Showing posts with label Catwoman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Catwoman. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 19, 2014

Birds of Prey #14 (Feb 2000)

Previously in Birds of Prey...


Birds of Prey #14: "Apokolips Express Part 2" is written by Chuck Dixon with pencils by Greg Land and Patrick Zircher, inks by Drew Geraci, and colors by Gloria Vasquez.  The cover was done by Land and Brian Stelfreeze.

Black Canary and Catwoman are trapped on Apokolips with the mutated miniature Parademon who brought them there.  The Parademon, Pharzoof, starts recounting his origin and motives for kidnapping the ladies and a U.S. Marshal transport train full of G-list super-villains.  Dinah, however, really doesn't care about Pharzoof's origin and motives.  She hates him and she wants him to boom-tube them back to Earth.


Elsewhere on the planet, Marshal Dina--not to be confused with Dinah--leads her outnumbered and outgunned squadron in a desperate defense against thousands of Parademon warriors.  To balance the scales, she unleashes the train's five prisoners, which includes a clone of Guy Gardner and some other assholes.


The marshals we don't know and the villains we don't care about spend five or six pages fighting Parademons because Chuck Dixon and Greg Land still haven't gotten the hang of depicting character moments in this series.  Meanwhile, Black Canary and Catwoman sneak through the slave-operated diamond mine to find a motherbox.


Leaving Catwoman to her selfish devices, Black Canary and Pharzoof sneak into the armory of Granny Goodness' Female Furies.  It doesn't take long for the little monster to uncover a working motherbox, but before Black Canary can escape, one of the Female Furies attacks.


Back on Earth, Oracle sent Power Girl to the site of the marshals' train disappearance.  Power Girl hears from the agent-in-charge that the radiation readings around the train tracks suggest the train and its occupants were boom-tubed to Apokolips.

As the hordes of Parademons threaten to overwhelm the marshals, Dina leads her men in one final counter-surge with a rousing speech comparing them to other valiant defenders who all died horribly.


Black Canary fights Lashina for a little while.  Then Catwoman returns and jumps the Fury.  She tells Dinah to get away with Pharzoof and the motherbox.


Black Canary miraculously returns to the scene of the marshals' last stand and creates a boom-tube.  Black Canary, Catwoman, the surviving marshals, and the super-villains all escape, leaving Pharzoof back on Apokolips to be dealt with by Parademons and Female Furies.

On Earth, the villains are taken back into custody.  Black Canary reunites with Oracle via audio communication, and Catwoman slips away to burgle another day.


Thus concludes the most underwhelming story involving the Apokolips and the New Gods... until every story involving Apokolips and the New Gods published between the mid-2000s to present day. Once again, Chuck Dixon fails to capture real human character moments or progress the characters in any meaningful way, because Oracle is nothing more than a cameo in this two-parter, and Black Canary takes a backseat to Catwoman, a bunch of federal agents dressed like stormtroopers, and some lame-ass villains that aren't even worthy of the likes of Invisible Destroyer and Signalman.

This is the last issue to feature Greg Land and Drew Geraci for quite a while.  That's good.  It pleases me, and that's all I'll say.

Come back next Tuesday for a review of Birds of Prey #15.

Tuesday, August 12, 2014

Birds of Prey #13 (Jan 2000)

Previously in Birds of Prey...


Birds of Prey #13: "Apokolips Express" is written by Chuck Dixon with pencils by Greg Land and Patrick Zircher, inks by Drew Geraci, and colors by Gloria Vasquez.  The cover was done by Land and Brian Stelfreeze.

Black Canary boarded a military train full of U.S. Marshals transporting a group of super-villains--and Catwoman who snuck aboard to spring the villains.  But then a mysterious evil-doer who has been manipulating Oracle for some time triggered a Boom Tube sending the train and its occupants across time and space to a distant world.

Dinah and Dina, the head of the marshals, climb out of the wrecked train trying to figure out what happened and where they landed.  Black Canary realizes pretty quickly where they ended up.


Marshal Dina shoots down some of the aircraft coming to investigate the train's sudden arrival and derailment.  The rest of the marshals secure the location and the prisoners on board, all except for Catwoman of course.


The mystery villain in the hat and trench coat makes his presence known and Marshal Dina opens fire and blasts him.  Black Canary freaks out, knowing that whoever that strange-o is he transported them to Apokolips and he can send them back to Earth.  So Black Canary and Catwoman head out looking for the mystery guy.


Back on Earth, Oracle has enlisted the aid of Power Girl to help her find Dinah and the mystery train.


Black Canary and Catwoman watch a flight of parademons soaring overhead toward the marshals' location.  Then the women find the damaged exo-suit of their mystery villain, which means whoever is behind this is actually really small and trying to hide his appearance.

The parademons attack the train, but the marshals are able to fall back and reposition.  Marshal Dina realizes she needs heavier weapons to defend the train and its cargo of villains.

Meanwhile, Catwoman wonders why Canary can't call Oracle for help.


As Black Canary and Catwoman skulk around Apokolips, they find a mining pit operated by slaves.  Catwoman is more interested in what the mine is producing than who is working it; she likes the shiny blood diamonds.

At the train, Dina fires a big honking bazooka weapon that blows away most of the parademons.  For the moment, the marshals have held them off but a prolonged defense will require a lot more power on their side.


Black Canary and Catwoman find the mystery villain crying behind a rock.  He turns out to be an unusually small parademon who wanted to kidnap the super-villains in order to lead a revolt.


At the train, Dina frees the five captives and tells them they all need to work together in order to survive.

Uh... I'll do more analysis when this arc is over, 'kay?

Come back next Tuesday for a review of Birds of Prey #14.

Tuesday, July 29, 2014

Birds of Prey #12 (Dec 1999)

Previously in Birds of Prey...


Birds of Prey #12: "Hellbound Train" is written by Chuck Dixon with pencils by Dick Giordano, inks by Jordi Ensign, and colors by Gloria Vasquez.  The cover was done by Greg Land and Brian Stelfreeze.

We open with Black Canary dropping on top of a military train, guarded by U.S. Marshals in high tech armor, transporting a group of meta-human super-criminals.  As soon as Dinah lands on the roof of the train, the Marshals are hip to her presence and hold her at gunpoint.  Black Canary tries to warn them that the train is under threat of a jailbreak and she's there to defend it, but the guards aren't buying her story.  Oracle pleads with Black Canary through her transceiver to go easy on the marshals; they're not bad guys.

Unfortunately, Catwoman doesn't really care who or what they are, and she dives onto the train and knocks out two of the marshals before Black Canary can stop her.


Neither Canary or Catwoman are aware that their train ride is being observed by the mysterious, inhuman-looking stranger who set up Oracle and Black Canary to free Joe Gardner in the previous issues.  But Oracle already suspects a similar sinister presence behind this snafu.

While Black Canary and Catwoman argue about how they should proceed, more Marshals arrive, and open fire on the ladies.  The women drop down between two train cars.


The sonic bomb disrupts the marshals on the train roof while Catwoman gets herself and Canary inside the train's armory.  Catwoman says she was hired by some strange-o with a scary voice to knock out the train's communications network.  That's enough for Oracle to connect this operation with the Koroscovan op that went so terribly.

Then Black Canary shows Catwoman how little she wants to team-up again.


At that moment, a squad of marshals kicks in the door and demands Black Canary's surrender.  At the same time, more than a little conspicuously, Oracle gets a chat message from her online boyfriend, Bumblebeeb.  He still wants to meet her in person and asks her out on a date.  She reveals that she has tried to uncover his real identity and has failed, which means he could be more than just a really good hacker; he could be extremely dangerous to her.

But Bumblebeeb presses on with his flirtations and reveals something else that--if true--could be very interesting for Oracle.


Back in the train, Black Canary has been captured by the marshals who threaten to lock her up with the other super villains they have caught.  She continues to warn them about the pending breakout, but they don't want to listen.  We learn that the train is transporting five meta-humans: Shrapnel, Mammoth, Sudden Death, Spellbinder, and Joe Gardner, the last two of which the Birds of Prey have had some recent encounters with.  The military is shipping the villains to S.T.A.R. Labs so scientists can operate and see if they can cure them.

Black Canary keeps arguing that the marshals are in danger and someone or something is coming to steal these five super-villains.  Inexplicably, the head of the marshals listens to her.  Maybe because her name is Dina and that's sort of like Dinah?  I don't know.  Anyway, Dinah and Dina rush to the front of the train where the engineer tells them all of the reasons why nobody could penetrate or derail the train.

Then the mysterious stranger shows up standing on the tracks and summons a gigantic teleportation tunnel with a massive BOOM!  (Almost a boom-tube, if you will.)  The train passes through the tunnel and vanishes while also generating enough feedback to fry Oracle's entire system.


Oracle scrambles to get a backup computer online, but when she checks, the train and Black Canary have no signal.  They're gone.  So Oracle calls someone else she thinks might be able to help her.


I've said it before: at this point in his career, Dick Giordano's art was inoffensive, but hardly as stylish and great as it was in the '70s and '80s.  Still, I prefer this to Greg Land's artwork nine times out of ten.  The story, too, is better than what Dixon has given us over the last few months.  The train robbery is a nice, classic setup with some interesting twists.

Throwing Catwoman in the mix didn't really seem to add much to this chapter, but hopefully more will come of her inclusion next time around.  Meanwhile, I'm really excited to see what Power Girl brings to the table.  I'm also further intrigued who Oracle's mystery suitor is and whether or not it aligns with my prediction.

Come back in two weeks for a review of Birds of Prey #13.

Friday, March 14, 2014

Pretty Bird: DETECTIVE COMICS #559

You might know I'm fond of coordinating blog posts with celebratory events from DC's Super Calendar from 1976.  And according to that calendar, March 14th is the birthday of Selina Kyle, also known as Catwoman!  So today's installment of Pretty Bird Friday looks at a comic that not only showcases Black Canary working with her boyfriend, Green Arrow, but also guest stars Catwoman (and some guy named Batman, too).


Detective Comics #559: "It Takes Two Wings to Fly" is written by Doug Moench with art by Gene Colan and Bob Smith.  As you can see from the cover, Black Canary is dressed in her sweatsuit costume generally known as her Justice League International costume.  This look--which I've never preferred although I will admit it has grown on me over the years--designed by Klaus Janson, debuted in Detective #554.  After that, Dinah wore it in a couple issues of Green Lantern, but I'm fairly sure this was only the fourth or fifth published appearance of the costume.

The story opens with Batman chasing a suspect across the rooftops of Gotham City*.  The crook manages to escape the Dark Knight by leaping onto a train, and Batman's pursuit is disrupted by the intervention of Green Arrow.  The Emerald Archer tries to convince Batman that the crook, Curtis Sample, isn't such a bad guy, he's just fallen on hard times as a result of a broken and corrupted financial system.  Batman argues that's no reason to allow criminals to get away with committing crimes.  Green Arrow, of course, calls Batman a Nazi and that's when things are about to get punchy.


Green Arrow prevented Batman from stopping a potential murderer and claimed that the guy was a victim of circumstance?  I don't think he has much chance of swaying the Caped Crusader to his position.

The three costumed crime fighters go for coffee--yes, they go sit down at a table in a coffee shop.  Batman and Green Arrow call each other names but Black Canary tries to keep the peace and tells Batman what they're doing in Gotham.

Curtis Sample's father worked for Kemson Corp for twenty years handling hazardous waste.  When dad died of cancer, Sample tried to sue Kemson Corp for their dangerously negligent practices concerning toxic waste and such.  Oliver Queen wrote articles in the Star City newspaper to help Sample's crusade against the environmental polluters, but it amounted to nothing.  Sample lost his case.  And Kemson retaliated against Sample.


Green Arrow and Black Canary explain to Batman that Sample's scheme is to rob Kemson's Gotham division of enough money that he can front as a representative from an international chemical conglomerate, lure Kemson into a deal for some illegal product, and prove in court that they're dirty.  Ollie and Dinah are allowing him to go along with this overly complicated scheme while watching over him to make sure he stays safe.

Batman can hardly believe what he hears.  They continue to bicker...in a restaurant surrounded by night owls drinking coffee.  Batman makes it about pride and territory, that they didn't inform him they were coming to operate in Gotham.  Green Arrow makes it about left-wing/right-wing politics.  Black Canary, for her part, makes it about innocent people being poisoned by this company, and that's enough to settle the argument.

However, as the altruistic trio make their way outside, one of the coffee shop's patrons follows them out with a gun.


Black Canary kicks and punches the would-be shooter, Batman disarms him with a batarang, and Green Arrow pins him to the wall with an arrow through the man's jacket.  Ollie questions the guy who claims to be hired muscle from Kemson Corp paid to follow Sample.  There are others who stayed on his trail while this guy went after the heroes.

Black Canary worries that Sample is in grave danger while they've been fighting amongst themselves.  Green Arrow and Batman blame each other for that.

Batman meets Commissioner Gordon at the hospital where Curtis Sample was admitted after taking a serious beating from the Kemson hoods.  Outside the hospital, Catwoman approaches Batman, who introduces her to the others.


Batman vows to continue with Sample's plan to entrap the Kemson Corp in an illegal sale of hazardous chemicals.  Green Arrow refuses to go along with it because he doesn't want to admit Batman's plan makes sense.

So Bruce Wayne gets Lucius Fox to set up the deal through a subsidiary and uses Selina Kyle as the front for the deal with Kemson.  Selina goes to the Kemson plant in Star City to inspect the plant, but when she gives them the money, the Kemson officials betray her.  One of the men is the hood who ambushed Batman and the others outside the coffee shop.  He was bailed out of jail and told his superiors about Batman's plan.  Before Kemson hurts Catwoman, however, the Dark Knight makes his dramatic entrance.


One of the hoods threatens to shoot Selina, but he's struck by an arrow.  A green arrow.


Batman, Catwoman, Green Arrow, and Black Canary work together to stop Kemson, retrieve the money, and put down all of his hired guns.  Batman thanks Ollie and Dinah for showing up to lend a hand, and then Dinah and Selina go get some coffee to gossip about their men.


So as a birthday tribute to Catwoman, this isn't the greatest example, but I already reviewed Birds of Prey: Manhunt.  She doesn't do a whole lot in this story; it's really about Batman and Green Arrow bickering about their approaches to society's evils, calling each other stupid names, and generally being childish brats.

On the other hand, Catwoman and Black Canary are the only characters who come out of this issue not looking like idiots.  Dinah is able to keep Batman and Green Arrow from physically brawling and she's able to keep them focused on the only thing that really matters in their line of work: protecting innocent people.  Her level-headedness is what makes this team-up work both for the characters and for the reader.

As for the art, I am and will always be a huge Gene Colan fan.  He's one of my all-time favorite artists in the business.  Now I don't think this issue was one of his better outings, but it's not bad, and once again, I think Black Canary comes out on top.  Colan has drawn a better, darker, more striking Batman, but I don't know if Black Canary ever looked better in her blue sweatsuit costume than she did in this issue.

* The first part of this story is supposed to be set in Gotham City.  But on the first page, there is a sign on one of the buildings that says "I Love the Big Apple" with a heart standing in for the word love and an actual apple for the word apple.  Is this a sign for New York City in Gotham?  Was Colan referencing actual buildings and drew the sign forgetting that in the DC Universe, the cities aren't actual representations of real life cities?

Tuesday, January 14, 2014

Adventurous Woman: ADVENTURE COMICS #419

Continuing from yesterday's entry, the second part of "The Canary and the Cat" by Dennis O'Neill and Alex Toth originally published in Adventure Comics #419 in May 1972.


Once again, I haven't read this entire issue.  Black Canary's strip was published in the Black Canary Archives hardcover collection.  As such, I haven't read the Supergirl, Zatanna or other stories in this issue.  Maybe Anj from the Supergirl blog at Comic Box Commentary has read them.

If you didn't read the first part of the story, go back and check it out.  In case you browser is acting up or there's something wrong with your ability to click a link or homepage icon, I'll give you the short rundown.  A restless and unemployed Dinah finds work teaching Judo to the radical Women's Resistance League.  But not long after teaching them how to fight, they ambush her and she realizes their leader has some nefarious plan, the first part of which involves killing the Canary!

Now, the complete second part of O'Neill and Toth's story!









Oh man, even a glimpse of Toth's Catwoman is breathtaking!

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

Back in Action: ACTION COMICS #614

Previously...


Every Wednesday, I review an issue of Action Comics Weekly featuring a backup story starring Black Canary among others.  Each installment of Back in Action will look at Dinah's story and touch on my favorite or least favorite moments from the rest of the strips in these issues.


Black Canary's sixth appearance in ACW was issue #614, which features one of my favorite covers of this series.  Mike Mignola, creator of Hellboy, shows Green Lantern in a way that accents the hero's cosmic dimensions with a dash of the gothic mystery Mignola does better than anyone.

Black Canary

"Bitter Fruit" Part 6: written by Sharon Wright, pencilled by Randy Duburke, inked by Pablo Marcos, lettered by Steve Haynie, colored by Tom Ziuko, and edited by Mike Gold.  There is a misprint on the title page, saying this chapter is Part 4 when it's actually the sixth of eight.

This chapter begins with William MacDonald, an Immigration & Naturalization Service official calling a hit on another INS agent named Ellen Waverly.  Why?  Because Ellen is unknowingly close to discovering that MacDonald is corrupt and preventing immigrants from gaining legal status at the behest of...somebody with power.  Maybe a guy named Scales who has his own company.

At the same time, Ellen receives a phone call from a man calling himself Barry Neiman, and he is the mysterious man with the goatee who has been following several characters around throughout the story.  He was turned away from Hector Librado's hospital room at some point before Hector was attacked and put in a coma; is this "Barry" the man who tried to kill him?  Is "Barry Neiman" this man's real name?  We'll have to see.  After that call, Ellen informs Hector's family that she is awaiting documents from another office that will finalize their citizenship.

Meanwhile, in the alley behind Hank Beecham's shop, the forger is getting threatened by two familiar goons.  Dinah rushes the goons with a broken bottle and kicks their asses.  She threatens one with the bottle while demanding answers.  She reveals, perhaps accidentally, that she was the woman with the cowboy who the goons jumped in an earlier part of the story, even though she was in her Black Canary costume then.  The guys say they weren't the ones who knocked her upside the head, and then run away without telling her who they work for.

After the rescue, Hank Beecham takes Dinah inside his store and fills in some useful gaps in the story.  He says that he forged work history documents for Hector to help get him citizenship, and every job he did was paid for, so he had no reason to attack Hector.  But someone else has been muscling in on Beecham's business, trying to get him to retire.  He says the two goons Dinah just fought worked for the Cowboy, who Dinah thinks is named Doug Vallines but is probably named Gary, and Doug Vallines is another guy.

At the Scales building, Vincent Scales gets word that MacDonald is coming to Seattle for some business.  Scales tells Cowboy Gary to prepare the boat so they can go out to an island.

Down in California, the real Doug Vallines is spying on a piece of land that is owned by Scales, but fenced in by the U.S. Department of Agriculture and patrolled by government security forces.

That night, Dinah is sitting alone in her apartment above Sherwood Florist.  She has a sudden idea and dials for Information to connect with Doug Vallines.  She leaves a message--calling herself Bonnie Cardinal again--and says she knows who attacked Hector Librado.





I continue to have the same problems with this story week after week, namely the unwieldiness of the plot and supporting characters, and how the art fails to distinguish different people we barely recognize from page to page.  However, this chapter was a little better and things seem to be picking up steam.  They had better; after all, there are only two chapters left after this.

The highlight, as always, is seeing Dinah in action.  She gets the drop on the goons and gets some valuable information out of them and their target.  I wish we could see her do this in her Black Canary costume--that's kind of the point--but something is better than nothing, I guess.  Revealing her past involvement with them in a different costume seemed like a mistake, though, like a dumb non-blonde thing where she forgot she was supposed to have a dual identity, even if she's "out".

I have mixed feelings about Dinah's phone call at the end.  On one hand, it's nice to see her be proactive, especially if she's formulating a plan or putting the pieces together.  On the other hand, does she really know who she's calling?  Is this message an intentional trick?  A trap?  Is she leaving a message for the real Doug or the fake one she knows?  If this is a trap, will it succeed if the wrong man gets the message?  I guess hope we'll find that out next time.


The Rest

In the Green Lantern chapter, Peter David and Tod Smith treat us to a GL retcon worthy of Geoff Johns.  The ring reveals to Hal Jordan that the reason he is a man utterly without fear is because Abin Sur's ring sort of lobotomized him.  We see the moment where the ring identified the two most worthy candidates for stewardship of the ring: Hal and Guy Gardner, but Hal was closer geographically to where Abin crashed.  But Hal still had some basic fears that the ring erased by rearranging part of his brain.  So in this issue, Hal has the ring reverse that process.  Now Hal Jordan has fears that he must overcome through will power.  "You don't have to be a man without fear," Hal tells himself.  "Just a man."

Writer Paul Kupperberg and artist Tom Grindberg conclude their short Phantom Stranger adventure with the titular character being captured by Ah Puch, the Mayan death god.  I'm a big fan of Kupperberg's writing, and Grindberg creates some gruesome and horrific images in these panels, but somehow, this story didn't really grab me.  Maybe it needed more time to breathe, more pages, or maybe it wasn't right for the Phantom Stranger, whom I have always had difficulty viewing as a protagonist in his own stories.

In the second part of the Nightwing story written by Marv Wolfman and drawn by Chuck Patton, Nightwing and Roy Harper have traveled to London to prevent Cheshire, the mother of Roy's child, from killing a member of British government.  They save the target, but Jade kills an innocent bystander.  In combat, Cheshire proves more than a match for her former lover.  Against Dick Grayson, though, Cheshire must resort to trickery in order to escape.  Later, Roy tells Dick the story of how he hooked up with Jade and got her pregnant.  Even later, Cheshire murders her target by pumping lethal gas into his shower.  Later still, Jade taunts Roy in an alleyway, scoffing at his threats.

This is a really enjoyable story, though I'm not sure why Roy Harper or Speedy doesn't get equal billing with Nightwing, since it's as much his story as Dick's.  I'm a big fan of Marv Wolfman's work at Marvel, particularly in the horror titles.  I never had the same fondness for his DC work.  I didn't like Crisis on Infinite Earths, and I couldn't get into New Teen Titans, though I concede that nobody wrote Dick Grayson better than Marv, and that's why this story works for me.

In the Superman strip by Roger Stern and Curt Swan, the Man of Steel races to the hospital to question the man who tried to kill the other man who told Clark Kent that he--the man--is part of a cult that worships him--Superman--like a god!  Superman arrives at the hospital just in time to find another man attempting to smother the first attempted murderer man.  Fun.

Finally, Mindy Newell and Barry Kitson wrap up Catwoman's adventure in "The Tin Roof Club" part 4.  Previously, Selina Kyle stole an Egyptian cat brooch and hid it with her friend Holly.  Then Holly's husband got the brooch and blew up his wife.  When Catwoman came for the brooch and some revenge, Holly's husband, Arthur, threw Catwoman out the window of his penthouse apartment.  As this chapter begins, Catwoman saves herself from the fall and scales the side of the building, going back up to Arthur's room.  Two security guards come to the room after Arthur's mistress called for help.  The guards act shifty, pretty much demanding a bribe... and then Catwoman straight up murders the guards by pulling them over the ledge and dropping them off the side of the building.  She leaves the brooch there, so when the cops arrive to investigate the two dead men, they find the stolen property in Arthur's room.  Arthur is arrested, and Selina feels justified in avenging her dead friend.  But still.  She freaking murdered two security guards.  They weren't even a danger to her.  They were completely incidental, and while not the most noble of people, I don't think they deserved what they got.

Catwoman is a tricky character.  I will always categorize her as a villain, no matter how many times Batman screws her and then lets her go with a warning.  Catwoman is a criminal.  She doesn't break the law to make society better like a vigilante.  She breaks the law to make herself happy.  She's a villain.  That doesn't mean she's a psycho killer like Joker or Two-Face.  This last chapter felt really unsettling with her killing two people as a means to punish someone else.  Also, her story only got seven pages instead of the usual eight.

Next week, I'll look at Action Comics Weekly #615, which kicks off two brand new features starring Wild Dog and Blackhawk, as well as continuing the sagas of Black Canary, Superman, Green Lantern and Nightwing.

Wednesday, November 13, 2013

Back in Action: ACTION COMICS WEEKLY #613

Previously...

Every Wednesday, I review an issue of Action Comics Weekly featuring a backup story starring Black Canary among others.  Each installment of Back in Action will look at Dinah's story and touch on my favorite or least favorite moments from the rest of the strips in these issues.


Black Canary's fifth appearance in ACW was issue #613.  The cover by Michael Kaluta showcases the newest addition to the anthology, Nightwing.  The Nightwing stories in this series were recently collected in the trade paperback, Nightwing: Old Friends, New Enemies.  It was this collection that first drew my attention to these back-issues which included the Black Canary stories.  I'm sure it's too much to hope that Dinah's stories from ACW would ever be collected, but given her increased exposure in recent episodes of the television series Arrow and the video game tie-in comic Injustice: Gods Among Us, maybe someday soon she'll have a high enough profile to warrant some more trade paperbacks.

Black Canary

"Bitter Fruit" Part 5: written by Sharon Wright, pencilled by Randy Duburke, inked by Pablo Marcos, lettered by Steve Haynie, colored by Gene D'Angelo, and edited by Mike Gold.  Other than her inaugural appearance in this series, Black Canary's feature has consistently come at the end of the issue, after the letters column.

The fifth part of "Bitter Fruit" opens with Dinah meeting Rita and Luis at the hospital on a rainy Seattle morning after their father, Hector Librado, was attacked.  He didn't die, we discover, as his attacker was discovered in mid-kill by the patient in the next bed.  Rita recalls a man who tried to get into Hector's room after visiting hours the day before.  It's Dinah's only lead.

Outside, we see the man Rita was talking about, the mysterious man with a goatee who has been following her around.  Was he the one who tried to Hector?  His dialogue sounds vaguely ominous, but if he was anything more than just a misdirect, why wouldn't they have shown the assailant's face last issue?  He's on the phone talking to "Doug".  Is it the cowboy Doug Vallines that Black Canary met the day before, or the Hollywood Doug Vallines we saw at the end of part 4?

Dinah takes Rita and Luis to a cafe where the walls are alternating shades of red, yellow, orange, and pink.  Luis says Doug Vallines was a crop-duster pilot back when Hector worked in the orchard.  Luis then goes on to explain how his father enlisted the service of a records forger to help establish a legal employment record so he could become a naturalized citizen of the United States.  The goons who beat up Luis in part 1 were looking for Hector and wanted to know the name of his forger.

We then find the head of the Scales corporation in a greenhouse with the cowboy who is obviously not Doug Vallines.  In fact, Scales calls the cowboy Gary and demands an update on the cryptic, overly confusing crap that's been going on in this story.

In the Seattle branch of the Immigration and Naturalization Service, a woman named Ellen Waverly stumbles onto the fourth or fifth subplot of this series.  She calls William MacDonald from the I.N.S. office in Lincoln, Nebraska, to let him know that Hector Librado is not a convicted felon from Mexico and his citizenship papers ought to be processed.  Since MacDonald is corrupt and working to deny visas to certain people for unknown reasons, he tries to throw her off the case.  She stubbornly holds to her principals of righteous justice.  So MacDonald makes a phone call that sounds like he's ordering her killed.

Meanwhile, Dinah goes to see Hank Beecham, the forger, only to find him getting his ass kicked by the goons who previously attacked her in part 3 and Rita and Luis back in part 1.






"Bitter Fruit" Part 5 sort of answers some of the questions I've had since the beginning, but there are still a lot of characters whose identities are vague and motivations are indecipherable.  Is this story about immigration or about using and abusing undocumented migrant workers?  Who is spying on who and for what reason?  And who tried to kill Hector when he's already in the hospital?

I maintain my position that Sharon Wright's script does not work for this shortened eight-page format, and even more, that her story would have worked better as a long form graphic novel or even a prose novel.  Randy Duburke's art is suitable for the lack of action, but not for the subtlety and nuance in the characters.  Duburke as well as the inker and colorist make every character look roughly identical and non-specific, which only adds layers to the confusion of this overly-layered story.


The Rest

Once again, Green Lantern by Peter David and Tod Smith kick off the issue with the continuing story of Hal Jordan questioning the nature of his fearlessness.  The psychic villain Mind Games attacks Hal by thrusting him into a mental war zone full of mental projections of all of Hal's villains and supporting players.  The first page is a great splash image of Sinestro, Hector Hammond, the Shark, Black Hand, Carol Ferris in Star Sapphire garb, Arisia, and half a dozen Green Lanterns including Tomar-Re, Kilowog, and Salaak.


Hal is confronted by emotional triggers such as guilt, jealous rage, passion, and fear, the last of which proves ineffectual.  As a reader and fan of Geoff Johns' run on Green Lantern, it's kind of fun to see these precursors to the emotional spectrum given a  sense of danger.  Hal defeats Mind Games and turns him over to the police.  Then he questions the ring about the source of his fearlessness and the ring pulls him inside it.

This issue sees the first chapter of Nightwing's story, "The Cheshire Contract" by Marv Wolfman and Chuck Patton.  The story opens with Nightwing taking out some smugglers on the wharf.  When his over enthusiasm puts him in danger, Dick Grayson is saved by his old Teen Titans pal Roy Harper, Speedy.  Roy has come to Dick at the behest of the Central Bureau of Investigation and the two team up to pursue Roy's baby mama, the deadly, sexy assassin known as Cheshire.  They arrive in London to save Cheshire's target, but it seems her loyalty to the father of her child is nonexistent and she turns her sniper rifle on Roy and Dick.

During the story, Wolfman lays out for the reader Dick Grayson's reason for severing his partnership to Batman.  No longer Robin, no longer able to sport the classic green trunks, Nightwing must balance his fun, free-wheeling attitude with the maturity and responsibility of a solo hero.  I forgot how much I enjoyed this era for Nightwing.  And how much I liked this original costume.  As silly as some aspects of this costume look, it is so much better and more fitting of his character than the forgettable black and blue or current black and red costumes.

In The Phantom Stranger chapter written by Paul Kupperberg and drawn by Tom Grindberg, the titular character involves himself with an investigation into two mysterious deaths.  The victims were reading a novel when they were mysterious attacked and drained of their life force by something inside the book.  The Stranger is greeted in his sanctum by the novel's writer, Daniel Gleason, who reveals the substance of the novel is based on a Mayan chant to their god of death, Ah Puch.  The writer is possessed by Ah Puch, who looks particularly nasty, and then attacks the Stranger, stealing his life force.

The two-page Superman strip by Roger Stern and Curt Swan furthers the tale of the mysterious Bob Galt, who believes Superman is a deity.  There's an inscrutable corporation that's out to destroy the Man of Steel.  The one weak link in their plans is a man in a hospital, so they send someone to kill him.  Meanwhile, Superman targets the same man as his best shot at solving the mystery of Mister Galt.

In the third part of Catwoman's story, "The Tin Roof Club" by Mindy Newell and Barry Kitson, Catwoman has gone to the New Jersey home of her friend Holly.  Catwoman stole a brooch and hid it with Holly; she has come to collect it, but Holly reveals that she already opened the gift and showed it to her husband.  Catwoman knows they're in danger.  She tries to get Holly out of the house, but there is an explosion and Holly is mortally wounded.  She dies in Catwoman's arms.  Selina goes to get drunk in her club when she's visited by her police detective friend, George, who warns her to get out of town before the heat from the cops and the gangs comes down on her for the stolen brooch.  Catwoman pays a late night visit to Holly's widower, who is consoling his grief in bed with another woman.  Catwoman figures out that he caused the explosion that killed Holly so he could cover the fact that he kept the brooch.  Catwoman gets it back, but he throws her off the balcony of his hotel.

Next week, I'll look at Action Comics Weekly #614, which furthers the continuing sagas of Black Canary, Superman, Green Lantern, Nightwing, Catwoman, and the Phantom Stranger.