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About Me


Alex Carrillo
Age: 19
Location: Southern California
Ethnicity: Latin/Hispanic (I'm Mexican)
Religion: None

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G-mail/G-talk - Alexandorator [at] gmail.com


. Daft Punk - Alive 2007

. The Mars Volta - The Bedlam in Goliath

. DangerDoom - The Mouse and the Mask

. The Inkspots - The Millennium Collection

. Andrew Jackson Jihad - People Who Can Eat People Are The Luckiest People In The World

These are subject to change.







Frank Miller's Robocop
Frank Millar - Steven Grant - Juan Jose Ryp
Avatar Press

The original Robocop was fantastic. It was funny, violent, and it had some things to say about society (though not intelligently). The movie bordered on a thin line of acceptable ridiculousness, and was rather enjoyable cyberpunk flick. Robocop 2 and 3 on the other hand, were awful pieces of shit.

Everyone seems to place the blame on poor old Frank Miller for the dreadful sequels, but he says otherwise. According to him, Hollywood took his screenplay and made drastic changes. Producers of the film claimed that most Miller’s vision was “unfilmable”. Nevertheless, it left a bad taste in his mouth. Miller wasn’t too happy with the way Hollywood worked.

From 2003 to 2006 Avatar Press published nine issues of Frank Miller’s Robocop, now deemed to be the real Robocop sequels by nerds across the globe. The book follows Miller’s original Robocop 2 script, and bit off of Robocop 3 as well. He didn’t write it though. The adaptation was written by Steven Grant, but was looked over by Frank Miller.

With all that said, I don’t know if what Miller had written in his original script was worth all of the drama. The outlining story is practically the same. Detroit is still shitty, OCP still replaces the cops with a private military of criminals, and there is still a “Robocop 2” that Robocop has to battle.

I won’t tell you what differences there are between the movie and comic specifically. What I will say is that they make very little difference towards the end quality. Lewis still has no character, as well as everyone else in the book. Nothing is explored -- a generic and tired formula that begs to be ignored.

Grant does inject a bit of that satire found in the original film, and while it isn’t as good, he still manages to land a few on the bullseye. What is landing one hundred percent is the violence. Some of you could have fun with watching a woman’s burning, melting corpse slam against a wall.

The art was a tad difficult for me to review. While I can’t say it’s necessarily bad, it sure is “busy” (for lack of a better term). Too busy. Many times I’ve had to take a while to figure out what I was looking at. The detail work was somewhat impressive. In a way, it sort of channels that sense of chaos that comes from this universe’s version of Detroit. You can take it either way.

I can’t recommend this to everyone. I can’t even recommend it to most Robocop fans. You gain nothing from reading it. If you’re looking for something violent, or just want to rinse out some of what you saw in Robocop 2 and 3, then this could be for you. Everyone else should just…



Got a comment for one my comic reviews? Think it sucked? Found some errors? Check these links for its community blog post.

Older reviews:
Shooting War
Coward - Criminal Vol 1.
Frank Miller's Robocop
Fell: Feral City - Vol 1.
Wormwood: Gentleman Corpse - Vol 1.
Batman Death Mask
Scott Pilgrim's Precious Little Life - Vol. 1

Coming Soon:
Halo Graphic Novel
Stephen King's The Dark Tower: Gunslinger Reborn
Preacher Vol. 1
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Comic Review Double Whammy: Fell & Wormwood
vexed alex | 1:57 AM on 03.26.2009 8 comments


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Fell: Feral City - Vol 1.
Warren Ellis - Ben Templesmith
Image Comics

The Super hero genre is one that I don’t enthusiastically read anymore. It’s not that I hate super heroes or think I’m too old. I just don’t see much quality in the genre anymore. With every new retcon (retroactive continuity) I lose a large chunk of my ability to care. DC and Marvel believe they can make money off low quality work and rehashes (they aren‘t). This is why I turned to stuff like Warren Ellis Ben Templesmith’s noir, Fell, and I’m glad I did.

The book follows a super human detective named Richard Fell. And when I say superhuman I don’t mean that he has the power to duke it out with Superman. Fell just seems to solve most crimes with insane efficiency and ease in a town (Snowtown) that would dissuade Bruce Wayne from ever trying. There isn’t any background information (yet) to explain why he’s so good either. From what was told he’s just some young newbie detective.

Apart from a few (very, very few) questionable bits of dialogue, the writing is easily enjoyable and quite good. Fell is a likeable bad ass and his “everyday guy” appearance makes him unique in a medium inundated with capes and cowls. Some of the characters feel a bit “cartoony”. The Coroner specifically was really nutty. It did go well with the insanity of the town and how much no one in a authoritative position really cares, but there was something very “familiar“ about him -- like a mad scientist type. I guess you must have to be a bit insane to take delight in making a living out of investigating corpses.

It’s rare that you get an artist who’s so easily distinguishable and hasn‘t been in the comic book industry for very long. Ben Templesmith is one of these people. His gothic style is absolutely stunning and fresh.

Facial expressions, atmosphere, panel pacing -- it’s all brilliantly done by Ben Templesmith‘s work.
I rarely say this, but this book is worth the $15 on the art alone. I absolutely loved it. It certainly compliments Warren Ellis‘ writing impeccably.

It isn’t the most profound graphic novel out there out there but it’s a fun read. It’s further proof that this medium can do great outside of stuff like X-Men. Head out to your local comic book distributor and pick a copy up. I recommend it!

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Wormwood: Gentleman Corpse - Vol 1.
Templesmith
IDW

It didn’t take very long for me to become a diehard Ben Templesmith fan. His art is some of the most incredible and distinguishable work I have ever seen in the industry. I was admittedly skeptical when I heard Templesmith had illustrated and written an entire book himself, so is he a jack of all trades? Did he write something worth reading, or does this guy need to go back to the drawing board -- literally!

In the world of fantasy fiction we’ve got large number of books that deal with demonic monsters hell bent on robbing us of our planet and freedom. How many movies, video games, and books have you read in which that‘s the basic idea? It’s a cliché indeed, ladies and gentlemen.

I should be telling you to avoid this book since the concept is so derivative it fed my skepticism, but I won’t. I can’t. The difference between those other books and Wormwood is that they don’t have an uppity robotic sidekick, a horny leprechaun who is attracted to the robot, demon strippers, a parasite disguised as an “enlargement” pill, and a hilarious ending to what was thought to be an epic fight scene. Wormwood specifically is a “worm” that has the ability to telekinetically possess corpses. He also loves beer and is infatuated with strippers.

In this trade, the book starts you off with the “taster” to introduce some of the characters and give you a basic idea of what you’re getting yourself into. Templesmith then steamrolls into a four part story that has Wormwood helping a ghost detective solve murders involving demon parasites and exploding stomachs.

This book is a comedy first above anything, and Templesmith nails it. Charming characters and all, I couldn’t keep the smile off my face. Categorically, most of it is slapstick humor but he does get some nice little quips in there. It’s an absolute joy, but don‘t expect much in the way of “smart comedy“.

As always, Templesmith’s art is what really shines. Although dark, dirty, and minimalist, it sits in with the story perfectly just like it did with Warren Ellis’ serious writing on Fell. The art is also much more improved since Fell. He takes advantage of his own gothic style with that Tim Burton approach. It certainly proves how versatile his work is.

I have given you a multitude of reasons to make a decision and I hope you make the right one. Go get yourself a copy!

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[Sidenote]

I'd like to take this moment to point over to my sidebar. See that? Those are other comic reviews. I write them sporadically so don't expect a solid date, but check every once in a while. If you have any comments, just check the links bellow the review. You can correct me. I appreciate feedback. I need it.

My last comic review will always appear on my sidebar. That's why Fell is currently up there even though I have this blog written up.



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7 comments | showing # 1 to 7
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Cowboy TTop's Avatar - Comment posted on 03/26/2009 06:13
Cowboy TTop
Checking out Fell at the moment.

Wormwood, I'll have to hunt for.
RonBurgandy2010's Avatar - Comment posted on 03/26/2009 06:29
RonBurgandy2010
Great, now I have to spend more money. Thanks asshole ;)
Alasdair Duncan's Avatar - Comment posted on 03/26/2009 07:51
Alasdair Duncan
Fell is great; I'll buy anything Warren Ellis writes and I'll get anything that Ben Templesmith will illustrate. So Fell is a match made in heaven. I just wish Warren Ellis would stick to a project and keep writing for it, instead of going off and doing other things. I want more Planetary and more Desolation Jones.

Have you checked out Welcome To Hoxford and Singularity 7? They're titles written and illustrated by Ben Templesmith and are pretty damm cool.
MiOdd's Avatar - Comment posted on 03/26/2009 08:10
MiOdd
Good to know. I actually randomly stumbled upon Wormwood last week and ordered a copy without knowing anything about it or the artist. Haha. Glad to know I made the right decision, can't wait for it to arrive.
Jonathan Holmes's Avatar - Comment posted on 03/26/2009 19:10
Jonathan Holmes
Sometimes I love Templesmith, sometimes his stuff comes off like watered down Ashly Wood.

That said, I've loved ever issue of Wormwood I've read yet, which I'm pretty sure is all of them. It's the writing that really makes it great, though the art certainly doesn't hurt.
Alasdair Duncan's Avatar - Comment posted on 03/27/2009 09:25
Alasdair Duncan
On a side note, everyone needs to read The Chronicles Of Wormwood by Garth Ennis. It's fucking hilarious. Nothing to do with Templesmith's character, but brilliant all the same.
The GHost's Avatar - Comment posted on 03/27/2009 18:07
The GHost
Oh man, those books are both aces in my opinion. Fell especially grabs me in a way that makes me both uncomfortable and happy :)
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