• Briefly, Comics (3 June 2024)

    Black Panther (1998) #12 [1999] W: Christopher Priest. A: Mark Bright, Nelson (Nelson DeCastro). Just okay wrap up for the series-to-date. There’s some nice art and some okay jokes. Lots goes unresolved. And there’s a big reveal to change the impact of the story. Priest opens the issue with one eh reveal, and then does a pointless Captain America guest spot. Cap’s just around so they could have him on the cover.

    Black Panther (1998) #13 [1999] W: Christopher Priest. A: Bob Almond, Sal Velluto. Priest kicks off the next story arc with elaborate narration from Ross. There’s trouble afoot, not to mention betrayal, and a more sedate than usual Ross breaks it down. Priest gives all Ross’s dorky white boy lines to guest star Justice. It’s a packed issue. Also: Hydro-Man attacka. The new art team is fantastic and they know it.

    Black Panther (1998) #14 [2000] W: Christopher Priest, Glenn Alan Herdling. A: Gregg Schigiel, Richard Case, Sal Velluto. After a tedious if well-illustrated Ross introduction, the issue switched over to Black Panther rescuing a plane from Hydro-Man. The passengers don’t know they’re hostages, which gives T’Challa some page time. Must be nice just to have the suit turn on and off. Great action issue. Veluto and Almond’s art, Priest’s writing–the book’s delightfully sturdy.

    Black Panther (1998) #15 [2000] W: Christopher Priest. A: Bob Almond, Sal Velluto. It’s a very quick issue. Black Panther is giving a statement to former squeeze Nikki, while her boyfriend Ross is calling for help. Plus a lengthy, very amusing sequence about the Hulk getting radicalized against capitalism. Ross’s bit (he’s on a ceremonial hunt) is a little rote; since the art’s good now, it’s fine. Stable is the new BLACK.

    Black Panther (1998) #16 [2000] W: Christopher Priest. A: Bob Almond, Sal Velluto. Panther’s New York side mission now has Nightshade guest starring as the villain. She’s a LUKE CAGE villain, hired by Killmonger to disgrace Wakanda. Meanwhile the actual Killmonger is protecting Monica Lynne and running a capitalist utopia. Someone’s got to be confused, right? The ending is a lot of fun. The Ross gag (dipshit white narrator) is getting tiring.

    Catwoman (2002) #18 [2003] W: Ed Brubaker. A: Javier Pulido. It’s another major downer issue, starting with Holly teetering on the edge of the wagon. Then Slam is trying to get lost in work, only for the case to disappoint. His attempt to include Selina proves a poor decision, with Brubaker confusingly setting the story in the aftermath. Lovely, emotive art from Pulido. Hopefully Bru baker’s going somewhere.

    Catwoman (2002) #19 [2003] W: Ed Brubaker. A: Javier Pulido. As far as resolutions go, it’s frankly mid. Selina gets more self-destructive; eventually Batman shows up so they can get that sales bump. He’s not in it long enough to matter, just another tool on Brubaker’s narrative utility belt. The art gets too much for Pulido too. He’s great at movement and mood, but definitely not monologues.

    Catwoman (2002) #20 [2003] W: Ed Brubaker. A: Cameron Stewart. Selina and Holly hit the road to find themselves and whatnot. First stop: Catwoman’s top secret… farm. There, Wildcat Ted Grant provides sage advice and fight training. The duo is in need of both. Some really good action art. Holly’s letters home provide the majority of the narration. The script’s full of such narrative devices; they’re usually successful.

    Catwoman (2002) #21 [2003] W: Ed Brubaker. A: Cameron Stewart. Selina teams up with Captain Cold. He’s got information she needs, he needs help on a heist. Holly wanders Keystone (mostly off-page). The script’s okay, but Brubaker avoids exploring the team-up dynamics for the most part, which is good because they’re problematic. Nice GET SHORTY homage. Great art. The action, the “travelogue.” It’s a good looking book.

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  • Briefly, Comics (24 May 2024)

    Black Panther (1998) #9 [1999] W: Christopher Priest. A: Mike Manley. The cartoonish Manley art hurts immeasurably as Priest thoroughly unravels the conspiracy against Wakanda. Turns out the Avengers’ racist uncle at Thanksgiving was after the vibranium the whole time. If only someone had said something. Lots of (ugly) action, lots of expert exposition, and a little bit of character work. The Manley art hurts the character work the most.

    Black Panther (1998) #10 [1999] W: Christopher Priest. A: Mike Manley. The Manley art continues to be terrible, but Priest’s writing is so good it doesn’t matter. I mean. It does but not catastrophically. The story is all about the politics of the situation, but from the Wakandan point of view. Plus lots of action. Some of that action might even be good if the art weren’t terrible. Alas.

    Black Panther (1998) #11 [1999] W: Christopher Priest. A: Mark Bright, Nelson (Nelson DeCastro). Bright can draw. Not only can he draw, Priest trusts him to draw. So Priest tries things. They don’t always work–the movie references, which rarely involve the art, flop. But there’s a bunch of character work, even on Ross, and numerous pleasant surprises. Priest does an excellent job with the pacing. More intrigue and action. Finally okay looking.

    Catwoman (2002) #14 [2003] W: Ed Brubaker. A: Cameron Stewart, J.G. Jones, Mike Manley. Team Catwoman starts investigating sister Maggie’s missing husband and whoever blew up Selina’s community center. Odd Batman isn’t involved. Odder he doesn’t know Black Mask has been slaughtering rival crews. Marley’s inks kind of spoil things, but the story’s all regulars in great danger so it still compels. Whether Brubaker’s got a point besides cruelty remains to be seen.

    Catwoman (2002) #15 [2003] W: Ed Brubaker. A: Cameron Stewart, J.G. Jones. It’s more of the same relentless suffering, along with some torture. There’s also some phenomenal art. And some iffy cheesecake. To discover the mystery villain, Selina goes one way, Holly goes another. One of them is in greater danger by the end. It’s an outstanding finish to a yucky issue. The extreme is too much the point.

    Catwoman (2002) #16 [2003] W: Ed Brubaker. A: Cameron Stewart, J.G. Jones. It’s a good finish, but even when Brubaker ties it all together–including the torture and all that jazz–it comes up thin. And he’s got to pivot. And that pivot isn’t any better. It’s just more. Some real good art. The action gets a tad protracted. Then Brubaker punts the POV away from Selina, which stinks.

    Catwoman (2002) #17 [2003] W: Ed Brubaker. A: Javier Pulido. Pulido’s art’s controlled but rough; it’s kinetic; every line bursting with potential. Exactly what the story needs. Selina and company are trying and failing to recover from last arc’s heavy losses. Holly’s veering toward using, Selina and Slam are in a drunken, power imbalance hookup spiral. Brubaker gives Selina her time. Pulido draws Robert Mitchum as Slam. It’s awesome.

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  • Briefly, Comics (19 May 2024)

    Black Panther (1998) #8 [1999] W: Christopher Priest. A: Amanda Conner, Jimmy Palmiotti, Joe Jusko, Vince Evans. After a pretty but narratively pointless flashback to T’Challa’s first adventure with Captain America, it’s back to the present. A crowd of Black New Yorkers want to see Black Panther. The NYPD wants to shoot them for being lawfully assembled. Will the cops even listen to Captain America? Plus, international intrigue, ex-girlfriends, and assassination attempts. Good as usual.

    Catwoman (2002) #13 [2003] W: Ed Brubaker. A: Cameron Stewart. Just as everything starts coming together for Selina and company, an unseen enemy conspires to take everything away. There’s a lot of good material, lovely timing, great art, but the mix of sweet and sour is off for the ending. There’s a too effective thriller scene following a too effective action sequence. Oh. The arc’s called “Relentless.” Got it.

    Werewolf by Night (1972) #39 [1976] W: Doug Moench. A: Don Perlin. Despite some serious hiccups, not to mention Jack immediately returning to the friends he said he was forever abandoning, it’s not too bad. There’s some bad art, sure, but Brother Voodoo is a decent guest star and the characters are all sincere in their concerns. And Jack does have a decent surprise development. But the cliffhanger is utter nonsense.

    Werewolf by Night (1972) #40 [1976] W: Doug Moench. A: Don Perlin. It’s the worst writing from Moench in a while. Pointless references, low-key racism (so Jack’s on point), the too much padding. The werewolf and Brother Voodoo might zombies. Lots of fighting, while Jack discovering he has more control of wolfing out. The finish is more can kicking from Moench. I can’t believe they’re back to promising big changes.

    Werewolf by Night (1972) #41 [1976] W: Doug Moench. A: Don Perlin. More putting things in order has Wolfman Jack in full control, fighting monsters and old foes. It’s fantastical and silly. But there’re lots of little Perlin panels, which still charm. Also, Moench–in Jack’s first-person narration–finally contextualizes that narration: Jack’s journaling, sometime after the fact. Kind of compelling (because Topaz is in danger, really), kind of not.

    Werewolf by Night (1972) #42 [1977] W: Doug Moench. A: Don Perlin. Jack and Topaz go to New York City to celebrate his being able to control good lycanthropy. Before they know it, he’s playing superhero only to get in a fight with Iron Man. Then Jarvis shows up. It’s a lot, but Perlin’s much better with Iron Man than wolf men. Moench’s desperately enthusiastic; last ditch effort before cancellation.

    Werewolf by Night (1972) #43 [1977] W: Doug Moench. A: Ernie Chan. Despite Moench closing the series with the cancellation announcement, WEREWOLF leaves some loose threads. The story wraps the Iron Man team-up, complete with Jarvis being a weirdo about Jack. Moench’s narration is bland and omnipresent, but they’re fighting a giant robot with the traits of an ape, an alligator, and a cheetah. It’s silly, and an unfortunate finish.

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  • Briefly, TV (18 May 2024)

    The Big Door Prize (2023) s02e04 “Storytellers” [2024] D: Heather Jack. S: Chris O’Dowd, Gabrielle Dennis, Josh Segarra, Sammy Fourlas, Djouliet Amara, Patrick Kerr, Aaron Roman Weiner. Never mind, they’ve lost the plot with Amara and Fourlas again. And O’Dowd’s post-date guilt becomes a thing. Though it does rescue Dennis from an overwrought gal pals subplot. About the only solid material is for Kerr and Weiner, who bond over incomplete memories. Segarra’s got some funny moments. For everyone but Kerr, the show’s vamping for time.

    Doctor Who (2005) s14e03 “Boom” [2024] D: Julie Anne Robinson. S: Ncuti Gatwa, Millie Gibson, Joe Anderson, Caoilinn Springall, Bhav Joshi, Susan Twist, Varada Sethu. So good I recommended it to a real human person show-off episode written by former show runner Steven Moffat. It’s anti-war, anti-capitalism, anti-religion. Gatwa is stuck on a land mine. But still rescues Gibson and the assorted guest stars from a war planet. Real good acting. Gates’s the most accessible Doctor ever.

    Beacon 23 (2023) s02e06 “Luan Casca” [2024] D: Lewin Webb. S: Hannah Melissa Scott, John Kapelos, Milton Barnes, Diane Johnstone. The show punts the shark-jumping decision for a flashback episode, with Scott playing a teenage version of Lena Headey’s (still) deceased season one lead. Scott shows up as a beacon-keeper trainee to Kapelos’s working-class hero. It turns out they’ve both got secrets, but only one involves a mystery man (Barnes). Kapelos’s good; Scott’s making admirable swings.

    The Big Door Prize (2023) s02e03 “Power & Energy” [2024] D: Heather Jack. S: Chris O’Dowd, Gabrielle Dennis, Josh Segarra, Sammy Fourlas, Djouliet Amara, Ally Maki, Justine Lupe. On his first night “separated” from Dennis, O’Dowd starts an iffy arc with a date; fellow teacher Lupe. Meanwhile, Dennis gets trapped in a social situation with mean mom Crystal R. Fox. Hopefully, Lupe’s not supposed to be likable because she’s not. Some fun Segarra, and Fourlas and Amara recover their balance on screen. But the show is rocking.

    Crashing (2016) s01e04 “Episode 4” D: George Kane. S: Damien Molony, Phoebe Waller-Bridge, Jonathan Bailey, Louise Ford, Julie Dray, Adrian Scarborough, Amit Shah. It’s… next level. Not just the best episode of an excellent series, but double it. Or more. Molony and Waller-Bridge have an old school hangout adventure, while Ford discovers herself after an accident. Then Bailey’s taking his new flirt-jerk thing with Shah to even more extremes. Series best acting from everyone with enough to do. Including Molony.

    Doctor Who (2005) s14e02 “The Devil’s Chord” [2024] D: Ben Chessell. S: Ncuti Gatwa, Millie Gibson, Jinkx Monsoon, Chris Mason, George Caple, Jeremy Limb, Kit Rakusen. Interdimensional god Monsoon arrives in the 1920s to steal all the music for themself, then running into Gatwa and Gibson in the sixties when Gibson wants to see The Beatles. Can Gatwa and Gibson save music itself? Gatwa and Gibson maintain their charm, even in what amounts to a special effects extravaganza action episode. Monsoon’s fun. It’s just thin.

    Doctor Who (2005) s14e01 “Space Babies” [2024] D: Julie Anne Robinson. S: Ncuti Gatwa, Millie Gibson, Angela Wynter, Michelle Greenidge, Golda Rosheuvel. Gatwa and Gibson kick off the regular series with an obnoxiously adorable outing involving a bunch of super intelligent babies trapped on a space station with a monster. The monster gives major ALIENS vibes, so there’s some nice contrasts. It’s funny, yucky, charming, and extremely charming. Gatwa continues to be a delight, Gibson’s coming along; it’s absolutely wonderful.

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  • The Fabulous Baker Boys (1989, Steve Kloves)

    The Fabulous Baker Boys opens with pseudo-protagonist Jeff Bridges saying goodbye to his latest cocktail waitress one-night stand (always his decision, never hers–Baker Boys is all about taking advantage of patriarchal privilege). Under the opening titles, he walks to work. Baker Boys takes place in Seattle and regularly features its skyline, but director Kloves is careful never to show the Space Needle. Much like its characters, the film exists on the edge of reality.

    Bridges plays one half of the Fabulous. Beau Bridges play the other. Beau’s the responsible one who has a wife and kids in the suburbs. Jeff is the love-them-and-leave-them, hard-drinking jazz pianist with a heart of gold (he gives Ellie Raab, the tween who lives upstairs, a safe spot when her mom’s got a fellow over). They’ve been playing piano together for thirty-one years, starting as kids, turning it into a profession. They’ve played all over town for years, and they’re getting played out. No one’s going to clubs with pianomen.

    After one particularly disheartening experience, Beau decides they’re going to need to have someone along to sing a song. Cue an amusing (albeit unkind) audition sequence, which starts with Jennifer Tilly’s off-key attempt. Baker Boys appreciates having Tilly (she even gets a special end credit), and she’s a lot of fun. She brings the first lightness to the film. While it’s never too dark, it does… wallow in melancholy at times. Tilly shakes up the momentum nicely.

    The audition sequence ends with Michelle Pfeiffer, who can sing, and thus becomes the singer, even though she’s a little too brash for Beau’s tastes. She doesn’t even rate a blip on Jeff’s radar initially, but once they all get performing and realize they’ve found a good thing… he takes notice.

    There are some fantastic scenes during this portion of the film. There’s a mix of dismay and exuberance–Pfeiffer’s new to the live entertainment business, excited at various potentials. Beau and Jeff have years of experience and are appropriately downtrodden about the whole thing. They think they’ve hit their peak, not realizing Pfeiffer’s contributions will change their lane. Jeff plays most of his scenes silent and sullen. He’s a tortured artisté (no one says he’s the best jazz pianist in the town, but it’s definitely the vibe, and he’s given that up for Beau, who’s just good). But when Pfeiffer and Beau clash, Jeff gets these twinkles in his eyes, and they add up to character development and chemistry.

    Lots of Baker Boys is about chemistry. Jeff and Pfeiffer spend a solid portion of the second act circling each other, trying to find an angle where going for it isn’t a mistake. Beau sees what’s going on and tries to stop it. The sequence where he can’t is spectacular, where Kloves shows off he, cinematographer Michael Ballhaus (it’s such a gorgeous photography job, it’s never not stunning), and editor William Steinkamp’s abilities in an entirely new context. They’ve got light drama, light comedy, and sexy but not tawdry lounge singing down, but they can do so much more.

    Baker Boys is a character study. It’s a strange one because despite spending the movie with Jeff, it’s not clear until he and Pfeiffer start alternating clashing and crashing; it’s all about him. The character’s distant from everyone; why would the audience be any different.

    But Kloves doesn’t let the sub-genre dictate the format. Even as a straight drama–despite the hot and heavy, it’s not a romance or a romantic drama–there’s time for screwball, there’s time for laughs, for smiles. The first act sets up the Baker Boys, but there’s a lot more to say about them, it turns out, right into the third act. After an unevenly paced present action–the film takes place over any number of months, with New Year’s being around the center–the third act is a few days at most.

    Because there’s not a lot to wrap up other than everyone acknowledging the state of their situations. One of the problems is the lack of communication (no one ever points out Jeff being smirking, smoking, or sullen is a significant contributor, unfortunately), and the way Kloves layers in those reveals is exquisite. The characters often argue about something the audience doesn’t know about or know how to contextualize, and Kloves has to get the reveals in just right. Even though the audience can’t know (with some exceptions) how things will hit, the film’s got to be ready to situation them on demand. The thing about the arguments and the character turmoils is they’re fast-paced. When Jeff lashes out to hurt people, he does it rapidly, and Kloves makes sure the audience is never behind.

    The acting’s outstanding. Jeff really gets to come into it towards the end of the second act, while Beau plays sturdy support. Pfeiffer deserves those effusive “revelation” statements. There’s not really a cast besides them; hence Tilly is making such an impression.

    Outstanding technicals, fantastic Dave Grusin score, The Fabulous Baker Boys is, obviously, fabulous, but it’s also a superb achievement from cast and crew. There’s a lot of exceptional work on display here.