Sunday, November 23, 2008

Earth X - Dystopian Marvel Sensation

So, months ago I bought a trade paperback copy of Earth X. I bought this because it came highly recommended from Nick, whose taste I trust to yield interesting things. He had mentioned it to me some time ago, but I remember the oddest things at times, and so asked after it as well as Punisher Kills The Marvel Universe at the little comic shop in downtown Atown, balked momentarily at the price ($30), and bought it as well as PKTMU anyway.

I read PKTMU quickly (it is, regrettably, a single issue) and didn't get into Earth X. It looked long, and I was a few weeks away from moving out to Austin, which meant I had other things to be doing.

I finally pulled out Earth X on Thursday night and started reading. I didn't stop until I was more than halfway through, staying up far later than I had intended to. Which is unsurprising, really, since I am easily engrossed by reading and have been since I was rather young. I picked it up almost immediately after waking up, and finished before I had to go to work.

It's phenomenal. Comparison's have been drawn between (and Earth X was done in part because of the success of) DC's Kingdom Come and Earth X, mostly because both take a large scale view of the universe they take place in, star the big stars of their particular license, deconstruct the idea of super heroes, and are apocalyptic. I liked Kingdom Come quite a bit, but in the end, I'm much more familiar with the Marvel side of comics than the DC side, which tips the scales in the favor of EX. I ended up getting the jokes more often (poor Bucky).

The way it was done also leans more to my tastes than Kingdom Come. KC was much more visually oriented. The art style was gorgeous photo-realism and there were lots of splash pages (it is a very pretty book). EX is really heavy on dialogue (with lots of text-only interludes between 'issues') and the images almost feel cramped at times with how small they are, like everything is being squeezed in, but in a way that ups the intensity of the read (for me, anyway). As a reader, I squirmed my way through the panels along with the desperate characters as the story unfolded. EX also benefited from a cast of characters who were more human beings and less gods incarnate, the way that the DC flagship characters tend to be. Or maybe the things that keep the Marvel characters awake at night are things that make more sense to me as things to stay awake at night over.

Anyway, EX does an excellent job of stringing multiple story threads together into a coherent tapestry with enough creativity and thoughtful (Fact or Crap) changes to make it all hang together without violating one's sense of the essential characteristics of the involved characters (unless one is one of those crazy canon continuity types who can't stand being so frivolous with the carefully constructed backstories of so many characters). The development of the plot through dialogue between the main viewpoint character and his interlocutor is well-handled, and the plot devices don't end up feeling forced. It's a great read and well worth your time. If you don't know much about the Marvel mythos as a whole, some stuff will be a bit unclear to you, but the essentials are all in EX, so readers able to juggle a few things at once without the background will do fine anyway. Some have complained about the complexity of EX, and it is a complex plot at times with a few sharp turns here and there, but that's part of what makes it a satisfying read. And Joss Whedon liked it, too.


Dusting Off Old Ambitions

My mother sent me a package containing sundry items from my past recently, which I opened about an hour ago.

Some things made me sad, others made me laugh, and some gave me pause.

In particular, something that caught my eye and stopped me was a paper object, with a small photograph of my second grade self (I think, the shirt was from that era) and some small blurbs about myself. I wish I had a scanner at the moment.

The blurbs were as follows:

"All About Me

By Ben Crane

I like to: watch t.v.

I like to eat: chocolate pudding

One of my favorite books is: Dear Daddy

If I could go anywhere in the world, I would go to: Florida

When I grow up, I would like to be: a FBI guy"

I don't remember the book. Looking around online confirms the timeline I imagined for the time of the creation of this artifact, since it seems to concern itself with lost family members, and my parents had gotten divorced at some point just prior to my beginning the second grade.

Telling, in my opinion, are the last two things. I'm not so sure about Florida anymore (Nick doesn't speak well of it), but I think I'd like to give it a try sometime. Interesting to me is whether I wrote this before or after I had visited Florida (a trip which I remember mostly as a time in my life when I was an awful child to my mother and everyone around me, but also enjoyed in some aspects). I don't remember exactly when that trip happened. Thankfully, I remember the 'new episode' of Star Trek: TNG that aired while I was in Florida. Wikipedia informs me that this episode aired on April 26, 1993 (oh so close to a Sublime song). I believe this would place me at the end of the second grade when I visited Florida. It seems likely that I wrote Florida as a response after having been there, but I can't say for sure.

Anyway, of most note, however, is the last answer I gave (duh, right?). I had forgotten about that, and honestly, I'm kind of surprised that at that age I was interested in doing that (blame The X-Files, my mom was a loyal viewer at the time, and it was a great show). Turns out I'm not particularly qualified at the moment. But maybe it's something I can work toward. I'll need at least a master's degree in one the fields they like, and focusing on foreign affairs a bit more in my studies would probably help.

Regardless, looking over other old stuff from school has reminded me that once I was earmarked as a high achiever. I have most definitely fallen off the 'fast track' since then. I think I'd like to get back on it.


Saturday, November 22, 2008

After one aborted attempt, I have now decided to make a more serious effort at this 'other blog site'. This time, it's personal!

A recent post from my other blog:

 I am flying out to Washington DC on November 26th. After a brief stint in Delaware, I will bus my way to DC on Saturday and spend a few days out there before flying back to Austin that Wednesday.

Spur of the moment, I suppose. I miss seeing some folks out there, and my roommate has been gone for about a week already and is likely to stay out in Maryland with his family for the holiday, so rather than spending it all by my lonesome, I decided to have a little adventure.


I'm thinking that I'll be dual-posting for awhile, until I get lazy enough to start using this full-time.