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John Romita Jr

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Wolverine is a jerk

by Christine on February 3, 2010 in Humor

I know, the title is not quite as cerebral as you might expect from me. Not that I think you expect a constant flow of profundities or anything, but I guess it’s a little brusque (though well deserved in this case). Anyway, the sequence below is from the Enemy of the State arc of Wolverine, by Mark Millar and John Romita Jr, more specifically from Wolverine #24 (vol 3).

In his defense, Logan is still somewhat affected by his previous brainwashing at the hands of Hydra and the Hand, which brings me to the reason for posting these panels to begin with: This month, we’re going to take a closer look at the history of the Hand in the Marvel Universe. We’re also going to look at Matt’s previous trip to Japan, to make sure everyone’s prepared for his return to the land of the rising sun in this months’ issue.

Matt fights a brainswashed Wolverine

Matt fights a brainswashed Wolverine

I’m looking forward to diving into both of these topics this weekend, but in the mean time, I’d like to give you all a little advance notice that I’m also going to start contributing regularly to the Weekly Crisis, a comic book blog that packs a punch that’s about an order of magnitude bigger than this puppy and which I assume is familiar to all of you. However, don’t worry about my slacking off around this part of the woods, and I’ll reserve the vast majority of all Daredevil related stuff for The Other Murdock Papers.

I’ll see you Saturday!

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Daredevil collected

by Christine on October 31, 2009 in Character Basics, Guides & Lists

How do you like your Daredevil? Served in a beautiful hardcover, in the form of a convenient take-it-on-the-train trade paperback or as single issues to be treated carefully and then put away for posterity? For many older issues, there isn’t much of a choice, but a great many of Daredevil’s adventures have been collected. This includes all of volume two, which, for the most part, is available in more than one format. The sole exception is the Playing to the Camera arc, written by Bob Gale, which was released as Daredevil #20-25. The question of whether it ever will be collected resurfaces from time to time, but there is currently no indication of any such plans.

About a year ago, I wrote a post called Daredevil Volume 2 for Dummies, which contains a comprehensive list of all volume two collections. It was recently updated too, and provides a good guide to the last ten years of Daredevil publication. Collected editions from volume one don’t cover every writer and era, but there’s still quite a bit of material out there. With this post, I’m going to attempt to list all volume one collections. I can’t promise perfection, but I’ll do my very best. Let me know if there’s something missing from this list and I’ll add it.

Silver Age : Marvel Masterworks Daredevil

The Marvel Masterworks hardcovers collect the early stories of some of Marvel’s most popular characters in full color. So far, there are five volumes, each collecting around ten issues. These volumes collect the entire Stan Lee run on Daredevil since Daredevil #53 was his final issue as writer. Click the images below for more details about each volume at www.marvelmasterworks.com

Collects Daredevil #1-11 Collects Daredevil #12-21 Collects Daredevil #22-32Collects Daredevil #33-41 Collects Daredevil #42-53

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While I always tend to write about things I want to write about on this blog (with the odd exception of some mandatory news reporting), this series of posts – more so than others perhaps – is one I’m putting together knowing that many of you might find it a bit anal. Not all of you – judging by the decent number of people who land on this blog after searching for “Daredevil radar sense” on Google – but probably a majority. And yet, I keep at it. Call it self-indulgence or the simple curiosity to try to understand how writers and artists imagine Daredevil’s most exotic trait, his unique window on the world.

In the last post of this series, I quoted an excerpt from an old Miller interview where he was able to talk about his take on the radar sense, putting words to the ambiguity I know many fans, and presumably a fair share of writers, feel about the radar. I’ve seen some people refer to it as a cop-out, and I’ve seen others who have wanted to see it removed altogether and replaced with something more subtle. What I think Miller was striving for with his talk of a “proximity sense” was to portray the radar sense as something that performs some of the functions of vision, while also being something quite different. He also added his own take on the origin of the sense, seeing it as an innate ability that could be unleashed, or possibly enhanced, but a far cry from Stan Lee’s all-purpose radio-transmitter and antenna set-up. An ability brought out by radioactivity and mysticism while also being rooted in human biology.

Below, I’ll just post some panels that highlight Miller’s take on the radar sense, offering some brief comments when necessary. Feel fee to provide your own comments on how you view Miller’s work in this regard, and how you’d like to see Daredevil’s radar sense portrayed. All panels below are written and penciled by Frank Miller, except Daredevil #185 (penciled by Klaus Jansen) and Daredevil: The Man Without Fear #1 (penciled by John Romita Jr).

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Brand New Amnesia

by Christine on July 30, 2009 in Commentary

Amazing Spider-Man #600 came out last week (I doubt anyone missed it), and it had a lengthy guest appearance by Daredevil. I don’t usually read Spider-Man, and the headache of Brand New Day makes the thought of picking it up just slightly unappetizing, but I did actually enjoy the anniversary issue. It even casts some light on how the whole “I know who you are, but you don’t know who I am” situation. I’m not saying it makes a lot of sense, but apparently Matt is very much aware of the fact that he should know who Spider-Man is, but can’t remember and is apparently mystically prevented from figuring it out by his usual means. When Spider-Man offers to let him in on the secret, Daredevil stops him and reminds him of all the things it’s cost him to have his private life exposes. Still, the new setup is a little awkward as far as these two guys are concerned.

image from Amazing Spider-Man #600

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Enough slacking off for me. It’s time to get back into the heat of things. Today I’ll be reviewing an issue from Ann Nocenti’s run. Usually when you read current commentary about people’s reactions to Nocenti’s Daredevil, you’re told that it was controversial – loved by some and hated by others. I wasn’t around back then. These issues came out long before I was a fan so I have no idea what the reaction to her run was at the time. All I know is that it seems the vast majority of current longtime readers adore her, and that mine is a dissenting opinion.

Basically, I’m not a big fan. That makes reviewing this issue hard. I’m not sure I’m qualified to comment on the actual literary and artistic merit of a comic written in a style that I just happen to not particularly care for, all I can do is give my opinion. This also brings up the difficulties of reviewing old issues of Daredevil in general. How do you compare Stan Lee’s Daredevil to Brian Michael Bendis’s? They are such different animals. At the end of the day, my final score will depend on basic entertainment value. A well written and high quality comic, like much of volume 2, will offer a completely different kind of experience than something quirky and fun from the earlier issues of volume one.

For me personally, most of the Nocenti run offers neither kind of entertainment. When I’m not left cold, I usually feel annoyed when reading her issues. There are some I like, and I feel she was often great at writing compelling villains, but many of the things that rub me the wrong way are present in the issue reviewed here, so I’ll return to them below.

We Again Beheld the Stars is part of the Inferno cross-over event, which mainly involved the X-titles and a few other tie-ins. #265 is the last of three Daredevil tie-ins and showcases New York City nearing the end of the demon invasion that had taken over both people and inanimate objects. I don’t know to what extent Nocenti had any power over whether Daredevil would be involved in the event or not, but I don’t like demons in Daredevil. Nor do I like galactic events in Daredevil. We don’t have any of the latter in this issue, but my basic complaint is the same. I just don’t feel it suits the tone of the book, so that’s strike one as far as this issue is concerned.

What Nocenti does here is use the demon invasion, and the people affected, to also tell a different kind of story. Normally, I would laud this kind of effort. If you’re going to be stuck with a demon invasion in a book where such a theme seem likes a bad fit, why not craft a nice metaphor out of it? One of the problems I have with Nocenti’s use of metaphor in this and many of her other issues, however, is that it lacks subtlety, and political commentary seems shoe-horned in for no apparent reason. One example of this can be found on one of the very first pages. When we follow a demon-possesed dentist, “infected” on the opening page by a machine, through his office and waiting room and out onto the street, the story shifts to a couple of guys in a truck. We see the driver drinking a beer, and thick black smoke coming from the exhaust pipe. The person in the passenger seat says, “It’s fun to blast holes in the ozone!” to which the driver responds, “Gun it again, pollutin’s a blast!” I won’t get into the fact that exhaust fumes don’t break down the ozone layer (oops, I guess I just did), but these characters seem to exist only to deliver this message. Which would be fine in and of itself – I actually like real issues reflected in fiction – but these characters become caricatures. Who actually talks like that? It takes me out of the book.

On the next page, Daredevil makes his first appearance. This issue sees him being in a trancelike state, like so many of the people on the streets, going about his mission like a zombie. He still does what he’s supposed to though, battling demons and helping people, but he’s not acting like himself. He doesn’t have a single line in this issue, but his actions are commented on by onlookers Butch and Darla, two of the children who made frequent appearances in Nocenti’s run. Butch is frightened by Daredevil’s coldness while Darla, clearly possessed, cheers him on.

The rest of the issue continues in much the same way. We switch between events happening to various people in New York, both the possessed and the unaffected, and Daredevil waging a robot-like one man war on demons. Throughout we get heavy handed social commentary, such as:

“A city of social darwinism, that’s what we’ve got! Cull out the meek, the timid, the shy. Let only the aggressive survive! Once we weed out the artists, the poets, *snort! Yuk yuk* the tender-hearted liberal saps — it’ll be a city of bullies stomping heads as we climb to the top! It’s the law!”

This, to me, combines pretentiousness with a complete disregard for any kind of subtlety. If you really want to illustrate a point, it’s better to show it than deliver it on a platter for easy digestion.

I also find the art uninspiring. I actually like most of John Romita Jr’s current work, and I think he did a fine job of drawing Matt in the Enemy of the State storyline in Wolverine, but I never cared for how he drew Matt/DD while teamed up with Nocenti. There are other details I like, but the face of the main character often seemed stern and expressionless in ways that make me care even less about what happens to him.

Bottom line: I’m neither entertained nor intrigued by this issue. It does nothing for me. I think it was Chichester who said that, to him, Nocenti’s Daredevil seemed more like a comic which happened to have Daredevil in it than a comic about Daredevil. I’m paraphrasing here (and it’s not as if Chichester is beyond reproach), but that way of looking at it might, in part, explain why Nocenti’s Daredevil has been so hard for me to get into. In this issue, Daredevil is not even acting like himself, becoming instead only an agent of some other force, which makes this even more problematic. This issue is about as exciting as a public service announcement set against the implausible backdrop of New York being overtaken by demons. This is not why I read Daredevil.

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Here’s one of these points where all comparisons with Batman really fall apart. Bruce Wayne has a cool hi-tech car – the Batmobile. Matt Murdock… Well, let’s just call him “vehicularly challenged.” Luckily for him, he lives in New York where there are cabs everywhere (if his battle with Bullseye in issue #169 is any indication, he’d probably prefer to stay out of the subway). He’s also been known to travel billy-club style across Manhattan and I think he currently lives within walking distance of the office.

Being blind, Matt obviously doesn’t have a driver’s license, and the fact that he lost his sight before the age of sixteen pretty much guarantees that he never had any driver’s ed either. That hasn’t prevented him from driving on numerous occasions in the Daredevil comic. Heck, in issue #100 (Vol 1) he was even seen piloting the Avengers’ jet, though I suspect that was before it was widely known in the superhero community that the guy probably shouldn’t be operating aircraft (though it might be argued that he can do so more safely than drive a car).

When it comes to driving, Matt has met with mixed success. He’s never hurt either himself or anyone else that I can recall, but he’s had a couple of close calls when an emergency situation has forced him to get behind the wheel. I actually sort of buy the idea that he would do okay on a highway in the middle of nowhere, but inner-city traffic is certainly a little more challenging. After all, most road signs and traffic lights are not just for decorative purposes. Although considering Dakota North’s sweet ride in #107, he probably doesn’t mind hitching a ride with her.

Anyway, let’s take a look at Daredevil driving, starting with Daredevil #8. Since this was back in Stan Lee’s day, Daredevil comes across as an expert driver. While Stan doesn’t actually say that Daredevil can “drive more safely than a sighted man,” we sort of get that feeling as he stops a runaway car, complete with a car bomb. If you recognize this first panel, it also appeared in a previous post on the radar sense, since it features the first depiction of the iconic radar rings emanating from Daredevil’s head.

This next panel (these are all in sequence, by the way) strikes me as hilarious. I love the whole “No brakes! No brakes!” I’d love to see him yell “Look, no hands!” while taking both hands off the wheel.

“I’ve got to keep guiding it… till the end!” Oh Matt, you’re such a drama queen (below).

This panel below is actually pretty funny. First of all, I’d like for someone to explain to me the difference between images and sights (seriously). Secondly, the “master driver” bit? Gotta love it.

In the last panel of DD driving in this issue, we seem him drive the car into the sea. His head looks dangerously close to colliding with that sign overhead.

The next time we see Daredevil drive a car is in issue #54, written by Roy Thomas. As I mentioned in another post, it seemed that the book got significantly goofier for a while after Thomas took over and this page is certainly full of all kinds of goofiness. First of all we have another instance of Matt apparently wearing his shades under his mask. The rest of the page is of him remembering some of the details of faking his own death, which he did quite callously. Here he drives to an air field, and rents a plane with a fake license, disguised with a hideous black wig and – oddly enough – not wearing any shades. In case you’re wondering, the “passenger” in the car is a dummy that’s supposed to look like Matt Murdock. What I never got about this was why the dummy was necessary. It’s not like the people who find it at the crash site are going to confuse it with an actual corpse, right?

There are many more instances of Daredevil driving, but the rest will be revisited in a second post. Before rounding this off, however, we’re going to look at two Frank Miller classics that both feature Matt behind the wheel of a car. The first group of panels below is from the last issue of Born Again. And the second from the last issue of Man Without Fear. Neither one of these occasions bore the marks of a “master driver,” but at least no one got hurt. And, in an emergency, you’ve gotta do what you’ve gotta do, right?

For a more recent example of Daredevil driving a taxi, take a look at the panel from Vol 2 #103 posted by Francesco, which was the lead-in for this post, incidentally. More driving in a few weeks when I round up more panels of DD goodness.

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