoking Chekhov’s law: Sure enough, Scott has to use the Fahren Knife, shaped from Darkseid’s own flesh, to cut the umbilical cord. They name the baby Jacob after Jacob’s ladder, the exit from the X-Pit on Apokolips. But of course he’s really named after Jack Kirby, whose real birth name is Jacob. Scott also nicknames him “The Lump,” a reference to another Kirby creation. Closing quotation from Kirby’s MM #7: This one accompanies a page worth of the newborn baby working his way up to a good cry: “Think of the most ferocious, mind-shattering fight that has ever taken place! And it will fall pitifully short of what awaits our—Mister Miracle! Only the arena of the gods would produce this combat! Only vile Granny Goodness would find an adversary like – The Lump! Only Scott Free has a chance to survive – The Battle of the Id!” This is a perfect caption to describe the howling infant. Scott’s Shirt: Superman. The delivery room wall has a poster encouraging laboring mothers to “Be a Wonder Woman.” My Two Cents: The story treats the cutting of the umbilical cord as a crisis moment. It’s actually not something that has to be done instantly, though obviously you don’t want to delay it indefinitely. There’s some dialogue about Jacob not breathing because “the cord is around it” (his neck), but that’s normally fixed when the head is delivered but before the body comes out. Is Barda’s first name really “Big”? If so, is Mad Harriet's first name "Mad"? Mad Harriet tells us that this whole story is a dream, but she’s crazy, so no one listens. She also writes “Mad Harriet was here” on the waiting room wall. Barda’s Eyes: Brown. Or blue.
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Post by rberman on May 12, 2019 13:38:54 GMT -5
Mister Miracle #8 (May 2018)Opening quotation from Kirby’s MM #8: Over a scene of battle on Apokolips: “Apokolips! A world without mercy! A jungle of the super-strong! The creation of Gods whose evil code is ‘shape up – or die!’ Unable to escape the long arm of that code – Scott Free and Big Barda have returned to face… the battle of the Id!” Cover Comment: This series had two sets of covers: The “main set” is done by Nick Derington, while the alternates are done by series artist Mitch Gerads. The Gerads covers are uniformly better, and I don’t understand why they were made the “alternates.” Is that how it’s done these days? The main cover is a sacrificial lamb to drum up interest in the alternate? For instance, the image at the top of this thread is the alternate Gerads cover to this issue. The Story: Scott and Barda are trading off work and child care responsibilities. Scott assassinates an unnamed, fascist-looking Apokolips leader (it’s Kirby character Virman Vundabar) with a sniper rifle. Then he’s at home warming a baby bottle. Then he’s getting his leg mended during battle and chatting with Barda on his cell phone (Motherbox) while she moans about having trouble getting the baby to fall asleep for his nap. Scott is now in the “Parent Trap!” We occasionally get a glitched panel to remind us of the unreality of all this. Notice how sketchy the background is in the images below. Eventually, Scott battles Darkseid’s lieutenant Kanto in a “duel of champions” to determine the outcome of the war. Scott loses, and the forces of New Genesis are forced to withdraw for now. Months later, it’s war season again. Scott can’t bring himself to watch Lightray killing a baby monster on Apokolips. As a parent, he now has a new perspective on all this. Scott’s Shirts: So many shirts this time. Wonder Woman. Nightwing. Then later still, he’s wearing a “Superman Red/Blue” shirt that changes colors. I suspect this is supposed to be like the inconsistency in Barda’s eyes that show the unreality of the story, as well as being a joke on the whole Red/Blue Superman thing, rather than literally a T-shirt that changes colors. Later, a “Booster Gold Fan Club” T-shirt. I can’t tell what his last two shirts are. The grey one is maybe a Blue Beetle insignia. The last one with the yellow flame, I have no idea. Closing quotation from Kirby’s MM #8: This one accompanies a page worth of Scott responding to a crying baby: “They kill him here! They kill him there! They kill him everywhere! But he always turns up alive!” This is a parody of the Scarlet Pimpernel’s motto “They seek him here, they seek him there, those Frenchies seek him everywhere!” My Two Cents: Wow, there’s a lot going on here. Some issues are one long conversation in one room; this one has many brief scenes over a period of a year or more. This issue draws together two experiences from Tom King’s life. One is balancing work and family life, and being worried about missing the big moments in your rapidly developing child’s life. The other is the alienation of being in a war zone and hearing about mundane domestic events back home. In some cases, the backgrounds behind Scott are incredibly sketchy, as if that element of his reality is fading in the face of his son. Everybody knows Kirby’s weapons master character Kanto, right? Despite having been apparently killed by Big Barda a few issues back, Funky Flashman is back in all his Stan Lee exuberance, none the worse for the wear and not bearing a hint of animosity. More evidence that we’re in a dream where anyone can die or return from the dead. Baby “Jack the King” is of course another Kirby homage; Tom King is engaging in wish fulfillment of a happy relationship between Stan and Jack. Barda’s Eyes: Brown or Blue? In this issue, Barda’s presence is felt by her absence, since when she’s at home, Scott is fighting on Apokolips, and vice versa. Two ships in the night and all that. They do finally get a moment of cuddling at the very end of the issue, but her irises are never visible.
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Post by rberman on May 13, 2019 7:17:27 GMT -5
Mister Miracle #9 (June 2018)Opening Quotation: Grisly scenes from across Apokolips overlaid with: “The heart of Apokolips lies beyond the greyborders – across the darkening road to Longshadow! Through the clanking horrors of night-time! And rises white hot – at the raging, hissing infernos of the planetary fire-pits! The raw and dirty edge from which great Darkseid draws a mammoth power! – and feeds upon a mighty fear.” The Story: Scott is meeting Kalibak and Kanto in Darkseid’s castle for armistice talks. Kanto takes Scott for a bathroom break and boasts that he once romanced Leonardo da Vinci. Kanto will later admit this was a lie to impress Scott. Anyway, the bathroom is a big hole in the floor, and we get to see what Scott does not: At the bottom of the pit is Mark Moonrider, in chains. Also, Big Bear’s head is impaled on a pike nearby. In between negotiation sessions, Scott and Barda sip bloodwine, a beverage fermented from the bone marrow of New Gods. Barda knows how to make such concoctions as a result of her time in the Female Furies. Later, she and Scott gaze into Granny Goodness’ “mirror of goodness,” which shows them the way she sees them: flayed abominations. Later, they take a dip in the firelake, just for old times sake. Late in the negotiations, Kalibak throws a curve ball. Darkseid is willing to accede to all terms, including the loss of the Anti-Life equation, but his expectation from them is shocking: Closing quotation from Kirby’s MM #9: This one accompanies a page worth of Scott and Barda’s shocked reaction to Kalibak’s offer. “It hasn’t happened yet. Thought darkness is abroad… the future is still free to all! Thus, from this heavy fragment of “Mister Miracle – past!” we move to the most exciting and dangerous chapter of… “Mister Miracle – to be!” Barda’s Shirt: It’s one of Scott’s merch items, depicting the cover from Kirby’s first issue. My Two Cents: The plot twist at the end of this issue could have been handled in two pages at the end of last issue if that were all that’s going on. In addition, Tom King spends a lot of time here fleshing out Kalibak and Kanto, and dropping some exposition about Barda’s expertise in carving up New Gods. But yes, there’s also Darkseid’s shocking “Yahweh and Abraham” moment to deal with now. Barda’s Eyes: Brown or Blue? Both Barda and Scott have brown eyes here; Scott’s are usually blue.
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Post by mikelmidnight on May 13, 2019 12:02:09 GMT -5
Scott’s Shirts: So many shirts this time. First Wonder Woman. And then… Dark Phoenix? Or is there some DC character with a logo like that? Then later still, he’s wearing a “Superman Red/Blue” shirt that changes colors. I suspect this is supposed to be like the inconsistency in Barda’s eyes that show the unreality of the story, as well as being a joke on the whole Red/Blue Superman thing, rather than literally a T-shirt that changes colors. Later, a “Booster Gold Fan Club” T-shirt. I can’t tell what his last two shirts are. The grey one is maybe a Blue Beetle insignia. The last one with the yellow flame, I have no idea.
I believe the Phoenix-looking shirt is the Western hero Nighthawk, who was later retconned as being connected to Hawk avatars or Khufu's reincarnations or something.
Thanks for these reviews, by the way, the series in intriguing although I'm not sure I'd have actually enjoyed reading it.
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Post by rberman on May 14, 2019 6:28:52 GMT -5
Mister Miracle #10 (July 2018) Opening quotation from Kirby’s MM #10: As Bard and Scott take a Boom Tube home to their crying baby: “From the violent world of Apokolips – a small band of refugees finds its way… to Earth! They hastily leap from the Boom Tube which links both worlds! And scan their surrounding with startled surprise! This is not the place they had expected to see! But it’s enough that they are here! Big Barda, Scott Free, and the Mister Miracle to be!” This would make baby Jack the "Mister Miracle to be." The Story: Scott and Barda return home, shaken by Darkseid’s demand to take their son Jacob. Pathseer analyzes the situation and reports that without the proferred peace treaty, Darkseid will ultimately win the war. Scott goes out drinking with Blue Beetle and Booster Gold. Barda is over-eager to discuss plans for Jack’s first birthday party but flies into an incoherent rage when the Scott broaches the topic of Darkseid’s offer. Her violence awakens Jack, who cries from the other room. Scott seeks counsel from a store clerk who advocates a purely rational, utilitarian analysis that maximizes happiness for the most people. That’s great buddy, but it’s not your kid at stake. Humans are wired not to be purely rational. We favor those closest to us, and act as if their lives have more value than other lives. One day at the park, Barda unleashes her pent-up feelings of rage at Scott for slitting his wrists. It’s a tricky balance, wanting to help someone who is hurting yet being hurt by them in the process. Like that original series Star Trek episode “The Empath.” How much of someone else’s hurt can you take upon yourself without breaking into self-pity or worse? Having a depressed spouse is complicated. Scott decides to confront Darkseid in some sort of feint, pretending to offer baby Jacob but really attempting to kill Darkseid. Having found a plan he and Barda can both live with, they make up and make love. Closing quotation from Kirby’s MM #10: This one accompanies a page worth of Scott and Barda moving to cuddling and more: “It’s true! They’re in business! But what a business it turns out to be! Life and death set to music! Mister Miracle! Big Barda! And a force so malignant and evil that it threatens more than just: The Greatest Show Off Earth!” Scott’s Shirts: One promotes King’s Iraq mini-series The Sheriff of Babylon, one is Shazam!, one is Hawkman, and one is Kid Flash. Tom King is on record with Wally West being his favorite speedster. This may suprise those who have read his recent work. My Two Cents: There’s a humorous moment with Scott using Motherbox to call a Boom Tube, which Tom King treats as an Uber app with a receding arrival time due to traffic. Little details… the Justice League International apparently have their own credit card. Or the scene where Funky Flashman has a coded discussion with Scott about the Stan/Jack collaboration resulting in Galactus and Silver Surfer. Tom King sees that Fantastic Four story as a metaphor for Stan and Jack themselves: Barda’s Eyes: Brown or Blue? I didn’t see any examples of either.
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Post by rberman on May 15, 2019 6:51:43 GMT -5
Mister Miracle #11 (August 2018)Opening quotation from Kirby’s MM #11: As Scott and Barda pack Jack’s diaper bag: “And this is how it begins! With flaming death leaping to claim its victim and complete the horrible cycle! But, where no other escape artist dares to hope, this one dares anything! Especially when he hovers at the edge of doom! Especially when destiny challenges his – lures him – to the point of no return – and beyond! This is more than an act! This is the lifestyle of – Mister Miracle, Super escape artist. The Story: Scott and Barda present Jacob to Darkseid. Desaad accuses them of having a plan to kill Darkseid. Scott scoffs. After receiving Jacob, Darkseid follows through with his bargain to remove the threat of the Anti-Life equation… by removing his eye, which shoots the Omega Sanction. Barda crushes the eyeball in her fist. Then, plot twist! The underside of the baby carriage hides a weapon salvaged from the Final Crisis. Barda uses it to blast Darkseid, but it doesn’t kill him. Maybe it weakens him though? More on this in the commentary section. Then, plot twist number two! Scott’s veggie tray hides a Farhen knife which he uses to stab Darkseid’s brain through the vulnerable empty eye socket. It was established in issue #9 that Barda knows how to make such weapons as a result of her Female Fury training. This is a clever way to fulfill the prophecy about Orion killing Darkseid. Then, plot twist number three! Desaad turns into Metron and gives Scott a vision of the DC Universe, telling him, “Where you are is not where you should be.” In other words, Scott is hiding in a death-induced fantasy without superheroes instead of escaping death to rejoin DC continuity. Note that Big Barda, Orion, Lightwave, and Izaya are shown in his vision. Will Scott heed the call? Closing quotation from Kirby’s MM #11: This one accompanies a page worth of Scott and Barda reacting to Orion’s sudden appearance and their vision of the DCU: “If a mastermind couldn’t trap Mister Miracle – you’d think it was night impossible! Well, you’re wrong! It’s easy! See how it’s done in the next complete issue!” Jacob’s Shirt: He wears a Batman onesie. My Two Cents: Given that this story takes place in a world without any super-heroes, the appearance of the Miracle Machine is a genuine surprise. It was basically a deus ex machina used to defeat the powers of Darkseid and of Mandrakk the vampire Monitor in Grant Morrison’s 2008 Final Crisis. I can understand the appeal of a story in which Mister Miracle uses power from the Miracle Machine. But if Final Crisis is in-continuity for this story, then why do the DC heroes only exist as merchandise items? I guess it doesn’t have to make sense; it’s just not what I expected. The plot depends on three lazy mistakes by Darkseid. First, he lets Scott hold Jacob again, at a distance, even after Darkseid has completed his part of the bargain by enucleating his eye. Second, he allows the Miracle weapon to go undetected under Jack’s baby carriage. Third, the Fehren Blade somehow goes unnoticed buried in the shallow veggie tray from which Darkseid takes at least two carrots. I call shenanigans. OK, once more we can say it’s all a dream, but up until now the dream elements in this story have been mostly confined to window dressing like Barda’s eye color, except perhaps for Funky Flashman’s unexplained resurrection. Up until now, this series has at least the pretense of narrative, albeit with an unreliable narrator who won’t admit that he is dead. And the veggie tray does work on a symbolic level, with domesticity and hospitality defeating Anti-Life. Upon arriving on Apokolips, Big Barda is greeted warmly by Sweet Leilani, a character about which I can’t seem to find much. Anybody know? Barda’s Eyes: Brown or Blue? Jack’s eyes have been blue up until here; now they are brown. Barda is brown. Also, check out those white circles of Kirby Krackle. They appear sporadically throughout this series, always white rather than the usual black. Is this another clue of the unreality?
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Post by rberman on May 16, 2019 7:00:17 GMT -5
Mister Miracle #12 (September 2018) Opening quotation from Kirby: As Scott performs an escape act before an audience of real-life celebrities: “Such is the curse of fame! Even if it is in its early stages! Never dreaming of involvement with the strange personalities that lurk in the unseen audience now attracted by his exploits… Our hero basks in the growing sunshine of exposure to the public! But – this is to change quickly! A trap is about to be sprung on Scott Free! A trap which is diabolical in its simplicity! A trap meant for the masked challenger of death! A trap Scott must fall victim to – For Scott Free is. Mister Miracle, Super escape artist!" Celebrity Guests in the above page: Eight of the seventeen spotlighted faces have been identified; they are comedians and DC folks. Do you know any of the other nine? The Story: Scott has a series of conversations with ghosts. First up is Granny Goodness, who chides him for putting her mirror in the bathroom. She tells him that this whole series is akin to Terry Gilliam’s movie Brazil, a fantasy Scott concocted to escape from the crushing reality that he never escaped torture on Apokolips. The death of Darkseid has not ended the war between New Genesis and Apokolips, any more than the deaths of Highfather Izaya and then Highfather Orion did. Now King Kalibak rules Apokolips, and the war goes on, with none of the underlying fundamentals of the struggle changed. This notion that “cutting off the head of the snake” doesn’t really work also runs through the war stories Tom King wrote in The Omega Men and The Sheriff of Babylon, and it is a central theme of his novel "A Once Crowded Sky" as well . While Big Barda beats up Kanto in this season’s battle of champions, Scott drinks bloodwine, and Forager (ghost #2) informs Scott that this endless succession of enemies comprises Hell. Clearly an experience drawn from Tom King’s CIA work. Barda and Scott go for an ultrasound of their second baby. It’s a girl! They name her Rosalind, after Jack Kirby’s wife. Orion (ghost #3) appears to mock Scott for killing himself so he could find a happy ending in paradise. Notice that each ghost has a different opinion about exactly where Scott is in this dream, but they all agree that this is not reality. Back at the condo, Funky Flashman plays “New Gods” on the floor with toddler Jack, who tries to say, "Excelsior!" The last thing Jack Kirby ever said to Stan Lee in real life was, “Stan, you have nothing to reproach yourself about.” Funky says it to himself here. Darkseid (ghost #4) says nothing. He just sits on the couch, glitching, and Scott props his feet up as he sings Jack to sleep. Next comes a reprise of the page of the schoolboy who talked about drawing God in issue #1. It’s superimposed on a Kirby splash page of “Young Scott Free” and explains the meaning of the term “Fourth World.” At New York Comic Con 2018, Tom King said that this final issue “reveals what Jack Kirby intended for the Fourth World,” so I assume the quotation is from King Kirby, not Tom King. Izaya (ghost #5) appears as Scott walks home from the corner store. He condescendingly congratulates Scott for trying to escape depression, a.k.a. the Anti-Life Equation, even though Scott failed. Scott rejects Izaya with words and fists. Lastly, Oberon (Jack Kirby, ghost #6) appears to Scott, exhorting him not to be a continuity Nazi. This story is just as legitimate as an in-continuity story. In the words of Alan Moore, “This is an imaginary story… aren’t they all?” Scott tells Barda that he can escape this reality whenever he wants. The final panel of art glitches, leaving the story open-ended as to whether Scott will choose to return to reality or not. The art over the couch now reflects Kirby’s final issue, #18. (Barda had smashed the previous picture in issue #10.) Closing quotation from Kirby’s MM #18: “The ‘Mister Miracle’ series will not be continued – Its new and thrilling successor will soon be on sale! Look for it! Thank You… ” (creative team names) Scott’s Shirt: It has a compass rose with astrological signs and a five pointed star superimposed. I don’t know whose logo that is. Later Scott wears an Adam Strange T-shirt. Jack has bibs with Batman and Flash logos. My Two Cents: Whew, another detail-filled issue. Look how often we are told that Scott has died. Notice once again that the kitchen is sketchy, barely existing in this reality. Also notice Barda’s use of the number 37, which appears as a running gag in many Tom King works. Scott’s bathroom has Kirby panels framed on the wall. Word balloons and everything. Tom King fuels the notion that “it was all a dream” by having the opening page recreate, beat for beat and dialogue too, Bobby Ewing’s shower scene from that 1986 episode of Dallas in which his death was retconned away to return popular actor Patrick Duffy to the show. But then King undercuts that notion by having Scott and Barda proceed along the plot line the series has established. Still, a clever homage. King talked about going to therapy as a child and not getting much out of it, but then returning to therapy as an adult and realizing the clear benefits of working through issues with someone. ( Tom King interview) His latest series, "Heroes in Crisis," uses more mainstream DC characters. It's just finishing publication and has apparently stirred a hornet's nest of controversy as to where it goes, examining the idea that mainstream DC characters would have PTSD from their lives of violence.
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Post by misteryei on Feb 18, 2024 14:55:01 GMT -5
Scott’s Shirts: So many shirts this time. First Wonder Woman. And then… Dark Phoenix? Or is there some DC character with a logo like that? Then later still, he’s wearing a “Superman Red/Blue” shirt that changes colors. I suspect this is supposed to be like the inconsistency in Barda’s eyes that show the unreality of the story, as well as being a joke on the whole Red/Blue Superman thing, rather than literally a T-shirt that changes colors. Later, a “Booster Gold Fan Club” T-shirt. I can’t tell what his last two shirts are. The grey one is maybe a Blue Beetle insignia. The last one with the yellow flame, I have no idea.
I believe the Phoenix-looking shirt is the Western hero Nighthawk, who was later retconned as being connected to Hawk avatars or Khufu's reincarnations or something.
Thanks for these reviews, by the way, the series in intriguing although I'm not sure I'd have actually enjoyed reading it. The shirts retaining are from The Comedian's button (pin), Blue Beetle and the orange one is from Aquaman.
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