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Friday, September 16, 2016
Captain Marvel Meets Doc Samson
Captain Marvel is a big fan favorite at the moment, and plays a crucial role during the Civil War II saga. I like this double-scene in Issue 0, where she meets up with Doc Samson after a long time of separation. Then we fast-forward to them sanding together and embracing. It's very atmospheric, with the panoramic window showing the cloudy New York skyline, and all the computer monitors alight. My only question is this: If danger is ever present, why isn't the S.H.I.E.L.D. control room staffed 24/7?
This is another cool pic. It's Captain Marvel seen through the panoramic window, talking introspectively with Doc Samson. It depicts her inner struggle: the need to find time for herself amid a life of constant vigilance. The fact that the New York skyline is shown in reflection, and the morning sunlight is throwing a line of light against the window, adds another layer of reality to the artwork.
Dragon Dave
Friday, September 9, 2016
With Great Power Comes Great Destruction
Justin worked on Marvel's Infinity event a few years ago. In that series, a bomb explodes which spills vast amounts of Terrigen into Earth's atmosphere. Formerly, Terrigen was used in controlled settings, usually for helping children of the Inhumans complete their metamorphoses. Now Terrigen travels around the globe in storms. When a Terrigen cloud appears, ordinary people are encouraged to take shelter.
The reasons for this are obvious. Everyone carries a vast number of unutilized traits in their recessive genes. The Terrigen works on those recessive genes. If a person unknowingly carries an Inhuman trait, the Terrigen transforms the ordinary mortal into an Inhuman with special powers. Of course, as Stan Lee taught us, with great power comes the need for great responsibility.
In Civil War II Issue 0, Brian Michael Bendis asks this question: What if a person is given great power all at once, and is not able to control it?
It's an interesting question to ask at any time, but even more so in an election year.
Dragon Dave
Friday, September 2, 2016
James Rhodes For President
Most of you probably know Colonel James Rhodes from the Iron Man movies, if not the comics. You may also remember the posts I wrote awhile back, when I covered his adventures as War Machine in Invincible Iron Man Issue 6. In Civil War II Issue 0, Colonel Rhodes has a meeting with...well, let's just say it's with a very important man.
Writer Brian Michael Bendis comes up with an interesting notion here, that billionaire Tony Stark might buy his way into the Presidency of the United States. Isn't it interesting how some people spend their lives destroying people, companies, and anything that would limit their company's personal power, and then, later in life, decide they want to "give back?"
Unlike Tony Stark, James Rhodes isn't like that. But then, that's why we love him.
Dragon Dave
Friday, August 26, 2016
She-Hulk Defends The Defenseless
In Civil War II Issue 0, we find Jessica Walters in court. Her job: to defend a super-criminal codenamed The Jester. This is one of the most painterly examples of Justin's work I've seen lately. It captures all the drama of this courtroom setting as She-Hulk argues on her client's behalf.
Later, on a SHIELD helicarrier, we learn that she lost her case. Yet we love her for believing in her client. After all, no one else does.
She-Hulk may be green, but she's not jaded by her experience as a lawyer. She has not stopped believing in the possibility of someone turning her life around. Perhaps that's why we love her so.
Dragon Dave
Friday, August 5, 2016
A Whole New Civil War
Once upon a time, I knew a boy named Justin Ponsor. Initially, I knew his mother better than I knew him, as she played the piano in my church. But later on, I got involved with the puppet team. He was a great puppeteer, and he and I bonded over our mutual love for puppets.
While Justin liked puppets, he also loved comics. He knew what he wanted to do when he grew up: he wanted to get involved in comics. Now he's a colorist for Marvel. And this year, he's working on Marvel's premiere summer event: Civil War II.
Even if you've never seen the Marvel movies, and are unfamiliar with Marvel characters, you'll no doubt recognize Iron Man, and his comrade-in-armor War Machine. Some characters you might be less familiar with are Captain Marvel and She-Hulk. The latter two may yet to feature in a Marvel movie, but that has more to do with how many great characters inhabit the Marvel universe, and less to do with their popularity. If you've followed this blog, you'll notice that we read the early issues of the current Iron Man series, which featured Iron Man and War Machine. If not, you can scroll back through my posts, and catch up.
I've just learned that Marvel has printed over 380,000 copies of Issue 1. Meanwhile, the prologue story, Civil War II #0, has gone back for a second printing. Compare those numbers with household character books such as Thor and Guardians of the Galaxy, which only merit print runs of a tenth of that number. That gives you an idea of how much popular Marvel's new Civil War II series is. So if you want to read what the majority of comics readers are buying, you might want to pick up a copy of Civil War II Issue 0.
Then, as you read, you can marvel at the awesome coloring done by Justin Ponsor, former church puppeteer, now premier colorist for a bestselling, mega-popular comic event.
Dragon Dave
Friday, April 1, 2016
War Machine Versus Ninjas
In Invincible Iron Man 6, Brian Michael Bendis depicts Tony Stark's friend James Rhodes in his War Machine armor, investigating the Stark facility infiltrated by Madame Masque. There he is attacked by two beautiful, but deadly, ninjas. This time, they're ladies.
This photo of Mike Deodato and Frank Martin's artwork suffers a little from light reflection on the right hand side. But you can still compare how differently Dave Marquez and Justin Ponsor treated a similar scene in my earlier Ninja post. Take a look at the ladies' legs, for example. There's no detail in their musculature. You can barely see their feet.
There's much less depth and vibrancy than in the Ninja scenes by Marquez and Ponsor. The skin tones seem particularly flat by comparison. And there's so much black. Ordinarily, I would wonder if that was due to the Inker. But no one is listed as Inker for the issue, so it must be down to artist Mike Deodato or colorist Frank Martin.
I battled with light reflection while taking all my photos of Issue 6. Either that's got something to do with the change in art style, or I suddenly forgot how to use my camera.
Dragon Dave
This photo of Mike Deodato and Frank Martin's artwork suffers a little from light reflection on the right hand side. But you can still compare how differently Dave Marquez and Justin Ponsor treated a similar scene in my earlier Ninja post. Take a look at the ladies' legs, for example. There's no detail in their musculature. You can barely see their feet.
There's much less depth and vibrancy than in the Ninja scenes by Marquez and Ponsor. The skin tones seem particularly flat by comparison. And there's so much black. Ordinarily, I would wonder if that was due to the Inker. But no one is listed as Inker for the issue, so it must be down to artist Mike Deodato or colorist Frank Martin.
I battled with light reflection while taking all my photos of Issue 6. Either that's got something to do with the change in art style, or I suddenly forgot how to use my camera.
Dragon Dave
Thursday, March 31, 2016
Groovy War Machine
In Invincible Iron Man 6, Mike Deodato and Frank Martin's art provides a vivid contrast with that of Dave Marquez and Justin Ponsor. Take this image of James Rhodes in his War Machine armor, for example. Colorist Frank Martin seems to adore orange and black: those colors suffuse nearly every page. By comparison, all other seem muted. As you may have noticed in the earlier posts, the comic nearly becomes black-and-white, with silhouettes, and blazing light, mostly in the orange spectrum, that washes out much of the detail.
Justin Ponsor colors each frame like a realist, evoking everyday color without, for the most part, enhancing it for effect. Frank Martin's color super-saturation, and his love affair with orange, make me wonder if at heart, he's a child of the swinging 1960s. Justin's work is forever, and for everyone. Frank Martin's color style appeals to the wild child. As Austin Powers might say, he's groovy, baby!
Dragon Dave
Wednesday, March 30, 2016
Hero or Villain?
In Invincible Iron Man Issue 6, Tony Stark's relationship with Amara Perera has deepened. We find them in bed together. The two then go out to eat at a diner. Mike Deodato's sketching and Frank Martin's artwork, coupled with this phase of the relationship, make me look at Amara completely differently. She doesn't seem so innocent or classy anymore.
But then, Tony Stark doesn't look so earnest, so willing to break down the barriers to be a man who's worthy of her either. To me, he looks more like a villain.
There's absolutely nothing wrong with Mike Deodato and Frank Martin's artwork. Nonetheless, it makes me feel completely differently about the characters that penciler Dave Marquez and colorist Justin Ponsor got me to care about. Suddenly, I no longer love, or respect Tony Stark and Amara Perera as much as I once did.
Dragon Dave
Tuesday, March 29, 2016
Radioactive Amara Perera
In Invincible Iron Man Issues one through five, author Brian Michael Bendis introduced us to Dr Amara Perera. She's every bit as smart as Tony Stark, and classy enough to refuse a kiss on their first date. Later, she warms to him, but Dave Marquez's sketching and Justin Ponsor's coloring made her seem like an elegant yet innocent young princess. Her skin is chocolate brown, yet gentle and supple. Clearly, it's her natural skin color.
In Invincible Iron Man Issue 6, colorist Frank Martin depicts Amara as a surfer girl. Either she's just sat under a sun lamp for a few hours, or Tony Stark's Iron Man armor has developed a radiation leak. Amara, run, do not walk, to your nearest dermatologist.
Hurry!
Dragon Dave
Monday, March 28, 2016
An Invincible Variant Cover
Imagine our surprise when we went to the comic book store to pick up Invincible Iron Man Issue 6, and discovered that Justin had left the book. While author Brian Michael Bendis remained, penciler Dave Marquez had also departed. Replacing the art team were penciler Mike Deodato and colorist Frank Martin. Although their artwork was cool, my wife and I were amazed by how much their unique style altered how we looked at the series.
While we liked their cover featuring Tony Stark's friend James Rhodes as War Machine, we decided to purchase this copy, featuring a variant cover by artist Skottie Young instead. The scene not have anything to do with the story, and it doesn't feature the color art of Justin Ponsor, but every time I look at it, it really perks me up. I wonder why.
Dragon Dave
Friday, February 12, 2016
Mary Jane's Dilemma
In the new Invincible Iron Man series by writer Brian Michael Bendis, Mary Jane Watson moves to a new city and opens a night club. As she tells the crowd, one of the perils of living in New York City is that it's filled with superheroes and super villains. On one occasion, the clash between the two forces destroyed the first night club she tried to open. So for her, this represents a fresh start.
Of course, often a fresh start really isn't a new act. It's merely the repetition of an old act. Of course, we can hone our skills, and eventually master them, through repetition. But all too often, we merely pick up and move somewhere else, or try doing the same thing in a new place. Then we wonder why we fail.
Some claim the definition of insanity is to continue doing what hasn't worked in the past, and hope for different (better) results this time. Yeah, like none of us ever do that.
While nothing can (or should) stop us from trying, sometimes we are the way we are. In Mary Jane's case, she naturally attracts superheroes and super villains. It's just part of who she is. So when Tony Stark, aka Iron Man (Superhero!) and Whitney Frost, aka Madame Masque (Super Villain!) walk into her new bar...well, you can guess the result.
When her new club is destroyed, Tony Stark recognizes not just her loss, but her talent and tenacity. So he offers her a job. Unlike merely opening another bar, going to work for Stark Industries will be a different move for her. It will be interesting to see how she grows as she stretches herself in a new environment.
Do what you did someplace else, and hope for better results next time? Try your hand at something different, and hope it gives you more satisfaction that your previous efforts? There's always more than one way to embrace the future. As to which course will offer the future we desire...well, that's a little more difficult to see, isn't it?
Either way, it's better than doing nothing. Right?
Right?
Dragon Dave
Friday, January 29, 2016
Mary Jane Watson: Reincarnated
Everyone dies: that's a fact of life. And sooner or later, everyone dies in comics: that's also a fact of life. For some characters, that's the end. Their bodies crumble to dust, memories of their exploits fade, and even their creators are forgotten. As in life, this fate befalls all heroes and sidekicks, no matter how powerful or significant.
Recently, I've been enjoying the exploits of a character called Mantra. She was one of a special group of superheroes called Ultras. She and her fellow superheroes endured hardships, and enjoyed such spectacular adventures, that Marvel purchased Malibu Comics, the company that published their adventures, back in the mid 1990s. For a time, authors such as Robert W Barr, and artists like Dave Roberts, thrilled readers who made titles like Mantra a part of their lives. The Ultras even ventured into toy stores, and enjoyed a brief run in the TV series "Ultraforce." Sadly, the Ultras, and all memories of their exploits, faded away, when Marvel decided to close Malibu Comics, and stopped publishing their adventures.
Had readers banded together in great numbers, and insisted Marvel publish more of the Ultras' exploits, perhaps their fate would have been different. But no matter how much people loved and admired them, they just didn't care enough about characters like Mantra, and in sufficient numbers, to convince Marvel to continue their adventures.
Stan Lee envisioned Mary Jane Watson as the pretty, wholesome girl-next-door whom Aunt May wanted Peter Parker to date in the early days of "Amazing Spider-Man." Elsewhere, I've mused upon his inspiration for the character. Like Dr John Watson, a man who shares a similar name, Mary Jane has enjoyed a long life and career in comics. Or, perhaps I should say, many lives and many careers. At times she's pursued journalism. At other times, acting. In some eras, she was the girl who loved Peter Parker from afar. In others she dated him, or was his wife. Now she's a new incarnation, no longer living in New York, but in Chicago. She's a former supermodel, and has just opened a nightclub. From the cover of Invincible Iron Man #4, it seems as though she has consigned any hopes of life with Peter Parker to the past. So what's she doing with Iron Man? You'll have to read the issue to find out, won't you?
One thing's for sure: some characters never die. We care about them too much to let their bodies crumble to dust, and let all memories of them fade away. Spider-Man and Iron Man are two heroes who seem destined to live forever. Mary Jane Watson, a woman without lacking any superpowers, is another person who continually rises from the ashes of her former existence to remake, recreate, and reincarnate herself.
How do we embrace each new day? Do we continually look to become someone new? Or do we continue long journeys toward the realization of long-held goals? I suspect Mary Jane Watson does both equally well. Perhaps that is the reason why she refuses to die, and why we keep on insisting that she live.
Dragon Dave
Related Dragon Cache entries
Stan Lee's Inspiration
Recently, I've been enjoying the exploits of a character called Mantra. She was one of a special group of superheroes called Ultras. She and her fellow superheroes endured hardships, and enjoyed such spectacular adventures, that Marvel purchased Malibu Comics, the company that published their adventures, back in the mid 1990s. For a time, authors such as Robert W Barr, and artists like Dave Roberts, thrilled readers who made titles like Mantra a part of their lives. The Ultras even ventured into toy stores, and enjoyed a brief run in the TV series "Ultraforce." Sadly, the Ultras, and all memories of their exploits, faded away, when Marvel decided to close Malibu Comics, and stopped publishing their adventures.
Had readers banded together in great numbers, and insisted Marvel publish more of the Ultras' exploits, perhaps their fate would have been different. But no matter how much people loved and admired them, they just didn't care enough about characters like Mantra, and in sufficient numbers, to convince Marvel to continue their adventures.
Stan Lee envisioned Mary Jane Watson as the pretty, wholesome girl-next-door whom Aunt May wanted Peter Parker to date in the early days of "Amazing Spider-Man." Elsewhere, I've mused upon his inspiration for the character. Like Dr John Watson, a man who shares a similar name, Mary Jane has enjoyed a long life and career in comics. Or, perhaps I should say, many lives and many careers. At times she's pursued journalism. At other times, acting. In some eras, she was the girl who loved Peter Parker from afar. In others she dated him, or was his wife. Now she's a new incarnation, no longer living in New York, but in Chicago. She's a former supermodel, and has just opened a nightclub. From the cover of Invincible Iron Man #4, it seems as though she has consigned any hopes of life with Peter Parker to the past. So what's she doing with Iron Man? You'll have to read the issue to find out, won't you?
One thing's for sure: some characters never die. We care about them too much to let their bodies crumble to dust, and let all memories of them fade away. Spider-Man and Iron Man are two heroes who seem destined to live forever. Mary Jane Watson, a woman without lacking any superpowers, is another person who continually rises from the ashes of her former existence to remake, recreate, and reincarnate herself.
How do we embrace each new day? Do we continually look to become someone new? Or do we continue long journeys toward the realization of long-held goals? I suspect Mary Jane Watson does both equally well. Perhaps that is the reason why she refuses to die, and why we keep on insisting that she live.
Dragon Dave
Related Dragon Cache entries
Stan Lee's Inspiration
Friday, January 22, 2016
Justin Ponsor Hits The Beach
Justin Ponsor & Friends Photo from www.wizardworld.com |
After nearly two decades in comics, it's safe to say that Justin has worked with some pretty famous people, such as Miles Morales (the Ultimate Spider-Man), Rocket Raccoon, and Thanos (the mad god). Still, it surprised me when I reread Invincible Iron Man Issue 4, and spotted a familiar face on the beach.
When Iron Man vanquishes the ninjas, they can't bear to live with their dishonor. So they order their suits to incinerate their bodies immediately. This causes a number of bonfires on the beach, but probably not ones where you'd want to kick back with your friends for a relaxing evening.
Iron Man summons the authorities, and they arrive in short order. Apparently, Justin decided to accompany them, perhaps to help him figure out how best to color the panel. How he learned of the incident, and arrived at the scene so quickly, I don't know. I suspect penciler Dave Marquez gave him a call, and suggested he might want to see the crime scene before he colored it.
But then, when you're one of Marvel Comics' premier colorists, I guess you can pretty much go wherever you want.
Dragon Dave
Friday, January 15, 2016
Iron Man's Ninja Beach Bash
In Invincible Iron Man Issue 4 by Brian Michael Bendis, ninjas attack Tony Stark at night.
So Iron Man takes the action away from an apartment building to the beach, where he can fight them without risking civilian casualties.
I love the old comics of the 1970s and 1980s, in the time period often called the Bronze Age of Comics. This was before computers made their way into the hands of the artists, and comics were still drawn and painted on paper. I love the handmade look of those old comics. As the artwork was less sophisticated, I think often the writers worked harder to pack more plot into their stories. But what amazes me about today's comics is how much darkness artists like Justin can pack into a picture. All the dark colors in the sky, the sea, the sand, and yet all those elements stand out in a way they never could have back in the good old Bronze days.
Iron Man's artificial intelligence/operating system, Girl Friday, even uses the armor's chameleon circuits (Like Doctor Who's TARDIS, only these function far better) to color the outer plating black, so that's more darkness in the picture for you.
Faced by hi-tech ninjas, whose cybernetic suits can instantly adapt their fighting techniques, Iron Man's new armor reshapes into a modern Samurai warrior. The armor even manufactures a sword so he can take on the ninjas on even terms. Wow!
I'm betting Justin had just as much fun coloring these scenes as Dave Marquez did drawing them. But then, one should always do one's best for ninjas and samara warriors.
Dragon Dave
Friday, January 8, 2016
Superheroes Read Books
In Invincible Iron Man Issue 3, a battle with Madame Masque, and an encounter with Doctor Doom, leave Tony Stark shaken. When Dr Amara Perez leaves the laboratory at the Massachusetts Institute for Technology (MIT), she finds Tony Stark in her office. Crouched by a bookshelf, he tells her that, right now, he'd rather be with her than anyone else. As he puts it:
"I can't shake the idea that becoming the man that would actually deserve you would be very good goal in life at this stage of the game." |
Tony Stark may have a protective suit of armor, but Amara Perez can't help but notice how he's cast off all barriers in her presence.
After seeking solace from her, Tony Stark knows he needs to do a little research on what Doctor Doom has told him about the powers Madame Masque now wields. So he heads over to the Sanctum Sanctorum of Doctor Strange.
The print version of this picture really doesn't do it justice. But in the electronic version (included free with purchase of Issue 3), you can see Doctor Strange's Sanctum Sanctorum in all its majesty. Candles hover in the air, and burn on the floor, illuminating floor-to-ceiling bookshelves. It's the kind of library I'd love to have someday. Only, as I can't levitate, I'd want a solid wood ladder on wheels connected to a brass rail.
I'm not sure if writer Brian Michael Bendis consciously intended this, but one theme that emerges from Issue 3 is the source of a superhero's power. Dr Amara Perez is one of the smartest scientists of her generation, but she didn't reach her exalted post, get her learned papers accepted in the most prestigious journals, or make her important, world-changing discoveries without lots of study. Likewise, Doctor Strange works incredible feats by merging science and (what we call) magic, but he couldn't do so without the need to study.
And then, remember how Tony could have sat anywhere in the room. Instead of taking a comfortable chair, he sits on the floor next to Amara's packed bookshelves.
In today's culture, we place so much emphasis on what a person does that we tend to forget all the effort that lies behind one's actions. Achievements are like icebergs: others can only see the smallest, most outward portion of all the work that went into them. Enthusiasm, instinct, and natural talents can carry you far. But to develop your intelligence and abilities, study is required.
There's a reason Dr Amara Perez and Dr Strange keep those books close by. There's a reason Tony sits by them. They're not just there to impress other people. Instead, those books the foundation of these superheroes' powers and careers.
Naturally, Justin Ponsor had to color each and every one of them.
Dragon Dave
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