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Comics Have Never Been So Much Fun

Monthly April 22, 2008:
CWN and the Grand Finale!
-

Flipped

Weekly February 4, 2008:
In Conclusion
- David ends his CWN run with Tezuka's MW from Vertical

Heaven Knows I'm Miserable Now

Monthly February 2, 2008:
Acting Like You Have Nothing to Prove
-

The Draft

Weekly February 2, 2008:
The Shoegazer Returns
- A New Year Begins, And Our Narrator Makes A Pledge

Judgment Day

Weekly January 30, 2008:
Tim's Reviews
-

Pull List

Weekly September 13, 2007:
Wizard World Chicago Loot, Part One
- Stykman, Empty Chamber, the Ztarian Saga, and yes, Little Bunny Foo Foo

Guttermouth

Weekly February 15, 2007:
I Come Not to Bury Nick Cage...
- But to mourn the death of my punchline

Chicks and Romance

Bi-weekly November 20, 2006:
The End
- Rich's last Chicks & Romance

Past the Front Racks

Weekly November 8, 2006:
Joann Sfar's Klezmer
- And a Front Racks Hiatus

Fathers' Day

Monthly October 4, 2006:
This Month's Guest: Dave Gibbons
- From the pages of Elephantmen!

Avoiding Extinction

Monthly September 18, 2006:
Back in Berlin
- or How I spent my summer

Comics and Crumpets

Monthly July 29, 2006:
KICKING UP A STORM
- An interview with David Lloyd

Grim Tidings

Bi-weekly June 19, 2006:
You Ain't Never Had A Friend Like Me.
- Graeme looks at Spidey's "genies"

That's News to Me

Weekly December 18, 2005:
Disappointed
- Sad news for fans of Busiek's CONAN, Stephen King, and others

From the Other Side

Monthly December 13, 2004:
JUSTICE UNPLUGGED 2 at last !!!
- By Fabrice Sapolsky & Xavier Fournier

12 Step Program

Monthly December 2, 2004:
THE TWELFTH AND FINAL STEP
- Say it ain't so, Dan.

Time of the Month

Weekly November 23, 2004:
The importance of editing
-

Mysteries and Conundrums

Monthly September 29, 2004:
Mystery and Conundrum indeed!
- Where in the world is Jason Pomerantz?

Border Patrol

Weekly September 13, 2004:
Hello and Goodbye and Hello Again
- Change is in the air at CWN and it smells sweet.

Quoth the Raiven

Weekly August 12, 2004:
The Rise of the Web Toon
- New Business Model or Dumb Luck?

Spin Doctors

Weekly July 30, 2004:
The Name Says it All...
- Spin Doctors revamp Boomerang.

Making It Up As I Go

Weekly July 27, 2004:
Bigger Isn't Always Better
-

Subsurface Communications

Weekly June 8, 2004:
Pre-emptive Strike: MoCCA Arts Festival
- Looking forward to the con, rather than looking back at it


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Monthly The Layer Method
Our top Secret time-saving technique for creating and merging balloons and tails in Illustrator.

Reviews

Thursday, September 2, 2010

The Silencers: Black Kiss

Amazon.com
Caught between superheroes and villains

Written by Fred Van Lente
Illustrated by Steve Ellis

Published by Moonstone
$14.95


Conventional wisdom has it that you can’t be successful making superhero books unless you’re Marvel or DC. I’m not really sure what that means, but I suppose it has something to do with how you define success. Still, any way you cut it, I think you’ve got to call Invincible successful, and Noble Causes has been around long enough to call it successful.

Certainly, if you limit success to financial measurements, the list is short, but if we’re talking artistic success, I think you’ll find that there are numerous examples of independent superhero books that aren’t just trying to mimic Marvel and DC, but are finding new things to say in the genre. And The Silencers is one of those.

The back cover of Moonstone’s collection of The Silencers mini-series calls it a “supercrime” book and that’s an appropriate descriptor. The story takes place solidly within the world of superheroes and supervillains, but the focus is on a group of superpowered mafia enforcers who’ve just been betrayed by their organization and now find themselves wanted by both heroes and villains. At least if the heroes catch them, they only go to jail.

Crime fiction isn’t one of my favorite genres. I’m not inclined to give much leeway to criminals and it’s rare that I find myself sympathizing with them. Mostly I want to see them get what’s coming to them. The exceptions are when the criminals are up against worse criminals, like in Ocean’s Eleven or Christopher E. Long’s comic The Easy Way. Or, of course, The Silencers. Van Lente and Ellis do an excellent job of portraying their cast of supervillains as sympathetic victims without ever trying to convince you that they’re really the good guys. Yes, the Silencers kind of deserve what they get by being in bed with the mob in the first place, but their betrayal is so heinous and absolute that you can’t help but cheer them on as they try to extricate themselves from it.

They’re interesting characters too, which also helps. Their powers may be standard (electrical power, energy beams, high tech armor, big guns, etc.), but Van Lente avoids making them clichés by giving them real personalities. Even Hairtrigger, who obviously started from the Punisher template, is a likable guy. His violent inclinations make him a loner, but you get the feeling that he really isn’t at heart and actually wants rather badly to fit in with the rest of the group. The other members of the team also have similar tweaks in their makeup that cause them to transcend the stereotypes they were based on.

Something else that I thought was really cool was how – at least in the early parts of the book – the superheroes in the Silencers’ world are people we know. Of course, we never get their names or even see them very well, but when a guy flies in with a blue suit, a red cape, and red underwear over his pants, we know exactly who it is. And when the shadow of a bald contortionist swings by and one of the characters notes, “He’s just clinging to that wall over there,” it reinforces the illusion that the story’s taking place in a familiar location.

Unfortunately, that illusion is shattered later on in the story when the heroes play a larger role and we get to see more of them. Then it becomes obvious that these aren’t Superman and Spider-Man, but parodies of them. I wish van Lente and Ellis had found a way to keep the heroes in the shadows and preserve the fantasy, but it’s a small point and doesn’t take away from the coolness of the Silencers themselves or our ability to cheer them on. It’s just that in an otherwise flawless book, that one imperfection glares.


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• Fox Bunny Funny
We all rebel in our own ways

• Klezmer: Tales of the Wild East
Books can be musical

• Graphic Classics: Volume One – Edgar Allan Poe
The Perfect Horror Anthology

• The Living and the Dead
Secrets are murder

• The Ticking
Ugly is in the eye of the beholder

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Cover
The Silencers: Black Kiss

Caught between superheroes and villains

Amazon.com


Cover
Fox Bunny Funny

We all rebel in our own ways

Amazon.com


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Icon A Comic-Con without the Captain
The Windy City sings the red-white-and-blues over the death of an illustrated legend

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Friday, February 8, 2008

• The End.
So long. Farewell. Auf Wiedersehen. Good night.

Wednesday, February 6, 2008

• Closing time
You don't have to go home...

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

• Oni resurrects letters columns
Resurrection series features letter-writing contest

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

• And... we're back
With Red 5 info

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

• Happy Thanksgiving!
From aka Comics and Comic World News

• Happy Birthday, COMICRAFT!
Lettering powerhouse and CWN sponsor turns 15

Monday, November 19, 2007

• Surrogates movie ready to start production
Bruce Willis to star

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