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10+ Works 412 Membros 13 Reviews

Séries

Obras de Scott Nybakken

Showcase Presents: House of Mystery, Vol. 1 (2006) — Editor (collected ed.) — 120 cópias
Showcase Presents: House of Mystery, Vol. 2 (2007) — Editor (collected ed.) — 72 cópias
Showcase Presents: House of Secrets, Vol. 2 (2009) — Editor (collected ed.) — 36 cópias
Showcase Presents: The Witching Hour Vol 1 (2011) — Editor — 33 cópias
Showcase Presents: House of Mystery, Vol. 3 (2009) — Editor (collected ed.) — 31 cópias
Showcase Presents: Secrets of Sinister House (2010) — Editor (collected ed.) — 29 cópias
Strange Adventures (2014) — Editor — 12 cópias
Daffy Duck: You're Despicable! - Volume 1 (2005) — Editor — 7 cópias

Associated Works

Fables, Vol. 04: March of the Wooden Soldiers (2004) — Editor — 2,077 cópias
The Sandman: Overture (2013) — Editor — 1,553 cópias
Batman: Knight and Squire (2011) — Editor — 67 cópias
Spirit Archives, Volume 24 (1952) — Editor, algumas edições40 cópias
DC Goes to War (2020) — Editor — 11 cópias

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Data de nascimento
c. 1968
Sexo
male
Nacionalidade
USA

Membros

Resenhas

Compared to Vol 1 all the interstitial stuff about the house itself has completely gone, with just very short abel introductions. Similar stuff, horror stories that always end with evil being punished because of CCA rules, some are spooky, a lot of silly ~twist endings~, sometimes the art is really cool. If you like kind of silly and not particularly scary but fun horror comics this is decent. Goosebumps type appeal
 
Marcado
tombomp | outras 2 resenhas | Oct 31, 2023 |
been wanting to read light stuff recently so this was fun. some good stories, some weird, some incoherent, but overall pretty fun to read through. nothing like. super clever but I often found myself impressed by the art (doubt it's impressive to anyone who actually knows comics though) scratched the same sort of itch as goosebumps or something.
 
Marcado
tombomp | outras 2 resenhas | Oct 31, 2023 |
Access a version of the below that includes illustrations on my blog.

Before the Darkness is DC's most recent reprint series for Legion of Super-Heroes, the one that finally totally seals the gap before The Great Darkness Saga, thus giving us a complete collection of the Legion from 1958 to 1984! I feel like this era is often spoken of in pretty disparaging terms, the consensus being that when Levitz and Giffen took over, they saved the book. Even in this very volume, the introduction comes across as an apology for what you are about to read, explaining that Gerry Conway—who writes most of the stories collected here—did not really like the Legion. Conway's run actually began with issues collected in the previous collection, Superboy and the Legion, Volume Two, and I didn't like much of what I read there.

So... I was pleasantly surprised by this run! I don't think Conway is among the great Legion writers, but this volume shows him to be among the solid ones. He provides more character focus than I remember from some previous Legion volumes, particularly on lesser-used, often-forgotten characters like Timber Wolf and Light Lass. Timber Wolf had largely faded into the background since he joined the Legion, but Conway gives him lots to do; Light Lass I don't remember doing anything at all ever, but here she's a versatile, integral member of the team. He shows off the powers of some other Legionnaires to good effect; Princess Projectra, always one of my favorites, got a couple excellent moments across these stories. We get a nice return to what Bouncing Boy and Duo Damsel are up to, for example. Maybe Conway didn't love the Legion, but he clearly threw himself into its history and characters with a gusto that he probably could have got away with not having.

Conway is also, I think, more of a science fiction fan than most comics writers: you can tell he was probably reading actual prose sf, not just reading other comics and watching bad films. He uses stuff like tachyons and explores how the President of Earth might be elected. Genuinely interesting worldbuilding, which is something that usually happens in Legion by accident... if at all. I particularly liked the climax of one story: the Legion, in space suits, grabs onto a spaceship when it enters hyperspace. Without a hull between hyperspace and them, their perceptions of its strange dimensions threaten to drive them mad, but Brainiac 5 has the bright idea that Projectra should cast an illusion of reality, so they all perceive themselves in a beautiful meadow. This includes the villain, who's there with them... and he, not understanding the illusion, runs away from them, thus letting go of the ship and losing himself in the depths of hyperspace.

A lot of them are goofy, of course. Not sure what was up with the one about the guy who attacked the Legion with fake pirates! But every story by Conway has at least one solid moment of characterization, one clever twist. I particularly liked the saga of the "Dark Man."

Conway also writes out Tyroc but tries to smooth out his history in the process. When originally introduced, it seemed as though Tyroc came from an island where all humans of African descent were segregated to—and ignored. This story establishes something very different, that it's a Brigadoonesque place that only appears every two centuries, and that it was settled by escaped slaves from the 1800s. I guess this is better? Unfortunately, it writes Tyroc out, so he never gets a chance to make much of an impact as a character.

Outside of Conway's stuff, there's a pretty bad fill-in by J. M. DeMatteis, which spends more time on overcomplicated exposition of the villain's backstory than the actual story, and three issues of Secrets of the Legion of Super-Heroes. This miniseries, written by Paul Kupperberg from a plot by E. Nelson Bridwell, with art by Jim Janes and Frank Chiaramonte, was I believe the first official attempt to put this history of the Legion into some kind of detailed order. With the way I dance around Legion history out of sequence, it's hard for me to know for certain, but I think this story is the source of many retcons we now take for granted.

The plot is thin: R. J. Brande is dying and his assistant Marla Latham sneaks into Legion H.Q. to steal files on the Legionnaires because he thinks one might secretly be related to him and thus be able to provide a blood transfusion. Like, why not just ask? But it's an excuse to watch some history tapes and for the Legion to reexplain their own backstories, and I appreciated that more than the mediocre attempt at drama. It's also the story that reveals Brande is secretly a Durlan and the father of Chameleon Boy.

The art in this volume is generally quite solid, too. One story by Jim Sherman, which is always nice, but most of it is by the new-to-me Jim Janes, who I would say is above-average for the era is terms of doing character work with the art. I see he continues on into the next volume, but apparently has not done much other comics work, alas. I feel like he could have blossomed into quite a talent given time. Steve Ditko does one issue, and unlike most Legion artists, he gives the Legionnaires spacesuits, not just bubble helmets. But the spacesuits are colored to look like their costumes, which means any Legionnaire with bare arms or legs (which is most of the women and many of the men) has a spacesuit that is mostly flesh-colored. (I guess this could be the colorist's fault. On the other hand, the colorist was clearly told during some issues to make the outfits more modest, as parts of characters like Shadow Lass and Princess Projectra that are usually colored like skin are made to be part of their outfits.)
… (mais)
1 vote
Marcado
Stevil2001 | Apr 8, 2023 |
So far I know I have only read one story from this

"Eyes of the cat" is about a girl who is the ward of her rich uncle.She is also the proud owner of a black cat she calls "Lucifer. (lovely name isnt it? nothing ominious about it at all)

She loves her cat very much and cant understand her older cousins antipathy against it.Well they do say cats have a sixth sense and its reason for disliking the cousin becomes even greater when the wheelchairbound uncle gets pushed over a cliff by said cousin...

Now only one thing stands between the cousin and his inheritance. The girl.

But not if the cat has anything to say about it.
… (mais)
 
Marcado
Litrvixen | outras 2 resenhas | Jun 23, 2022 |

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Estatísticas

Obras
10
Also by
5
Membros
412
Popularidade
#59,116
Avaliação
4.2
Resenhas
13
ISBNs
17

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