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I’m most interested in Blackcross #1 this week, a book
which seems to be flying under the radar. It’s Warren Ellis and Colton Worley’s
first foray into Dynamite Entertainment’s Project Superpowers line. Ellis is
one of the rare buy-on-sight creators, regardless of company or collaborator, as
there’s always kernels of brilliance, even among his occasional “misses.”
Blackcross promises to juxtapose Golden Age Superheroes with small town
supernatural mystery, something quirky enough that it could be a sleeper hit.
Image Comics continues their mindshare dominance with Saga
#26 from BKV and Fiona Staples, Nameless #2 by Grant Morrison and
Chris Burnham, Black Science #12 by Rick Remender and Matteo Scalera, the
brand new Descender #1 from the team of Jeff Lemire and Dustin Nguyen,
and the finale (of this run) of the series in Supreme: Blue Rose #7, by Warren Ellis and
Tula Lotay. Of the lot, it’s sorta a three way tie between the ever-adventurous
Black Science (part of the ridiculously good writer’s trifecta with Low and
Deadly Class, it’s a helluva a time to be a Rick Remender fan!), Nameless (I’m
quite curious to see where the guys take this series), and Supreme: Blue Rose
(since it’ll be interesting to see how they stick the landing).
If you held a gun to my head and made me buy a corporate
comic this week, I’d certainly choose the Disney/LucasFilm/Marvel premiere of Princess
Leia #1 by Mark Waid and Terry Dodson. I’ve never been a huge Dodson
fan (though that cover image admittedly looks terrific), but Waid is a writer
with longevity who I respect, and I’m quite interested to see what fan reaction
will be to this book. It sounds like it’ll cover some of the same emotional
ground as Brian Wood’s Star Wars run, and I’m wondering if fans will similarly
push back on Waid’s treatment of her as a blaster-wielding, X-Wing piloting
leader of an insurgent cell.
IDW is offering Winterworld #0 by Chuck Dixon and
guest artist Tommy Lee Edwards, so I’m definitely checking out this prequel
story to the post-apocalyptic affair. Lastly, I’ll be picking up Lady
Killer #3 by Jamie S. Rich and Joelle Jones, published by Dark Horse
Comics, which wryly merges suburban ennui with period wetwork, something which
seems to be a rising sub-genre in the collective consciousness of the last few
years.
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