Danny Miki
Autor von DC Comics: Zero Year
Reihen
Werke von Danny Miki
Zugehörige Werke
(Crisis on Infinite Earths) By Wolfman, Marv (Author) paperback Published on (01 , 2001) (2000) — Inker — 1,003 Exemplare
Black Panther by Christopher Priest: The Complete Collection Volume 4 (2016) — Illustrator — 38 Exemplare
The New Avengers (Vol. 1) #8: The Sentry, Part 2 — Umschlagillustration — 3 Exemplare
The New Avengers (Vol. 1) #10: The Sentry, Part 4 — Umschlagillustration — 3 Exemplare
The New Avengers (Vol. 1) #9: The Sentry, Part 3 — Umschlagillustration — 3 Exemplare
Wolverine (2003) #33 - Chasing Ghosts, Part 1 — Umschlagillustration — 1 Exemplar
Getagged
Wissenswertes
Für diesen Autor liegen noch keine Einträge mit "Wissenswertem" vor. Sie können helfen.
Mitglieder
Rezensionen
Dir gefällt vielleicht auch
Nahestehende Autoren
Statistikseite
- Werke
- 1
- Auch von
- 19
- Mitglieder
- 80
- Beliebtheit
- #224,854
- Bewertung
- 3.5
- Rezensionen
- 2
- ISBNs
- 4
This book gives snapshots of the early lives of a number of superheroes, framed by two parts of a Batman origin story. Someday I will read the full Batman: Zero Year story, but I liked what I got of it here. The book opens with Bruce Wayne as Batman taking down the Red Hood Gang, in what seems to be one of his first real superheroic actions. It's hard to judge the writing, since I only have a snippet of the story, but I really enjoyed Greg Capullo's art and Fco Plascencia's colors. This is a moody Gotham, but in a very different way to that of Frank Miller and David Mazzucchelli. This is a harsh, dynamic, neon Gotham-- a purifying crucible for the weird. The story ends with a little epilogue that introduces the idea that a giant storm is about to hit Gotham... and some fellow calling himself the Riddler has deactivated the electrical grid.
This provides the setup for the stories that follow, as various young heroes who either live in Gotham or come to render aid to Gotham each has their own experiences during the hurricane. I think there are about twenty-five different stories, and as you might imagine, that results in quite a range of quality, andI don't think I could point to any I found outright terrible, though many are somewhat generic, which is perhaps worse.
I'll focus on the positive here. The best stories were the ones that approached the storm as a testing ground or a crucible, a horrific event that allowed the hero in question to demonstrate who they really were deep down. The very best was, unfortunately, the first of these, a story of Superman. Eager to prove he can do something other than smack on criminals well below his weight class, young Clark Kent flies to Gotham to battle nature itself, and learns that there are limits even to his own power, as much as he still attempts to be the best person he can possibly be. It's a dynamic, involving story: Aaron Kuder does surprisingly good action sequences, and Greg Pak really captures Clark.
I also really enjoyed the story of young Barbara Gordon. With her dad having to do police stuff, Barbara is left at home to protect her brother-- but when their apartment gets evacuated, this turns out to be harder than she thought. There's no big moment where she decides she's going to be a superhero one day; it's simply Barbara deciding to stand up for what she believes in and protect her fellow human beings because it's impossible for her to imagine doing anything else. It's a well-drawn, well-scripted story of how we find who we are during the darkest of times. Literally!
There's also a James Gordon story. It's a little too focused on cop corruption, and not very focused on the storm, but it has its moments, and some of them are great. But then, I always like a little bit of James Gordon. The Kate Kane (the future Batwoman) story isn't very complicated, but it is a good depiction of two women finding their way toward heroism.
The ones I found less effective were either the ones that seemed to contrive the situation to make this moment significant in the life of its hero, or the ones where the fact that there was a giant storm came across as nothing more than incidental set dressing. An example would be the Flash tale: though it makes sense for policewoman Maggie Sawyer from nearby Metropolis to be deployed in Gotham to help out, or for Marine John Stewart to be sent in to help evacuate, it stretched my belief that that an unpowered forensic scientist would be sent to Gotham all the way from Missouri or Ohio (or wherever Central City is), and I sort of rolled my eyes when it turns out that this is when Barry meets Iris West for the first time. Plus the story is all about a weird drug, and very little about the city's crisis. Not that it's a bad story, and given that it's partially drawn by Francis Manapul, it certainly looks good, but it didn't take advantage of the setting in a compelling way.
I didn't care for a significant part of Green Arrow's backstory happening to occur in this place at this time, but Andrea Sorrentino's amazing artwork almost makes me want to pick up the Green Arrow comic book again. The backup tale from the same issue shouldn't have been included here, though, as it has nothing to do with the Zero Year story beyond taking place "in the past."
What's weird about the book is how it ends, with another chapter of Snyder and Capullo's Batman story... but one that clearly takes place before the two dozen stories you've just read, as the storm hasn't hit yet! But it ends with Batman being abducted, so it's unclear to me how it lines up with Batman's cameos through Zero Year (he appears in the Jim Gordon, Green Arrow, and Batwing stories, for example). Maybe this is explained in the next issue, but if so, why wasn't it included here, and why weren't these tales put in order?
Overall, though, this is a surprisingly effective glimpse at a formative time in the new new new DC universe.
DC Comics Crises: « Previous in sequence | Next in sequence »… (mehr)