by Sal Loria, Dec 21 2009 // 11:00 AM
With 2009 coming to a close, the challenge was to pick and rank the 10 best comics from the entire year. I’ve estimated reading approximately 1,500+ issues over that time frame, so obviously it wasn’t the easiest task to complete. Still, after much deliberation, these are my picks for the 10 best comics of 2009.
1. Jonah Hex #50
DC Comics
Writers: Justin Gray, Jimmy Palmiotti
Artist: Darwyn Cooke
Originally reviewed on December 3, 2009
Perfection. Defined as the highest degree of proficiency, skill or excellence, perfection is near impossible to achieve, especially when every comic ever printed is subjective in nature. You know, “beauty is in the eye of the beholder” and all that jazz. Still, when I thought about all the comics I’ve read this past year, this issue of Jonah Hex kept coming back to me. While not perfect (frankly, what is?), it’s pretty close.
A wonderful done-in-one tale following our “hero” as he diligently goes about his day job, in this specific case while hunting down 50 various bad guys who had it coming to them. A fine story on it’s own. Now add a dash of romance – or the bounty hunter’s version of it – to the mix, sprinkle in a little personal vengeance, and top it off with a jolting reminder of how cruel life can be, and you’re left with a portrait of a man who makes no excuses for who he is or what he does, life expectations be damned.
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Posted in: Best of 2009 · Comics · DC · Dark Horse Comics · Flickcast Presents · Marvel · Pull List · Vertigo
Tagged: Adam Kubert, Amanda Conner, Andy Diggle, Batman, batman and robin, Batman R.I.P., batwoman, Ben Caldwell, Best of 2009, Bing Cansino, Blackest Night, Brendan Fletcher, Brian Azzarello, Brian Stelfreeze, Civil War, Crisis On Infinite Earths, Cully Hamner, Dan DiDio, Daredevil, Dark Reign, Dark Reign - The List: Daredevil, Dark Reign - The List: Punisher, Dark Reign: The List - Amazing Spider-Man, Darwyn Cooke, Dave Bullock, Dave Gibbons, David Lapham, Deadman, detective comics, Eddie Berganza, Eduardo Risso, Fábio Moon, Fantastic Four, Final Crisis, Geoff Johns, Green Lantern, greg rucka, Ivan Reis, JH Williams III, Jimmy Palmiotti, Joe Kubert, Joe Quinones, John Arcudi, John Romita Jr., Jonah Hex, José Luis García-López, Joss Whedon, Justin Gray, Kamandi, Karl Kerschl, Karl Moline, Kurt Busiek, Kyle Baker, Lee Bermejo, Madrox, Marco Santucci, Mark Millar, Marvel 1985, Messiah CompleX, Metal Men, Mike Allred, Neil Gaiman, Old Man Logan, Paul Pope, Peter David, Question, rick remender, Roberto De La Torre, Ryan Sook, Sean Galloway, Secret Invasion, Sgt. Rock, Siege, Steve McNiven, Sugarshock, Superman, Teen Titans, The Road Warrior, Thelma & Louise, Vinton Heuck, Walt Simonson, Wednesday Comics, X-Factor, Young Liars
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by Sal Loria, Nov 5 2009 // 11:00 AM
Welcome to The Pull List Comic Reviews! First off, a huge thanks to John Carle for covering the column last week, he did a fantastic job. Make sure you check out The Flickcast’s podcast this week where he was also a guest-host! The dude’s everywhere. Okay, on with the comics. As always, WARNING: SPOILERS AHEAD.
PULL OF THE WEEK:
Lobo: Highway to Hell #1 (of 2) – DC Comics – $6.99 US
Writer: Scott Ian Artist: Sam Keith
Score: 8.5
You’re sitting there, asking yourself “How in all that is holy is Lobo: Highway to Hell the Pull of the Week?” Believe me, I’m asking myself that very same question. You see I’ve never dug Lobo. I’ve read a good chunk of his various issues over the years and I’ve never seen the attraction to the character, but seeing as variety is the spice of life, I figured I’d give this a shot. The premise sounded interesting enough…
Lobo’s chillin’ at home when he receives a message – in the form of slain dolphins – from the big bad himself: the Devil. Even though the Main Man has been banished from Hell for quite awhile now, he figures it’s time to go on a road trip and pay a not-so-friendly visit to his old pal, Beelzebub. Along the way everyone’s favorite Czarnian runs into more violence, mayhem, booze and floozy “women” than he can shake a stick at, but what happens when he finally comes face to face with the cutest evil… waitaminute… CUTE?!?
He hasn’t had a starring role since 2007’s Batman/Lobo: Deadly Serious, so when DC Comics dusted the mothballs off of the character, they decided to get a fresh take on him. Enter Scott Ian, the guitarist for the band Anthrax. Ian’s first foray into comic writing is pretty decent, but it’s how he handles the title character that blew me away. There was just enough here to add weight to the usual aloofness that the character normally projects, which clicked beautifully. While the big payoff will be next issue’s finale, so far this has been a very enjoyable ride.
The Maxx creator Sam Keith, who had both writing and artistic duties on the aforementioned 2007 mini-series, makes his return to the character. Bringing his distinctive style that is every bit as manic as Lobo is, the art looks great, even while juggling different levels of detail throughout the issue. From what I could tell, the creative team looked like they catered to each other’s strengths, culminating in a fun romp that became our Pull of the Week.
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Posted in: Comic Reviews · Comics · DC · Dark Horse Comics · Marvel · Pull List
Tagged: Adam Dekraker, Adam Hughes, Agents of Atlas, Assault on New Olympus Prologue, Batman Confidential, Black Widow: Deadly Origin, Buffy the Vampire Slayer: Season 8, Cable, Chris Yost, Corey Soriano, Craig Rousseau, Dalibor Talajic, Deadpool Team-Up, DUANE SWIERCZYNSKI, Fred Van Lente, Gabriel Hardman, Georges Jeanty, Greg Pak, Harvey Tolibao, Humberto Ramos, Incredible Hercules, Iron Man & The Armor Wars, Jane Espenson, Jeff Parker, Jo Chen, Joe Caramagna, John Paul Leon, Karl Kesel, Lobo: Highway to Hell, Marcos Martin, Marcos Marz, Marvel 1985, Marvel Adventures, Marvel Zombies: Evil Evolution, Paul Cornell, Phil Noto, Psylocke, Rob DiSalvo, Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa, Rodney Buchemi, Royal McGraw, Sam Keith, Scott Ian, Steve Dillon, The Maxx, Tom Raney, Tommy Lee Edwards, X-Men Origins: Iceman
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