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Christmas Comics Gift Guide 2008

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Written by Carl Doherty   
Wednesday, 10 December 2008 20:54

We've all suffered those moments when parents, spouses or creepy bearded men ask us for Christmas present suggestions, and struggled with but one. Well struggle no longer, with this concise graphic novel shopping guide.

 

Rather than concentrate on Chrimbo themed books, I'm opting for the classics, personal choices and the odd surprise. No, this has nothing to do with the fact that I plan to change the date on this article and recycle it this time next year. Hee, hee! I'm so crafty!

 

For the inspiring industry insider:

Watching the Watchmen

Not a graphic novel but an insightful guide to Alan Moore's seminal Watchmen series. Though Moore is absent, Dave Gibbons recounts the conception of the book's layered themes and characters with the humble honesty of someone who had no idea quite what they were creating. Crammed with concept art, page layout sketches, copies of correspondence letters between Morre and Gibbons, anyone with even a passing interest in comics needs to own this book.

 

For the budding sociopath:

Wanted

Though Mark Millar's Wanted shares a similar plot to Timer Bekmambetov's kinetic but mindless movie, it's actually are far wittier, self-conscious pastiche which asks 'what if the villains beat the good guys?' and plays it beyond all expectations.

Wanted Graphic Novel - Mark Millar, JG Jones

 

For those bitten by the Dark Knight bug:

Joker

Brian Azzarello's Joker isn't the modern classic it's been hailed as, but it’s still a rollicking, often sickening, ride that will haunt you for some time. Beautifully illustrated by Lee Bermejo, too.

Joker Graphic Novel - Brian Azzarello

For the indie film buff:

Persepolis I and II

Many people have already been directed to Marjane Satrapi's personal tale Persepolis from the highly acclaimed animated adaptation. Like Art Spiegelman's Maus, this monochromic autobiography is equal parts funny and heart rending.

 

Buffy the Vampire Slayer Season 8 - No Future For You (Faith)For the ladies:

Buffy Season 8 vol. 1: The Long Way Home

Buffy Season 8 vol. 2: No future for You

Buffy may have left both our television sets and our hearts, but the vampire slaying continues in comic book form. Predominantly written by series creator Joss Whedon, “season eight” of Buffy loses none of the humour that made the series so much fun, and is getting better with each volume.

Nemi, volume II (2)

Lise Myhre's observations on the intricacies of twenty-something life range from side-splitting observations to surreal occurrences to depressing truisms. Bit like real life, then.

 

 

 

 

For Horror fans:

The Walking Dead

Robert Kirkman's zombie saga is still going strong, having just offed its entire cast (retrospective spoiler alert). Whenever the series seems to stall, Kirkman pulls another ace from his sleeve and turns his character's relative serenity turned upside down – often by having the undead eat their brains.


Y'know, for kids…

Bone (colour reprints)

With a Warner Bothers animated feature speculated to be in the works, your kids may thank you in two years time for having introduced them to possibly the most enjoyable fantasy adventure since The Hobbit… though by then they’re more likely to have reached that “difficult stage,” and throw something at your head.

Silverfin

It's James Bond. At Eton. I've no idea if it's good or not, but all kids love Bond. Except girls. And precocious boys. And me when I was a child.

 Jar of Fools - Jason Lutes

For the art student:

Like a Velvet Glove cast in Iron

Hardly a new book, but Daniel Clowes' surreal classic reveals more subtext with each additional read – though I've still no idea what it's all about. As close to a David Lynch comic as anyone could ever ask for.

Jar of Fools

Again, another older book. Jason Lute's understated study of loss is impeccably paced, and illustrated with an attention to detail that pulls you in more than most films could possibly hope to.

 

 

For the guy/girl whose bookshelf consists of nothing but Steven King:

Dark Tower: The Gunslinger Born

Scripted by the ever reliable Peter David, this origin story is surprisingly entertaining, even for those unfamiliar with King's Dark Tower universe.

 

Songs from the Punisher Movies

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Written by Carl Doherty   
Thursday, 19 June 2008 13:23

So you loved the Punisher movie, right? And it goes without saying that you've bought the obligatory skull T-shirt, joined the nearest gym and began on building a physique befitting Thomas Jane? Whether you've already assembling an arsenal large enough to stage a rebellion, or have decided that the obnoxious clerk down at the deli is in the crosshairs of some serious punishment, I've compiled a small Punisher-related audio selection that should compliment vigilante extremism no matter the occasion.

 

The Punisher - Frank Castle

 

The Punisher (1989) Score

Dennis Dreith, Perseverance

For those with a fondness for the 1989 Dolph Lundgren vehicle (lower your hands, please) the Dennis Dreith score is available from Perseverance records. It's a little cheesy, evoking the likes of Rambo and countless Schwarzenegger flicks, but it captures the essence of the Punisher surprisingly well, which is more than can be said for the rest of Mark Goldblatt's abomination.

 

The Punisher: The Album (2004)

Various, Wind-Up Records

With great powers come big budget movies with lacklustre soundtracks. Okay, Frank doesn't actually have any powers, so that doesn't quite work, but this is the usual mix of nu-metal, rock and random oddities that seems mandatory with any superhero movie release. Fortunately, the metal direction suits the film more than it did either Spider-man 2 or Daredevil, and for fans of the genre it’s a pretty solid line-up.

 

Track listing:

 1. "Step Up" by Drowning Pool

 2. "Bleed" by Puddle of Mudd

 3. "Slow Motion" by Nickelback

 4. "Never Say Never" by Queens of the Stone Age

 5. "Broken" by Seether Feat. Amy Lee

 6. "Finding Myself" by Smile Empty Soul

 7. "Lost In A Portrait" by Trapt

 8. "Still Running" by Chevelle

 9. "Ashes To Ashes" by Damageplan Feat. Jerry Cantrell

10. "Sold Me" by Seether

11. "Eyes Wired Shut" by Edgewater

12. "Slow Chemical" by Finger Eleven

13. "The End Has Come" by Ben Moody Feat. Jason Miller & Jason "Gong" Jones

14. "Piece By Piece" by Strata

15. "Bound To Violence" by Hatebreed

16. "Sick" by Seven Wiser

17. "Complicated" by Submersed

18. "Time For People" by Atomship

19. "In Time" by Mark Collie   

 

The Punisher Score (2004)

Carlo Siliotto, La La Land

Carlo Siliotto's score echoes Frank Castle's pain and sorrow. While sounding similar to Dennis Dreith's attempt, it’s slightly more deliberate set, the antithesis of the commercial soundtrack that has undoubtedly sold far more copies.

 

Track Listing:

1. Punisher

2. Otto Krieg

3. Unusual Resurrection

4. Moving

5. I Can't Believe I'm Home

6. His Whole Family

7. Massacre

8. Death and Resurrection of Frank Castle

9. God's Gonna Sit This One Out

10. Ice Lolly and Meat

11. You're Gonna Help Me

12. Entering the Fort

13. About Your Family/Setting a Trap

14. Bomb for John Saint

15. Good Memories Can Save Your Life

16. Thugs

17. Torture

18. Elevator and Headache

19. New Family/Joan's Suffering

20. Quentin's Glass Home

 

 

Details on the soundtrack for Punisher: War Zone are scarce as of writing, but I will be sure to update this page as soon as they become available.

 

A New Reader's Guide to Neil Gaiman's Graphic Novels

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Written by Carl Doherty   
Friday, 06 June 2008 03:36

The Sandman - Neil GaimanWith the success of the movie adaptation Stardust, as well as his novel American Gods, Neil Gaiman's work is finally getting the mainstream attention it deserves. Though alongside Allen Moore, Gaiman has been one of the few American comic writers to enter popular culture, gathering critical acclaim from outside the comic book sphere, many of his appreciators may still not recognise his graphic novel work outside of The Sandman series and its numerous offshoots.

 

For the sake of brevity, I've concentrated on Gaiman's work that is currently available in graphic novel format, presented in chronological order. The list far from extensive, but I think most would agree that I've covered all the classics. As ever with the comic industry, some of the publishing dates may be debatable - in most cases I have given the year in which the stories were published in their original comic format.

 

Violent Cases

1987

Gaiman's first graphic novel collaboration with Dave McKean, in which a narrator recalls events from his childhood in Portsmouth, where he was taken by his father to be treated by an osteopath who once worked for Al Capone. In what would become a prevalent theme in Gaiman's work, Violent Cases is a study in the relationship between memory and imagination, as the narrator's accounts are increasingly skewed by an imperfect recollection of things he was too young too have understood at the time.

 

Black Orchid

1988

An update of a Silver Age DC Comics character with shares similar plant-based powers to Swamp Thing. Featuring cameos from Batman, Poison Ivey and the aforementioned Swampy. This could be considered a precursor to the seminal Sandman series, in that though it is set within the DC Universe, its idiosyncratic atmosphere is more in line with Gaiman's personal work. Dave McKean's art uniquely blends colour and monochromic imagery – Orchid is purple while those around her appear colourless - complements the eponymous heroine's emotional reclusion.

 

The Sandman

1989-1996

  1. Preludes and Nocturnes
  2. The Doll's House
  3. Dream Country
  4. Season of Mists
  5. A Game of You
  6. Fables and Reflections
  7. Brief Lives
  8. Worlds' End
  9. The Kindly Ones
  10. The Wake

The definitive Gaiman series, undoubtedly one of the greatest comic book runs of all time, and the only comic book to find its way onto the New York Times Bestseller List. The ten volume tale of Morpheus, Lord of Dreams, and his fellow personifications of universal concepts The Endless, incorporates countless myths, legends and fairytales into an epic, Grecian tragedy.

 

Though the first volume, Preludes and Nocturnes occurs in the mainstream DC Universe, the series progressively took its own direction. The Sandman spawned numerous spin-offs, the majority of which were not written by Gaiman but are worth reading nevertheless.

 

The Books of Magic

1990

Lead character Tim Hunter and the magician-in-training plot bear an uncanny similarity to J.K. Rowling's Harry Potter, though this is an infinitely more pensive series. Though Gaiman was only involved in this initial miniseries, primarily intended as a guide to the various forms of magic an mysticism in the newly retconned DC Universe, a praiseworthy ongoing series written by John Ney Rieber expanded upon the Tim Hunter character and his fairy heritage, and is highly recommended to fans of The Sandman. Art by John Bolton.

 

Signal to Noise

1992

An emotional, ethereal yarn in which an anonymous film director, told that he has a terminal illness, attempts to create the film he will never get to produce in his head, with a cast of friends and family. Simultaneously empty, depressing and inspiring, Signal to Noise lingers in the mind long after. Again, art by Dave McKean.

 

Death: The High Cost of Living / Death: The Time of Your Life

1994/1997

Two graphic novel spin-offs starring the popular goth chic rendition of Death, sister to the Sandman, Morpheus. The High Cost of Living, in which Death takes human form once every century in order to appreciate life, is arguably the greatest thing Gaiman has ever written, and has undoubtedly reduced countless emotional readers to tears. The Time of Your Life is also very good.

 

The Tragical Comedy or Comical Tragedy of Mr. Punch

1995

A surreally haunting portrayal of a man haunted by his childhood, with bizarre art by long-time collaborator Dave McKean that blends painting with photographic imagery. Like Violent Cases this is a story about stories, with convincingly disturbing themes of early childhood perception and the nature of memory, that really makes you appreciate just how demented the Mr. Punch character is.

 

Stardust

1997

Began as another prestige-format illustrated novel with delicate illustrations by Charles Vess, though it is now most commonly published in a more conventional illustration-free paperback format. Now a popular feature film, though the book has a far more earthly, folktale ambience to it.  

 

Neil Gaiman's Midnight Days

1999

A Collection of Gaiman's earliest short stories, including John Constantine, Swap Thing and the Golden Age Sandman. One for the most ardent fans only, really.

 

The Sandman: The Dream Hunters

1999

Not strictly speaking a graphic novel, but an illustrated novella, with incredible art by Final Fantasy artist Yoshitaka Amano. Gaiman draws his inspiration from numerous Japanese myths, predominantly that of the kisune, or fox spirit.

 

Harlequin Valentine

2001

Based on the old Commedia dell'Arte and Harlequinade pantomime, from which Mr. Punch also derived, this contemporization sees the mischievous entity Harlequin giving his blasé love interest Missy his heart… by literally nailing it to her door. It's an intimate, bittersweet tale, beautifully painted by John Bolten. Includes an interesting essay by Gaiman on the origins of his tale, 'Notes on a Harlequinade.'

 

Marvel 1602

2003

Though written primarily to financially aid his lawsuit against Todd MacFarlane for ownership of the Miracleman property, this relocation of the Marvel Universe into historical territory is an entertaining swashbuckling epic that can be appreciated regardless of one's prior knowledge concerning its characters. Gaiman's classical reinterpretations of popular Marvel franchises (the Fantastic Four, X-Men, Captain America et al) are intelligently mixed in with actual events, though thankfully the book doesn't take itself too seriously. Art by Andy Kubert.

 

Neil Gaiman's Nevewhere (graphic novel)

2006

(written by Mike Carey)

Began life as a dire, low-budget BBC miniseries, co-written with Lenny Henry and aired in 1996. Gaiman wrote a far superior companion novel, which was later adapted into graphic novel form by writer Mike Carey and illustrated by Glenn Fabry. This is by far the best of the three adaptations, with Fabry's art capturing everyman Richard Mayhew's journey through the labyrinthine London Below with a grandeur and attention to detail that no television budget could possibly match.

 

Eternals

2007

Just as he did with DC's original Sandman, Gaiman attempts to breathe life back into Jack Kirby creation The Eternals, an offshoot of humanity created on Earth by the alien Celestials. The nearest to conventional capes & tights shenanigans Gaiman has written in many years, this book sticks closer to the original mythos than his previous reboots. Unlike much of Gaiman's Marvel or DC work, it is perhaps best avoided by those intimidated by the superhero genre. Art by John Romita Jr.  

 
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