I was expecting more from Phil Hester and especially Andrea Di Vito on T.H.U.N.D.E.R. Agents. It’s a mix of gee whiz, colorful costumes and some modern sensibilities, but Hester isn’t willing to commit fully to any of them. He’s also not willing to reward the reader much for his or her time in the first issue.
After establishing the THUNDER organization, he quickly brings in the new male hero (it’s very predictable). He’s a loose cannon, a bit hotheaded, but he’s the right man for the job. The vaguely bitchy but good-hearted woman in an authority role goes just goggly eyes on him in her first panel after he arrives.
But the Di Vito art is the real disappointment. It’s not particularly detailed and his figures are really large in their respective panels. It’s like he doesn’t want to work too hard.
And the cliffhanger is an abject failure.
CREDITS
The Judgement Tower, Part One: The Taking of Field Station 123; writer, Phil Hester; artist, Andrea Di Vito; colorist, Rom Fajardo; letterers, Shawn Lee and Chris Mowry; editors, Chris Schraff and Tom Waltz; publisher, IDW Publishing.
Millar hits a home run with the final issue.
Poor Chester and Liz, they only get a page together. But Millar does give Chester just about the only joke in the entire issue.
It’s the big Constantine issue. Oddly, Millar hasn’t really given his own new characters much to do. Instead he relies on the classics to wrap up the comic. It’s appropriate and all, but one might think a writer would be selfish. If Millar’s writing this finale dispassionately, he’s a master faker.
Millar continues killing off Parliaments this issue. Between that subplot, Arcane’s return and Abby preparing for her visit, it’s a full issue. Most talky is obviously Arcane’s return, since he really does only come back to lecture. Millar also reveals the new Arcane ties into something in his first issue–he’s doing a really good job of tying the whole series together, whether stuff from his run or much earlier.
Lots of returning faces this issue–Millar’s first (and last?) regular appearance of Chester. He and Abby go to a McDonald’s stand-in and discuss the world’s predicament. Millar positions their relative calm against everyone else, who are all expecting the world to end.
Millar brings in Jason Woodrue, who hasn’t been around for quite a while, and Constantine, who Millar hasn’t written in this series before.
The wonderful Chester Williams issue. I remember it from reading it years ago–though I forgot Curt Swan pencilled it.
To become the rock elemental and the water elemental, Millar put Alec through a whole bunch of grief. But to become the wind elemental, there’s really not much to it. He has to solve one of the easier riddles I’ve ever read. It’s probably not even a riddle. He just has to find a clue. A very obvious one.
It’s a nice, full issue. Alec meets the son of one of the Cajuns he killed–not his fault, of course, Parliament of Trees banished his human side–and has a very interesting encounter. He bonds with the kid, but also gets to talk to some of his victims.