Thirteen Minutes focused on weekly reviews of Creator-Owned Comics from 2005 to 2015. Critic @ Poopsheet Foundation 2009 to 2014. Critic @ Comics Bulletin 2013 to 2016. Freelance Writer/Editor @ DC/Vertigo, Stela, Madefire, Image Comics, Dark Horse, Boom! Studios, and Studio 12-7 from 2012 to Present. Follow @ThirteenMinutes
4.21.2014
The Fuse #3 [Advance Review]
The Fuse #3 (Image): This issue continues "The Russia Shift"
arc, as Dietrich and Ristovych investigate what is ostensibly just a dead
cabler. Antony Johnston and Justin Greenwood depict the police procedural as a
sometimes talky, slow-burn process that feels a lot like putting together an unknown jigsaw
puzzle. The sparse leads are the puzzle pieces, one leads to another leads to
another, some key and some peripheral, and if you keep chasing them and snap down enough, eventually you
start to see an image forming. Their investigation takes them to the heart of the Mayor’s
Office, with familial intrigue, past lies, and secrets being revealed. If you pay really
close attention to the very first scene, and then square that with the final
sequences in the book, it also becomes clear that some people know more secrets than they’re
really letting on. I like how Johnston and Greenwood use the plain black and
white location headers, which remind me of the edits in something like Law &
Order (one of many shows with confessed influences on The Fuse) or Christopher
Priest’s old Marvel Knights Black Panther series that used them to great effect, if you’re more comfortable with
a comic book reference. If I have any criticism of this issue, and maybe the series as a whole so far, it’s that the
very nature of the book makes it a bunch of talking heads until the evidence reaches a crescendo and something actionable pops
off, so it’s up to Johnston to keep the journey of the dialogue intriguing, and
Greenwood to hold our attention visually. He does this to some extent with excellent mastery of body
language, evident in all the reaction shots or cops with folded arms
emphasizing closed posture. Those are the subtleties that I enjoy, but I do fear some readers may grow impatient with all of the talk, though perhaps the readers that just want empty action aren't the ones reading a book like The Fuse in the first place(?). Anyway, Shari Chankhamma’s lighting also helps break things
up tremendously from scene to scene, where light-sourcing and color palettes
differ in the coroner’s office, dingy apartments, or the open streets of Midway
City. As all of the leads start to converge, Johnston is also careful to continue
world-building along the way. Sometimes there are significant efforts, like a
flashback to the race riots and all the clues to the “origins”of Klem and Ralph, while other times they’re small little throwaway bits
that suggest characterization. My mind is always drawn to things like another officer
named “Chang,” which hints at interplay with other ethnicities, the mention of “spring
rolls” having an air of authenticity to it because it's so specific, Yuri’s likely political connections, or the great deadpan line “Holy shit, that a real
gun?” which I hope will be used as a recurring bit of humor. Grade A.
Justin Giampaoli was an award-winning critic at Thirteen Minutes and Comics Bulletin for over a decade. As a writer, his work includes the self-published crime caper The Mercy Killing with artist Tim Goodyear, introductions and bonus content for New York Times Bestseller DMZ at DC/Vertigo, the alt-history epic Rome West and the sci-fi drama Starship Down, both with artist Andrea Mutti at Dark Horse. Recently, he edited the geo-political thriller California, Inc. with writer Arthur Ebuen and artist Dave Law at Studio 12-7, and was a panelist at San Diego Comic Con 2024.
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