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Giggaheim Podcast Episode 68

 

 

Flashpoint 3 vs Fear Itself 4 • PlayStation Network Passcodes • Space Shuttle Atlantis • Speed Dating

Giggaheim Podcast-68-AlbumThe Giggaheim podcast is packed this week. Pete reviews summer event comic books Flashpoint#3 and Fear Itself #4. Then answers listener mail by differentiating between Marvel Comics’ Mockingbird, and DC Comics’ Black Canary. After the news of sexually harassing Archie Comics, and Rockstar Games moving on to movies, the crew takes apart video game movies. Craig fills us in on the new PlayStation Network Passcodes, the lack-luster Burnout:Crash, and Modern Warfare 3’s Color Blind Assist mode. In Tech news Pokemon makes its own mobile app, Google and Microsoft bid for Hulu, and this week marked the last launch of the Space Shuttle Atlantis. Craig melts everyone’s head with math, and Randis gives us all tips for Speed Dating.

 

 

Download it here.

 

Giggaheim Podcast Episode 66

 

Ultimate Comics Spider-Man #160 • Mobile Gaming Future • Lulz Disbands • Flirting Guide

 

 

Giggaheim Podcast 66-Album

It’s a solemn end to an era as Pete reviews Ultimate Comics Spider-Man #160. Craig updates us on the latest Rockband DLC and the future of gaming on the mobile frontier. In tech news Pottermore brings up the issue of DRM, Tesla Motors stops making the ultra-fast electric roadster, Lulz apparently disbands, and we find out it is illegal to sell pieces of the moon. Then Randis gives us a guide on flirting, and poses the question: Do you have an office buddy you flirt with?

 

 

Download it here.

 

Giggaheim Podcast Episode 65

Butcher Baker the Righteous Maker #1 • Green Lantern Movie Review • Super 8 Movie Review • Xbox Kinect Hands On Review • Voyager at the End of the Solar System • Dealing With Regrets

 

Podcast-65-AlbumEpisode sixty five is a big one, and packed full of geeky fandom. Pete reviews the macho first issue of Butcher Baker the Righteous Maker, and the crew reviews two summer blockbusters: Green Lantern and Super 8. Craig gives a hand-on review of Xbox’s latest add-on peripheral, the Kinect. The space explorer Voyager reaches the end of the known Solar System, and Randis helps you get over those regrets you may have in your relationships.

 

 

Download it here.

 

Reading Green Lantern: Where to Start

Reading Green Lantern: Where to Start

The I Have Issues office got the following email yesterday:

 

the-green-lantern-comic-Alex-RossHey guys, love the show. I was wondering with the Green Lantern movie coming out, where would I start reading Green Lantern comics? There are a lot of them at my local bookstore, but I don’t know where to begin. Any help would be great.

Thanks,

Frank

Toronto, Canada

 

 

 

Well Frank, first thanks for listening. Secondly, I have been procrastinating on a Green Lantern Starter Kit, and you motivated me to get this post up in a hurry. I picked the following books because they are great places to get your feet wet, and explore the emerald ring-slinging world of Green Lantern. Starting any comic book series can be difficult, and when you look at the 70 years of Green Lantern comics, you have a lot to choose from. Here’s’ what I recommend…

Green Lantern: Secret Origin

green-lantern-Secret OriginThe most logical place to start with every comic book is at the beginning. After the events of Green Lantern: Rebirth, Geoff Johns rewrote the origin story of Hal Jordan. You read about how the ring came to him, the training he receives, and all the origin story background you need to know about the experimental jet pilot who knows no fear. Ivan Reis’ artwork in incredibly detailed, and the panel layouts are highly imaginative. Some of the more iconic scenes between Sinestro and Hal Jordan are drawn and written in this volume, and it really lays the groundwork for a solid new reader friendly experience.

New Frontier

new frontier Green LanternThis is another good origin story for Hal Jordan, but in a round-about way. Darwyn Cooke’s New Frontier is a love letter to DC Comics Silver Age, but Hal Jordan winds up being the central character that the reader can relate to. Cooke’s 1950’s-styled art casts the reader back into the Silver Age (1950-1970), and gives a great overview of the DC Comics superheroes and how they eventually form the Justice League to repel the evil forces of the monstrous island of destruction called The Circle. In New Frontier we see Hal Jordan’s traumatic Korean War experiences, follow him through his wild experimental test pilot days, and see him ushered into the space age. Eventually, the man with no fear comes across the green ring, and helps save the day. Both the story and art are fantastic, and this book will not only introduce you to Green Lantern, but the entire essential pantheon of DC Comics super heroes.

Green Lantern: Rebirth

Green Lantern Rebirth CoverSome stories can be started in the middle (authors call this a cold start). Look at the classic Star Wars. That started in the middle, and was engaging enough for us to go both ways through the timeline. The same could be said for Green Lantern: Rebirth. You don’t need to know 40 years of Green Lantern history to “get” the story. Hal Jordan returns from the grave to reclaim his ring, and restart the Green Lantern Corps. Geoff Johns writes a fantastic story that is an epic blockbuster in scale, and only Ethan van Sciver could have illustrated this larger-than-life story. The approach van Sciver renders the ring constructs, differentiates the different green lanterns, and designs the horrible embodiment of fear known as Parralax, cemented his reputation as one of DC Comics’ most influential artists. This book is a must have for any DC comic book collector, and it is one book that will help new readers understand the scale of the Green Lantern books, and help them understand how these amazing power rings work.

Green Lantern: Emerald Twilight

Green Lantern Emerald TwilightGreen Lantern: Emerald Twilight is another way you could cold-start your Green Lantern reading experience. I would recommend reading the other books first, but this is where you can see the responsibility of being a Green Lantern come crashing down on Hal Jordan. This story was highly controversial since Hal goes nuts, and in a quest to restore damage done to his home town of Coast City, he fights the entire Green Lantern Corps ushering in the modern age of comics (1990-present). You don’t have to read years of content to understand the book, and it leads into Green Lantern: Rebirth easily.

 

I Have Issues: Fear Itself #3 versus Flashpoint #2

Again, I’ve decided to compare the two largest comic book publishers’ cross over event comic books. Fear Itself and Flashpoint are two very different comics, but they are the comic book reader’s annual event to look forward to, and since they malign schedules, dump cross over plotlines into other books, and wreak havoc on our reading they deserve a little bit of attention.

Fear-Itself-3-CoverFear Itself #3

Written by Matt Fraction

Illustrated by Stuart Immonen

Published by Marvel Comics

 

Fear Itself still has the follow characteristics from the previous two issues:

 

  • Thor Incarcerated
  • Hammers fall from the sky for heroes and villains to pick up
  • The good guys are spread thin to deal with the mayhem
  • Famous landmarks are destroyed

 

Not too bad. It’s what you want in a event book. You want something different, something that deserves the entire world’s attention, and we also want collateral damage. Unfortunately the following characteristics have carried over from the previous issues:

 

  • The story feels dicey, and chopped up. As if it has been edited to death.
  • The heroes are either clueless or act foolishly
  • Major landmarks are destroyed with no reprisals
  • We don’t know the Serpent’s true motives

 

 

WARNING!!! The Following Has Spoilers!!

 

But hey, Bucky-Cap dies. So there’s something you pay to see. My main issue is that I feel this book is incomplete. I don’t think it’s Fraction’s fault at this point. It feels more like it has been edited to a point of incoherency. Scenes that should hold weight and be explained are incredibly short, and other scenes feel like they are catching up from another cross over book, but there isn’t any material there. It’s frustrating!

FearItself_3_Double-Page

Another frustration is the artwork, Immonen draws a fantastic book, but this artwork is on par with a Green Lantern Corps book, or an Avengers Academy. It doesn’t have the “wow” factor of an Event book. It doesn’t blow me away, and there aren’t any two-page spreads that I can quickly recall in my head as a classic, blockbuster moment. It simply told the story, and a majority of the panels had no backgrounds. Where was the time spent? Are they desperate to have an event book actually come out on time?

 

At the halfway mark the book hasn’t put its hooks in me, and certainly hasn’t given me reason to see it through. Things are changing in the book, and consequences have been delivered, but I continually find it harder and harder to care about the Marvel books when their central events don’t seem to give me any reason to keep reading.

 

 

flashpoint-2-coverFlashpoint #2

Written by Geoff Johns

Illustrated by Andy Kubert

Published by DC Comics

 

As far as cross over events the news lately has been drenched with the consequence of the aftermath of Flashpoint. But Flashpoint continues to dive deeper into the weird world that Barry Allen finds himself in. Batman beats the hell out of Barry, and then Barry’s memories begin to pull a Back to the Future rewriting trick. Meanwhile we find Paris sunk, and Wonder Woman decides to choke out Captain Trevor. The maligned sense of this shattered world continues to draw parallels to the world we know as Barry ties to recreate his accident that made him The Flash, and ultimately regain his speed.

 

 

Much like my review of Fear Itself, I’m having issues with this cross over event as well. Mainly, we have had some progress in the plotting, and it doesn’t feel as disconnected, but I don’t feel like we have made any progress in two issues. And as a Flash reader, I must say I’m having a problem with Barry trying to get his powers back. We just spend quite a few issues on the Speedforce, only to fall back on the 1960’s chemical accident. Why? Perhaps my questions will be answered, and they are waiting for me in a future issue, but “This World is Vastly Different” hammer they keep hitting me with is beginning to get annoying.

 

flashpoint-2-lightning

Kubert’s art is fantastic. He breaks the traditional guttered layouts, and the inker and colorists aren’t undoing any careful details he’s put into the illustrations. I still don’t get the cinematic event feel I’d like to have in the book, but at least the panels have backgrounds and detailed depth that I can enjoy.

 

Will I pick up issue three when it comes out next month. Well, probably. I don’t feel like I’m wasting time yet, and frankly, a lot of other books (52 of them) are hinging on the outcome of this event. I enjoy seeing the different sides to these Elseworlds characters, and there is enough intrigue there to make me want to keep reading. I’m not anxious for the next issue, but I will be picking it up.

 

 

I Have Issues: Rafael Grampa’s Mesmo Delivery

On a recent trip I was able to visit a comic shop, and find a rare jewel to add to my comic book library: Rafael Grampa’s Mesmo Delivery. I had reviewed Grampa’s work some time ago on Giggaheim’s Podcast Episode 41, and fell in love with the Wolverine story he wrote and illustrated. His work had an energetic detail that reminded me serious tattoo art that had wound up illustrating the gory and sad life that had become Wolverine. So when I found a trade paperback of Grampa’s, I snatched it up, and never put it down.

 

Simply put, Mesmo Delivery is about two men who are en route to deliver the content of a tractor and trailer. When they stop in a local greasy spoon diner, a fight breaks out. Any more details, and it would spoil the book. The story is a simple one, but takes some twists and turns. The driver is a boxer. He’s a huge, stocky man who obviously is more brawn than brains. Next to him is a lanky grease-ball who loves Elvis. Not too much to get attached to, but when the driver is assaulted, the book spins out of control, and it is a fantastic ride.

 

mesmo panelRafael Grampa’s art is fantastic, and I didn’t want to spend the entire review throwing around terms like “kinetic”, “frantic”, “clean”, “earthy”, or “wild”. The art within the pages is all those things, but I didn’t want to sling the same terms at you, otherwise, why read this?

 

His art is a mixture of cartooning, illustration, woodcut printing, and industrial tattooing. It’s as if Steamboat Willie-era Mickey Mouse walked out on a pregnant Minnie Mouse, got a job loading trucks, and tattooed a pulsing, infected body part on his arm. That’s what it “feels” like to me. It’s similar to a raw twist on an art-form, but it certainly has the energy, detail and exaggerated features that lend itself to this violent story. Besides the style, Grampa also chooses layouts and angles to tell the story in a way that lures your eyes, and guides you through the book. After a few pages, you can taste cigarette smoke, feel hot dusts settle on the back of your sweaty neck, and your heart will race for the next crazy moment to happen. Rafael lures you in, and never lets go until the last page says: The End.

 

 

Adam Limbert = Geek Gold

adam limbert Pixar ComicThis morning I read a piece on Comic Alliance about an artist from Ohio. Crafting clever ideas and illustrating geek lore is just one of the many talents he has. His website has a great gallery of graphic design, and clever geek pieces that certainly earned a spot in my favorite designers and artists, and look for more of his stuff to come up.

 

 

Giggaheim Podcast Episode 63

War of the Green Lanterns • Xbox E3 • iPad for a Kidney • Sex Facts

Giggaheim Podcast 63-AlbumThe crew adopts Masta-Don into the fold for their sixty third adventure. Pete updates and reviews all the events that are transpiring in the War of the Green Lanterns by reviewing Green Lantern #66, Green Lantern Corps #60, and Green Lantern Emerald Warriors #10. Then Pete gives the low-down on DC Comics complete line re-launch. All news number ones, continuity, and how they are going to leave some stories in continuity. The crew reviews X-Men First Class, and then Craig gives us the Gaming News. PlayStation Network reboots, and  Xbox ramps up for E3 announcements including the new Diamond Membership. Randis covers the boy who sold his Kidney for an iPad 2, and Pete gives the news of another Sony hack, Car Apps that will kill you, and why the world needs an 8-foot wide 3D HDTV. Randis then gives us some sexually stimulating facts you may not know, and the crew answers your mail and questions.

 

Download it here.

 

Memorial Day Comics: Dong Xoai, Vietnam 1965

To honor the brave men and women of the Armed Forces the Giggaheim would like to highlight various aspects of fandom that were influenced by our national conflicts, and inspired by the heroism of our veterans. Here is one example:

 

Dong Xoai CoverDong Xoai, Vietnam 1965

Our mission at the Giggaheim is to always keep you hip, and if you do not know who Joe Kubert is, or have heard of The Kubert School, feel free to investigate those links first. Go ahead, I’ll wait. Reason I send you across the net to Wikipedia, is that I could spend all day writing about the works of Joe Kubert, and his vast catalog of comics work. But, the great professor recently assembled a fantastic book, and schooled everyone on the graphic novel form of story telling.

 

I bought this book after listening to other podcasters drone on and on about how great it was. I won’t lie, Vietnam isn’t really a war I am in to. World War II, the American Civil War, and the War of 1812 are probably conflicts that I could read about until my eyes fall out. Vietnam has never held my interest due to the plethora of gritty movies, and over-the-top media that seemed to sensationalize the conflict and how it changed America.

 

Dong Xoai Panel2Dong Xoai, is a story I was immersed in. I captivated me from all angles of my interest. The commonality of the soldiers stories, the careful accounting of the true tales of the Dong Xoai Battle, and the masterful crafting of the story and illustrations. Joe Kubert presents an account of these American soldiers as they try and complete a mission they were tasked with. Frankly, I’m not going to write down the plot points, it would ruin the experience for you. This truly is an experience, and any more pontification here would only rob you of it.

 

I will, however, laud the panels and illustrations by Joe Kubert here. The book doesn’t read or flow, as you would traditionally expect. The loose pencils give the reader a genuine feeling that an illustrator had been assigned to the unit to chronicle the events within the book, and the journal was only now just published. It’s intimate, gritty, and inspiring. Everything the movies fail to achieve. If you enjoy the graphic novel medium, and you want to dive into a war-themed book, Dong Xoai is a book that will grip you by the collar and deliver an experience short of enlisting.

 

 

Memorial Day Comics: Civil War Adventure

To honor the brave men and women of the Armed Forces the Giggaheim would like to highlight various aspects of fandom that were influenced by our national conflicts, and inspired by the heroism of our veterans. Here is one example:

 

Civil War Adventure CoverCivil War Adventure

I recently reviewed this title for Free Comic Book Day on Podcast 61, and thought it was a brilliant collection of short stories, much like Weird War Tales. However, this isn’t a trippy, strange tales collection. Chuck Dixon (G.I.Joe, Batman, Green Lantern) has assembled a fantastic historical fiction over at History Graphics Press.

 

Like I mentioned on the podcast, these books remind me of Marvel’s Illustrated Classics comics. Books that were meant for ages 10 and up, and had some fascinating stories, and factoids that kept young readers memorized and interested in history. The Free Comic Book Day edition is a fantastic taste of what is accomplished in every issue. You get 2 gritty tales from the war between the states, and a guide to amputation in the back. Everything a growing boy needs to fuel his imagination.

 

devils-due-1

Now, I am a Civil War buff. I grew up in Virginia, and US 1 is named Jeff Davis Highway. You can spit into the wind and hit a Civil War battlefield. I was surrounded by history, and the more you dig into the American Civil War, the stranger it gets. Tales of men writing home on hard tack crackers, the amount of unbridled slaughter, the technological advances, and the fact that one of the war’s largest battles was fought over shoes makes the war that united the states a fascinating subject.

 

Chuck Dixon and the team at History Graphics Press have a bottomless well to draw from, and I certainly hope that this book has an extraordinary shelf life. It is a fascinating read for all ages bringing entertainment and education in 22 illustrated pages.

 

 
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