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Johnny Bullet
Marvel Comics
Bad Night Starts New Criminal Story Arc
By Henry Chamberlain

August 26, 2008 - 11:54

Publisher(s): Marvel Comics
Writer(s): Ed Brubaker
Penciller(s): Sean Phillips
Inker(s): Sean Phillips
Colourist(s): Val Staples
Letterer(s): Sean Phillips
Cover Artist(s): Sean Phillips
$3.50 US


Bad_Night_Cover.jpg
"Bad Night" begins the next story arc in the Brubaker/Phillips series, Criminal from the Marvel Comics Icon line. The focus this time is Jacob, the cartoonist of his own noir comic, "Frank Kafka, Private Eye." So, you've got it all here: a stand-in for the creators of Criminal and a comic within a comic. And, of course, that smooth prose like this example: "The city felt different to me when I got out. And even now, it still does. They're the same streets I've known my whole life...the same noise, the same junkies and bums and lunatics...but it's like I see them from a different perspective. One that I'm not sure I understand...an invisible view. From the other side of the vanishing points."

What happens when a guy who creates crime comics is living the life of a crime comic? That's exactly what happens when Jacob can't sleep and decides to go get some coffee at  his local greasy spoon. Little does he know that he's just stepped into the last place he should be that night.

Bad_Night_Panels.jpg
From the other side of the vanishing points.



The character of Jacob is finely etched: a middle-aged hipster, long sideburns, slouched and ready for whatever happens next. You wince when he gets caught up in a fight between a thug and his girlfriend in the diner. You instantly know that he's over his head. When, later on, he finds himself in bed with the same girl, you really know he's over his head. And so the ingredients emerge for another great crime story.

Ed Brubaker points out in the extras pages to this series that it's word of mouth that plays such an important role in keeping a  new title alive and thriving in the comic book shops. Eisner awards definitely help to acknowledge the quality but your voice, as the reader and buyer, is the final word. So, if you've already discovered the quality behind Criminal and want to make sure it keeps its place on the shelves, make sure to let your retailer know!

As a final note: for a series with its fair share of easter eggs, take a closer look at the cover of this latest issue. There's a movie marquee lost among the glare and smoke. It reads: "Sleeper." That's another Brubaker book to check out. If you haven't heard of it, talk to your retailer about that too.  Everyone will be up to speed when the movie, starring Tom Cruise, comes out in 2010.

  


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