comiXtreme

Go Back  
Register Games Social Groups Mark Forums Read

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old July 7th 2007, 12:15 AM
Scott A. Williams's Avatar
Scott A. Williams Scott A. Williams is offline
REVIEWS EDITOR
 
Join Date: Dec 2002
Posts: 3,992
Location: Oakville, ON
Users Flag!
Scott A. Williams is a glorious beacon of lightScott A. Williams is a glorious beacon of lightScott A. Williams is a glorious beacon of lightScott A. Williams is a glorious beacon of lightScott A. Williams is a glorious beacon of lightScott A. Williams is a glorious beacon of light
RUNAWAYS #27 REVIEW

Reviewer: Scott A. Williams, yoda905@yahoo.com
Quick Rating: Very, very good
Story Title: Dead-End Kids Part 3
Rated T+

The Runaways gotta go back… to the future!

Writer: Joss Whedon
Penciler: Michael Ryan
Inker: Rick Ketchum with Jay Leisten
Colorist: Christina Strain
Cover Artist Jo Chen
Lettered by: Virtual Calligraphy’s Joe Caramagna
Assistant Editor: Danny Ketchum
Editor: Nick Lowe
Editor-In-Chief: Joe Quesada
Publisher: Marvel Comics

Yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes. Yes. This is what I’ve been wanting, waiting for, hoping for. A few issues into Joss Whedon’s stay on Runaways, by Jove I think he’s got it. From the start, he showed a love and understanding of the characters (indeed, it bordered, seemingly, on sycophantic devotion) and he’s always been a talented writer when it comes to plots, sure, but something about the first couple issues didn’t gel for me. After the brilliance of the inaugural Brian K. Vaughan’s run, Whedon came off as a relief pitcher; talented but somehow lesser. But here, he finds his step.

The story is one part oddball plot – the kids are in over their heads again, this time after a time-traveling mishap leaves them in the Buster Brown-reading, Teddy Roosevelt-electing streets of turn of the century New York City. There, they encounter period heroes and colourful characters (I smell a spin-off!) including, bizarrely enough, the Yellow Kid (personally, I’d have preferred Little Nemo but I guess he was asleep) and some very cute era-approximate dialogue.

The characters sparkle in this situation. Nothing like time travel to cement a character’s traits. Karolina in particular finds herself taken with the charms of the period, only to be disgusted with its Dickensian nature. It’s just fun to see the characters wander around the setting and behave, let alone the plot. Whedon is apparently smart enough of a writer to know there’s no suspense in “will they get back?” The DeLorian always somehow gets fired up; it’s not important how they get back, but what they do until they do. Whedon leaves us with a last page that comes out of nowhere despite being, in hindsight, not only obvious but downright logical.

And thus, the issue comes together as a complete classic in the Runaways canon. It’s appropriately each of the following: irreverent, iconoclastic (inasmuch as we value history,) sarcastic, insightful, true to its characters, light on its plot, intriguing in its events and turns, and aware of its status in the pantheon of comic book reality. There’s a moment between Chase and a hologram emitted by the Leapfrog that made my heart sank. It was so incidental that it may as well not have been included, but it was the piece that seemed to be missing.

The artwork is truthfully among the best the series has ever seen, with all due respect to Alphona. Ryan’s work is clean, clear and consistent. It always shows you what you need, looking good, and keeps the story easy to follow. The era is rendered like the ole photo essays you study in Grade 10 history class (cities before cars were mandatory.) The coloring is, perhaps deliberately or perhaps as an invention of my mind, bathed in a subtle sepia tone, to make it look like the photographs of the day (which reminds me of one of the best lines in the issue, wondering about the existence of cameras.)

With only a handful of issues left in his stay on this book, Joss Whedon has done good by it by keeping its spirit alive with a story that is a great deal of fun to read, loaded with exquisite visuals, and moments both small and big that help keep this book’s reputation as the finest of its time and place.

P.S. As always, love Jo Chen’s cover.

Story:


Art:


Overall:


Buy this issue online from X-World and save!
__________________
Keep on rockin'
Scott A. Williams
Reviews Editor and Buddhist Slacker

"That's an easy fix. One line of dialogue. Thank god we invented the You know, whatever device."



Do not feed my ego by following me on Twitter.

Last edited by Scott A. Williams; July 7th 2007 at 12:21 AM..
Reply With Quote
  #2  
Old July 7th 2007, 11:27 AM
skinnyboy2387's Avatar
skinnyboy2387 skinnyboy2387 is offline
Superpet
 
Join Date: Oct 2005
Posts: 94
Users Flag!
skinnyboy2387 will become famous soon enough
Thank you! All I've heard from most people is griping about how this isn't as good as BKV and blah blah blah but I've been loving Joss's issues, and this is his strongest.

The only thing is that I would've LOVED to see Alphona draw this issue. Ryan's good (especially his Karolina), but Alphona has such an amazing design sense he would've rocked this issue.
Reply With Quote
  #3  
Old March 13th 2009, 02:09 PM
maxgaucho maxgaucho is offline
Innocent Bystander
 
Join Date: Mar 2009
Posts: 3
Users Flag!
maxgaucho is on a distinguished road
Quote:
Originally Posted by skinnyboy2387 View Post
The only thing is that I would've LOVED to see Alphona draw this issue. Ryan's good (especially his Karolina), but Alphona has such an amazing design sense he would've rocked this issue.
Certainly, these issues are not better than what Brian Vaughan produced. But still they are good.
Reply With Quote
Reply

Bookmarks

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off



All times are GMT -5. The time now is 11:07 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2010, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
comiXtreme © 1999-2008 comiXtreme.com