by Sal Loria, Dec 3 2009 // 1:00 PM
Welcome to another edition of The Pull List Comic Reviews! This week Jonah Hex takes top billing, a couple more Blackest Night mini-series debuts and a slew of over-sized annuals and one-shots invade your pull list. As always, WARNING: SPOILERS AHEAD.
PULL OF THE WEEK:
Jonah Hex #50
DC Comics – $3.99 US
Writers: Justin Gray, Jimmy Palmiotti
Artist: Darwyn Cooke
Score: 9.5
The landmark 50th issue of Jonah Hex hits the stands, featuring a done-in-one tale of the scarred bounty hunter’s latest task: to locate and dispose of 50 various bad guys. The cost of victory, however, may prove to be too much to bear…
Jonah Hex is no stranger to violence. We’ve been exposed to his brand of “justice” for decades now, so it’s very easy to forget that, under all of that hatred, this killing machine does have a heart. Thankfully, writing team Justin Gray and Jimmy Palmiotti weave a story that is sure to please the loyal Hex fans with plenty of merciless vengeance, while injecting a tragedy that goes to great lengths to humanize the central character.
Darwyn Cooke handles the art chores on this commemorative issue, further cementing how incredible a read this was. Gorgeous pencils accompany the artist’s usual cinematic flair, with numerous examples of how to kill a man mixed in with a few touching moments, and a final page that speaks volumes without the aid of dialogue. With the holidays around the corner, I’d gladly accept this final page in all of its original glory as a nifty Christmas gift.
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Posted in: Comic Reviews · Comics · DC · Iron Man 2 · Marvel · Pull List
Tagged: Blackest Night, Blackest Night: The Flash, Blackest Night: Wonder Woman, Brannon Braga, Brian Michael Bendis, Carlo Barberi, Carmine Di Giandomenico, Chris Bachalo, Chris Yost, Civil War, Craig Kyle, Daredevil, Dark Avengers, Darwyn Cooke, David Hine, Deadpool, Fabrice Sapolsky, Fall of the Hulks, Fall Of The Hulks: Alpha, Final Crisis: Rogues' Revenge, Flash Rebirth, Freddie Williams II, Generation X, Geoff Johns, greg rucka, Iron Man vs Whiplash, Jason Pearson, Jeff Parker, Jimmy Palmiotti, Jonah Hex, JSA All-Stars, Justice Society of America, Justin Gray, Marc Guggenheim, Marvel Super-Heroes Secret Wars, Matthew Sturges, Michael Lark, Nicola Scott, Paul Pelletier, Phillippe Briones, Robert Kirkman, Scott Kolins, Secret Six, Siege, Siege: The Cabal, Spider-Man Noir, Spider-Man Noir: Eyes Without A Face, World War Hulk, X-Force
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by David Press, Dec 2 2009 // 10:15 AM
This week is a lighter week than last week, so I’m going to take this opportunity to talk about some of the books that came out last week that I didn’t get a chance to check out because of Thanksgiving. Which reminds me: comics do not come out today (Wednesday, Dec. 2) they come out tomorrow because of the holiday.
Last week the trade came out for one of the best miniseries that not a lot of people may know about. This book is Wildstorm’s The Winter Men by Brett Lewis and John Paul Leon. Lewis is responsible for the creation of Bulletproof Monk and this new book is incomparable. It involves the development of a super soldier program in Cold War Russia to serve as a deterrent to America’s Superman. The trade came out last week, and if you can find it, you really cannot go wrong with this incredible book. It’s my pick of last week.
As for this week, we have Blackest Night Flash by Geoff Johns. I don’t know exactly why this book exists since the Flash is in the main Blackest Night book more than even Hal Jordan or other Green Lanterns, but I’m intrigued to see if this is different somehow. Other than that, I’m really only getting a couple more books.
Yesterday (December 1st) was Eisner award winning writer Matt Fraction’s birthday, and you can celebrate by buying the recent issue of Uncanny X-Men #518. My second book of the week is the start of Marvel’s Siege with “The Cabal” by Brian Michael Bendis and art by the awesome Michael Lark. I think this event is going to be genuinely dynamite, and I can’t wait to get every damn issue of the book.
The other book is Hulk Winter Guard by David Gallaher and Steve Ellis, the brains behind the brilliant Zuda webcomic, High Moon. High Moon is a western supernatural story where a gun for hire hunts down supernaturals in the Wild West. There is just one hitch: this gun for hire, cut from a similar cloth to Clint Eastwood’s character in Unforgiven, is also a werewolf. It’s awesome, trust me, go read.
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Posted in: Comics · DC · Marvel · Recommendations
Tagged: Blackest Night, Brett Lewis, Brian Michael Bendis, Comic Recommendations, Comics, David Gallaher, Geoff Johns, High Moon, John Paul Leon, mark sable, Matt Fraction, Michael Lark, Steve Ellis, The Siege, Uncanny X-Men, Unthinkable, Wildstorm, Winter Men
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