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Akira live-action to be directed by Hughes Bros

Monday, February 15th, 2010

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It was recently announced that the adaptation of “Akira” would be handled by Allen and Albert Hughes for Warner Brother’s take on the now legendary manga by Katsuhiro Otomo about a post apocalyptic Tokyo.

The new film will be based in Manhattan in a similar setting, with the leader of a bike gang attempting to save his friend from a medical testing facility. No other set news has been revealed, but rumors abound of Leonardo DeCaprio playing the role of Kanada have yet to be confirmed. This news comes after this movie has been floating around since Legendary Pictures acquired the rights in 2007 from Kodansha Publishing.

The Hughes brothers are attached after finishing work on “The Book of Eli’ and of course, when any other info comes out, we’ll make sure to have it to you. So, what’s your opinion on this? Should we really have a live-action Akira?

Pixelbot’s Anime Update: BIOMEGA preview

Thursday, January 28th, 2010

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Yeah, I got a little giddy when this came across my email. Mecha, futuristic technology, and zombies? I’m already sold on this title, but I wouldn’t be doing my job without telling all of you about it.

From Viz Media:

Zoichi Kanoe plunges into the depths of 9JO, a sprawling island city in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, in search of Eon Green, a girl with the power to transmute the N5S virus. The deadly contagion is spreading across the world, turning humans into disfigured, zombie-like “drones.” But he’s not the only one looking for her. Agents of the Public Health Service’s Compulsory Execution Unit are also in hot pursuit, with sinister designs of their own. Zoichi and his trans-human allies have no time to waste; the countdown to the apocalypse has begun!

“Tsutomu Nihei created BIOMEGA with a jaw-dropping, intensely powerful art style that reflects his background in modern architecture,” says Leyla Aker, Editorial Manager, VIZ Media. “The main characters—the “enhanced” human Zoichi and Fuyu, the AI in his rocket of a motorcycle—navigate this apocalyptic landscape in a story that offers pure speed, action, and suspense. Both manga and American comics fans won’t want to miss this exciting debut!”

Tsutomu Nihei debuted with the acclaimed manga short story BLAME!, which was nominated for North America’s Harvey Award and won the Shiki Award in Japan. The artist also created NOiSE, a manga prequel to BLAME!. His visually striking Wolverine tie-in SNIKT! was published by Marvel Comics along with a commission by Bungie Studios for the HALO graphic novel.

To pre order your copy, you can find it here.

All images are copyright of Viz Media.

Anime Banzai Talks To Gavin’s Underground

Friday, October 16th, 2009

Downtown Salt Lake City officially becomes overcome with costumed fans of the Japanese artform this morning with three days of celebration at the Sheraton Hotel, including viewings and interviews and even gaming (both card and arcade) to be had. Two of the festival’s organizers sat down and chatted with City Weekly’s own Gavin Sheehan for a chat about the convention and all that can be expected. Check it out at the link below, and if you’re int he area… go!

Gavin’s Underground interview with Anime Banzai

Gavin: For this year who will you have on hand as guests for panels and interviews?

Tyla: This year we’re happy to announce Michelle Ruff, a voice actress who has done voice work in both anime and video games. A few of her more popular roles would be Rukia in Bleach and Yuki in The Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya. She will be in a few panels as well as an autograph session. Coming back again this year is Steve Nunez, aka Warky T. Chocobo. He is a local talent who can recreate video game music on his piano. I believe he will be performing a concert as well as playing the background music for our Banzai Brawl which has become a very popular event at the convention.

Gavin: Speaking of panels, what have you got lined-up in that area?

Chris: There are a ton of different panels taking place throughout the weekend from costuming panels to individual fan panels. There are also several events in the main events hall, the most attended of which are the AMV contest and the Cosplay contest both of which take place on Saturday afternoon and evening. The convention schedule was just uploaded to our site and can be found here.

Previews Reviews: September 2009

Tuesday, September 8th, 2009

Look at this, they are actually letting me write another one!

If this is your first time joining me, the purpose of this column is to scour Diamond’s Previews catalog and highlight upcoming releases which may not be on your radar, but which, for one reason or another, deserve a closer look.

Alternatively, I make fun of people/an ass of myself.

Like I said last month, letting your retailer know that you are interested in one of these titles will make him or her a lot more willing to take a risk on it, especially in these times of economic uncertainty, when most of them just go for the guaranteed sales and ignore everything else. Pre-ordering is even better. Not doing so, on the other hand, will ensure the failure of independent creators and small press publishers and all that is good in the world, you jerks.

The cover for the September 2009 Previews announces Nekron, the Lord of the Undead, as the driving force behind all the shit going down in DC’s Blackest Night crossover. Which I’m not reading, by the way, because I really dislike crossovers. More accurately, I dislike crossovers that require me to buy comics by creators whose work I generally don’t enjoy in order to get the full story, but not nearly as much as I dislike having ongoing series that I follow get interrupted with editorially-mandated tie-in issues (which are designed to temporarily boost the sales of any given title, but are also a surefire way of getting me to drop the book completely. Sorry Peter David’s X-Factor!).

That, and DC’s recent string of Big Event comics has been kind of weak.

I don’t mean to be a dick, but it’s true. The denouement to the murder mystery central to Identity Crisis, which stumped the world’s greatest detectives with access to highly advanced forensics tools, ended up being, um, crazy lady with a flamethrower? It just doesn’t hold up to any scrutiny. Infinite Crisis and Final Crisis featured less rape and crying, but neither ever really managed to generate any momentum, and for all their ambition and scope, they both ended with a return to the status quo. Yawn. Both were also impenetrable to new readers (if they were people, they would be a couple of old guys chasing kids off their lawn with a garden hose), and when high-profile books like that only appeal to a niche audience, it makes one wonder how concerned DC really is about comics’ declining readership.

I might still pick it up in collected form, if I hear good things about it. After all, what I’ve read of Geoff Johns’ Green Lantern has been mostly decent. You guys should check that out, if you haven’t already. I’d tell you why, but summarizing Green Lantern plots always makes them sound more retarded than intended (you try it).

The upside-down back cover is something out of a time capsule, a teaser for the upcoming Image crossover Image United, featuring the original Image founders (sans Jim Lee, obviously) collaborating on each page of the project, each of them drawing their own original Image creations as they get together to battle a yet unrevealed foe (my money is on Neil Gaiman). And the preview pages inside are as awful as you’d expect. These guys seem to bring out the worst in one another, as many of their illustrational tics are turned up to 12 here: there are no feet or background objects in sight, everyone is striking a pose with no regard for page layout or perspective or proportion (one of Witchblade’s titties is bigger than Shaft’s head, for fuck’s sake, and SHE’S STANDING BEHIND HIM), and so on.

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Oh, and it ships with seven (7) different covers. I feel like I’m twelve again.

BATMAN/DOC SAVAGE SPECIAL #1 (DC Comics, pg. 80, $4.99)

The last time Brian Azzarello was in charge of old and obscure DC properties, he made a pretty convincing argument for their inclusion in the modern DC Universe (right before he wrote them out of it!). That was the highly underrated, joyfully metafictional Doctor 13: Architecture and Mortality. Now, he’s teaming up the original, gun-toting version of Batman with old pulp magazine hero Doc Savage for an introduction to DCs new pulp universe, which is set to feature The Spirit and a slew of other non-powered vigilantes, and where he, as a writer, should feel even more at home.

LOBO: HIGHWAY TO HELL #1 (DC Comics, pg.83, $6.99)

Thanks a lot, Gerard Way. Now they all think they’re writers, and no one seems to remember how awful rock star attempts at writing comics have been before he came along.

Total train-wreck potential.

THE MIGHTY VOL. 1 TP (DC Comics, pg. 93, $17.99)

I haven’t read this, but the right people are talking it up. It’s a non-DCU story of a world with a single super-hero, whose police liaison discovers that not everything about him is as good as it seems. The set-up sounds intriguing, but the art by Peter Snejbjerg of Starman fame is the biggest selling point for me.

THE AUTHORITY: THE LOST YEAR #3 (DC Comics, pg. 100, $2.99)

I should be intrigued to see where this goes, what with it being co-plotted by Grant Morrison as a continuation of his aborted Authority run with Gene Ha, but the preview pages make it look like every other Authority comic I have read, and I think I may finally be over The Authority as a concept. Then again, remember when Brian Azzarello and Steve Dillon were set to relaunch the series with a storyline that was supposed to have the team fighting Jesus?

I would still read that.

THE MARVELOUS LAND OF OZ #1 (Marvel, pg. Marvel 9, $3.99)

I understand that writing and illustrating the Age of Bronze is time-consuming and that a brother needs to make a living somehow, but what the fuck? I’d like to see it finished in my lifetime! On the other hand, the Skottie Young art is great, and it wouldn’t suprise me if Shanower has all the Oz stuff memorized, having played in that sandbox for a long part of his career, and can just whip up an adaptation in no time. Either way, give the guy some money.

INCOGNITO TPB (Marvel, pg. Marvel 77, $18.99)

For my money, this was the best super-hero comic put out by Marvel this year. Except it’s about a super-villain, one whose shady past catches up to him and  shakes up his dreary, dead-end existence in the Witness Protection Program to the core. It lacks the enveloping sense of desperation and doom that made Brubaker’s and Phillips’ previous superhero noir series Sleeper such a compelling read, but it’s enjoyably pulpy and twisted in its own right.

POWERS #1 (Marvel, pg. Marvel 78, $3.95)

Like The Authority, I think I may have lost interest in this for good, especially since it became obvious that it wasn’t very high on the list of Bendis’ priorities anymore, but I’ll give this new number one a look based on the strength of previous storylines (two of the best ones being collected in POWERS: THE DEFINITIVE COLLECTION VOL.3 HC, solicited two pages later for a bargain of $29.99, which also scores you the infamous monkey sex issue).

However, at the first sighting of an open mic night, I am totally bailing again.

POPE HATS #1 (AdHouse Books, pg. 186, $4.00)

The comic book debut by the Canadian cartoonist Ethan Rilly and the winner of last year’s Xeric Foundation grant, this is a story of a young woman and her escape from both figurative and literal demons, which has been described by fellow Canadian Seth as “the most impressive debut comic I’ve seen in years.” And if there’s one good thing Canada has been able to produce, it’s good independent cartoonists. If you don’t trust Seth, trust the freaking statistics.

THE MORE THAN COMPLETE ACTION PHILOSOPHERS! TP (Evil Twin Comics, pg. 257, $24.99)

I guess the fact that I will now be buying most of the material contained herein for the third fucking time speaks for its strength (or my weakness). Presented here in chronological order are the biographies and philosophies of some of the greatest thinkers in history (and Ayn Rand), filtered through the language of genre comics. Educational and highly entertaining, this is something that both philosophy novices and professors can enjoy. Free previews here!

THE UNCLOTHED MAN IN THE 35TH CENTURY A.D. (Fantagraphics, pg. 258, $19.99)

Dash Shaw is one of the most exciting new voices in comics today, and his Bottomless Belly Button graphic novel was one of my favorite books of last year, a tragicomic tale of the dissolution of an American family in the style of Jonathan Franzen’s The Corrections. This collects a lot of his early short work, including his brilliant contributions to the MOME anthology, some rarities, and a brand new story.

GANGES #3 (Fantagraphics, pg. 259, $7.95)

Kevin Huizenga, on the other hand, is without a doubt the most promising cartoonist of his generation, and the Ganges books have so far been his best work. Part of Fantagraphics’ Ignatz line of oversized single issues, the stories of everyman Glenn Ganges have managed to be incredibly inventive and playful without losing out on emotional impact, and while each issue stands alone, you would be doing yourself a favor by picking up all of them.

FOOTNOTES IN GAZA (Metropolitan Books, pg. 278, $25.00)

After several excursions to Bosnia and Iraq, comic book journalist extraordinaire Joe Sacco returns to the Gaza strip, in what is billed as his most ambitious work yet. The focus this time is the town of Rafah, a notorious flashpoint in this most bitter of conflicts going back to 1956, in which a bloody incident left 111 Palestinian refugees dead at the hands of Israeli soldiers. As usual, Sacco immerses himself in the daily life of this town, and through the stories of its citizens uncovers the history of bloodshed spanning the last five decades.

Any book by Joe Sacco is automatically bound to be one of the most important releases of the year, and this is definitely the one book on this list I look forward to the most (after all, his Safe Area Gorazde is probably my favorite graphic novel of all time). And if the idea of comics as war reportage sounds dry to you, his work is nothing like you imagine: rather than providing casualty reports from the safety of a heavily-guarded hotel suite, Sacco is in the thick of it, crashing on people’s couches, hanging out with them, and often risking his life just to record their stories.

Deeply humanist, remarkably observant, and without any overt political agenda, Sacco is a national treasure you don’t even know you have, and you owe it to yourself to check out his work.

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OOKU: THE INNER CHAMBERS VOL. 2 (Viz, pg. 305, $12.99)

In an alternate-history Edo Period Japan, a new disease has wiped out seventy-five percent of its male population, and women are running the country, while most of the men have become a bunch of pampered pansies who are protected and prostituted. This is, along with the Sig Ikki line from Viz (dig Children of the Sea), one of the more intriguing new manga releases of this year, and while the translation, which uses Shakespearean Early Modern English to mirror 17th century Japanese, takes some getting used to, the book’s reversed take on political intrigue and sexual politics is never less than fascinating. From the author of the more light-hearted cult favorite Antique Bakery.

NEXT MONTH: More of the same!

Previews Reviews: August 2009

Monday, August 17th, 2009

Hello, sweethearts.

Welcome to my new monthly column, in which I plumb the depths of the Previews catalog and separate the nuggets from the turds. The ultimate goal is to point out good books that may be flying under your radar, while occasionally taking advantage of the platform to mock and sneer at stuff I don’t like (you know, just for the fun of it).

Remember, no retailer can afford to order everything that is solicited every month, so letting your favored store know that you’re interested in a certain title will go a long way toward ensuring that it recieves the appropriate attention. Otherwise, it might not get ordered, and, thanks to Diamond’s new cut-off policies, it might never come out at all.

I’ll start with the covers:

Planetary #27

The cover to the August 2009 Previews catalog announces the final issue of Planetary by writer Warren Ellis and artist John Cassaday, which is probably a wise move by DC since most of the world has by now forgotten that this was still coming out. Call me fickle, but after three years I find it hard to muster up a lot of excitement for this, apart from the pretty Cassaday cover, especially considering how retarded the previous issue was.

Speaking of retarded, the flip side (or: the cover for people who like to read Previews upside down) features something called Cowboy Ninja Viking by Image Comics (apparently Monkey Pirate Zombie is taken). Seriously? From the writer whose only memorable accomplishment was having the most forgettable run on a Batman title in recent history (yeah, try to wrap your mind around that one) and the artist of that one book my overzealously Jewish friend liked because it had a Golem in it or something. Seriously?! THIS is your cover feature? Oy vey.

Moving on:

SUGARSHOCK by Joss Whedon and Fabio Moon (Dark Horse, pg. 22, $3.50)

The Eisner Award winner for Best Web Comic, originally appearing in MySpace Dark Horse Presents, and published here with never-before-seen material. The story is fun and kinetic, if a bit slight, but it’s Moon’s art that sells it for me.

BATMAN #692 by Tony Daniel (DC Comics, pg.73, $2.99)

Just when you thought things couldn’t get any worse for the Caped Crusader, Tony Daniel returns to the title as artist AND writer. Hopefully he is able to interpret his own scripts better than he did Morrison’s. ZING!

WARLORD #7 by Mike Grell (DC Comics, pg. 94, $2.99)

Mike Grell takes over pencilling duties from local boy Chad Hardin, likely to appease nostalgia-driven fanbase who has been pretty vocal in in their distaste for Hardin, presumably for not being Grell-like enough. Which is exactly the kind of reactionary knee-jerk behavior aging comics nerds seem to do best, as if that 70s shit was really all that good to begin with.

Then again, we might actually find out just how good it was, because between Grell writing and illustrating Warlord, and Gerry Conway, Doug Moench, Walter Simonson, Jim Starlin, and Marv Wolfman all doing something for DC this month, these solicitations read like they’re about thirty years late.

HELLBLAZER: SCAB TP by Peter Milligan and Giuseppe Camuncoli (DC Comics/Vertigo, pg. 115, $14.99)

I haven’t read this, but according to some, this is a return to greatness for both Milligan and Constantine, from which they’ve both been absent for far too long (I dropped Hellblazer sometime during the dismal Denise Mina run, and Milligan has been on auto-pilot since the cancellation of Human Target, if not before). So, I will probably give it a shot. As usual, a new writer on the title signals a good jumping-on point for this Vertigo mainstay.

SHADE THE CHANGING MAN VOL.1: THE AMERICAN SCREAM TP by Peter  Milligan and Chris Bachalo (DC Comics/Vertigo, pg. 119, $17.99)

A new printing of the first half of the first storyline of what is one of my favorite series of all time, with a new cover by original cover artist Brendan McCarthy (yay). It’s a bit rough in places, and Bachalo’s art certainly isn’t as refined as it would become later on in the series, but it sets the stage for some of the most innovative and mind-bending comics Vertigo has ever produced, and that includes the majority of Grant Morrison’s output.

SHADE THE CHANGING MAN VOL.2: THE EDGE OF VISION TP by Peter Milligan and Chris Bachalo (DC Comics/Vertigo, pg. 119, $19.99)

The concluding half of The American Scream, reprinted here for the first time ever. Further collected editions probably hinge on the sales of these two trade paperbacks, so please, do us both a favor and pick this up, dear reader!

X-MEN: ASGARDIAN WARS HC by Chris Claremont, Arthur Adams, and Paul Smith (Marvel, pg. Marvel 90, $34.99)

Chris Claremont’s words usually make my eyes bleed, but the pretty artwork from Art Adams and Paul Smith in oversized format might be worth a look. Hopefully, the recoloring only goes as far as that unfortunately defaced cover.

DARK REIGN: FANTASTIC FOUR TPB by Jonathan Hickman and Sean Chen (Marvel, pg. Marvel 105, $16.99)

If Hickman follows the established Bendis pattern, he has less than two years before all of his talent is destroyed by Marvel. So, enjoy his work while you still can, friends. And prepare for the inevitable tragic downfall of Matt Fraction.

GHOST COMICS by various (Bare Bones Studios, pg. 208, $10.00)

Themed anthology featuring a solid line-up of indie cartoonists, including Jeffrey BrownJohn Porcellino, and that guy from Low. A Xeric Grant recipient AND a benefit book, you practically HAVE TO buy it.

THE BOX MAN HC by Imiri Sakabashira (Drawn & Quarterly, pg. 261, $19.95)

Described as a surrealist scooter trip featuring animal people and weird sex stuff (which, along with the preview panels posted here, suggests all kinds of awesome). I have never read any Sakabashira, but if Red Colored Elegy and the Tatsumi books are any indication, Drawn & Quarterly knows exactly what kind of manga appeals to the discerning art comics reader (right, the filthy kind).

PRISON PIT by Johnny Ryan (Fantagraphics, pg. 267, $12.99)

Johnny Ryan does Kentaro Miura’s Berserk. Jog, comics blogger extraordinaire, seems to like it.

THE BEST AMERICAN COMICS 2009 HC edited by Charles Burns (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, pg. 269, $22.00)

I usually have a hard time recommending these, for the work they reprint is often not in its proper length or context, but anyone looking for a very broad sampler of some of the best work currently being done in comics could probably do no better than picking up one of them. The line-up for this year, featuring work by Kevin Huizenga, Adrian Tomine, and Chris Ware, strikes me as particularly strong.

ACT-I-VATE PRIMER HC by various (IDW, pg. 282, $24.99)

New stories by the web comics collective, featuring Nick BertozziDean Haspiel, and Roger Langridge. If you’ve spent any time on the Act-i-vate website, you know this is not to be missed.

BINKY BROWN MEETS THE HOLY VIRGIN MARY HC by Justin Green (McSweeney’s, pg. 287, $29.00)

A classic of sorts, and the first long autobiographical work to appear in underground comics, this is a gloriously fucked-up study of OCD and Catholic guilt. And the incredibly corruptive power of penis rays.

STUMPTOWN #1 by Greg Rucka and Matthew Southworth (Oni Press, pg. 294, $3.99)

With Queen & Country indefinitely on hold, Rucka trades in international intrigue for neighborhood crime watch, with a new creator-owned crime series set in his current city of residence. If by now you aren’t aware that Rucka does crime as well as anyone else in comics, a mere $3.99 are likely going to correct that.

GOGO MONSTER by Taiyo Matsumoto (Viz Media, pg. 310, $27.99)

Another brick of a book by one of my favorite comics auteurs, creator of the boldly original No. 5 and Tekkon Kinkreet, who draws equally from American, European, and Japanese influences to create a uniquely gorgeous style of his own, and whose work has been criminally underrepresented here in the States. Billed as a tale of a young boy with an overly active imagination, this is bound to be as wonderfully imaginative and surreal as anything he’s done, but hopefully not as overlooked. Seriously, if there is a book in this catalog that I wish everyone reading this column would give a chance, it’s this one. Check out the pictures of the Japanese edition!

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NEXT MONTH: Bigger, Better, Faster, More!

COMIC-CON: Marvel to Unveil Anime Series at Comic-Con

Wednesday, July 15th, 2009

The Marvel Animation panel just got a whole lot more interesting.

News just rolled in that there will be an exclusive sneak-peek at the new Anime versions of Wolverine and Iron Man.

This could be very good news and a lot of fun to look at.  Earlier in the decade Marvel published a Manga Spider-man book that was quite fun to look at and I had hoped they’d revisit that idea sometime.  I hope this is cool, there’s a lot of talent involved (including Warren Ellis.)  My concern?  It’s not scheduled to hit TV even in Japan until 2010, so this might be an extremely early look at something we might not see here in the United States for quite a while.

Without further comment, here’s the press release:

CULVER CITY, CA (7/15/09) - Marvel Entertainment Inc., has partnered with renowned Japanese animation studio Madhouse (Paprika, Tokyo Godfathers) to create four all new anime versions of classic Marvel Super Heroes. Get an exciting first glimpse of two of the planned four series at this year’s Comic-Con International, the country’s leading comics and popular arts convention. The Marvel Animation Panel will be held on Friday, July 24, and will include an exclusive first look at official teaser trailers for two of these new series, hosted by writer and multiple-Eagle Award winner Warren Ellis, who will appear to discuss writing the all new adventures of these re-imagined Super Heroes.

These Marvel Anime TV series are being created as a way of merging the beloved Marvel Super Heroes of western culture with the bold animation tradition of Japan. The resulting product will be four visually groundbreaking anime series featuring popular Super Heroes redesigned and repurposed as emerging from the fabric of Japanese culture. The series is expected to begin appearing on the Animax channel in Japan in spring of 2010.

The Marvel Animation Panel with run from 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. on Friday, July 24, at the San Diego Convention Center. An autograph signing with Ellis will follow the panel at Marvel’s Comic-Con booth #2429.

Madhouse, Inc., established in 1972 with offices in Tokyo, Los Angeles and Beijing, is one of the top animation studios in the world working exclusively with some of Japan’s top anime directors. They have created many well-known titles such as worldwide hits Ninja Scroll, Vampire Hunter D, Trigun, Tokyo Godfathers, and Metropolis, Japanese successful TV series such as “Death Note” and “Nana”, as well as Paprika (an Official Selection at the 2006 Venice Film Festival) and The Girl Who Leapt Through Time (2007 Japanese Academy Award for Best Film – Animation) Marvel Entertainment, Inc. is one of the world’s most prominent character-based entertainment companies, built on a proven library of over 5,000 characters featured in a variety of media over seventy years. Marvel utilizes its character franchises in licensing, entertainment (via Marvel Studios and Marvel Animation) and publishing (via Marvel Comics). Marvel’s strategy is to leverage its franchises in a growing array of opportunities around the world, including feature films, consumer products, toys, video games, animated television, direct-to-DVD and online.

COUNTDOWN to: REVIEW – Wolverine, Prodigal Son

Wednesday, April 22nd, 2009

wolverine-prodigal

Do you like Wolverine?!?!!!!

I don’t…. Other than a couple cases in the movies, getting his ass beat by Deadpool, some classic Claremont moments and the 90’s cartoon, I don’t usually identify with the adamantium laced character. He’s like the walking cliché to me, ‘A man with a mysterious past who blazed in on his hog from the darkness’ or as Pee-Wee Herman put it best: “I’m a loner Dottie, a rebel!”  Whether or not you’re a fan of good ‘ol fisticuffs, Wolverine: Prodigal Son is a fairly good read.  Granted, it’s not a masterpiece that you’ll want to reread over and over again, it’s not supposed to be (and quite honestly there are very few mangas that accomplish that feat; Ranma 1/2, I’’s, and of course the brilliant Avril Levigne’s Make 5 Wishes).

It’s not a retelling either, it’s more of a revamp. It starts off fairly sluggish; basically, Logan is this arrogant, cocky, fight hungry student at a Canadian karate school the likes we have never seen called “Quiet Earth”. Logan is Mr. Bad-Ass of the school as usual and beats the crap out of everyone… except for Tamara, the hot, quick daughter of sensei. The book picks up the pace around chapter 4, when young Logan and Tamara have to team up and haphazardly accomplish a trial of tests, afterwards then gets sent to New York that sets off a chain of events that are pretty engrossing and the character and story development starts to evolve. The artwork is not Wilson Tortosa’s best in this one either, but his worst is better than most manga that people cream themselves about. I sometimes found some panel choice confusing to follow in action and fighting scenes. The best part about this book was the sensei who was a bad ass with the ‘wise elder’ style. The thing about this one is that anyone can jump on board; fan-boys, non-fans, avid readers, and with new enemies such as a sultry Lady Silence who seem will kick ass later down the road (and a wet-dream for the younger readers of this paperback), it could be for good reason… not to mention this little teaser: get off my daughter

Pencilbot welcomes any other bot to share their opinion of this book baring in mind your affection to the icon. Wolverine: Prodigal Son came out not too long ago and is available everywhere.