Sunday, 13 February 2022

Graphic Novel Reviews: "New 52" Volume 1s - "Batman", "Aquaman", "Swamp Thing

New 52 Batman Volume 1: The Court of Owls
W: Scott Snyder, A: Greg Capullo


 
Snyder and Capullo start a justly famous run here, and pull off something quite special: “reboot” Batman without actually discarding continuity. (You’ll see the timeline problems pointed out by those invested in that pre-New 52 continuity, but in the self-contained world of the book, they don’t come across.)
 
An example: this is positioned as a starter issue, as somewhere where we see Batman’s identity discussed, where his (largely) adoptive family is introduced, where he hits all his high notes – detective work, tech use, fighting. But the family includes three Robins (Nightwing, Red Robin, and Damian Wayne as “Robin Proper”), and the mystery is one grounded on the longevity of Batman’s character – a nasty surprise lurks within Gotham. This would be too much for an *actual* origin issue, and it could easily go wrong as a soft reboot – but Snyder’s plotting and Capullo’s clean art land the plane.
 
The book starts with Batman in Arkham beating up his Rogues Gallery – this trades on familiarity to a degree, but also uses those villains to sum up negative conceptions of Gotham. Gordon is introduced next to the Batsignal. We see the classic Batcave with a giant penny and an animatronic dinosaur, as well as far too many Batmobiles. The Robins are all introduced in the same panel, as Bruce’s new retinal computer identifies them and their security clearance (High). We are given glimpses of “minor cast”, really there for the longtimers – Vicki Vale, Leslie Tompkins. Finally, a retinal ID on Alfred (security clearance: Highest – this is very efficient communication from Snyder).
 
Snyder trades on a little background familiarity, though efficiently communicates concepts to the theoretical alien from outer space. He doesn’t rely on any detailed plot knowledge, as long as you’re willing to accept the shorthand. You may think Dick Grayson is the only Robin, but there’s two more, and one of Bruce’s son. Okay? Okay.
 
The actual story is justly famous, too, as Bruce’s conception of Gotham as defined by Batman is wrecked by the emergence of an urban legend into the light – the Court of Owls, with safehouses across the city in hidden spaces in famous buildings. The Court send one of their necromantically-empowered assassins, the Talon, to kill Bruce, to stop his plans to improve Gotham, and Bruce’s first real issue is that he doesn’t believe in the Court of Owls. They threaten his self-conception.
 
This is very effective, and Snyder and Capullo both do their work very well. Snyder is economic, despite being famously “talky” – his many boxes and bubbles do not waste space or time. That does make this sometimes more cerebral than a given other book, but that’s no bad thing, and this still isn’t Morrison or Moore. Capullo has a muscular and clean style, though always shaded well. He manages to simultaneously “originate” the new characters well, present the sunny side of Gotham (there are a few daytime scenes here!), and get some good horror and action-in-the-dark scenes in, too. There is the occasional awkward angle or pose, but nothing terribly noticeable.
 
The chief Bat Family members to get a runout here are Nightwing (who turns out to have been an intended recruit for the Talons, but foiled long ago by Bruce; this is picked up in Nightwing Volume 1, which even has a parallel scene but from Dick’s perspective) and Alfred. Lincoln March, new mayoral candidate and seemingly a fellow believer in Bruce’s vision for urban regeneration, also debuts here, and is an effective babyface.
 
The New 52 was good (and fun) for trying out fringe concepts, and was actually more liable to struggle with re-establishing main characters and long-running continuities – but Batman is a triumph.
 
Collects Batman #1-7.
 
8.5/10

New 52 Swamp Thing Volume 1: Raise Them Bones
W: Scott Snyder, A: Yannick Paquette/Marco Rudy



Scott Snyder’s other big New 52 book was Swamp Thing, which gave a soft reboot to Alan Moore’s continuity and linked Swamp Thing into a wider mythos, crossing over particularly with Jeff Lemire’s Animal Man and Frankenstein, Agent of S.H.A.D.E. in the “Dark” range of New 52 books. Moore’s Swamp Thing turns out to have been a stopgap avatar of the Green, the life-locus of vegetative life (as the Red is for animal life); Alec Holland was meant to be the avatar, the warrior-king, in an upcoming apocalyptic battle, but his accidental death led to the creation of the bestial Moore Swamp Thing. Now, via Flashpoint, Holland is back, and the Green want him to take on the mantle, and go fight the Rot.
 
This volume largely features Holland as Holland, not Swamp Thing. He doesn’t want to be a monster-avatar-king for a force of nature, but the Rot won’t leave him be, and of course he is eventually convinced to take up the cause. As in Batman, Snyder expertly restarts continuity whilst retaining it: we are told everything we need to know about the past whilst still being clear this is a fresh start, no past reading required. Via Alec having confused memories of key supporting cast and storylines – particularly around Abigail Arcane – we, the audience, are introduced to facts with Alec. The mythology rewrite, as with Animal Man, brings everyone in on the ground floor together. This is all technically very successful.
 
Paquette’s art is vibrant and superbly detailed in a modern style. Rudy does a very fine Paquette imitation – there is much less noticeable difference than between Foreman and Pugh in the equivalent Animal Man volume, though Pugh is a very good artist in his own right – but I am glad Paquette managed to stay on for a fairly long run, where Travel Foreman dropped from sight. If it’s possible, Paquette is more visceral and horrid than Foreman (and Pugh) – perhaps Snyder is to “blame” for this, but nonetheless it is Paquette drawing dead children. This certainly hints that the age rating is, if anything, higher than Animal Man. Nonetheless, none of this feels gratuitous.
 
This falls short, though, of being quite as brilliant as the first volumes of Batman or Animal Man¸ for different reasons the obvious comparisons. Holland is a much flatter character than Buddy, whose reality and depth Lemire immediately asserts. The environments are certainly less compelling than Snyder’s Gotham. The stakes here are perhaps muddier than in either “Court of Owls” or “The Hunt”. But it is still very fine.
 
Collects Swamp Thing #1-7.
 
7.5/10

New 52 Aquaman Volume 1: The Trench
W: Geoff Johns, P: Ivan Reis, I: Joe Prado


 
Aquaman’s first volume is comfortably better than Justice League’s equivalent. Popular wisdom on JL is wrong – it’s perfectly good at introducing the characters, with its real struggle lying in the actual plot of the book, the botched use of Darkseid and the rest of it. Aquaman both introduces the key characters – Arthur, Mera, and to a lesser degree Dr Shin, this one doggo, and maybe a lady called Jennifer – and offers a fairly enjoyable antagonist/plot for the first half of the book (it arguably falls apart a little in the back half).
 
Johns presents Aquaman as a reluctant Atlantean Prince and a misunderstood superhero – plenty of jokes are made by landlubbers about Aquaman and his ability to speak to fish and the like. It’s easy to look back, after Jason Momoa’s success, and think: was it necessary to construct an apologetic for Aquaman, when he could just be, you know, cool? That is to miss both the difference in media and the difference in audience involved. Aquaman is here earning his place to a solo book amongst an ambivalent fandom.
 
Mera – trained to kill Arthur, now his lover – is an able enough secondary character, though her solo issue at the end of the collection suffers from a comically poor “bad guy” (a creepy supermarket manager whose arm she breaks). The moment at the end between shopgirl Jennifer, Mera, and the dog who Arthur has adopted works well, though – Johns is good at intimate moments, at grounding superheroes in “the real”.
 
The main plot running through the first four issues revolves around coelacanth-humanoids who swim up from the Atlantic Trench in search of food – which has become very scarce near their home. Of course, their preferred food is red meat! There are some solid horror and action scenes around this, and the actual revelation of their “society” is good, as is the follow-up investigation of what they were or what went wrong to drive them to the surface. Some moments stretch credulity – Arthur and Mera go down alone, not just to investigate, but eventually to storm the actual home of these beings – and the philosophical consideration of, uh, whether or not to commit genocide is a little stunted (though not without any value). However, it still works well, and places Arthur in both his worlds, wet and dry.
 
Ivan Reis and Joe Prado offer a heavily textured and fairly dark art style (coloured by Rod Reis). It’s as competent and flashy as the names involved would have you expect, if (forgive me) a little “cartoony” at points – but then, Jim Lee, co-publisher at DC at the time, industry legend, and artist for Johns’ JL, is exactly the same. It was a style very popular for a period either side of the New 52, and can be enjoyed more in that light.
 
Collects Aquaman #1-6.

7/10

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