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Sunday, November 13, 2016

Conan Red Sonja

Title:

Conan Red Sonja

ISBN: 9781616556518
Price: $19.99
Publisher/Year: Dark Horse/Dynamite, 2015
Artist: Dan Panosian, Randy Green, Rick Ketcham
Writer: Gail Simone, Jim Zub
Collects: Conan Red Sonja #1-4

Rating: 1/5

I think Conan Red Sonja would make an fine book for a preteen who has not read many comics, or maybe someone a little older who needs a bit of distraction while waiting at an airport, or any someone who needed to get an idea who and what Conan and Red Sonja were but didn’t really want to know any the specifics (for some reason). Conan Red Sonja would make a suitable book for one of these persons.

There are some things Conan Red Sonja has going for it. It isn’t completely disjointed, despite having large time jumps between issues. It contains some good artwork. Some good colouring. It is printed on great paper. It is bound very well.

I also think I like what writers Gail Simone and Jim Zub were aiming at. And to be fair they don’t completely miss the mark. This book has a some nice set pieces. Individual panels here and there can be quite pretty. The splash pages are well composed. The whole package is there. Unfortunately its just lacking in all the little polished details that would have made Conan Red Sonja something really good.

In essence what’s wrong with Conan Red Sonja is that it is just not smart enough.

Now I bet most people who haven’t read a lot of Conan comics wouldn’t expect you’d go to Conan or Red Sonja comics for smartness, but I do.

It used to be that Conan’s stories were based on short stories by Robert E. Howard (and a few other authors). That tended to smarten things up quite a bit. And Conan comics, unlike the superhero comics, had real deaths, people would die and – get this – not just come back a few issues down the road. That was smart too. Trust me, I know whereof I speak on this whole issue. I’ve been reading comics since the mid 1980s. I grew up collecting and reading Savage Sword, Conan The Barbarian, King Kull, Red Sonja and pretty much every other Robert E. Howard character they’d do a comic about. So I know Conan and Red Sonja pretty damn well – and it can be very smart stuff.

This comic isn’t very smart.

I’ll point to five very specific problems:

There are no cannons in the Hyborian age. Maybe this wasn’t actually in the script, maybe this is just a slip-up by an enthusiastic artist who, thinking “this is a pirate ship” and “pirate ships have cannons” drew some cannons. They don’t have cannons, not in the Hyborian Age.

The pirate ship on the right. Do you see what’s missing? You can’t make racism go away by avoiding situations that might look controversial. Bêlit’s crew is supposed to black, made up exclusively of “ebony-skinned warriors.” Bêlit’s crew, in Conan Red Sonja don’t look ebony to me. Yes, Howard was racist, but Bêlit isn’t racist. She is selfish. Wanton. Cruel. But not racist. Having Bêlit not have a black crew is a stupid way to avoid looking like being racist. It’s like having the Kents of Smallville be Chinese for the purposes of racial diversity, but keeping Clark Kent white – he’s a fucking alien! – So, suffice it to say, I don’t get the point of the change here – it just makes me think yeahhh, they’re afraid to deal with the fact that the creator of this character was racist, so lets pretend everyone is white in the Hyborian Age. Howard specifically sets up this image in Queen Of The Black Coast. Bêlit is an “ivory” skinned warrior woman leading a crew of “ebony” skinned pirates. Deal with it.

No, Thoth Amon is not responsible for the poisoning of the Zarkheba River, nor, as we are probably supposed to infer, the subsequent death of Bêlit. Bêlit is responsible for her own death. Despite what writers Gail Simone and Jim Zub have Thoth Amon saying above, there’s no reason at all to have him say it – other than it is something for him to say.

First of all, Thoth Amon isn’t the be-all and end-all of evil in the Hyborian Age – he isn’t the evil behind every evil. He isn’t anything close to being the Professor Moriarty of Hyborian Age (and neither was Moriarty, actually). That’s just lazy, lazy writing.

Thoth Amon shows up in exactly one Robert E. Howard story, The Phoenix On The Sword, and the two characters never actually meet. Or as the Wikipedia page for Thoth Amon puts it “[Thoth Amon] is often used as Conan’s arch enemy in derivative works.” Well, here’s another derivative work to add to the list, Conan Red Sonja.

Moreover, Thoth Amon’s explanation for why he supposedly poisoned the Zarkheba River doesn’t hold water. There were no ruins of a coastal town at the mouth of the river! There was a ruined city upriver, that’s the setting for the climax of Queen Of The Black Coast, but that city was ancient, and had very different reasons for going bad. Again, shitty lazy writing.

Maybe there are excuses for this sort of thing, maybe the folks at Conan Properties International and Red Sonja, LLC, are so worried about protecting the characters they invented claim to own that they are micromanaging the writing team – telling them what can and cannot be written. I don’t know.

When not occasionally looking drugged, sometimes, just from panel to panel, Conan will look like a different dude. He will rapidly grow and then lose abdominal hair. Weird right? Too weird. I could buy a version of Conan with abdominal hair, or a version with chest hair, or a version with hair everywhere, or a Conan with a completely hairless torso (the traditional look). What I can’t buy is the growing and mowing I’m being asked to do between panels. Pick a fucking hair pattern.

While The overall plot McGuffin isn’t bad – I like the idea of a red seed (from space) – one that sprouts a red-thorned vine that infects and chokes all the life out of everything in a land – it’s not a new idea of course, its from H.G. Well’s The War Of The Worlds – I like it! Yet I don’t think this book uses it very well. For example, we’re told it kills absolutely everything it gets close to, and so when Conan, after getting infected somehow (the book doesn’t show us how) – after getting infected Conan has the red thorny vines growing out of the muscle on his left forearm. His cure for this infection is fire (which is cool) but when the red thorny vine grows back Conan just pulls it out by the root – and that cures it?!? WTF!? What about all the other people and animals and plants that were killed by this invasive red alien plant? You’re expecting me to accept that this burn it then pull it technique will work for Conan but didn’t work for anyone else?

And that again is the problem with Conan Red Sonja, this book doesn’t expect anything of me. It certainly doesn’t respect the rules and patterns of the Hyborian Age and so it can’t and doesn’t respect itself.

I’ve seen this happen with a lot with corporate controlled franchises. They turn a character with whom an author told stories into fan service machines – telling us more about the character and forgetting what made the original writing so compelling.

Don’t give us more backstory, don’t give us prequels, do something awesome.

Sunday, October 30, 2016

Hiatus

As my loyal readers will have noticed, I haven't been making my normal weekly posts over the past few months. Everything's alright, but there have been some circumstances that have come together to make this happen and I would like to explain:


  • I have been very busy with my work life, and I haven't had as much time as I need to both read and write. In order to be able to publish new reviews, I have to have the chance to read the trades and this has helped to cause the problem.

  • I have been very busy with keeping-up with my non-profit, Comic Book Covers 4 Cancer, as well. I haven't had the energy or motivation to read or write, so I have put what I had into working on #CBC4C.


Since I'm coming-up on celebrating our 7th anniversary here, I have decided to take a brief hiatus until I have enough material read to be able to post my regular reviews again. I am going to try and post additional, "industry" related posts from time-to-time to help fill the void and to make sure you don't forget about me here.



On the good news side, I do have a nice stack of trades to read and post reviews on. I'm always looking for more and welcome to suggestions. If there are any authors, artists, editors, publishers or comic shops that would be willing to provide material for review, please feel free to email me. I love being able to read trades that are outside my "normal" interests and will give my unbiased opinion on what I have read.



I promise I will be making a return soon. Thank you for your support!



-John







Saturday, September 17, 2016

Rose City Comic Con 2016 - My Experiences


http://rosecitycomiccon.com/


September 10-11, 2016



For the 5th year, we have been blessed with a one of the best (IMHO) comic events in the PNW. I am proud to say that I have been in attendance to every single one of them. I still have my paper bracelet from the first year when it started in a crowded hall in the Double Tree.



As I've noted before, this event just gets bigger every year. This year will be Stan Lee's final appearance to Portland. I noticed that they gave him a ton of space on the floor.







Last year, I was honored to be a member of the press to help provide coverage for the event. This year, the wonderful folks at RCCC graced me with another set of press passes for my crew and I to attend. Thank you specifically to Ron and Paula Brister for allowing me the opportunity to come and provide a non-biased point-of-view to your growing event.







I had our photographer lined-up to help take photos... because my faithful readers all know that I rarely take good pics myself. Unfortunately she had to cancel due to an issue at home. You're stuck with the photos I took, I'm afraid. Don't worry. I think you'll be surprised at what shots I did get this year and how well they turned out.







Last year, we learned that arriving even an hour after the con opened was a costly mistake. This year, we got there around 9am and we weren't the only ones waiting. Fortunately since we were apart of the media, they allowed us early access at 9:30am.



When I talk about "us" or "we", I did have a friend with me who helped with the experience. He goes in for getting signatures and photos from the celebs. His primary focus was getting a signature from Jon Barenthal and photos with Summer Glau (JEALOUS) and Ming-Na Win. Our first stop was to make sure he was in-line for the 10:15am Jon Barenthal signing... which was not a problem since we were the first ones there.



At this time, I should mention that last year my friend purchased a very special copy of The Walking Dead #115 from Comic Book Covers 4 Cancer. This specific cover had been donated by our wonderful supporter and artist, Paul Rowden. Paul donates to #CBC4C in the memory of his adoptive father Francis Joseph Bernauer, who died of colon cancer. He was able to get the autographs from a variety of cast members from the show. Scott Wilson, Chad L. Coleman, Lawrence Gilliard Jr., Kyla Kenedy, Jose Pablo Cantillo and Michael Rooker.














 



His goal is to get as many cast signatures as he can on it. This year, he added Jon Barenthal.









After leaving him to get his autograph, I went on the hunt for my personal autographs and to meet with several friends who were at the show. While leaving the celeb area, my first stop was to make sure that I knew where Jimmy Palmiotti and Amanda Conner were going to be. As I approached, walking towards me was none other than Jimmy himself. We said hello to one another, I shook his hand as he kindly greeted me and I asked when they would be ready for fans. He let me know that Amanda was planning on arriving around 10am, so I thanked him and we parted ways. Very nice guy, I must say.



As I did a walk-through of the show floor to get my bearings on where each artist and vendor I had planned on visiting was, I stopped in on my friend Benjamin Kreger of Warrior Innkeeper Creative. We spoke for a minute as he was on his way to meet with another friend who was having an early morning panel discussion. He then gifted me with a copy of the Black Suit of Death #1: Convention Special.







I have been a fan of Ben's work for quite a while, and Black Suit of Death is my favorite work of his. When his had his first Kickstarter last year to get this book published, it was the first time I had ever supported any KS campaign. I was very bummed when it wasn't successful, but I think that worked for the best because he doubled his efforts on the 2nd campaign... and it paid-off. Fortunately, I was able to pledge more the second time around than the first. If you're not familiar with this book, I encourage you to take a look for yourself.





After I had made my first walk-around the show floor, I came back to get in line for Jimmy Palmiotti and Amanda Conner. I had brought a Harley Quinn cover that was donated to #CBC4C by artist Tom Campbell to have both Jimmy and Amanda sign. They both loved the cover and I hope this will help raise some good $$ for the American Cancer Society. Of course, I also got some of my own comics signed as well as pick-up a great print for my collection.











Before I left my home, I was considering taking all of my unsigned Hellboy trades with me to get signed by Mike Mignola. I know that every time I have met him before, his wife insists that he's trying to get away from signing events, so I never know when my next chance will be. When I realized how much extra weight that would have put on my backpack, I decided against it. I'm glad I did because there was a perpetually unending line of people that were waiting on a chance to meet him.



I did bring my copy of Words for Pictures for Brian Michael Bendis to sign, but unfortunately he too had an unending line of fans.



As with last year, I reached-out to several of the attending artists to see if any of them would be able and willing to donate a cover to my non-profit, Comic Book Covers 4 Cancer. This year we were able to receive donations from Chrissie Zullo, Jeff Parker, Keith Tucker and Ben Hansen. Unfortunately I forgot to stop by Jeff's table to pick-up the cover he's donating to #CBC4C... but he'll be shipping it to us and I'll post the scan of it on our FB page.













I also couldn't walk away Chrissie's table without adding some more of her amazing prints to my collection.





I did manage to make sure I took some photos of some of the great cosplays I saw this year.













The Catwoman in the last photo is actually a friend, Allison. She has some pretty amazing work available at Isles of Day. That guy she's "threatening" happens to my friend I spoke about earlier, Scott.



It wouldn't have been as great of a show if I didn't stop by to see my friend and biggest #CBC4C supporter, Tony Grove from Tony's Kingdom of Comics.






Not actually my photo.

Even though my family has imposed a purchasing freeze on me this time of year because of my birthday in October and, of course, Christmas, I indulged myself to get a new Funko Pop for my collection from Tony.






The biggest highlight, for me, is when I find vendors that have great deals on trades to add to my collection. When I find these deals, I try to take as much advantage as I can out of them. Ever since Tony recommended I stop by their table at the very first Rose City Comic Con, I have always made it a point to hit the I Like Comics area as they typically have a great selection of trades at a considerable discount. When I arrived, there were several others taking in the selection available at 70% off. Unfortunately for me, many of the titles were either ones I already had in my collection or titles I didn't feel like trying to read just yet. Here's what I walked away with:







Just before leaving the event, I did manage to find Gem City Comics that had a huge selection of trades available that they were selling for $5 each or 5 for $20. I limited myself because I knew my limits, but I could have easily bought more than this.









I absolutely love this years event, and I can't wait until next year. I'm hoping that I can actually get some table space to help promote #CBC4C at next years RCCC.





The air was electric, and you could feel that everyone was enjoying themselves. It seemed as though the supply of volunteer henchmen was lacking. There was a time where I was needing help locating a specific artist, and I walked around for several minutes before I finally found a red shirt to help. I hope that next year they will put the call out for volunteers a little sooner or hopefully there will be more of a response to the call.



Something that was brought-up on several of my talks with people around the event was the question of why this wasn't 3-days. I feel that RCCC can easily fill at least a half day on a Friday opening. With the recent announcement that Image is moving to Portland, I also expect that the pull of artists and creators will also increase the demand for Rose City. As I told my friend, with Image coming to Portland, there's a bigger chance of getting Robert Kirkman to come to RCCC. To that he replied, "That would probably be the only non-cast member I would have sign my Walking Dead cover!" (I hope someone imparts this information to Ron, Paula and Image.)




http://rosecitycomiccon.com/






Friday, September 9, 2016

Challenge From Comic Book Covers 4 Cancer






To help raise additional $$ for the American Cancer Society
and raise awareness, I have decided to shave my head in support of all cancer
patients who have lost their hair in the struggle.










In a similar fashion to the Ice
Bucket challenge for ALS, I make a challenge. Those of you who would accept
this challenge can do so in 1 of 2 ways:




  1. Shave your head as well. Post before and after photos and share our call for
    donations. Please use the #cbc4c
    hashtag when you post. Share across all of social media

  2. Make a donation through our PayPal donation page.



https://www.paypal.com/us/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_flow&SESSION=oWszwMP7w3lSTy1sf-kcLciZQv0p74BH3dA4De1DQ7d8708kR4C1LI3psSS&dispatch=5885d80a13c0db1f8e263663d3faee8d4fe1dd75ca3bd4f11d72275b28239088


Comic Book Covers 4 Cancer (#CBC4C) has been working
to raise money for the ACS since July 2013. I welcome you to check out our
Facebook page for more information. www.cbc4c.com







I have 2 head coverings that I will be wearing
during October. Once my hair grows back, or if I decide to keep the bald look,
I'll be donating them to a local chemo group.





Please spread the word. I look forward to seeing how
many others will take the challenge and I welcome all donations.



Thank you!



-John

Facebook: Comic Book Covers 4 Cancer

Twitter: @ZanziberPoV

Instagram: CBC4C

#cbc4c

#fuckcancer



An Open Letter to @eBay RE: #GivingWorks



Dear eBay,



I am writing on behalf of Comic Book Covers 4 Cancer (eBay user ID: CBC4C).



When I first started our non-profit to help raise funds for the American Cancer Society, I found that eBay's Giving Works program was going to be a great fit for what I intended. Our work relationship was excellent until this year when your system became broken and I could no longer manually send my donations nor could I access our donation records.



When I reached-out to your "customer service" team, I was informed that this was due to the separation between eBay and PayPal and that things would improve by the end of the Summer, 2016. It's not September and I don't see any changes being made.



Also, it would be wonderful if there was an email form that users could use in order to properly contact eBay. I don't have much time to sit on the phone and talk to someone who can't do anything for me or have a Twitter account tell me to "DM them" to let them know what my problems are.



Here's the long-and-short of what I would like answered:


  1. When will I be able to access my donation account on eBay again so I can see what donations have been made and when?

  2. When will I be able to manually send our donations instead of having to wait 21 days after the auctions have ended?

  3. When will I be able to receive a full accounting of our donations?


When/If you chose to respond to this, I'm not difficult to find. My email is zanziber@gmail.com.



Sincerely,



John

Director, Comic Book Covers 4 Cancer

#CBC4C

www.cbc4c.com

Friday, August 26, 2016

News!





As first announced via my Facebook and Twitter accounts, I will again be participating in the media coverage for Rose City Comic Con!



I'm looking forward to the experience and I am very thankful to Ron & Paula Brister for allowing me and my team to come in to cover the event.



When I say "team", I mean my friends from {Chrysalis Rising Photographic Studio}. This year, I have a better gameplan for where to go and who to take photo's of. Look forward to seeing more of Rita's great photography.







As we did last year, I have reached-out to several of the attending artists to see if any of them would be able and willing to donate a cover to Comic Book Covers 4 Cancer. So far we've had 3 artists confirm that they would be willing to donate. Once we're another week closer to the event (September 10-11), I'll post on our Facebook page who those wonderful contributing artists are.



Last year, we had a Larry Hama cover autograph challenge where we had donated G.I. Joe covers that were signed by Hama. This year, both Jimmy Palmiotti and Amanda Conner are going to be attending, so I made a call for Harley Quinn covers that we'll have signed by both. It should be fun!








With regards to #CBC4C, I was thinking about the fact that we're unable to have our regular
auctions in September, and I wanted to continue our efforts to promote
cancer awareness as well as hopefully raise some additional $$ for the American Cancer Society.




Since I don't run and can't grow facial hair, I thought I would step
outside of my comfort zone. At the beginning of October, I will shave my
head. I encourage anyone willing to take this challenge to do so as well and share a video on the #CBC4C FB page.




Also, for those that would like to support our cause but keep your
hair, I have added a donation button to our FB page. All donations made
from now until the beginning of October will go to ACS for cancer
research.



Spread the word. Accept the challenge. Make a donation.



 Seems easy enough.



I look forward to your responses.





Sunday, August 21, 2016

New Posts Coming in September!

I know that August hasn't seen any reviews or other posts on here. I needed to take some time to myself, and frankly, I'm running out of trades to review from my collection.



I'm planning on some new articles and reviews starting in September. Hopefully, I will have a review of this years Rose City Comic Con as well.



Keep the faith and stay tuned.



-Z

Wraith: The Oblivion 20th Anniversary Edition

 Title: Wraith: The Oblivion 20th Anniversary Edition Price: $29.99 (PDF), $134.99 (Hardcover) Publisher/Year: Onyx Path Publishing, 2018 Au...