• The Spirit (October 13, 1940) “The Spirit! Who Is He?”

    Will Eisner (editor, script, pencils, inks)

    Joe Kubert (colors)

    Sam Rosen (letters)

    The splash page for this strip is a newspaper article about the Daily Press declaring its mission to uncover the Spirit’s identity. The article gives a rundown of (some of) the strip so far, including the Spirit being wanted for murder.

    That murder will get discussed a few more times—and its “solving” is so simple one wonders why the Spirit waited so long to get it cleared up—and Eisner and studio clearly did not think all their readers were getting through that newspaper article. Every time it comes up, we get extra exposition on the subject. At one point, the mayor makes Commissioner Dolan tell him all about the murder charge only to remember he was in that scene so knows all the information.

    Separate from the Spirit’s quest to clear his name, a gangster decides to impersonate the Spirit (all it takes is a blue suit, after all) to commit crimes and taunt the police. Oh, and the Daily Press reporter—in from the war in Europe, but this story’s bigger—gets help from a cop to uncover Spirit’s secrets.

    The three subplots never quite converge—the reporter’s adventures stay mostly distinct except when the plot needs to move along a little—and then Dolan gets the ending. In some ways, it’s an entirely functional strip: the Spirit’s (false) murder charge gets resolved. Along the way there’s some humor at the reporter’s expense (Ebony’s contribution) and a variety of action. Besides the Spirit going around town, the gangster impersonating him is out causing trouble. It all leads to some glorious fisticuffs.

    While the strip itself isn’t particularly ambitious, Eisner has several art flexes. The repetitive exposition usually gets some inventive panel composition. Even with the heavy-handed finish (Dolan talking about the Spirit being the dark knight the city deserves), it all works out. The art and narrative choices put the relatively slight story over.

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  • The Spirit (October 6, 1940) “The Mastermind Strikes”

    Will Eisner (editor, script, pencils, inks)

    Joe Kubert (colors)

    Sam Rosen (letters)

    The Spirit tries—very gently—a “whodunit,” with the reader getting as much information as Spirit or the cops; more, actually. The whodunit aspect seems half-baked, similar to the rest of the strip. While The Mastermind avoids any of Spirit’s problematic pitfalls, it’s also barely a story.

    The strip opens with a mayoral candidate’s aide dying by poison gas, which the coroner can’t figure out. When the candidate visits Dolan to demand action, the Spirit shows up and the candidate remembers Spirit’s wanted for that murder from months ago. The candidate demands Dolan arrest the Spirit, but obviously the Spirit escapes.

    One more murder and then the “Mastermind” is after the Spirit too, hiring a kid to deliver a bomb to him. Spirit will enlist the kid’s help, intentionally putting him in harm’s way at one point, as he unravels the case. Except he’s just operating off that early clue the reader also got, so it’s not a lot of unraveling.

    The last few pages have the Spirit getting in a fight with the villain. Lots of empty backgrounds as they punch it out. Even the finish is slight, with Eisner and studio wrapping the whole thing in the last couple panels, including the villain’s motives. Given the strip starts promising a “Mastermind”—standing over a pile of skulls on the splash page—having the villain not just be a done-in-one, but also be far from devious and really just in possession of explosives and poisons the cops can’t identify.

    There are some nice establishing shot panels of the city—long shots with good angles and nice line work. The action at the end is fine; it just dawdles through action and hurries through the exposition.

    Even as the least impressive of Spirit so far, it’s still rock solid work, technically speaking. Eisner just seems like he’s run out of things to try this one.

    Outside that gorgeous splash page, of course.

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  • All-Star Comics (1976) #61

    Gerry Conway (editor, script)

    Keith Giffen (layouts)

    Wally Wood (pencils, inks)

    Al Sirois (inks)

    Carl Gafford (colors)

    Ben Oda (letters)

    Paul Levitz (assistant editor)

    Writer Gerry Conway likes deus ex machinas so much, he flies one in on a spaceship for this issue. The issue’s got multiple comes and goings, like there was only so much time each hero got in each subplot. For instance, when the deus ex machina lands, the only superhero going to intercept is Power Girl, ducking out on another scene.

    She ducked out just after Mrs. The Flash came to the burned up headquarters from last issue and told Jay it’s time to come home because he’s not young anymore. It’s very strange. Especially since other heroes then arrive to bring the numbers back up.

    The majority of the issue involves the JSA trying to take down Vulcan, having discovered he’s the rogue astronaut gone mad with power. Or maybe he went mad first; doesn’t end up mattering. Conway must’ve decided even though the All-Star heroes are a bit squarer than their Earth-One counterparts, the comic’s going to get unexpectedly and unnecessarily dark from time to time.

    There’s oddly more internal griping from Green Lantern this issue, too. It’s like Conway’s got his various character personality bits to get in—Star-Spangled Kid going on about his cosmic rod, Wildcat being a shallow bully, Power Girl (usually accurately) finding misogyny everywhere. Alan Scott, the Green Lantern, is a petulant man-child narcissist who cannot stop thinking about himself. Even when Dr. Fate runs into trouble, Green Lantern centers himself entirely in the panic.

    There’s some setup for next issue with Hawkman’s alter ego’s museum-related subplot. And Dr. Mid-Nite shows up to do some doctoring, but also do be the only one with x-ray (close enough) vision. Conway’s got everything very neatly arranged, even if all the details are bland.

    Power Girl does get a relatively decent solo mission intercepting the spaceship and its pilot. There’s a multi-page punch-out with penciller Keith Giffen doing some elaborate page layouts. Wally Wood keeps up on the finished art, of course, but when Giffen actually gets to do a busy, creative page, it works out.

    It’s not a particularly compelling read, however. Giffen’s few pages of Power Girl versus space invader, which has panels ranging from the most sci-fi superhero comic fight to a journey through the mind, are very welcome. Except there’s no pay-off because the timer’s gone off, and Conway’s ready for the next batch of characters.

    Despite saving the planet every other issue, the book doesn’t seem at all necessary.

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  • The Spirit (September 29, 1940) “Oriental Agents”

    Will Eisner (editor, script, pencils, inks)

    Joe Kubert (colors)

    Sam Rosen (letters)

    Despite the (already) ominous title, Oriental Agents’ main cringe-factor doesn’t involve the titular spies. Instead, wow, does The Spirit think very little of Ellen Dolan, and in general, the female of the species.

    The strip begins with Ellen dumping Homer Creep (née Creap) because he’s not the Spirit. Homer goes off and gets drunk, gets picked up by a spy, and kidnapped. Ellen’s mortified at the thought of him… finding another woman. Just because she doesn’t want him doesn’t mean she wants some other girl having him.

    This generally gross vibe continues throughout the strip, whether when Ellen tries to tag along with the Spirit to investigate or when she gets to the resolution and finds no one cares about her feminine wiles.

    The spies—from the “Asiatic Embassy”—kidnapped Homer to hypnotize him and get him to kill an industrialist. Despite them being the title characters, until the Spirit arrives at their lair—a remote castle—they’re barely around. Most of the time is spent with Ellen, Homer, or the Spirit. Dolan’s got a little time fretting over Ellen’s romantic decisions and expositing about Homer being a murderer (he’s not the first guy they’ve hypnotized into murder). Ebony’s also around for a few panels; he was out doing investigating for the Spirit, who isn’t as disinterested in the case as he conveys to Ellen. He just doesn’t want to be cleaning up her love life.

    Once it’s clear their cases are entwined, Spirit will relent and take Ellen along in his pursuit. That pursuit will involve the Spirit putting on a disguise. The disguise is on his face: muss to make him look old and a ruffled hat. Otherwise he does not change his blue suit. No one can recognize him with that face makeup, despite him wearing the same suit as the scene before.

    It’s an okay strip, certainly the least in a while. While the Oriental aspects of the story seem like they should be in the spotlight, they’re very mild. Ellen being an unlikable, shallow harpy, however, is a problem. Especially since the strip itself seems to dislike her.

    Big “he-man woman haters club” energy here.

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  • Briefly, TV (23 July 2025)

    The Gilded Age (2022) s03e02 “What the Papers Say” [2025] D: Deborah Kampmeier. S: Carrie Coon, Morgan Spector, Louisa Jacobson, Denée Benton, Taissa Farmiga, Cynthia Nixon, Christine Baranski. Thanks to some semi-twists, fantastic acting (Baranski gets to flex), and a killer cliffhanger, the episode distracts from the fast resolutions to outstanding plot threads. The continuing ones seem fine–including setting up Coon for a big season, even though she’s been queenmaking behind the scenes until now–but AGE is finite. Exceptionally good gowns this episode, too.

    The Gilded Age (2022) s03e03 “Love Is Never Easy” [2025] D: . S: Carrie Coon, Morgan Spector, Louisa Jacobson, Denée Benton, Taissa Farmiga, Cynthia Nixon, Christine Baranski. Lots of great soapy scenes distract from the wheel spinning as far as plot arcs are concerned. Most of the first act’s conflicts are completely resolved by the third–it’s still too soon (is it, though) to figure out Coon’s season arc or anyone’s; except maybe Benton’s. Her story–about classism affecting her potential love life–is the highlight.

    The Gilded Age (2022) s03e04 “Marriage is a Gamble” [2025] D: . S: Carrie Coon, Morgan Spector, Louisa Jacobson, Denée Benton, Taissa Farmiga, Cynthia Nixon, Christine Baranski. It’s Farmiga’s wedding episode so it’s unfortunate she never gets centered. Lots of subplots perturb (or seeming resolve) and the show seems to be positioning Coon for a boring villain arc. Good acting, especially Benton and Baranski. It’ll probably all be fine but there’s too many perfunctory closures occurring at once.

    Poker Face (2023) s02e10 “The Big Pump” [2025] D: Clea DuVall. S: Natasha Lyonne, Jason Ritter, Patti Harrison, Method Man, Natasha Leggero, Myra Lucretia Taylor, Laith Wallschleger. Guest star Ritter’s angry he’s not seeing enough fitness results and blames other guest star Method Man. Do they both have secrets worth dying for? Delightful performances–from everyone, particularly Method Man and Harrison as Lyonne’s sidekick–make up for a generally inert, way too easy mystery. However, Brooklyn’s the longest Lyonne’s been in a location; the bit’s ripening.

    Poker Face (2023) s02e11 “Day of the Iguana” [2025] D: Ti West. S: Natasha Lyonne, Simon Helberg, Patti Harrison, Lili Taylor, Justin Theroux, Haley Joel Osment, Taylor Schilling. Harrison and Lyonne are buddies working a wedding where mysterious assassin Theroux is after groom Osment. Harrison thinks Theroux’s cute. Also Helberg’s back for another episode as Lyonne’s FBI body. Lots of intricate setup for very little unraveling, as it turns out it’ll all play into the season finale next episode. Really good performances (and good bits) carry it fine.

    Poker Face (2023) s02e12 “The End of the Road” [2025] D: Natasha Lyonne. S: Natasha Lyonne, Rhea Perlman, Simon Helberg, Patti Harrison, Lili Taylor, Taylor Schilling, Adam Arkin. Season–or is that series–finale is simultaneously accomplished, predictable, and divine. Lyonne and Harrison are trying to find mob-boss-in-witness-protection Perlman so they can escape hit man Theroux. Meanwhile, FBI guy Helberg is trying to find them, too. Beautifully done (though there’s a big BTS question mark at the end), with fantastic performances. Big wow.

    Resident Alien (2021) s04e04 “Truth Hurts” [2025] D: Brennan Shroff. S: Alan Tudyk, Sara Tomko, Corey Reynolds, Alice Wetterlund, Levi Fiehler, Elizabeth Bowen, Meredith Garretson. Tudyk spends most of his episode with returning guest star Edi Patterson, who he loves but finds revolting physically now because he’s just human. Will he or won’t he tell her? Meanwhile, Wetterlund can’t help getting the currently independent subplots closer together. Great episode for very funny Tudyk and Reynolds (who’s learning to love believing in aliens).

    Resident Alien (2021) s04e05 “The Human Condition” [2025] D: Sydney Freeland. S: Alan Tudyk, Sara Tomko, Corey Reynolds, Alice Wetterlund, Levi Fiehler, Elizabeth Bowen, Meredith Garretson. Tudyk gets a lot of good material as he tries to figure out how to live as a human who used to be an alien, rather than an alien impersonating a human. Tomko’s got a lot going on (albeit reacting to everyone else). Reynolds, Bowen, Fiehler, Garretson all seem ready to combine plot threads. Great Jenna Lamia showcase, too.

    Resident Alien (2021) s04e06 “Soul Providers” [2025] D: Sydney Freeland. S: Alan Tudyk, Sara Tomko, Corey Reynolds, Alice Wetterlund, Levi Fiehler, Elizabeth Bowen, Meredith Garretson. Absurdly sappy episode–which should’ve gotten through as Capracorn–stumbles its way to a lovelily acted conclusion. Tudyk’s on trial at space court and discovers he’s got a soul; meanwhile, Wetterlund tries to find Tomko’s bank deposit, which she drunkenly lost. The episode keeps the laughs coming while going from syrupy to content warning to sincere. Bad directing, though.

    Resident Alien (2021) s04e07 “Daddy Issues” [2025] D: . S: Alan Tudyk, Sara Tomko, Corey Reynolds, Alice Wetterlund, Levi Fiehler, Elizabeth Bowen, Meredith Garretson. Stephen Root guest stars as Tudyk’s alien dad in human form and brings the right energy. The part itself is a little thin. They argue and make faces. Good stuff. Meanwhile, the humans are all in crisis, mostly alien-related but also serious human drama. The show definitely seems to be setting up for a finish. A strong okay.

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