FIFTH DEGREE: MCDUFFIE’S new wonderful four and O’MALLEY’S SCOTT PILGRIM!

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Gravity

by Josh Crawley

Before I get into things this week, I want to mention my pal Zack Kruse’s webcomic mystery Solved. There’s an old person with a twirly moustache and a pipe. There’s a new installment every Thursday! and there’re fairies!

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Over the weekend I grabbed a handful of graphic novels to read at home after work. The first of those was Gravity: big City incredibly Hero by Sean McKeever & Mike Norton. I liked the book, but in all honesty, there wasn’t enough for me. I wanted a lot more of the fresh-out-of-high school kid from Wisconsin! (Sheboygan, to be exact. It’s pretty up there.) Not that McKeever & Norton are to blame. Sales didn’t warrant any a lot more than the five issues published.

Imagine my surprise when i start reading the next book in my stack, wonderful Four: The new wonderful four by Dwayne McDuffie & Paul Pelletier, and Gravity shows up!

Quick aside: if you follow my lead but don’t want to make my mistake, you may want to read McDuffie & Scott Kolins’ Beyond! between the two, as parts of it are spoiled otherwise; conveniently available in strong hard cover or lightweight trade paperbackvarietials.

New wonderful Four

McDuffie’s new wonderful four starts after the end of Civil War. That’s about all you need to know, and you barely even need to know that. The book consists of three stories that all step at a pretty brisk pace, which can be a pleasurable change of pace when so lots of books seem padded out for the eventual collection.

Pelletier’s art, while not something I seek out, is solid and clear, and he does terrific expressions. I think it fits the fun atmosphere the wonderful four must (and did, in this book) have.

Paul Mounts’ coloring, however, doesn’t tend to be something I normally care for; not that I think he’s bad at it. It was just fine here, but after reading the volume after this (The beginning of the End; a lot more on that later), I much like Wil Quintana coloring Pelletier’s work.

After reading a while, I wasn’t shocked to see Rus Wooten lettered the book, though there are a few pages where I could vow he didn’t do them. Yes, I really am that much of a lettering geek.

Beginning of the End

The odd thing, though, is McDuffie’s story wraps up in The beginning of the End. but it’s only three of the five issues in the book. While I understand wanting to get the other story in print (two issues by Karl Kesel and Tom Grummet), I would have much preferred McDuffie’s work in one tome.

I’m sure there’s plenty of other wonderful four stories out there that could have been collected with those two issues written by Kesel in another book. After a quick (and admittedly somewhat annoying) search through comicbookdb.com, there were a couple books that had a bit of new material in them written by Kesel with some reprints: The wedding Special;  A death in the Family; and they could have tossed in wonderful four 2099 (which Kesel also wrote) to round it out! but enough of my yammering about that…

If you’re trying to find a fun wonderful four read, check out McDuffie’s new wonderful four and The beginning of the End. His love for the characters shows, and I wouldn’t be ashamed to put them next to the John Byrne or Walt Simonson collections of wonderful four Visionaries.

Between you and me, after reading these and enjoying Justice League: crisis on two Earths, I would love to see McDuffie script a wonderful four movie.

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Scott Pilgrim 6

Scott Pilgrim volume 6: Scott Pilgrim’s Finest Hour… or is it?

Honestly, I had high expectations. The ante was upped each volume. I liked each volume a lot more and more, but this is what all of those previous volumes were building to. While I felt satisfied with the outcome, as a whole, I wasn’t very impressed. Sure, it looks great, and it’s fun (though not as fun as previous volumes). It just felt a lot more like a rough cut than a final product; scenes that needed be shown to wrap things up, not the end of an epic story.

My recommendation? get your expectations as low as possible, then give it a read.

(Trust me, if I really didn’t want you to read this book, I wouldn’t have pointed out it at all.)

Josh Pilgrim

Now, for the really fun part!!! discuss to the Scott Pilgrim motion picture web site (be careful; lots of Flash craziness going on), and then go to the lower ideal hand side of the screen. See that button that says  “Create you own Scott Pilgrim Avatar!” with the stunning Mary Elizabeth Winstead as Romana Flowers? click on that! Then, Make you own avatar just like I did!

(Amazingly, I had an issue with that, too. No choices for black or white in the color selections. Arg!)

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Now go read mystery Solved!

?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?

Josh Crawley is the tenured Master of disaster at Westfield Comics. He is not the keyboardist for Everclear.

josh@westfieldcomics.com

Westfield Comics
ATTN: JOSH
7475 Mineral point Rd STE 22
Madison WI 53717

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