I know I said that this would be an annual thing, and I’ll
try to keep this on schedule, and I’ll try to post these on time, and I know
I’m posting the one for 2017 as 2018 comes to an end… but writing this took a
backseat as I had to finish some projects and write a thesis. C'est la vie, as
the French say.
So, since I obviously can't keep this on schedule, and this doesn't deserve to get stuck in limbo, welcome to the final edition of EVENT BATTLE, ladies and gentlemen. Thank you for sticking around.
So, since I obviously can't keep this on schedule, and this doesn't deserve to get stuck in limbo, welcome to the final edition of EVENT BATTLE, ladies and gentlemen. Thank you for sticking around.
Last time we had what I called a Triple Threat Match: DC vs
Marvel vs Valiant. While I was hoping this would be a trend going forward,
Valiant Comics took a break from publishing big summer crossover events this
year. (Side note:
I absolutely adore Valiant’s quality over quantity strategy, and I hope it
continues despite the recent
setbacks.)
So, back to the heavyweights, then?
2017 saw DC Comics handing over their universe to the most
successful team off their New 52 experiment, Scott Snyder and Greg Capullo (of
the Batman fame), in the form of METAL, or Dark Nights: Metal.
While Metal is indeed a continuation of Snyder and Capullo’s run on Batman,
it does build itself up on the shoulders of giants. Peter Milligan and Kieron
Dwyer’s “Dark Knight, Dark City” being one, Grant Morrison’s seminal run on
Batman, Final Crisis, his The Multiversity stuff, and pretty much
the entirety of his DC output is some of the few important stories from the
past that the creators wove into theirs. However, although Metal leans
on and borrows from a lot of stories (like most modern superhero stories do),
it does not make them a required reading. You will easily find your way if you
have never read “Dark Knight, Dark City” (you should, though) and don’t know
who or what Barbathos is. Metal is that accessible to new readers. If
you are a long-time reader and know your comics, however, it is oddly satisfying
when you catch a reference.
Like I mentioned earlier, Metal brings back Barbathos,
the bat daemon occultists in 1776 (including the third President of the UnitedStates of America!) tried summoning with their “Ceremony of the Bat”. Bruce
Wayne, because of his connection to both the Wayne family and, well, I guess,
bats in general, is revealed to be the host for Barbathos’ return. To act as
the portal/host for the daemon, Wayne needs to be exposed to five divine
metals. It is revealed later that Batman already has been exposed to most of
them in previous storylines (Electrum in “Court of Owls”, Dionesium in
“Endgame”, Promethium in “Superheavy”, Nth Metal in the prologue of the event
with Dark Nights: Casting and Dark Nights: Forge, and finally, Batmanium
during the course of this story). The daemon, of course, has evil intentions.
It is bringing with itself the “dark multiverse”. It literally wants to sink
the Earth and flip the scales.
Oh, and also, it is bringing with itself the twisted versions
of Batman… who kinda do look awfully similar to Dark Judges from Judge Dredd?
As you can imagine, much of the story then follows Batman
and the Justice League’s attempt at stopping Barbathos and his horde of
mercenaries. Metal is filled to the brim with ridiculously absurd and
deliciously fun moments throughout. While I did stick with my rule of not
reading the tie-ins for events, I did read those that Snyder co-wrote, and they
work quite well with the main story. They offer details to the story as you
would expect from a tie-in but if you do choose to follow the main book only,
you would be good.
While bigger, louder, more ridiculous seems to Snyder’s modus
operandi for every story after “Zero Year”, it just kinda works here. Rarely
does the story pauses and the characters get a chance to breathe. Even the
dialogues are written in such a way that they service the plot forward and not
add any depth to the characters themselves. While this does seem to continue on
his Justice League run, what I do appreciate here is how he managed to
adapt and extend previous stories and add more layers to the cosmic side of the
DC Universe, which I have always felt falls a bit short when compared to
Marvel. Apart from Darkseid and the New Gods, there’s not much else to it, is
there? (Cue fans telling me off in 3… 2… 1…)
Greg Capullo draws every issue of Metal, front to
back. This in itself is unheard of for modern superhero crossover events, but
that’s not all. The man knocks it out of the park throughout. From huge action
splash pages to an eight panel page of a tightly choreographed fight scene,
Capullo works his magic throughout. Joining him on the tie-ins are John Romita
Jr., Andy Kubert, Jim Lee, Doug Mahnke, Yanick Paquette, Jorge Jiménez, Riley
Rossmo, Howard Porter, Bryan Hitch, Mikel Janín, and a host of talented inkers
and colourists. While on some scenes in the tie-ins, the transitions between
the artists is not subtle and it feels a bit off, the books are a sight to
behold. If Jorge Jiménez’s work on Superman, Super-Sons, etc.
didn’t inform you, the guy is a superstar.
Marvel, on the other hand, had a rough
year. I’m talking about the comic book side of the business, of
course. They seem to be doing just fine everywhere
else.
SECRET EMPIRE is the continuation of Nick Spencer’s Captain
America run, specifically his ‘Hydra Cap’ storyline. You know, the one that
caused so
much outrage. I wasn’t following his run then, but reading this event
now, I learnt that (spoiler alert:) that man is that controversial panel
actually is Steve Rogers. While the story very firmly establishes that
it is not an LMD, not a clone, not a shape-shifter, etc., that man is still not
our Captain America. Something is a bit off – specifically, Rogers gets
his history rewritten by a sentient cosmic cube – and this leads to an
interesting “What If?” storyline, almost.
Yes, Captain America is a Hydra agent. The bad guys have
won. America is under Nazi rule (Which, is not that different from the current
state of things, is it?). Spencer’s plays with this idea throughout the story,
drawing parallels between the two. For example, the persecution of the Inhumans
in the make-believe world is drawn from the persecution of the Jews in the
real, and so on. While the story is not that epic in scale as Metal
perhaps is, it does work as a summer blockbuster crossover event story
regardless. Spencer also smartly limits the active cast. New York is put under
a blackout, so half the Marvel superheroes are off the table and a shield
around Earth has locked out heavy-hitters like Captain Marvel and such. This
makes it easier to follow the action. Not that I doubt Spencer’s ability to
write a large cast (he does exactly that so expertly here) or that I doubt the
reader’s ability to read a book with a large cast. A smaller cast works here,
because unlike Metal, for example, this is not a story about the heroes
trying to stop the bad guys from winning. They have won already. It is up to a
handful of rebels to overthrow the regime Reich.
The first and the last issue of the story is drawn by Steve
McNiven, and rest of the work is divided among Rod Reis, Daniel Acuña, Andrea
Sorrentino, Joshua Cassara, Leinil Francis Yu, Sean Izaakse, Joe Bennett, Ron
Lim, Paco Medina, …holy shit that’s a lot of artists. To their credit though,
the editorial team does manage to avoid any art inconsistencies. The story
follows the one artist per issue rule to the dot, or a specific artist(s)
sticks with a particular plotline. Steve McNiven hyper-detailed art sets up the
mood perfectly in the beginning and that exposition is perfect for the end.
Andrea Sorrentino, I think, handles a major portion of the book. His panel
structure and innovative use of the borders and the gutters is fantastic.
THE VERDICT
To be honest, this was the hardest it has been in quite some
time to pick one of the two. Usually, I like one book over the other a lot. Infinity
over Forever Evil, Original Sin over Futures End, Secret
Wars over Convergence, Rebirth over Civil War II and 4001
A.D. This year, I thought both worked quite well in their own regard.
Neither of them is perfect by any means. There are some gaping holes in the
plot of both stories. Dream appearing in Metal to add a convenient layer
of exposition to an ‘oh my god, how are they ever going to do it?’ plot, The
Punisher and Thor kinda turning Nazis with little to no conviction in Secret
Empire, and so on. Nonetheless, I had a good time reading them, and that’s
all that matters on some days.
While both Metal and Secret Empire had some
lasting impact in their respective universe, most of what was caused by Secret
Empire has been hushed over. This is partially, I think, because of all the
(unnecessary) outrage it caused. Metal, on the other hand, boosted
sales, launched new series, spun new tales. I had so much fun reading that
book. And oh, how could I ever forget baby Darkseid doing the devil’s horns?
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