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Batman: Legacy (Robin) (Nightwing) (Catwoman) (DC Comics)

Alan Grant, Doug Moench, Chuck Dixon

Batman: Legacy (Robin) (Nightwing) (Catwoman) (DC Comics) Alan Grant, Doug Moench, Chuck Dixon List Price: $17.95
By: DC Comics
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 3 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

Wrong book. 4 out of 5 stars.
17 of 17 people found this review helpful.

The advertised book is "Batman: Legacy." However, the synopsis, and both customer reviews, are for an earlier graphic novel, entitled "Batman: Contagion." The aforementioned plague is released, confronted and eventually cured in "Contagion" and in "Legacy" the source is traced.

Not as choppy as Contagion but still has its flaws 4 out of 5 stars.
4 of 4 people found this review helpful.

I'll try to review this without spoiling too much. This is basically the sequel to the Contagion Storyline. Apparently the cure found by Azrael in Contagion only makes the virus dormant and eventually mutates it into an even more deadly strain. The villain(I'm sure by looking at the cover you know who it is) is looking to spread even more viruses around the world including Gotham City. It's up to Batman, Nightwing, and Robin(Huntress steps in towards the end)to travel around the world and stop the bad guys from releasing the upgraded virus. The good thing about this book is that the story does not constantly shift from one subplot to another like Contagion. However it does have its weaknesses. After rereading it several times I still can't figure out Catwoman's role in the story. Basically she was captured and held at the villain's stronghold where he was planning his attacks. She escapes only to never be seen again in the story. Not only that, DC Comics makes it even stranger by not printing the whole story. Instead they print a couple pictures and some captions in an attempt to summarize it. Catwoman's appearance had no relevance at all. The only reason I can think why they put her in the story at the beginning was to show us the "wheel of plagues." But any reader would have figured out how the viruses were created because the wheel was reintroduced later on in the story. Overall it was still a good read. Maybe I read into it too much but I think Chuck Dixon was already teasing a Nightwing/Huntress love story. At one point she says to Nightwing: "Boys and their toys." Earlier on Nightwing tells Robin that he and Huntress are good at the "sneaky" stuff. I'm sure Dixon would have done a much better job if he was writing the Nightwing/Huntress story instead of Devin. This book is worth picking up if you can manage to find a copy. I managed to get one on Ebay for just $15. They should reprint this book considering they decided to the same to Contagion.

Editorial Review:

A deadly plague has been loosed upon Gotham City, forcing Gotham's wealthiest citizens to take refuge in a guilding ghetto of their own design, unaware that money is no protection from the virus. Now it's up to Batman and Robin to find a cure for the mysterious virus--with the help of their unlikely allies, Catwoman and Azrael. And when the virus returns in mutated form, Batman and his allies must race across the globe to find its source--and a cure. Graphic novel format.

Fantastic Four Visionaries - George Perez, Vol. 2

Len Wein, Roger Stern, George Perez, Marv Wolfman, Doug Moench, Mark Gruenwald, Ralph Macchio, Joe Sinnott, Chic Stone, John D'Agostino, Mike Esposito, Gene Day

Fantastic Four Visionaries - George Perez, Vol. 2 Len Wein, Roger Stern, George Perez, Marv Wolfman, Doug Moench, Mark Gruenwald, Ralph Macchio, Joe Sinnott, Chic Stone, John D'Agostino, Mike Esposito, Gene Day Amazon Price: $15.59
List Price: $19.99
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By: Marvel Comics
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 1 Average rating: 1.0 of 5

Marvel is really reaching with this one 1 out of 5 stars.
7 of 12 people found this review helpful.

Marvel adds another misleading entry to their series of Visionaries trades with FANTASTIC FOUR VISIONARIES: GEORGE PEREZ VOLUME 2. Once again focusing solely on an artist, instead of a writer/artist, they trumpet the work of George Perez, apparently claiming that he, a fresh face at Marvel at the time, was a "visionary" who made these FF stories worthwhile... as if the writers had nothing to do with it. Don't get me wrong, I am a big George Perez fan, but what did he really accomplish artistically with these characters that had not already been done by Jack Kirby? Labeling Perez' work on the FF as visionary, especially when it was from so early in his career, is ludicrous.

Anyway, I gave Volume 1 a 2-star review, due to the above problems, along with the fact that stories were often incomplete due to Perez rotating with other artists. Volume 2 gets the dreaded 1-star review due to more of the same, plus some worse: the fact that it contains some non-Perez work - not to provide complete stories, but to bulk up the page count. It seems that Marvel didn't have enough FF work from him to make it as big as volume 1, so they included some additional random bits from the Annuals. This is just stupid... really, this trade paperback defies logic. I mean, Volume 1 at the least could claim to be exclusively the work of George Perez, but Volume 2 can't even claim that. So what we have here is a compilation with no point whatsoever.

But let's get to the stories. This volume includes FF #187 - 188, 191 - 192, and Annuals 14-15; Marvel Two-In-One #60; and Adventures Of The Thing #3. They feature the Molecule Man, Agatha Harkness and Salem's Seven, those nasty Skrulls, the Texas Twister, the Impossible Man, the return of the Terrible Trio, and living statues of Diablo, Blastarr, and Dr. Doom. So there are some fun stories here, and the gaps aren't as obvious as in Volume 1; however, I have too many problems with this book to give it a passing review. This is not a bashing of George Perez, but of Marvel for releasing such a weak trade collection.

Editorial Review:

One of the FF's top talent gives Mr. Fantastic a really new look... as the Molecule Man! Once the team deals with this ultimate infiltration, they still must face sorcery, Skrulls and super-powered statues! Plus: the power of Franklin Richards! Guest-starring the Texas Twister and the Impossible Man! Collects Fantastic Four #187-188, 191-192, Fantastic Four Annual #14-15, Marvel Two-In-One #60, Adventures of the Thing #3.

James Bond 007: Serpent's Tooth [Book 2]

Paul Gulacy, Doug Moench

James Bond 007: Serpent's Tooth [Book 2] Paul Gulacy, Doug Moench List Price: $15.95
By: Dark Horse Comics
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Editorial Review:

Stolen nuclear weapons, kidnapped scientists, and sightings of flying saucers and vampires; seemingly unrelated incidents, but if there's a connection James Bond will find it!

On the trail of the reptilian Indigo, Agent 007 stumbles on an insidious plot involving evolution, Genesis, and the possibility of a new paradise -- of course, a paradise under Indigo's rule!

Batman & Dracula: Red Rain

Doug Moench, Kelly Jones, Malcolm Jones, Eric Van Lustbader

Batman & Dracula: Red Rain Doug Moench, Kelly Jones, Malcolm Jones, Eric Van Lustbader List Price: $9.99
By: DC Comics
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 16 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

Dark Batman tale thrills, but Dracula deserves better 3 out of 5 stars.
2 of 2 people found this review helpful.

"Batman & Dracula: Red Rain" offers a unique take on the Caped Crusader. More Dark Knight than Adam West camp, this tale plops Bruce Wayne into an apocalyptic Gotham (even more so than usual), as the very sky weeps tears of blood.

Wayne's dreams are tortured by haunting images of beautiful-yet-doomed women, but even more disturbing are the mysterious scars on his back when he awakens. Soon, as the title subtly hints, Batman is matching fists (and to a lesser extent, wits) with good old Dracula himself.

This is a very violent take on the Batman saga, with more emphasis spent on blood and carnage than Batman's detective skills. Several panes offer horrifying visions of Batman's world, and it's safe to say that this is a story for older Batman fanatics.

While the look of this pulp is fantastic, the story lacks a bit of heft. After all, we're talking about the leading comic hero taking on one of the leading villains in Western Civilization . . . and yet Dracula comes across as a rather pedestrian nasty than world-class. There's also an unsatisfying clank of deus ex machina in Batman's climactic fight against the Old Count Dracul, and is not worthy of either our hero or our villain.

Still, "Batman versus Dracula" is an entertaining, if brief tale, and is sure to thrill fans of Batman to their core. Worth a read, but not worthy of the pantheon of great Batman tales.

Editorial Review:

Graphic novel fans won't be able to resist as Dracula comes to make Gotham City his dark dominion, first preying on the homeless and then amassing an army to take on the good citizens of Gotham. Batman must forge an alliance with the undead to defeat this unholy foe in a duel that stretches beyond the boundaries of death.

Batman: Dark Joker the Wild

Doug Moench, Kelly Jones

Batman: Dark Joker the Wild Doug Moench, Kelly Jones List Price: $9.95
By: Dc Comics
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 4 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

Dark Joker: The Wild never ceases to entertain. 4 out of 5 stars.
4 of 6 people found this review helpful.

Dark Joker: The Wild features the unstoppable team of Doug Moench, Kelley Jones, and John Beatty. Da Boyz weave a tale of an Elseworlds reality in which the Joker is a powerful sorcerer,the Bat-Man is a demonic brute, and the two are on an inevitable collision course with each other. We also get to see a midieval Jim Gordon as the mayor of a small village terrorized by the Dark Joker. I recommend this graphic novel; it entertains you all the way. To my knowledge, this is also the first project on which Moench, Jones, and Beatty worked together on. That's another reason to pick it up.

A Twisted Fantasy Story Well Worth The Read 4 out of 5 stars.
2 of 2 people found this review helpful.

Simply put, Elseworlds graphic novels take familiar comic book characters and place them in altered realities. Here, we have Batman and his diabolical enemy, The Joker, in "The Wild". The Wild is a place of sorcery and mystical legends. The "Dark Joker" is a maniacal wizard set out to obtain an ancient power and reign in all of his madness over the people. The "Bat-man" is a winged creature-like humanoid that, through his bloodline, is destined to protect The Wild from the Joker and his evil army of barbaric followers. And though the line between good and evil can at times be blurred, these foes are determined to do what they've come to accomplish.

Elseworlds comics are obviously a lot of fun, as pretty much every rule is thrown out the window and the only limit is the writer's and artist's imagination. While I don't believe Batman: Dark Joker - The Wild is even as good as most normal Batman vs Joker stories set in the classic Gotham City, I do believe that it stands well on its own as quite an interesting piece of work. It takes everything we love about the two characters and warps it into a gruesome yet often times poetic story. Through both the writing and the artwork, there seems to be an underlying beauty beneath the brutality. It's not extremely hard to follow, but the graphic violence and dark themes are certainly unsuitable for children. And that's one thing that really drives it home. No mercy. This is a pure, to-the-core battle between two iconic characters in a world full of a strange yet engaging atmosphere. All in all, it's definitely worth a purchase for any true fan of Batman and/or the Joker.

Batman: Hong Kong

Doug Moench

Batman: Hong Kong Doug Moench Amazon Price: $14.36
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 5 Average rating: 2.5 of 5

Too Bad Really... 1 out of 5 stars.
4 of 7 people found this review helpful.

I really don't know where to start on how bad this book is. It feels slapped together, by both writer and artist. If I ever see Doug Moench's name on another Batman book I won't walk, run, I'll flee from it. Moench has made a mockery of everything that Batman is supposed to be. There is no Bruce Wayne, and the Batman is nothing more than a Robin who's lost his feathers. The art, though stunning on the cover, is mismatched throughout the book. Some panels are painted, while others are penciled and colored differently. In one instance, a Hong Kong cop informs his police commissioner a white limo has arrived--and it's black! There's also the typical overreaction of clothes, people, and basically everything we come to expect from Asian artists in this genre. I'm embarrassed for everyone involved...too bad really.

Good book, but not quite as good as hoped... 4 out of 5 stars.
3 of 4 people found this review helpful.

When I first saw that Tony Wong was going to do a Batman comic, I just about flipped. I love his artwork, I love his storytelling abilities. He doesn't write this one but someone that's probably just as good does: Doug Moench. So then I read the book and I feel a bit let down. The artwork is of course gorgeous but, the storyline does feel thin. I realize that the point to this joint project was to bring a Hong Kong feel to Batman, to try something new. We'd already seen Kia Asamiya on Batman: Child of Dreams, already seen Katsuhiro Ohtomo on Batman: Black and White and of course already seen just about every other capable American artist on Batman...hell we'd seen Jim Lee do Batman so it was only natural that we'd get to see Tony Wong on a Batman comic. With the popularity of Hong Kong comics and films on the uprise, it was a definite step in the right direction. The storyline has been explained above so I won't go into it. Don't get me wrong, it was a good read but the dialogue feels like a bare bones translation of a Hong Kong comic and it's not even translated. The action flowed oh so well but, the dialogue was really stilted. The Editorial review by one of the staff members of this page said that it felt like a Jackie Chan or Jet Li flick and that's exactly right. Not too heavy on plot but good on the action. All in all, the artwork was great, the actual plot line was original but the dialogue was kinda corny in some parts and just ok in others. I expected better from Doug Moench but hey, everyone has their ups and downs.

-Alex Keefe

Shang-Chi: The Hellfire Apocalypse (Shang-Chi: Master of Kung Fu)

Doug Moench

Shang-Chi: The Hellfire Apocalypse (Shang-Chi: Master of Kung Fu) Doug Moench List Price: $14.99
By: Marvel Entertainment Group
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 4 Average rating: 3.0 of 5

You really can't go home again 2 out of 5 stars.
10 of 12 people found this review helpful.

When I became a certified comics fan in the late 70s, there were two comics outside of the "mainstream" superhero fare that I loved. One was Howard the Duck, a satirical comic about politics and society. The other was a comic about family, albeit one in which the father was the ultimate evil and the son had been raised to be the perfect assassin, who then rebelled against his father. Of course, Master of Kung Fu also had the big action sequences as well as secret service intrigue as well, but I suspect it was that idea of the son not exactly wanting to follow in his father's footsteps that a psychiatrist would have a field day with if I ever found myself on the couch.

Marvel's recent successes on the movie screen along with the burgeoning market for graphic novels has them looking to the past for their future. They also, obviously, believe that since the audience that grew up on these comics are older, that such audience also wants their return to be "mature" as well, and to that end Marvel has a new line of comics called "MAX" to distinguish comics with "mature" themes. I've only read two of the MAX titles--the original creators returning to my favorite books, Howard the Duck and Master of Kung Fu, and I'm starting to think ol' Tom Wolfe was right, and you can't go home again.

It's not that Master of Kung Fu (subtitled "The Hellfire Apocalypse") isn't well done. Moench and Gulacy are a wonderful team and the intervening years have not diminished their ability to portray in flat panels the fluidity and excitement of a martial arts epic. But something is missing, and I think it's the cliffhangers and surprise of the monthly comic. Collected together in this graphic novel, the monthly wait to see just how Shang-Chi, Weiko Lu, Clive Reston and Black Jack Tarr were going to get out of this dire calamity is gone. But even then, it wasn't that cast, nor Fu Manchu, that drew me to the comic, but the ancilliary ideas, just as it isn't James Bond or Blofield that brings you back to 007, but the gadgets. "The Hellfire Apocalypse," although it tries hard, is warmed over kung fu--there's nothing in this book that we haven't seen time and time again since Moench and Gulacy took their leave of us 20 years ago.

It makes me wary to re-read any of those 1970s/1980s originals, to see if my memory has failed me and that those comics weren't as great as I remember.

Editorial Review:

Comics pre-eminent star of martial arts action -- Shang-Chi, Master of Kung Fu -- is back. If Moench and Gully's seminal Master of Kung Fu successfully tapped into the Bruce Lee kung fu craze and popular James Bond spy flicks, then their revamped MOKF will appeal to the folks who are packing the seats for the latest Jet Li flick, or "Mission Impossible" sequel.

Six From Sirius

Doug Moench, Paul Gulacy

Six From Sirius Doug Moench, Paul Gulacy Amazon Price: $16.19
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 1 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

Great interstellar adventure 4 out of 5 stars.
0 of 0 people found this review helpful.

This book compiles the mini-series that Epic Comics distributed in the late 1980s. It was an exciting time, and Epic led the way, not just with its self-titled flagship magazine.

The "six" represent a super-secret trouble shooting team, the kind with lots of trouble and lots of shooting. This time, their mission seems straightforward enough: free the lovely ambassador from the impenetrable prison in time to save the peace negotiations. The mission starts going off the rails when the ambassador doesn't want to be saved. Every step after that one reverses all that went before, as each level of subterfuge peels back to reveal another.

You'll find a bit more character complexity here than in traditional superhero stories, but don't come looking for Jane Austen. Crisp artwork carries the story along well - not an innovative look, but well executed and well printed in my 1988 edition. Back then, comics for grownups were still finding themselves, and this contributed nicely to that growing body of work. That was then, though. Standards have risen since then, in many directions. "Six" did well for its time and still holds rewards for today's reader - but the times moved on.

-- wiredweird

Editorial Review:

Created in 1984, Six From Sirius featured the incredible pairing of writer/creator Doug Moench and artist/creator Paul Gulacy! The pair - best known for their collaborative run on Marvel Comics' The Master of Kung Fu, among other comic classics - created the series for Marvel's Epic imprint back in the mid-80s. The FULL COLOR series, featuring the intergalactic adventures of a team of agents, combined action, intrigue and suspense, all against the backdrop of that final frontier - space!

Wolverine: Doombringer

Doug Moench

Wolverine: Doombringer Doug Moench List Price: $5.99
By: Marvel Entertainment Group
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 2 Average rating: 3.5 of 5

Great untold story from Wolverine's Past 4 out of 5 stars.
4 of 4 people found this review helpful.

Doug Moench returned to Marvel in 1997, to write two limited series on Moon Knight, a character he created in the late 70's, and this special story on Wolverine. This is the best Wolverine story in years. It deals with Logan trying to uncover the mystery of an ancient Japaneese story called the Doombringer, which now threatens to destroy modren civilization. Great insight into the culture of the Far East makes this a thought-provoking and great book. Doug Moench is a great writer.

Pretty Good, but.... 3 out of 5 stars.
0 of 1 people found this review helpful.

In this story, Logan fights off an ancient demon. The story started off good, but it turns out to be just another Wolverine story. Still a good buy if you enjoy Wolverine stories.

Lords of the Ultra-Realm special

Doug Moench

Lords of the Ultra-Realm special Doug Moench By: DC Comics
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