It makes sense now
Mar. 16th, 2011 09:34 amI just finished Preacher--liked it less towards the end. Not to be punny or nothing, but it felt like it was slouching towards Gomorrah rather than running at the end, teeth bared and bloody, like it had been up until, oh, say the middle-to-late issues. I still liked it on the whole, mind you. I was amazed that, for a series about a guy with the ability to command anyone to do anything, very little of that sort of thing happened. Similarly, Cassidy is the least bloody-and-gutty vampire I ever met in fiction. I liked him immensely up until the story went soft around him. It was a nice change of pace from all the goddamned modern vampires. I love me some six feet of Eric Northman, mind you, but give it a bloody rest. (Ew, pun again.) I even liked Tulip, though she was a tad pathetic at times. Wish more could have been done with her, like what was done.
Anyway, I went to look up Garth Ennis to see what all else he's written. Apparently, some Hellblazer, which figures--his sense of humor and John Constantine's are nearly a perfect match. He also wrote the first six issues of The Darkness, as well as another corker of a miniseries, "Heart of Darkness," which !!!! I have the trades and I re-read 'em not infrequently. Say what you will about other Top Cow series--hell, say what you want about The Darkness--but they at least had style. And Garth Ennis literally wrote the best stories of that entire franchise, far as I'm concerned. Jackie worked best as the literal and figurative bastard he was before he was re-written to be more, I dunno, gritty or sympathetic. Ennis' Jackie was never a hero. He wasn't even saintly enough to be an antihero. He was an absolute asshole, with a streak of violence a mile wide with only his scant-few but bone-deep loyalties to redeem him as a character. He was also whip-smart and creative, which you should be, if you can help it, when you control a power that allows anything you dream to be. If they ever do get a Darkness movie off the ground, I'd love to see them go with Ennis' take on it.
But hot damn! He writes really well. I've got to check out more of his stuff!
Anyway, I went to look up Garth Ennis to see what all else he's written. Apparently, some Hellblazer, which figures--his sense of humor and John Constantine's are nearly a perfect match. He also wrote the first six issues of The Darkness, as well as another corker of a miniseries, "Heart of Darkness," which !!!! I have the trades and I re-read 'em not infrequently. Say what you will about other Top Cow series--hell, say what you want about The Darkness--but they at least had style. And Garth Ennis literally wrote the best stories of that entire franchise, far as I'm concerned. Jackie worked best as the literal and figurative bastard he was before he was re-written to be more, I dunno, gritty or sympathetic. Ennis' Jackie was never a hero. He wasn't even saintly enough to be an antihero. He was an absolute asshole, with a streak of violence a mile wide with only his scant-few but bone-deep loyalties to redeem him as a character. He was also whip-smart and creative, which you should be, if you can help it, when you control a power that allows anything you dream to be. If they ever do get a Darkness movie off the ground, I'd love to see them go with Ennis' take on it.
But hot damn! He writes really well. I've got to check out more of his stuff!
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Date: 2011-03-16 02:35 pm (UTC)Wonder how he was on Midnighter. As far as specific comics writers go, I think I like Warren Ellis more consistently over Ennis (and *sometimes*, when he's not completely out-of-it, I like Grant Morrison better, too), but Ellis has definitely put out some very fun stuff. I think I remember liking some Punisher comics he did, too.
I am not sure why I bothered with all those italics tags in a livejournal comment : )
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Date: 2011-03-16 02:37 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-03-16 03:32 pm (UTC)That Ellis tendency towards sex-and-gore-because-he-can has really turned me off to a lot of his later stuff. Goddess was especially appalling. I don't object to either in the service of story, but it feels more and more like his writing is being guided by a 16-year-old boy playing "you can't top this". No, having the main character squish people's eyes out with his thumbs for being slightly annoying doesn't make him badass, it just makes him psychotic and not particularly interesting.
Ennis has some similar tendencies from time to time. But I've really been enjoying Freak Angels.
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Date: 2011-03-16 03:48 pm (UTC)But yeah, I mix them all up occasionally.
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Date: 2011-03-16 04:11 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-03-16 06:16 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-03-16 06:46 pm (UTC)He did a lot of the Crisis/RIP Batman/Batman Inc nonsense.
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Date: 2011-03-16 03:49 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-03-16 03:59 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-03-16 04:09 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-03-16 06:17 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-03-16 06:44 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-03-16 11:24 pm (UTC)Transmetropolitan (amazing, if a tad, er, scatalogical)
Planetary (also amazing, tied somewhat, but not totally to WildStorm)
Nextwave: Agents of H.A.T.E. (hysterical send-up of the Marvel universe)
Global Frequency (standalone comic; Fringe wishes it was this)
Highly recommended:
the Authority (invented them, was amazing while he wrote them, tied closely to WildStorm)
Hellblazer mini-series (pretty good, if a little out-of-character)
Generally Fun:
Desolation Jones
Mek
Ocean
FreakAngels
There's quite a lot more, but those are the standouts, IMHO.
Wrote the plot for the video game Dead Space. Wrote the comic that became the movie Red. Currently writing Astonish X-Men (and it's good)
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Date: 2011-03-16 11:26 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-03-18 02:26 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-03-18 02:56 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-03-16 06:15 pm (UTC)