Friday, March 9, 2018

Bunny Vs. Monkey (Family Comic Friday)

When a test monkey and his rocket ship crash lands in the woods, he mistakenly believes that he has landed on alien soil. In order to fulfill the mission he was trained for, Monkey sets about to conquer his woodland neighbors. However, Bunny and his band of misfit animal pals aren't about to be domesticated so easily. Luckily for Bunny, most of Monkey's inventions used for local domination have some serious design flaws.

Boys and girls, I present you with today's Family Comic Friday selection: Bunny Vs. Monkey: Book Three.

Don't worry, just because I started on book three that does not you didn't miss anything. Bunny Vs. Monkey is a two-page comic that runs in The Phoenix, a weekly comic publication in the UK. A weekly feature, Bunny Vs. Monkey has run nearly continuously since 2012.

The stories in Bunny Vs. Monkey are self-contained and readers do not need to start from story #1 to be caught up in the action. Each two-pager is like a Coyote and Roadrunner cartoon in that each tale pretty much has Monkey trying to conquer his forest adversaries and failing miserably. A couple of adventures do mention previous capers but that's more for comic relief that the establishment of continuity. 

British cartoonist Jamie Smart is just like his name. His creation of a power hungry monkey versus a well, hungry rabbit is very clever. And funny! I laughed quite a bit. Imagine if the creator of Calvin and Hobbes crafted the adventures of Winnie the Pooh in the Hundred Aches Woods. That's the genius of Bunny Vs. Monkey.

Why did I choose to start at volume three?

Good question. I choose book three because of it's recent publication day. This collection of comics debuted in stores just last month. So if Family Comic Friday readers are interested in finding this book, they've got a much better chance at finding book three because of how new it is. 

I found the copy I read at my local library. It was on the new shelf in the children's section so if you are looking for it on loan, start there.

I really enjoyed this book. It was funny, smart and it felt edgy without being to adult or too serious. It was flawless fun and I am looking forward to reading the first two volumes of this series very soon.

Recommended for readers 6-12 years of age. But really readers of any age will enjoy this series!

Bunny Vs. Monkey: Book Three was published on February 27, 2018.

Worth Consuming!

Rating: 10 out of 10 stars.

Thursday, March 8, 2018

Speed Racer Volume 1

Now Comics was a small comic book publisher in the mid 80s. As a whole, all of Now’s books were really well written. But there was always something off with the art.

No matter what, the inked final product has this weird magic marker quality to it. I wasn't a fan of it but I kept buying their books because the stories were quite good. Probably the fact that Now Comics were the only books available at the pharmacy when I would visit my grandparents had something to do with my purchasing habits.

Anyways, Now overextended itself and got into some legal issues over paying artists and printing debts. Before 1990 was through, the publisher has filed for bankruptcy. It's comic book line all but dried up and went totally defunct by 1994.

The titles of Now haven't ever been on my modern wish list. If I find an issue of The Twilight Zone or The Terminator in the bargain bins, I don't pass them up. But I haven't felt like I just had to get a full series run of anything like that from the publisher… until now!

A few months ago I found this volume for only a buck at Roses of all places. The first five issues of Now’s amazing run of the classic racing cartoon, Speed Racer!

With Now’s art and print style, Speed Racer was the only title that was a pretty good fit. A 1960s Japanese animated series, it looked really different than American series of it's time. It was a precursor to anime, but the way Now transferred the franchise to the 1980s, something just clicked.

Len Strazewski does an amazing job crafting the origins of both our hero Speed and the mysterious Racer X! My only regret is that I blew through this book at Mach 5 speed! This book was tons of fun. Just as good as it was nearly 30 years ago.

I know what some of you are thinking, if Now is no longer in existence then how did this book come to be when Now never collected Speed Racer in trade for at?  Well, much thanks goes to IDW Publishing for obtaining the rights to bringing this otherwise missing gem of 1980s Indy comicdom! I can't wait to get the other volumes!

Worth Consuming!

Rating: 9 out of 10 stars.

Monday, March 5, 2018

Showcase Presents: The Flash, Volume 4


Though these issues were published in the late 1960s, the foundation of the Flash television show on the CW begins here.

The face changing abilities of the Reverse Flash began during this time period. The Rogues massively team-up for the first time ever! The marriage of Barry and Iris and her statement that she too is the Flash because of the bonds of matrimony happens here! The Flying Samuroids, Barry's creation of ultra cool tech, and so many more things that occurs in the live action series got it's roots in the books collected in this volume.

There's also some really great stories that the producers of the Flash have yet to integrate from the late 60s. The futuristic magician Abra Kadabra needs to go back in time to 2018. And how fun would it be that Barry Allen breaks the multiverse winding up on Earth Prime where's he only a comic book character! And he needs Geoff Johns and Greg Berlanti to help him find a way home.

There's several masterminds behind these amazing idea, but the best are John Broome and Gardner Fox! They brought such a creativity to DC Comics that has been missing for quite some time. Plus it helps that the amazing Carmine Infantino, aided by Joe Giella, is on hand to draw these stories in such a way that for the time these books were originally hitting stands, were rivaling Jack Kirby!

Infantino’s run came to an end during this period. His predecessors of Ross Andru and Mike Esposito did a bang up job but it wasn't quite the same.

I devoured this volume with both glee and a touch of sadness. This is the last Showcase Presents volume by DC except for a very hard to find out of print book titled The Trail of the Flash. So if I am going to fill in my gap of Flash books from about 1968-1985, it will probably be thanks to back issues. I've got a feeling it's not going to be cheap.

Worth Consuming!

Rating: 9 out of 10 stars.

Sunday, March 4, 2018

The Beef #1

I am a professional sous chef and chef instructor (and life-long comic book collector), examine ways comic books, geek culture and food crossover. Today we’ll be looking at the first issue of Richard Starkings and Tyler Shaneline’s The Beef.

What’s Your Beef?

Published by Image Comics, The Beef examines the way food can affect a small town. The Beef is not only a local chain restaurant. It’s also the name of the restaurant’s slaughter house. It is the town of Mudsville’s main source of income and employment. For decades, the owner of The Beef has been a ruthless tyrant, by the name of Vodino, upon his employees and his neighbors. He’s also not afraid to run afoul of the Health Department or the FDA using chemicals to make his beef more addicting. His grandson, G-Row is the town bully, having grown up very little since his school days.
The focus of most of G-Row’s abuse is a young man named Chuck Carter. His father was maimed and later died working at the processing plant. Now Carter is following in his old man’s food steps, being his family’s soul breadwinner after his pop’s untimely death. Chuck’s daily diet has been the burger and fries at The Beef. Decades of chemicals and questionable sanitation appear to be causing havoc within his body. But how much havoc has been caused thanks to The Beef is anybody’s guess.

You are what you eat. And whatever Chuck has become from eating The Beef regularly will be explored further in the remaining four issues of this miniseries.


Welcome to the Jungle

This new series by Richard Starking (Elephantmen) and Tyler Shaneline (Liberty Justice) reminds me of the 1906 novel written by Upton Sinclair: The Jungle. The classic novel was written by Sinclair, a socialist progressive who wanted to expose the cruel labor practices of the meat-packing industry, especially towards immigrants. Instead, his depictions of employees falling into meat grinders and being made into sausages lead the public to demand change. Within a few months, Congress passed a series of acts that created the FDA and the departments that now oversee the inspection of meats and poultry.
Sinclair famously has lamented his unintended influence on government by saying, ‘I aimed at the public’s heart, and by accident I hit it in the stomach.’
Throughout this first issue, Starkings incorporates factoids about the questionable chemicals in our food. I didn’t know until reading this issue and later fact checking that genes from certain fish have been spliced into strawberries in order to protect the plants from frost. I don’t know about you, but I don’t want to eat tuna-fied fruit. But when it comes to The Beef, I think the opposite effect is going to take place.

The Heart of the Matter

Featuring art by A-Men‘s Shaky Kane, this book has an every-man feel to it. Readers could easily put themselves in the shoes of both the victims and tormentors to clearly see all sides of the story. Plus, the realistic packed meat tin on the cover, by Comicraft’s John Roshell, makes this story seem that much more real and ominous.
However, it’s the workers that are picking the berries that I think are going to resonate more with readers. There’s a young Dreamer named Mary-Lynn whom Chuck is in love with. She’s accosted by G-Row and nearly killed when a prank orchestrated by him goes awry. I really think in this current political landscape, it’s the treatment of the workers, especially immigrants both legal and undocumented, that might inspire readers of The Beef to step up for change.
I think through The Beef, Starkings and Shaneline are trying to hit comic readers in their stomachs. But considering how brutal he makes the Vodino family appear and how ultra-sympathetic I was towards both Chuck and Mary-Lynn, I feel that by the end of issue #5, the authors are going to strike at our hearts instead.
The Beef #1 debuted in stores and digital plat forms on February 28th, 2018.

The Beef #1
Writer: Richard Starkings, Tyler Shaneline
Art by Shaky Kane
Cover by John Roshell
Published by Image Comics.

Worth Consuming!

Rating: 9 out of 10 stars.

Review was originally published March 1st, 2018 on outrightgeekery.com.

Scooby-Doo Team-Up #35


One of the best issues of the entire series and it stars not a DC legend but Yogi Bear!

Somebody is stealing the picnic baskets of visitors to Jellystone Park. Ranger Smith believes that it's the work of Yogi and is ready to ship him off to the Poughkeepsie Zoo. Yogi swears that it's a ghost. It's up to Mystery Inc to get to the bottom of this caper or Yogi is gonna become the newest attraction of the New York zoo scene.

Sholly Fisch did an amazing job on this story. Sometimes the jokes can get a little corny and stale. But Fisch manages to keep things fresh with this one. Usually the Hanna-Barbera crossovers are the weakest. Yet Yogi, Boo- Boo and his friends were a delightful surprise! Another reason this is one of my favorite series of all-time!

Another thing I loved was the art. Because of the use of recycled backgrounds in the old Scooby-Doo cartoons, regular artist Dario Brizuela will cheat occasionally by using a similar technique. With this being a Yogi Bear story, I expected this with abandon! Yet guest artist Walter Carzon with Horacio Ottolini, kept every panel from being static with dynamic pencilling on every panel!

If they will keep putting out issues like this I would have no problem with more non-DC team-ups!

Worth Consuming!

Rating: 10 out of 10 stars.

Scooby-Doo Team-Up #35 debuted in stores and digital formats on February 28th, 2018.

Friday, March 2, 2018

Jim Henson's Labyrinth: Coronation #1 (Family Comic Friday)

For this week's Family Comic Friday, I feel like I'm 10 years old again.. I have selected the first issue of Jim Henson's Labyrinth: Cornation. Published by Archaia, this book seeks to explore the origins of the Goblin King, Jareth!

Jim Henson's Labyrinth: Coronation #1
Writer: Simon Spurrier
Artist: Daniel Bayliss
Colors: Dan Jackson

For those of you not familiar with the film Labyrinth, it's a dark fantasy musical produced by Jim Henson studios. You know, the folks who gave us The Muppets. The 1986 film starred Jennifer Connelly as a spoiled teen named Sarah who resents her baby step brother Toby. Angered by all the attention Toby is getting from her father she wishes that the villain of a fairy tale she loved as a child would kidnap the baby.

The Goblin King grants her wish and steals Toby away. Regretting her actions, Jareth grants Toby's return should the Sarah solve the Labyrinth of the Goblin King within a set amount of time.

It during this time that our story takes place. Sarah has just been forced to redo the whole maze run. It's her dogged determination that we inspires Jareth to recall the story of another young woman who lost someone special to the Goblin King.

The first issue is pretty vague as to whether the child in the flashback story is Jareth or not. The lad is never named. Though it's heavily implied that the child is a infant Jareth because of the allusions to his eyebrows. But this could be a deception by the writer and artist team of Simon Spurrier (Six-Gun Gorilla)and Daniel Bayliss, as the Goblin King in the past’s face is never shown.

Thankfully, there's 11 more issues of backstory and mystery to be uncovered in this amazing story.

When I first saw Labyrinth, I wanted Sarah to fail. I still do because I am Team Jareth all the way. Plus Sarah was such a brat! One can argue that Jareth is really a good guy, helping Sarah learn to love her brother. But I like to think that the Goblin King was a wicked baddie! Like with the Empire Strikes Back, it’s the bad guys that make me love this film!

Jareth opened my ears to a new sound back in the 80s. The Goblin King was played masterfully by the late rock icon David Bowie. The King of the British glam rockers, Bowie sings several songs in Labyrinth. Though they weren’t the best songs (30 years later and they sound pretty cheesy), I became a fan of Starman watching Labyrinth for the the first time.

And it’s his music that is sorely missing from this book. Simon Spurrier does a dynamite job crafting a story as mysterious as the man telling it. Artist Daniel Bayliss (Kennel Block Blues) along with colors by Dan Jackson are perfect for capturing the events of the film along with a story set in Napoleonic Venice. It’s just that I miss Bowie’s charisma and charm along with that haunting voice of his.

I think that the world as a whole misses the beacon of light that Bowie was. At least for a few short pages over the next year the Starman will live on again.
Labyrinth: Coronation #1 debuted in stores and digital platforms on February 28, 2018.

Though the comic is not rated, the film in which if was based is rated PG. Some scenes may be intense for young readers.

Worth Consuming!

Rating: 9 out of 10 stars.

This review published concurrently on Outrightgeekery.com.

Thursday, March 1, 2018

Vinegar Teeth #2


Things seem to be going from bad to worst for Artie Buckle. His squad car has been painted with a perp's entrails. His apartment has been destroyed by a rouge tuba player. His favorite hat is trashed and his partner, the inter-dimensional being, Vinegar Teeth, has been made the senior lead on all future cases.

There's only 2 issues of this miniseries left and I have absolutely zero idea where it's going. But it's a funny buddy cop comedy that isn't afraid to pull any punches. 

Dark Horse has literally struck gold with the duo of Damon Gentry and Troy Nixey!

Worth Consuming!

Rating: 9 out of 10 stars.