Archive for the ‘Conan (2019)’ Category

REVIEW: Savage Sword – A Weak Link in Marvel’s Lineup?

By TROY CHRISMAN – Paint Monk’s Library Writer

The Savage Sword of Conan was a revelation to me as a young reader. I had read a few issues of Marvel’s monthly full color Conan the Barbarian and had seen Mego’s version of the Cimmerian at the store in action figure form.

But Savage Sword was a new world. Here we were presented with a more mature, gritty version of the barbarian. This was a black-and-white title that rested in the same magazine rack as Creepy, Eerie and Tomb of Dracula, nestled close to the car magazines and even the adult content!

It was almost a forbidden fruit. The stories within were violent but also highly nuanced, with plot twists and dark dealings. Much more was crammed into those beautiful pages of charcoal-like drawings than what you could find in the monthly color comic.

I picked up as many copies as I could. A subscription was far too ambitious for a young kid those days, but any time I would bike to the local 7-11 or hike to the downtown book store, I would try to scrounge enough change to pick up a copy. I still own quite the collection of those titles.

With Marvel adding Conan once again to its family in 2019, I was excited to hear about a new monthly title, but delighted and intrigued with the resurrection of Savage Sword! I have reviewed classic Savage Sword titles for Paint Monk’s Library, but this is a way for me to hop into this new title and take ownership of not only reviewing the title, but helping in a small way to keep it afloat. I am diving in, for better or worse, and riding the series out as far as it and a certain northern barbarian can take us.

Please note that the last modern comic series I read was Kiss: Psycho Circus from Image. Being a huge fan of the band, I tried the series out and loved the story and artwork. As a reader, be aware that I am no expert on what artists or which writers produce different titles. The creative team of Gerry Duggan, Ron Garney, Richard Isanove nnd Travis Lanham are simply names to me. They’re also names I will likely seek out if Savage Sword lives up to expectations.


  A Pirates of the Caribbean comic? Nope, it’s Conan’s fevered
hallucination of the pirates in SSOC #1.

Based on the first issue of this title, it needs work.

Conan begins this run aboard a ship of pirates, a familiar setting for fans of any of the barbarian’s former comics and even the original manuscripts of his creator Robert E. Howard. The odds are stacked against him and there is dark sorcery and a plan of escape afoot. The theme works and the violence is thirst quenching, even more so for fans of the barbarian at his most desperate and threatened. 

Sadly, though, the plot falls thin. How well does this creative team know Howard’s Conan? A ship captain is portrayed carrying a black powder pistol.  At one point, Conan remarks that his “grandmother” is stronger than a fellow captive. This is not the Conan we knew from the 1970s-1990s or from Robert E. Howard’s pen. 

In another sequence, we see the Cimmerian embracing a treasure chest, which dumps out a load of sand in exchange for a mind-blast, which presents an illusory map to our Cimmerian. Those who know Conan would expect the chest to be dropped with a shout of “BY CROM! More vile sorcery!” Not here. Conan seems all too eager to embrace this. 


Dialogue is not the strong point of Savage Sword of Conan #1.
 

Robert E. Howard was a brilliant storyteller in that he not only took a subject from point A to point B, but he also deftly wove in characters C and D before throwing them all into a frenzied finish. The original Savage Sword had those subplots, along with the artwork to capture the scene and propel the story forward at breakneck pace.

This new version has the artwork, but the story is flimsy. The plot twist is given away far too early and never fully fleshed out. The dialog is sparse – even juvenile at times. The bottom line is there aren’t enough words to go with the images. The conflict is wrapped up far too tidily, even though the ending sets readers up for a promise of a continuing story thread.

Let’s hope the next chapters include more story. It would be a shame to see this series get sucked into Dark Horse Comics downfall with the Cimmerian – far too much art and not enough words or story.

The issue also includes part one of a Scott Oden 12-part novella from the new Perilous Worlds publishing house. I will review the title in one story, rather than chapter by chapter. Despite the glaring flaws of this first issue, Oden’s novel was a huge highlight. It is worth the price of the issue by itself. 

On a scale of 1-10, I would rate this lackluster premiere a 6. Hopefully it gets better as the creative team dives deeper into the characters. 

REVIEW: Cimmerians Are Best At Telling Their Own Tales

By BOB FREEMAN – Paint Monk’s Library Writer

I count myself a Jason Aaron fan. In particular, I have enjoyed large parts of his more than six years on Thor and the two year stint on Doctor Strange. As such, when I learned Aaron was tapped to lead the relaunch of Conan at Marvel, I was unabashedly thrilled, and proclaimed as such anywhere and everywhere I could be heard.

Jason Aaron was exactly what Marvel’s Conan needed, short of drawing Roy Thomas back into the fold. Or so I thought.

Look, I get it. Robert E. Howard is a tough act to emulate. Other than the aforementioned Roy Thomas, who has successfully navigated the character? Tim Truman comes to mind. His runs, as both an artist and writer at Dark Horse were magnificent. Kurt Busiek did all right, as did Joe Linsdale, but there were a lot of talented writers who mishandled the Cimmerian.

Tim Truman’s “Wolves Beyond the Border” was an example of one of Conan’s finest contemporary tales.

I still think Jason Aaron has the potential to be a great Conan author, but three issues in, I’m just not feeling it. He does a fine job of name-dropping all the right Hyborian landmarks, faiths and cultures, and the plot thus far is serviceable enough, but trying to put my finger on it, ultimately it is the dialogue and prose that is leaving me flat.

It’s too modern. It’s too wink-wink, nudge-nudge.

Reading reviews of the comic, the trend I think is that young people are digging it. They like the art and the writing style. It suits them. A part of me thinks, maybe I’m just getting long-in-the-tooth? Maybe I’ve outgrown comics?

But no, that can’t be it. Truman and Giorello’s “Wolves Beyond the Border” wrapped in March 2016 and I would rate it as one of the finest runs featuring Conan throughout the Cimmerian’s storied history. The trade paperback is available on Amazon for around $30 and well worth the purchase.

I believe there’s a disconnect that can only be rectified by a restructuring of the industry. There is a rot that has set in and it’s well past time that someone cut away the disease so that true healing can begin.

Review : Conan the Barbarian (2019) #3

A seventeen year old Conan finds himself in Red Tree Hill, a small mining community, where the greatest crime a man can commit is to steal gold. Having been captured during an aborted theft, Conan is led to Red Tree to be hung until near death, then fed to hungry dogs.

The Cimmerian’s impressive bulk puts too much strain on the ancient hanging tree and the branch breaks. Conan fends off the city guard and topples the Red Tree before the mob descends on him and he is once more incarcerated.

Conan is being held until the head of the Watch heals so that he can swing the axe, beheading the barbarian for his crimes. Conan requests a priest of Mitra to use as a human shield and escape, but the Watch commander kills the priest and blames Conan for it. One more crime to add to the list.

When the time comes for the Cimmerian’s execution, where is to be quartered with an axe, the watch commander gives him an opportunity to pray to his gods and Conan shouts out, “Crom damn you!” as a bolt of lightning streaks down from the sky, killing the axe-man.

Conan then escapes, the crowd frightened by what they’d witnessed. It is said the miners began worshiping Crom thereafter.

The issue ends as we see King Conan in the back of a wagon filled with the dead, a guttural “Crom” whispered from his lips. He is being taken to the Crimson witch and her two child servants back to their unholy lair where the fallen king will be offered up in sacrifice to the death god Razazel.

We also get a third installment of John Hocking’s Black Starlight. In the previous two entries, Conan and his companions had taken refuge in a deserted town while on their way to Shem, but a mysterious intruder robbed Zelandra’s supply of emerald lotus and the Cimmerian sprang into action.

Chasing the thief across the village and over a rooftop, Conan caught scent of something strangely familiar. Passing a corpse in a ditch, it dawns on him that it was the smell of Stygian herbs used in mummification.

He turned as the undead thing rose up from the ditch. The Cimmerian hacked the thing to bits, recovering his friend’s emerald lotus, and returned to the docks.

CAPSULE REVIEW: Well, it seems wee get more of the same as The Life and Death of Conan continues from Aaron and Asrar. The story itself is entertaining enough, but it suffers from decompression. It does not take much to imagine these three comics having easily been writ as a single issue during the heights of the title in the 1970s.

I am noticing a theme in Aaron’s approach. Last issue, we met a Pict Shaman who waxed elegantly on the philosophy of barbarism vs civilization, while this issue we are introduced to a priest of Mitra who proselytizes on the virtues of faith and the fate of one’s soul.

And I think I’ve hit on the nagging problem I’m having with the title so far, beyond my displeasure with the art and lettering. It’s that Aaron is not writing a Conan story first and foremost. It seems to me that he has a story to tell and is using Conan to do so. That’s a big difference, in my opinion.

One of the things that made Conan sing for me as a young man reading Howard original tales was that they felt real. There wasn’t an agenda. It was just the recounting of an adventure in a man’s life, albeit a larger-than-life man, but still.

Howard said that the Hyborian tales came to him as if they were told to him round a campfire. That’s what’s missing. It’s something that people like Roy Thomas and Tim Truman were able to capture, and something I hope Jason Aaron discovers before the series ends.

On a scale of 1-10 skulls of my enemies, I would rate this issue worthy of a 7.

Alba Gu Brath – Bob Freeman (The Occult Detective)

Commentary: Marvel’s New Conan – Is It a Hit or Miss?

By BOB FREEMAN – Paint Monk’s Library Writer

Growing up in the wilds of Indiana, as a child, comics were my first true love. I can vividly remember hopping on the back of a train and riding it into\ town with two empty bottle cartons in tow. Then, I’d wander those small town streets gathering returnable pop bottles until both cartons were full and I’d deliver them to Mr. Cain at Cain’s Sundries in exchange for $1.60.

That buck sixty would garner five comic boks and a pack of Topps bubble gum cards back then. Some days, I’d be lucky enough to have some extra change and snatch up a Coke with a squirt of cherry phosphate to go along with the four color masterpieces being offered weekly from Marvel, DC, Charlton, Atlas and others. Even luckier days I’d catch Mr. Cain when he was stripping covers and I’d get to go home with a sack full of comics with their mastheads torn off.

My first Conan was issue 36. The Fury of the Stone God, it proclaimed. The year was 1974 so I would have been all of 8 years old. That was a big year for me in many respects, but discovering Conan the Cimmerian has to rank up there with one of the most important red-letter days of my life.

Conan the Barbarian #36 was the aithor’s introduction to Conan in the world of comic books.

I read Conan the Barbarian (and more importantly Savage Sword) religiously thereafter, until Thomas and Buscema had both walked away from the flagship title. Oh, I stuck around for a bit after Buscema, in the late 80s, but the quality was declining quickly and I gave it a rest.

And then Marvel Comics let Conan go and my interest was rekindled when Dark Horse claimed the license. I enjoyed a lot of what Dark Horse accomplished with Howard’s creation. Creators like Tim Truman and Tomas Giorello, in particular, really captured the fiery spirit that Robert E. Howard originally invoked and Roy Thomas, Barry Windsor-Smith, and John Buscema had done so well in translating for Marvel.

But eventually, just as Marvel had in the late 80s, the quality of Dark Horse Conan tales began to decline and I had settled once more into reading back issues of Savage Sword and Conan Saga to get my fix.

Then, rumors began to swirl. Conan was coming back to Marvel. Conan and Howard fandom was abuzz in anticipation. The hype was escalating. The fans were feverish. And then, it was here at last, Conan’s bombastic return to the House of Ideas, with Jason Aaron and Mahmud Asrar bringing the Hyborian Age to life once more.

Could Aaron and Asrar live up to the hype being generated by the marketing machine of Marvel Comics?

So far, for me, sadly the answer has been ‘no’. Let’s take a look.

A Brief Synopsis of Conan (2019) #1 & #2

In the debut issue, we are reintroduced to Conan, recalling his birth on the battlefield in the frozen hills of Cimmeria through his struggles to eventually claim the throne of Aquilonia.

We then find Conan as a brash youth, a pit fighter of immeasurable skill. A beautiful woman catches his eye and he is led to her bed, but then, changing into a hag, he learns he has been marked for death, that his power might fuel her foul sorceries.

Of course, Conan being Conan, he beheads the sorceress, but her dying words promise that he would die that Razazel would rise again.

Years later, King Conan stands victorious on the field of battle, strolling amongst the dead and dying, when he comes upon two odd, orphan children who herald the return of the Crimson Witch that he had slain those many years before. The witch rises up from the earth and Conan is struck down.

This brings us to the second issue, where we find Conan, young and strong, seeking revenge against the Picts along the Black River. As he hunts his savage prey, he comes upon a nest of giant snakes which be becomes locked in mortal combat with, eventually collapsing from the creatures’ deadly venom.

The Cimmerian awakens to find himself in a Pict village, being tended to by a shaman. Eventually, he is healed and tasked with eliminating the kingsnake that is bringing these giant serpents against the people who call the Pictish wilderness their home.

Conan repays his debt to the Picts and slays the beast then returns to civilization, realizing that he is more closely akin to the Picts he despises than the civilized men he interacts with.

We are left with two beggar children, the same two orphans from the end of issue one, who hold back in attempting to kill the Cimmerian, stating he is not yet ripe.

Capsule Review: Conan the Barbarian #1 (2019)

Shall we discuss what I don’t like about the title before delving into what I do?

First of all, its sloppy. The photoshopped montage of past Conan adventures from the House of Ideas was not planned out very well. Old text should have been removed, presenting a cleaner image. Nit-picky? Maybe. But I expect better from a professional comic book entity.

The same could be said of Mahmud Asar’s inks. Not on every panel,
but there are instances where the art seems muddy. The same could be
said of the underlying framework. 90% of the book is penciled solid
enough, but there are panels where I’m left scratching my head,
wondering how some of the awkward poses slipped past a critical eye.

The writing is mostly okay. I like Jason Aaron’s work a lot, and
the lion’s share of the issue is fine. Not breathtaking, but
serviceable.

The worst offender in this issue is Travis Lanham. The lettering is
indicative of modern comics and their reliance on computers to do the
heavy-lifting. It just does not work on any level for me, totally
taking me out of the book. It just doesn’t fit.

Based on the above, you probably think I didn’t care for this
comic. Well, the fact of the matter is, I enjoyed it very much. The
cover art is cracking good stuff from Esad Ribic and really sets the
tone for what is to come after.

The plot is great and faithful to Howard’s vision for the most
part. Aaron does a great job of giving us what you would expect from
a Conan tale and then delivers a nice twist in the final pages.

The editorial page was concise and a pleasant read. The creators’
enthusiasm for the project is refreshing and encouraging.

The highlight for me, however, was the first installment of John C
Hocking’s Black Starlight, a serialized Conan tale which will be a
part of the Aaron/Asar 12-issue run.

Hocking paints an interesting picture, with plenty of atmosphere. I
have high hopes for where this story may go.

All in all, a solid debut for Conan’s return to Marvel’s fold.
While not perfect, we are given an entertaining sword & sorcery
yarn and the promise of much more to come.

On a scale of 1-10 skulls of my enemies, I would rate this worthy of
7.

Capsule Review: Conan the Barbarian #2

So close, but oh so
far. Two issues into Marvel’s relaunch of Conan the Barbarian and I
am deflated. Jason Aaron has proven himself to be a very capable
writer, and there are moments in this where he is solid enough, but
Conan’s interaction with the Picts rings false with me.

I don’t have issues with the plot, per se, but with one character
in particular — the Pict shaman. Story-wise, I like the idea of it.
The Picts turn to Conan to save them from the King Snake. Makes
sense. The Cimmerian is a formidable foe and has a knack for
overcoming seemingly insurmountable obstacles. The shaman knows this
and him recruiting Conan is a sensible motivation.

But his dialogue is all wrong. He speaks more like a palace vizier
than a pictish healer living beyond the reach of civilization. Yes, I
get that Howard’s picts were an odd blend of Native American and
the actual Picts of historic record, but this shaman hews too close
to Kicking Bird for my taste.

Kicking Pict? The author believes the Pict shaman
 in Conan #2 is over the top

They might as well have called this Dances with Snakes and been done
with it.

I get what Aaron was going for. Howard certainly addressed the themes
of civilization vs barbarism in his original tales, but by
mishandling the shaman’s dialogue it detracts from what could have
been a more powerful message. By making the shaman come across as
polished and educated you lose the proper perspective and it becomes
preachy instead of enlightening.

The art continues to be disappointing, coming nowhere near the
grandeur of any number of luminaries who have been tasked with
illustrating the Hyborian Age. Is Asrar the worst that has put pen to
paper? Not by a long shot, but if you’re going to embark on such a
high-profile relaunch, then why not reel in a heavy hitter, someone
more suited for the task.

The colors were adequate, but Lanham’s lettering still leaves a lot
to be desired.

I’ll be sticking with the title, because there is enough there to
hold my interest, but I expected better from Marvel… Thing is, I’m
having a hard time remembering why. Marvel has been a pale shadow of
itself for years. Why did I think Conan would be different?

As for Black Starlight, we were treated to a second installment of
John Hocking’s serialized novella and, like the first snippet, it’s
a solid read. Conan and his companions set up camp in the seemingly
abandoned village and a mysterious thief steals Zelandra’s supply
of Black Lotus.

Not a lot to chew on, and it’s certainly got none of Howard’s
fiery prose, but I’m enjoying it well enough and eager for the next
installment.

On a scale of 1-10 skulls of my enemies, I would rate this issue
worthy of 6.

Alba Gu Brath – Bob
Freeeman (aka The Occult Detective)