Justice League Season 2 = Best TV cartoon ever.
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Discussion of Buffy and Angel comics, books, and more. Please don't get into spoilery details in the first week of release.
Justice League Season 2 = Best TV cartoon ever.
Don't make me go BIG BLUE JUSTICE upside your head!
I'm in Scola's corner on this one. I think The Tick is a lot of fun, but Justice League really hit its stride in Season 2.
I need to re-iterate how dumb I think the whole Storm/Panther thing is. And, in the XMen annual, they've retconned her eyebrows into being white.
It looks like much crap, and I did very much like her black dash eyebrows and double dashes from the corners of her eyes.
Have they retconned her into spinning like a top when she fights, yet?
Alan Moore might run into some problems with the holder of the rights to Peter Pan over the publication of The Lost Girls.
Much about X-men is on wikipedia -- so much that the mind boggles. But for convoluted backstory, try visualising the Summer family tree in the head. It will ache. For hours afterwards. And then you will go mad.
[link] is a pretty comprehensive database of the various X books.
The problem with the old coloring is that it hasn't been updated since the comics were first released, and its flaws have become magnified over the years as printing has improved and the standard for comic coloring has gone through the stratosphere.
When I first read Sandman (completely the fault of David) the colouring threw me off so much at first that I had to look away from the panels. I was trying to figure out if the comic book producers in the eighties had some freakish love affair with neons, because it didn't seem consistent with the storyline. Same was true for Constantine, when I started reading that last year. It's kind of a shock to go from, say, Manhunter, or that rare good run of Robin last spring, to super-saturated colors.
I remember thinking at the time that the color was crapulescent and the inking a pretty bad job compared to other comics of the day. It put me off until buzz about the writing got me to read "A Doll's House."
From the Robin #151: interesting. At least I hope it is. Needless to say, I'm less than enthused with the character developments of Cassandra Cain.