Showing posts with label Suicide Squad. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Suicide Squad. Show all posts

Thursday, 13 July 2023

Batman: The Adventures Continue Season Three #5 - DC Comics

BATMAN: THE ADVENTURES CONTINUE SEASON THREE No. 5, July 2023
Considering the sheer number of anti-heroes permeating this conclusion to Alan Burnett and Paul Dini’s “Crack-Up” narrative, many a bibliophile might find the twenty-page-periodical’s plot a little too rushed. Indeed, the entirety of Amanda Waller’s Suicide Squad are surprisingly easily taken out twice during this particular publication, despite the Wall’s team comprising of some significantly powerful combatants such as Deadshot, Katana, Captain Boomerang and King Shark; “Said he was gonna make his own gang of mindless mercs -- The J-Team!”

This somewhat frustratingly fast-paced storytelling sadly also surrounds the tale’s central character, Straightman, who despite being on the run from the authorities is all-too quickly located by Batman and Robin roasting a pair of rats for his supper down one of Gotham City’s lesser-frequented alleyways. The Joker’s former bodyguard is still depicted as having the strength of several normal men. But that doesn’t stop him somewhat shockingly being taken straight down by the Boy Wonder and a trusty bat-a-rang within moments of the Dynamic Duo trundling up to his location in the Batmobile.

Perhaps therefore this comic’s most impressive moment comes when General Joker launches a full-on frontal assault against the military hospital where Professor Hugo Strange is attempting to save Captain Finley’s “almost unsalvageable” mind. This set-piece initially appears to contain all the elements necessary for some truly memorable pulse-pounding panels, especially once the Clown Prince of Crime has the brain-washed Suicide Squad capture a formidably sized tank for him to use as a command vehicle. However, once again the action is cut frustratingly short by the Bat Family, in order to save plenty of sheet space for a ‘sickeningly sweet’ series of heavily narrated epilogues.

Of course, some within the audience may well argue that this publication is probably worth its cover price just for Ty Templeton’s dynamic pencilling and Monica Kubina’s eye-catching colours. The artists do a cracking job of imbuing the Joker with all the deadly zaniness a reader would expect of Jerry Robinson’s co-creation, as well as include the odd Easter egg within their artwork - not least of which is a spine-chilling Funtime Freddy look-a-like sat on a display shelf in the deserted Pizza Clown Family Restaurant at the start of the book.

The regular cover of "BATMAN: THE ADVENTURES CONTINUE SEASON THREE" #5 by Scott Godlewski

Friday, 5 May 2023

Batman: The Adventures Continue Season Three #4 - DC Comics

BATMAN: THE ADVENTURES CONTINUE SEASON THREE No. 4, June 2023
There’s a lot to enjoy inside issue four of “Batman: The Adventures Continue Season Three” as Alan Burnett and Paul Dini’s narrative treads an enthralling line between a nostalgic nod back to the animated series’ televised episode “The Strange Secret of Bruce Wayne” and a genuinely “not-so-funny” backstory to the tragically criminal Straightman. In fact, this second instalment to the writing team’s “Crack-Up” storyline projects such a sentimentally strong atmosphere of heart-breaking tragedy that it would surely be viewed as one of the critically acclaimed cartoon’s most touching tales should it have “originally aired on Fox Kids” back in the early Nineties.

Furthermore, the twenty-page plot arguably does a first-rate job of further incorporating the likes of Harley Quinn’s “least favourite ex-boss” and Task Force X into the Dark Knight’s pulp noir universe, courtesy of a wonderfully well-penned cameo in which Amanda Waller once again shows she’s not adverse to witnessing a tiny, blonde-haired infant being swallowed whole by King Shark if it means making a point; “Oooh! All these bad peoples fighting! This no place for baby! Buh-byeee! Lemme go, bait-breath! I’ll kick out those teeth faster than you can regrow ‘em!”

Ultimately however, it is probably the sadistically selfish behaviour of the Joker who steals the show, as he seeks revenge upon Professor Hugo Strange for “trying to con Pengy, Harv, and me into buying Batman’s secret identity!” Determined to once again give his right-hand man “a booster brain blast to keep our act fresh”, the Clown Prince of Crime will clearly stop at absolutely nothing to get his way, even ordering the memory-addled Captain Finley to cold-bloodedly strangle nurse Gretchen Gallway to death with his bare hands.

Of course none of these scintillating shenanigans would successfully convey quite the impact that they do if not for Ty Templeton’s dynamically-drawn layouts and Monica Kubina’s colours. Between them the artists genuinely bring the horrific trauma of Straightman’s origin to life, as well as add plenty of “Bash” and “Klong!” to the action-sequences when the dynamic duo finally get a lead as to the potential whereabouts of the thief who stole Waynetech’s prototype battle suit, and intercept them at Gotham City's old Eastside Carnival.

The regular cover of "BATMAN: THE ADVENTURES CONTINUE SEASON THREE" #4 by Jorge Corona & Sarah Stern

Wednesday, 22 March 2023

Batman: The Adventures Continue Season Three #3 - DC Comics

BATMAN: THE ADVENTURES CONTINUE SEASON THREE No. 3, May 2023
Focusing an enthralling spotlight upon “the Joker’s right-hand man, Straightman”, as well as featuring an intriguing appearance from both Amada Waller and Task Force X, Alan Burnett and Paul Dini’s script for “Crack-Up!” certainly should have impressed most of the twenty-page periodical’s bibliophiles. True, the Caped Crusader’s brilliantly brutal battle against the former super-soldier doesn’t actually last all that long. But that doesn’t stop the Dark Knight’s investigation into Captain Carl Finley’s “pre-Joker life” from being any less intriguing, especially once the likes of the Suicide Squad show up to help muddy the waters; “I figured that was you back in the alley, Deadshot. The expert marksmanship was one clue. The motley company you keep was the clincher.”

Furthermore, the book’s opening action sequence, depicting the Afghanistan veteran bravely risking all to save the life of a badly-wounded Colonel Haslett, makes for a riveting read and also helps establish that the formidably-powerful hoodlum clearly has a tragically heroic backstory to be told. Indeed, despite the slow-minded bruiser’s evident loyalty towards the Clown Prince of Crime, it’s debatably difficult not to feel some semblance of sympathy for so courageous a trooper who unselfishly put himself into the hands of Professor Hugo Strange in an unwise attempt to help create “a battlefield where no soldier has to suffer, where none are left behind.”

Similarly as successful is this narrative’s introduction of a mysterious, heavily-honed female fighter, who seemingly has Straightman’s best interests at heart and will even merrily blast away at Batman with an automatic weapon at close range if she feels it will aid her mission to “save him from Waller and that horrible clown!” Of course, many perusing this publication will soon deduce that the hooded vigilante is probably the aforementioned Haslett, who apparently joined her would-be rescuer as a guinea pig for Strange’s diabolical experimentations once she recovered from her injuries. However, that notion doesn’t lessen the sense of intrigue permeating any scenes in which the vigilante appears.

Also adding to the aura that this issue of “Batman: The Adventures Continue Season Three” was lifted directly from the animated television series are Ty Templeton’s layouts, which at times genuinely look like a cartoon still. The Canadian illustrator's art style is particularly impressive whenever a panel features the Dark Knight himself, with colorist Monica Kubina doing a first-rate job in covering the crime-figure or his trademark silhouette with precisely the sort of shadows any Bat-fan would expect from a super-hero who utilises “a bat-inspired persona.”

The regular cover of "BATMAN: THE ADVENTURES CONTINUE SEASON THREE" #3 by Baldemar Rivas

Wednesday, 8 June 2022

DC Vs. Vampires #6 - DC Comics

DC VS. VAMPIRES No. 6, May 2022
Considering the sheer number of super-heroes (and villains) that are depicted dying in a variety of horrible ways throughout this comic, few readers who bought Issue Six of “DC Vs. Vampires” could surely say it didn’t live up to its Burbank-based publisher’s hype of being the mini-series’ “blood-drenched halfway point!” In fact, considering just which top-tier crime-fighters are either dispatched or revealed to be pointy-fanged creatures of the night, it’s arguably somewhat surprising that James Tynion IV and Matthew Rosenberg’s storyline didn’t contain even more bodily mutilation; “We’ve got a problem. Savant and that spider guy are dead. The team seems to have a lot of vampires on it and they’re trying to eat us.”

Foremost of these shocking demises though must be that of the Dark Knight himself, who having earlier gained “the upper hand on the vampires who have infiltrated the Justice League” with just his wits and fighting savvy, is treacherously murdered by the new Vampire King in a genuinely “jaw-dropping moment”. This gut-wrenching betrayal by one of the Bat Family from behind is incredibly well penned, and debatably would have caught the vast majority of this book’s bibliophiles completely off-guard before it takes place.

What follows however, is equally as disconcerting as the likes of Cassandra Cain, Red Hood, Red Robin and Damian Wayne all allow their emotions to get the better of them and unthinkingly throw themselves into a one-sided fight that they surely can never win. In fact, possibly one of this publication’s most impressive moments is how Green Arrow stoically steps up as the group’s new leader, and applies Bruce Wayne’s famous cunning to the situation to ensure that Alfred Pennyworth can at least save a couple of the fledgling vigilantes from a nightmarish fate via a secret submarine.

Equally as enthralling as Otto Schmidt’s dynamically drawn death of Batman, are Simone Di Meo’s pencils covering the ignominious end of the Suicide Squad. Having discovered that the Joker is not the head of the vampiric horde attempting to enslave the world, Amanda Waller is ‘forced’ to detonate several of the team’s head-bombs - with Captain Boomerang’s hapless fate at the hands of Harley Quinn also providing this twenty-two-page periodical with a moment of distinctly dark humour.

The regular cover art of "DC VS. VAMPIRES" #6 by Otto Schmidt

Saturday, 21 May 2022

DC Vs. Vampires #5 - DC Comics

DC VS. VAMPIRES No. 5, April 2022
Deftly delving between a fantastic, action-packed punch-up deep within the Batcave and a similarly as sense-shattering fistfight featuring the Suicide Squad inside the Joker’s deserted hideout, the furious pace to Issue Five of “DC Vs. Vampires” arguably doesn’t stop until the comic’s nail-biting cliff-hanger. Yet whilst some writers may make the mistake of simply using non-stop violence to pad out a potentially weak script, James Tynion IV and Matthew Rosenberg’s narrative for this twenty-two-page periodical requires no such nonsense, with the battles positively brimming with enthralling character development and thrilling plot devices; “Batman. We know what happened. It’s an infection in the blood. You’re sick. You have to know that. Deep down, somewhere. But we can cure it.”

Foremost of these ‘hooks’ must be the excellent teamwork displayed by Bruce Wayne’s alter-ego and Oliver Queen, who bravely manage to beat down the rest of the Justice League of America by the skin of their (non-fanged) teeth. However, despite the pair clearly being stretched to their uppermost limits in tackling the likes of Superman and a vampiric Wonder Woman, this book’s authors still manage to include plenty of one-line wisecracks, as well as plenty of examples of the super-heroes using their brains, not brawn, to overcome their formidable foes.

Likewise, the same can arguably be said for Amanda Waller’s criminally inclined black ops team, who initially, foolishly believe themselves capable of taking down the Clown Prince of Crime in his own headquarters. Intriguingly, Hayley Quinn’s “puddin’” doesn’t actually make an appearance though, with the writers instead having the Black Spider being killed by one of his fellow team-mates, following the revelation that the ‘super-team’ has also been infiltrated by ghoulish, blood-drinkers.

Helping to separate these two simultaneous storylines with an incredible amount of dynamism and energy are the distinctly different-looking layouts of mini-series regular artist Otto Schmidt, and title newcomer Simone Di Meo (who prodigiously pencils those sequences involving the Suicide Squad). Neither illustrator skimps on the sheer savagery of the fighting taking place, nor lets the script’s intense speed ever falter, even when there’s a momentary pause in the mayhem for Cyborg to rationalise Batman’s seemingly erratic behaviour, or Batgirl to make a dramatic entrance just as Savant is about to fatally bite Quinn.

The regular cover art of "DC VS. VAMPIRES" #5 by Otto Schmidt