Saturday, July 19, 2014

Black Canary and Zatanna: Bloodspell - A Review



The Black Canary and Zatanna: Bloodspell graphic novel was a story that was first rumored about repeatedly even since before DC's New 52 reboot/relaunch occurred. So I was anticipating it for quite some time and I consider it an early birthday present from DC this year, especially because Zatanna is my favorite comic book super-heroine. It helps that Paul Dini was announced as the writer too! Dini wrote my favorite run of Batman comic stories I've read so far, with his issues of Detective Comics that I found reminiscent of Batman: The Animated Series (my amazing introduction to the world of Batman & his vast supporting cast). That run also included some appearances of DC's "mistress of magic" in a way that restored her more whimsical, capricious, and independent nature, after some drudgery DC put her through beforehand... And his issues written in the solo Zatanna series were a natural extension of that for her.
It's plain to see she's in good hands with him & he knows his way around the world of the Bat, and Black Canary falls into the fringes of that realm, but I hadn't seen her portrayed by Dini yet, so that was a little more of a surprise. And Joe Quinones as the artist is matched up perfectly with Dini for the entertaining, sometimes amusing, visual feel & tone of this book.

Both Black Canary and Zatanna are long-standing DC Comics super-heroines who share most of their intersecting history within the original Justice League of America, and are actually the second & third female characters to ever join the League, with Wonder Woman being one of its founders, and are most known in DC as sporting fishnet stockings. Yet I can't think of a time where these 2 had a team-up story all their own, despite all the decades of DC history, so this was overdue I think.

To start off, Dini has a previously unseen early chance meeting of the young ladies that still worked effortlessly with the pre-New 52 continuity--Zee as a mildly timid adolescent performing a mystical rite of passage in the Himalayas, and Dinah seemed to be an adventurous, thrill-seeking, "latch-key kid" teenager. That bond, once established, served to fully keep my interest throughout the rest of the book..

"Bloodspell" also revisits this friendship through a few more flashbacks of moments we only wish we had seen before in Justice League stories, but that still fit right in perfectly as untold tales. You even see both characters' evolution through their costumes at the different stages of their shared past. Dini & and Quinones even show show us Zatanna in her very first outfit, with Canary making a reference to Zee's first meeting with Hawkman & Hawkgirl, which coincided with her debut in DC. These flashbacks not only show a fun side to the the heroines' past, but provide any long-time Justice League reader with fond moments of nostalgia. And these moments are fluidly incorporated into the story where they work best.

With the main, present-day story, Dinah is shown with Ollie as her apparent husband, as they were married pre-Flashpoint, even with a bedroom scene (I'll show a snippet of here) presented in a playful fashion, that's refreshing.
  The newsflash here reveals the threat that reunites the fish-netted females, named Tina Spettro, someone who Dinah tangled with on an undercover case she worked solo, which ended in Spettro's untimely demise.
                                                               

But, Spettro's fate was also something planned for when she had Dinah (in disguise) and four other women unknowingly seal their fates together with a bloodspell, a deal which Spettro comes back to claim in revenge from beyond the grave. That leads to Canary seeking assistance from a friendly source in the supernatural, who happens to be putting on an after-show encore for some children with as much suspense as she can muster with monkeys! From there, it's a girls' day out at the mall to catch up & come up with a plan to take down the spectral Spettro & her serial-killing spell.     

 

   Later on, when the ladies discover and confront the former lover and earthly host Tina Spettro is operating through, the fight gets down & dirty, with the ghostly villain pitting the friends against each other. It's a manipulative fight that ends with a transference that hopefully brings peace to the restless spirit. 


And the hard-fought victory almost ends with the girls celebrating over margaritas, but instead are called by Ollie to Metropolis to help thwart another threat the League needs help with. One thing's for sure, Paul Dini & Joe Quinones bring the magic with this well-crafted story! Five stars from me! And for those of you who want to see more DC Comics stories set outside of the current New 52 continuity, vote with your wallet and buy this!

Sunday, June 15, 2014

My Most Recommended Comic Book Runs by DC: Part 5

41. Power of Shazam! (1995) #1-48

42. Resurrection Man vol. 1 (1997)

43. Outsiders vol. 3 (2003) #1-50, Annual 1

44. Catwoman vol. 3 (2002) #1-10, 12-37 [Ed Brubaker's Catwoman run] -- There's scattered other issues from this series that are decent, but Brubaker's is the best solid run of the series.

45. Crisis Aftermath: Battle for Bludhaven (2006) #1-6, Uncle Sam & the Freedom Fighters vol. 1 (2006) #1-8, Uncle Sam & the Freedom Fighters vol. 2 (2007) #1-8, Freedom Fighters vol. 2 (2010) #1-9 [Jimmy Palmiotti & Justin Gray's Freedom Fighters run]

46. Legion of Super-Heroes vol. 3 (1989) #122-125, Legionnaires (1993) #78-81, Legion Lost vol. 1 (2000) #1-12, Legion Worlds (2001) #1-6, The Legion (2001) #1-33 [Dan Abnett & Andy Lanning's run writing The Legion/Legion of Super-Heroes]

47. Saga of Swamp Thing (1982) #20-38, 42-45 & Swamp Thing vol. 2 (1985) #39-41, 46-64, Anual 2 [Alan Moore's run writing Swamp Thing]

48. The Flash vol. 2 (1987) #1/2, 0, 1-247, Annual 1-13

49. R.E.B.E.L.S. vol. 2 (2009) #1-28, Annual 1

50. Batman vol. 1 (1940) #655-658, 663-683, 700-702, Batman and Robin vol. 1 (2009) #1-16, Batman: The Return of Bruce Wayne (2010) #1-6, Batman: The Return (2011) #1, Batman, Inc. vol. 1 (2011) #1-8, Batman, Inc.: Leviathan Strikes (2012) #1, & Batman, Inc. vol. 2 (2012) #0, 1-13 [Grant Morrison's run writing Batman]

Friday, June 13, 2014

My Most Recommended Comic Book Runs by DC: Part 4

31.  1st Issue Special (1975) #8, The Warlord vol. 1 (1976) #1-133, Annual 1-6

32. Birds of Prey vol. 1 (1999) #1-127

33. Legion of Super-Heroes vol. 1 (1980) #298; Amethyst, Princess of Gemworld vol. 1 (1983) #1-12, Annual 1; Amethyst, Princess of Gemworld vol. 2 (1985) #1-11 [Gary Cohn & Dan Mishkin's Amethyst run]

34. Green Lantern vol. 3 (1990) #0, 1-181, Annual 1-9

35. Aquaman vol. 6 (2003) #1-39

36. Countdown to Infinite Crisis (2005) #1; OMAC Project (2005) #1-6, Infinite Crisis Special; Checkmate vol. 2 (2006) #1-25 [Greg Rucka's run on Checkmate]

37. Day of Vengeance (2005) #1-6, Infinite Crisis Special; Shadowpact (2006) #1-25 [Shadowpact's complete run]

38. Villains United (2005) #1-6, Infinite Crisis Special; Secret Six vol. 2 (2006) #1-6; Secret Six vol. 3 (2008) #1-36 [Gail Simone's Secret Six run]

39. JLA/Titans (1998) #1-3; The Titans (1999) #1-25; Titans Secret Files & Origins (1999) #1-2 [Devin Grayson's run writing The Titans]

40. Doom Patrol vol. 5 (2009) #1-22

Monday, June 02, 2014

My Most Recommended Comic Book Runs by DC: Part 3

21. Seven Soldiers of Victory (2005) #0-1, Seven Soldiers: Bulleteer (2006) #1-4, Seven Soldiers: Frankenstein (2006) #1-4, Seven Soldiers: Guardian (2005) #1-4, Seven Soldiers: Klarion the Witch Boy (2005) #1-4, Seven Soldiers: Mister Miracle (2005) #1-4, Seven Soldiers: Shining Knight (2005) #1-4, and Seven Soldiers: Zatanna (2005) #1-4 [Grant Morrison's Seven Soldiers mega-series]
http://www.comicvine.com/seven-soldiers/4050-18436/
http://www.comicvine.com/seven-soldiers-bulleteer/4050-18520/
http://www.comicvine.com/seven-soldiers-frankenstein/4050-18521/
http://www.comicvine.com/seven-soldiers-guardian/4050-18516/
http://www.comicvine.com/seven-soldiers-klarion/4050-18518/
http://www.comicvine.com/seven-soldiers-mister-miracle/4050-18519/
http://www.comicvine.com/seven-soldiers-shining-knight/4050-18515/
http://www.comicvine.com/seven-soldiers-zatanna/4050-18517/

22. Justice League of America vol. 1 (1960) #125-127, 131-134, 151-155, 163-223, 228-230, 233-234, 236, 238, 243-246, 248, 251-255, Annual 2 [Gerry Conway's Justice League of America run]
http://www.comicvine.com/justice-league-of-america/4050-2014/object-appearances/4040-40871/?page=1
http://www.comicvine.com/justice-league-of-america-annual-2--the-end-of-the/4000-140262/

23. 
Batman and the Outsiders vol. 1 (1983) #1-32 (last issue before the title change), Annual 1-2/Adventures of the Outsiders (1986) #33-46 (these issues are reprints), The Outsiders vol. 1 (1985) #1-28, Annual 1, Special 1 (This series continued directly from BatO #32.) [Mike W. Barr's first Outsiders run]

24. Swamp Thing vol. 5 (2011) #0, 1-40, Annual 1-2 [Scott Snyder's run ended with #18, but Charles Soule has been an excellent successor since then. I've been loving the entire series so far.]
http://www.comicvine.com/swamp-thing/4050-42599/
http://www.comicvine.com/swamp-thing-annual/4050-53507/

25. Booster Gold vol. 2 (2007) #32-43 [J.M. DeMatteis, Keith Giffen, & Chris Batista's (with some fill-in by Pat Oliffe)  run], #0, 1-10, 1,000,000 [Geoff Johns & Dan Jurgens' run], #11-12 [Chuck Dixon & Dan Jurgens' run], #15-19, 21-31, 44-47 [Dan Jurgens' mostly solo run], #13-14 & 20 [Rick Remender & Pat Oliffe's 2 issues & one stand-alone] -- I <3 this entire series, but arranged it in order of which creative teams' runs I liked best.

26. Batgirl vol. 1 (2000) #1-11, 13-19, 21-25, 28-29, 33-37, Batgirl Secret Files & Origins (2002) #1 [Scott Peterson, Kelley Puckett & Damion Scott's run], #12, 20, 30-32 [Chuck Dixon's run (mostly with Damion Scott's art)], #38, 58-73 (the last issue of this series) [Andersen Gabrych's run (mostly with Ale Garza's art)], #45-47, 49-50, 52, 54 [Dylan Horrocks & Rick Leonardi's run]--Basically, the only issues I didn't care for from this series was #39-44 because of Adrian Sibar's art.
http://www.comicvine.com/batgirl-secret-files-and-origins-1/4000-175057/

27. Animal Man vol. 2 (2011) #0, 1-29, Annual 1-2
http://www.comicvine.com/animal-man/4050-42600/
http://www.comicvine.com/animal-man-annual/4050-49334/

28. The Power Company (2002) #1-18, preceded in 2002 by 7 one-shots spotlighting each member: Bork, Josiah Power, Manhunter, Sapphire, Skyrocket, Striker Z, & Witchfire [Kurt Busiek's Power Company series]

29. Green Arrow vol. 3 (2001) #1-75 [Judd Winick's run from #26-75, then Kevin Smith's run of the first 15 issues were the best of this series, but it was all good. Smith was responsible for starting it out with wonderfully resurrecting Oliver Queen, who had been killed off in the mid-'90s.]
http://www.comicvine.com/green-arrow/4050-9113/

30. Action Comics vol. 1 (1938) #837-840, 844-846, 850-851, 855-873, part of 900, Annual 10-11, Superman vol. 1 (1939) #650-653, Superman: New Krypton Special (2008) #1, Superman: Secret Origin (2009) #1-6 [Geoff Johns' continuous Superman run]
http://www.comicvine.com/action-comics/4050-18005/object-appearances/4040-40439/
http://www.comicvine.com/action-comics-annual/4050-3776/object-appearances/4040-40439/
http://www.comicvine.com/superman/4050-773/object-appearances/4040-40439/
http://www.comicvine.com/superman-new-krypton-special-1-new-krypton/4000-140868/
http://www.comicvine.com/superman-secret-origin/4050-28107/object-appearances/4040-40439/

Monday, March 31, 2014

My Most Recommended Comic Book Runs by DC: Part 2

11. Firestorm: The Nuclear Man vol. 1 (1978) #1-4; The Fury of Firestorm: The Nuclear Man (1982) #1-28, 31, 33-36, 38-53, Annual 1-4 [Gerry Conway's run on Firestorm]http://www.comicvine.com/firestorm-the-nuclear-man/4050-18409/object-appearances/4040-40871/












12. Superboy vol. 4 (2011) #1-11 [Jeff Lemire’s Superboy series]http://www.comicvine.com/superboy/4050-36387/



13. Justice League vol. 1 (1987) #1-6, Annual 1/Justice League International vol. 1 (1987) #7-25, Annual 2-3, Special 1/Justice League America (1989) #26-60, Annual 4-5, Justice League Europe (1989) #1-35, Annual 1-2 and Justice League Quarterly (1990) #1-3 [Keith Giffen/J.M. DeMatteis/Kevin Maguire's run on the Justice League International period, though Giffen as writer is the only constant through all of these issues]


14. Hawkman vol. 4 (2002) #1-25, Hawkman Secret Files & Origins (2002) #1 [Geoff Johns’ Hawkman run]; Hawkman vol. 4 #28-49 (last issue of the series) [Jimmy Palmiotti & Justin Gray's Hawkman run]; Hawkman vol. 4 #26 & 27 [2 stand-alone story issues, one by Josh Siegal & the other by Ed Brubaker, both decent reads]--the best Hawkman comics I've ever read so far
15. Black Lightning vol. 2 (1995) #1-8 [Tony Isabella’s ‘90s Black Lightning run]http://www.comicvine.com/black-lightning/4050-5500/object-appearances/4040-42209/
 

16. JLA (1997) #1-17, 22-26, 28-31, 34, 36-41, JLA Secret Files (1997) #1 [Grant Morrison's JLA run]; JLA #18-21, 32-33, 43-58, 60, JLA Secret Files #3, JLA: Heaven's Ladder (2000) original graphic novel (I actually have yet to own or read it, but it sounds excellent) [Mark Waid's JLA run]; JLA #61-76, 78-90, 100 [Joe Kelly & Doug Mahnke's JLA run]http://www.comicvine.com/jla/4050-5957/?page=3
17. Starman vol. 2 (1994) #0-81, 1,000,000 & Starman Secret Files & Origins (1998) #1 [James Robinson’s Starman series]

18. Green Lantern: Rebirth (2004) #1-6, Green Lantern Corps: Recharge (2005) #1-5, Green Lantern vol. 4 (2005) #1-67, Green Lantern Secret Files & Origins 2005 (2005) #1, Green Lantern: Sinestro Corps Special (2007) #1, Green Lantern/Sinestro Corps Secret Files & Origins (2008) #1, Tales of the Sinestro Corps: Superman-Prime (2007) #1, Final Crisis: Rage of the Red Lanterns (2008) #1, Blackest Night (2009) #0-8, Blackest Night: Tales of the Corps (2009) #1-3, Blackest Night: The Flash (2010) #1-3, & Green Lantern vol. 5 (2011) #0, 1-20, Annual 1 [Geoff Johns’ epic Green Lantern run (with help from Peter Tomasi on writing the GLC: Recharge mini) & Doug Mahnke on most of the regular series art] -- I don't include Brightest Day series here because that focused on characters not related to the Green Lantern mythos at all.

19. Animal Man vol. 1 (1988) #1-26 [Grant Morrison’s Animal Man run]http://www.comicvine.com/animal-man/4050-3976/object-appearances/4040-40434/


20. Captain Atom vol. 1 (for DC)(1987) #1-57, Annual 1-2 [possibly the best quasi-military-themed series ever, all written by Cary Bates, except for #47, 51-57 handled by a few various others]
http://www.comicvine.com/captain-atom/4050-3782/