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All Buffy GNs/TPB published by Dark Horse Comics
Buffy The Vampire Slayer: The Remaining Sunlight 1999 (SC TPB) 80 pages
Reprinting: Buffy the Vampire Slayer #1-3, plus a 10 page story from Dark Horse Comics Presents - with covers of the Buffy comics.
Written by Andi Watson, with J.L. Van Meter. Pencils by
Joe Bennett, with Luke Ross. Inks by Rick Ketcham.
Colours: Guy Major. Letters: Janice Chiang, Steve Dutro. Editors: Scott
Allie, Ben Abernathy
Rating: * * (out of 5)
Number of readings: 1
Ironically, the high point here was that short piece,
"MacGuffins", by Van Meter/Ross/Ketcham (from Dark Horse Comics Presents,
printed here in colour for the first time). The story's just a gag piece,
with Buffy alone at her father's home beset, not by murderous vampires,
but by mischievous imps reminiscent of the Cat in the Hat, or the movie
Gremlins. The art was nice and the story, though slight, induced a chuckle
or two.
Unfortunately, the three main stories by the regular team
of Watson/Bennett/Ketcham was less effective. Watson tries evoking the
TV series' formula of mixing the characters' personal trials and tribs
with the action-horror of vampire fighting, but doesn't really pull it
off, delivering stories that are awfully thin. Thin on plot...and emotion.
Xander takes a self-defence class because he feels inadequate (Wu-Tang
Fang #1), Willow has a fight with her parents (Halloween #2), but sub-plots
like that aren't really developed, and can't compare with the heavy-duty
angst dished up by the series on a regular basis. The vampire-adventure
plots are even less meaty in theme, intent, or even simple plotting.
And the attempt to mimic the witty badinage and humour
of the series failed, for the most part, to strike me as, well, witty.
I had a (slightly) better reaction to the third story,
Cold Turkey--maybe because Watson was getting a feel for the gig, or maybe
I was adjusting to his take. It was still pretty slight, but the structure
seemed better, and some of the gags got a smirk, if nothing more. Though
even then, the whole thing seemed more reminiscent of Archie and his Pals
n' Gals rather than an episode of Buffy the Vampire Slayer.
Re-reading the first two stories, I enjoyed them more
the second time through, getting a bit more in sync with the jokes and
such (like the "multi-tasking" gag), but they still seemed awfully...thin.
Bennett's art was another sticking point. He's not a bad
artist--far from it. But he belongs to that modern school of comics artist
that seems as though he studied art by reading Japanese comic books and
watching Saturday morning cartoons. It's a popular style these days, but
it's not quite my cup of tea. Still, though the characters don't exactly
fool you into thinking you're looking at the actors, you can usually tell
who's who. Also, taking advantage of the limitless f/x available in art,
the vampires don't look even remotely human which, if you're looking for
fidelity to the series, might be awkward.
It ain't horrid, and I got a mild kick out of MacGuffins,
but it remains a not especially memorable read.
Original cover price: $14.95 CDN./$9.95 USA.
Buffy The Vampire Slayer: The Ring of Fire 2000 (SC GN) 80 pages.
Written by Doug Petrie. Illustrated by Ryan Sook (inking
assist Tim Goodyear).
Colours: Dave Stewart. Letters: Clem Robbins. Editor: Scott Allie.
Extras: commentaries by Doug Petrie and editor Scott Allie; sketches and storyboard samples by Ryan Sook.
Rating: * * * * (out of 5)
Number of readings: 1
Perhaps the main selling point of this graphic novel is
that it was written by Doug Petrie, one of the writers of the Buffy TV
series -- that is, not a comicbook writer trying to mimic the series,
but someone who is the series. The story is also nestled more firmly
in the show's continuity than other Buffy comics, set back in the 2nd season
when Buffy's vampire lover, Angel, had reverted to his evil incarnation
of Angelus. Teamed with Spike and Drusilla, Angelus plots to resurrect
an ancient demon. Meanwhile, Giles is still brooding over the death of
his girlfriend, Jenny, leaving Buffy and her friends to face the current
crisis without his guidance while he pursues his own ulterior agenda.
The result is, arguably, the best Buffy-in-comics story
to date (at least that I've read).
The plot is nicely handled -- oh sure, it's nothing the
series hasn't done a dozen times before, but there are enough story curves
and disparate plot elements to comfortably fill out its 66 pages of story.
It reads like a "lost" episode.
Ryan Sook's art is very effective. Heavy on the shadows,
with a nice sense of composing panels, this is the first Buffy comic I've
read (not that I've read that many) which seems to comfortably exploit
the medium, creating mood and atmosphere through the pictures, not
just in spite of them. Close ups, long shots, thick pools of inky darkness,
Sook is clearly thinking about how to bring out the nuances of Petrie's
scenes. The colours by Dave Stewart also add greatly to the brooding atmosphere.
Admittedly, Sook's style is a little stylistic in spots, with hard, craggy
lines, but at least you can tell who's who, though his Giles doesn't really
resemble actor Anthony Stewart Head. His handling of Buffy evokes actress
Sarah Michelle Gellar -- though, ironically, in sketches reproduced at
the end of the book, it's frustratingly clear that he probably could've
done an even better job than he did.
Since it's set during one of the series more sombre period
(and some might argue the best, most emotionally-charged story arc), it's
not surprising the overall mood is a little more serious. Even acknowledging
that, though, Petrie doesn't always deliver the laughs you'd expect from
a writer for the series. The quips are more often amusing than out-and-out
funny (though they are amusing). As well, Petrie maybe approaches
the thing a little too aware of the medium, too aware that scenes in comics
need to be tighter than scenes in a filmed story. Unfortunately, his brevity
can slide into abrupt. Plot elements sometimes seem to drop out of nowhere
(like the ring of fire of the title, which is a fairly minor aspect of
the story) and scenes are a little too stripped down, characters a little
short changed. You find yourself wishing for some wordier conversations.
The emotional emphasis is on Giles still struggling with
the death of Jenny, and Buffy's pain at seeing her mentor distraught. Other
character ideas are left largely unexplored, like the whole emotional quagmire
of Buffy vs. Angel, or even the fact that the animosity between Spike and
Angel was fuelled by a rivalry over Drusilla...but you wouldn't get that
here. Drusilla isn't entirely in character, nor is Kendra (yup, Kendra
crops up). That may be because, though Petrie is apparently a writer for
the series, I'm not sure he was part of the show in the second season --
he might have no hands on experience writing for 2nd season characters
like Drusilla and Kendra (it also might explain why he set this graphic
novel in that period...he never got the chance the first time around).
If the above paragraph makes you go "huh?" then this probably
isn't a good introduction for a non fan. Characters aren't introduced with
any explanation or much background given. Give it another couple of years
and even hard core Buffy-philes might have trouble orienting themselves,
remembering who's what (I'm not sure Oz is even referred to by name at
any point). Again, that relates to Petrie's no frills approach to the scripting.
Although a little more character depth would've been nice,
Ring
of Fire is still hauntingly atmospheric with a compelling plot.
Original cover price: $14.95 CDN./$9.95 USA.
Buffy
The Vampire Slayer: A Stake to the Heart
For my review at www.ugo.com, go here.
Buffy the Vampire Slayer: Uninvited Guests 1999 (SC TPB) 104 pages
Written
by Andi Watson, with Dan Brereton. Pencils by Hector Gomez. Inks by Sandu
Florea.
Colours: Guy Major. Letters: Janice Chiang. Editor: Scott Allie, Adam
Gallardo, Ben Abernathy.
Reprinting: Buffy the Vampire Slayer #4-7
Rating: * 1/2 (out of 5)
Number of readings: 1
Additional notes: intro by Watson; covers
What is there to say about the second collection of Dark
Horse Comics' monthly Buffy comic? I dunno. Ugh! comes to mind.
O.K., normally, even when being critical, I try to approach
the material with a modicum of respect, recognizing the efforts and talents
that went into a story, even if it didn't work out (in my opinion). But
these four issues (comprising three stories) just struck me as thoroughly
lame. Admittedly, I didn't much care for the first few issues of the monthly
comic (collected in the TPB The Remaining Sunlight),
but I still had a better reaction than to this. I don't know if that's
because I was being overly kind to that earlier book, or whether I'm being
too harsh now, or whether it is worse. I just don't.
In his introduction, writer Andi Watson gleefully admits
that "horror has never been my thing" -- and it shows. Not because he doesn't
populate his stories with vampires and other monsters, or indulge in lots
of fight scenes -- but because that's about all he does with the supernatural
stuff. He seems to have no interest, or aptitude, for actually developing
interesting plots utilizing such themes. Case in point is the first story:
Buffy gets a job at an ice cream parlour in the mall, Buffy's boss is secretly
conjuring ice demons, Buffy and friends have a couple of knock down drag
out fights with ice demons. The end. The second story, involving a werewolf,
and a sub-plot involving a schism between Buffy and best friend Willow,
likewise never really develops into an interesting plot. I had some hope
for the final story, "New Kid on the Block", both because it was a two
parter, and I figured maybe Watson was just having trouble developing plots
in 22 pages, and because it was co-written by Dan Brereton, who wrote The
Dust Waltz, which I moderately enjoyed. But my hopes were quickly dashed
with another thinly developed, predictable, effort.
Watson claims that his real inspiration is teen comedies
(and Molly Ringwald movies) but, honestly, that doesn't really come across
much either. That is, if you were to ignore the vampires, are the scenes
of the characters just hanging out fun and interesting on their own? Not
really. Even here the plotting and ideas are rather thin, the badinage
flat.
The art by Hector Gomez isn't exactly a plus, either.
I found his work passable on The Dust Waltz, but I'm less forgiving here.
There isn't a great impression that he puts much thought into his composition
and his figures are rather stiff-looking and ungainly.
I went into this not expecting much...and even then I
felt let down. There are better Buffy graphic novel and TPB collections
out there.
Cover price: $16.95 CDN./ $10.95 USA
Buffy the Vampire Slayer: Tales of the Slayers 2001 (SC GN) 88 pages
Written
by Joss Whedon, Amber Benson, Jane Espenson, David Fury, Rebecca Rand Kirshner,
Doug Petrie. Art by Leinil Francis Yu, Tim Sale, Ted Naifeh, P. Craig Russell,
Steve Leiber, Mira Friedman, Gene Colan, Karl Moline.
Colours/letters: various
Rating: * * * (out of 5)
Number of readings: 1
The mythos behind the TV series, Buffy the Vampire Slayer,
is that Buffy is not the first, nor will she be the last, Chosen One --
that in every generation a girl is chosen to fight the forces of darkness.
Therefore, it's a logical thing to explore the lives of Slayers through
the centuries. So logical that there's also a short story (non comicbook)
collection...also called Tales of the Slayers (how's that for confusing?).
Another hook here is that most of the writers, instead
of just being freelance scribblers, are actually associated with the TV
series itself, from Buffy creator and driving force, Joss Whedon, to actress
Amber Benson (Tara) -- who'd already co-written one or two Buffy spin-off
comics.
The end result is an O.K. collection of eight stories
(though the first and last are more prologue and epilogue than fully realized
plots) in which none are awful, though few are stand outs, with the art
styles mostly good to really good. The collection kicks off, appropriately
enough, with the First Slayer, who appeared enigmatically in the TV series
in a couple of dream sequences. Although written by Joss Whedon himself,
it actually loses some of the flavour of that first Slayer who, in the
TV show, had seemed almost eerily...primordial, without even the capacity
for speech, as though at the very beginning of humanity. Here, though,
the Slayer encounters a person from a village wearing embroidered clothes
and with a wicker basket. Not exactly the Dawn of Man stuff, eh? Conversely,
Whedon provides a credible explanation for why there is only one Slayer
at a time. Since it's now been established that scores of girls are being
trained at any given time, waiting for the call, why not have an army of
Slayers to fight evil? Whedon puts it on the level that, in a sense, the
Slayer -- a super powered killing machine -- is a kind of monster herself,
and no one wants too many of them running around at any given time.
Additional note: This is all stuff later incorporated
into the series itself in its seventh and final season.
That opening sequence is less a story than just a set
up, leading us into the rest. Unfortunately, most of the stories are written
to be short stories -- no, I mean short stories. Even though some
are as long as 12 or 14 pages. The plots are often rudimentary, the characterization
likewise. I won't detail them all, since part of the pleasure is turning
the page, unsure what -- and when -- is next, but some of the stories
are set during particular eras (Revolutionary France, Nazi Germany) which
adds interest. The one set in Germany promises to be particularly effective,
with an opening sequence of our heroine marching with other kids, while
only belatedly do we realize it's a Nazi rally, and with Mira Friedmann's
ugly, cartoony art -- perhaps mimicking medieval etchings -- lending an
effectively disconcerting grotesqueness to it all. It's well-intentioned,
but the basic point of the story -- Nazis are as bad as vampires -- seems
a bit self-evident.
The best story by far in the collection is "Presumption",
set in a kind of Jane Austen milieu. Elegantly rendered by artist P. Craig
Russell, it boasts a clever twist, with Jane Espenson exploiting the ambiguity
between words and pictures only comics can permit. "Nikki Goes Down" is
drawn by old master, Gene Colan, and is probably the best illustrated of
the bunch, effectively coloured by Dave Stewart. Featuring the black, New
York Slayer circa the 1970s (briefly seen in a TV episode's flashback,
though Colan drops the afro) it's the longest in the collection, and because
of that boasts more scene changes, allowing more of a sense of a plot,
and also has Nikki battling more than just a stock vampire. But the decision
to tell it largely through narrative captions tends to prevent the story
from blossoming into a fully realized story.
I'd like to say Amber Benson's contribution was also one
of the best -- just 'cause I liked her in the show -- but it's just average.
An interesting idea, but not developed much beyond the idea. Like a lot
of the stories here, it seems a little too...pared to the bone. I'm not
singling Benson out to be derisive -- as I noted, her story is average,
not below average. I'm just focusing on it because, heck, if I was reading
a review of this book, I'd want the reviewer to comment on Benson's story.
Regular viewers of the TV series can't help but be curious.
Another Whedon effort, "Righteous", is longer than it
needs to be, re- hashing the girl-becomes-Slayer shtick, and is told in
rhyme -- which, though an interesting experiment, maybe doesn't add much.
The rhyming pattern being a tad to simple. But it gets better toward the
end, and boasts a subtle visual clue to a villainous priest's true motives
(he's looking at something in the foreground).
Overall, I don't think the writers realized how much plot
and characterization can be squeezed into 8 or 10 pages if you really make
the effort. Instead there are a few too many wordless, page consuming fight
scenes throughout.
What's also missing, largely, is the wit and humour of
the series. And maybe that adds to the problem. Many of the writers were
trying to write serious, brooding pieces, and maybe should've let their
hair down a bit more. Also missing is a story featuring Buffy herself,
which might have been nice to include (she appears only in a collage of
Slayers).
The collection wraps up with a story of a future Slayer,
though like the opening piece, it's not really a story per se (though there's
a bit more of the series' wit here). That Slayer -- Fray -- already appears
in her own Joss Whedon scripted comicbook.
If you're a Buffy fan, Tales of the Slayer is definitely
an agreeable tome to have, with most of the stories certainly O.K. page
turners, even if most aren't necessarily exceptional.
Cover price: $22.95 CDN./ $14.95 USA
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