10 Awesome Comic Book Moments in 2010

10) Larfleeze becomes a consumer on Earth and discovers Santa Claus -  I enjoy everything about this character. From his first extended and vicious appearance in Green Lantern #39 (April 2009) to now; this supporting character has gone from the gluttonous and murderous Agent Orange of his debut to a kid in a candy store now that he has made it to Earth. He played a major role in the Blackest Night series, functioning as far more than simple comic relief (although every time he shows up in a panel it is good for major laughs). Where most of the colors of the post-Blackest Night GL emotional spectrum are getting a bit old, the orange light of Avarice is welcome to stick around for a while. Here, in Green Lantern #58, Hal Jordan discovers Larfleeze sitting on a throne of material possessions. The tusked alien tells Hal that he feels Earthlings share his lust for consumption because he, “has seen commercials”. He also expresses his excitement about having discovers our “gift giver who lives in (our) icy lands”. Before Hal breaks it to the long snooted creature that there is no Santa, he refers to him as “Gonzo”. HA!

9) Northlanders: Every book in the series – This was one of the best comic reading decisions I made this year. Brian Wood has always been a favorite writer of mine, so there was really no excuse to have stayed away form this series for as long as I did. Vikings. Sword-swinging, axe-wielding, beard-twirling, blood-soaked vikings. Each storyline features a new set of characters to get to know, and it’s based, roughly, in period appropriate settings. This is pulp, viking awesomeness that I now can’t get enough of. Throw on some Sunn o))) or some Burzum, crack open a beer, and sit outside in the snow while reading this one for the closest possible Norse experience.

8 – The Uncanny X-Force is formed - With so much going on in the X-books these days, it was refreshing to see a small team of new and classic X-Men come together for a pretty badass purpose; they are going to kill Apocalypse. Rad right? And who better to lead a team against the Darwinian super mutant than Archangel. Apocalypse put this dude through so much, with that whole forcing him to be his Angel of Death and cutting his wings off – thing, so it’s no wonder that Warren Worthington would be the go to guy to cut down the reincarnated Apocalypse in child form. Throw in Psylocke, Wolverine, Deadpool, and Fantomex, and you have a team of perfect killers. The Danger Room training sequence where Psyloche is killing Archangel over and over again as a contingency plan is a great example of the lengths the characters are prepared to go to see their job done. Even cooler are the new Four Horsemen of Apocalypse. Great stuff here.

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7) Lobo VS Green Lantern – Geoff Johns had an amazing year with his run on Green Lantern. His single issues of this particular book are just as entertaining as the story arc as a whole, which is a talent lost in this day and age. A single issue of any given comic book should be fun, not just dialogue or filler material acting as exposition for next issue. The first comic I ever bought was a copy of Spectacular Spider-Man #184, it was the sixth part of a story-line which brought back Harry Osborne as the Green Goblin, yet it didn’t matter that I hadn’t read the 5 previous issues, this book kicked-ass on its own. I was reminded of this when reading Green Lantern #55. Even If I hadn’t read all of Blackest Night and the GL issues that followed, I would still be laughing and loving this amazing issue. The only exposition needed here is the one line where Hal Jordan describes Lobo as “the only person I’ve ever seen give Superman a bloody nose”. Pure awesome.

6) Dick Grayson as Batman/ Batman V.S. Robin – This series grew on me more and more as I was reading it. I really love the idea of the original Robin having to reluctantly take on the mantle of Batman and then train a much more bad ass Robin in the process. The dynamic duo’s dynamic is reversed in this series, with Grayson’s Batman being almost light-hearted at times, and Damian Wayne’s Robin as a brooding, violent, sour-puss. The must read issues are 10 – 12 where a pre-programmed Damian tries to murder the Batman.

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5) Batman Returns: Not the Tim Burton flick – ‘Nuff Said

4) The X-Men are cool again – This book really brought the X-Men back for me. The stunning artwork by Paco Medina (Deadpool) really sold me on this one. The fact that they are facing a horde of vampires may seem like some Twilight and True Blood bandwagon bullshit at first, but remember the X-Men have been scrapping with Dracula since waaay back in the day, so it fits, and it’s awesome. Any X-Men comic that features a “fastball special” (the hi-tech battle maneuver where Wolverine gets tossed like a baseball by Colossus) is one for the history books in my opinion. This book will be awesome as long as Paco is drawing it. His art reminds me of Joe Madureira’s run on Uncanny X-Men. Lot’s of bright colors and excellent depictions of mutant powers. The X-Men should not be as dark and as dreary as the Hellblazer books, which is where some creators tend to take them Most of us were first exposed to these charaters in cartoon form, so we expect them to be vibrant, with story lines that are just as clear cut as the lines of the panels. Until now the X-Men have been too muddy, in composition and in story. So I can get behind a plot of “Hey we have to fight these vampire” with some awesome art. Long live Paco Medina and his easier X-Men.

3) Mark Millar’s Nemesis - This is a brutal book. The premise is simple enough, in the real world (our world) there is a virgin-white super-villain who is so good at killing cops, he can hand them a card with the precise date and time of their death. He brings about these deaths in such a manner that it could almost be considered art if not for the immense body-counts. He turns the world around these hero-cops into a giant game of mouse trap, where each player places himself deeper and deeper in peril as he tries to escape the time stamped on that card. Awesome right?

2) The Sentry tears Ares in two and then crumbles Asgard in a show of extreme bad-assery – Siege was a great series. It ended the “Dark Reign” stuff pretty epically, and in just 4 parts! I loved the brevity of this bad-ass brawl; it was over as quick as it started thanks to the force of nature that is the Sentry. He is probably the most interesting Marvel character to have emerged in the last 10 years, and he started as an April fools joke (Google it)! The duality of the character is wonderful, as The Sentry literally is his own greatest villain! Or maybe not, maybe The Void isn’t some separate and dark other half; maybe Bob Reynolds is just a supremely powered being who is so screwed up mentally, that when he has a bad day entire cities crumble and gods get torn in half. Either way, Bob was a threat so severe that he could only be stopped by the re-formation of the original Avengers.

1) Blackest Night – Hands down, the most exciting comic book series in the last 20 years. Never have I clamored to get every single variant cover and side story I could get my hands on. This is DC Comic’s vision of the zombie apocalypse. The dead heroes and villains of that universe clawed their way through the dirt in order to return to the living and literally tear out the hearts of their friends and loved ones. This story was vicious from the very beginning. From the opening brawl between the Flash, Green Lantern, and the newly re-animated evil corpse of their friend The Martian Manhunter, I knew this would be an amazing tale. While Marvel had their Marvel Zombies series set far off on an alternate world, DC actually desecrated their dead, and killed off a lot of its living heroes and villains in the process. If you haven’t read this yet, leave your house now and buy every single volume of what is certainly the best zombie comic book story ever told.

Posted by Mark | Comics, News, sliders

1 Comment

  1. ScottyOOOOpleasedontdie
    04 Jan 2011, 2:17 pm

    Blackest night was most certainly one of the most engrossing storylines ever put together. Massive multi book crossovers have been done over and again but the way blackest night tied them all together was the catch. Every superhero has some family or friend or foe death that was used against them. Even down to the ridiculous ones like the Flying Graysons was done right. My question is how do you rate top ten blackest night moments.
    10. elongated man smashing the hawks to death
    9. black lantern justice league
    8. the flash outrunning black rings by running 2 seconds into the future
    7. the formation of the new guardians
    6. larfleeze has no oath and a power level of 1000%!!??!?!!
    5.the lantern deputies….lex luther orange lantern
    4.black lantern Batman
    3.red lantern guy gardner
    2. white lantern sinestro
    1.scar biting the other guardins neck

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