Showing posts with label Sean Phillips. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sean Phillips. Show all posts

Saturday, March 7, 2015

The Fade Out by Ed Brubaker


Title: The Fade Out
Author: Ed Brubaker
Publisher: Image Comics
Rating: WORTHY!

Illustrated by Sean Phillips.
Colored by Elizabeth Breitweiser.


DISCLOSURE: Unlike the majority of reviews in this blog, I've neither bought this book nor borrowed it from the library. This is a "galley" copy ebook, supplied by Net Galley. I'm not receiving (nor will I expect to receive or accept) remuneration for this review. The chance to read a new book is often enough reward aplenty!

I favorably reviewed Fatale Book 4 by Ed Brubaker, Sean Phillips, and Elizabeth Breitweiser a year ago, and so I was pleased to have the chance to review this one, which I also found to be a worthy read. This one is a very different story from that earlier volume. Set in 1948, with World War Two a very fresh memory, and phobia related to the rise of communism turning the powers-that-be completely paranoid, this novel revolves around the people working at with a Hollywood studio. The studio is struggling and is in the middle of making a film with a very bankable female lead, Valeria Sommers, when she's found dead by one of the writers on the movie.

Not wanting to get involved, especially since he was drunk as a skunk and remembers nothing of the night before, the cowardly writer, Charlie Parish, cleans up all evidence of his presence in Valeria's house and sneaks off to the nearby studio as though nothing has happened. Later, he discovers that the studio has "spun" a completely false story around events. Now, instead of being found on the floor strangled to death, there's a picture in the local rag showing that she hung herself!

Conveniently, the actor who lost the role to the dead star, Maya Silver, is still around and ready to take over her dead rival's part in the movie. Curiously enough, she wants to befriend Charlie, who initially found the body. His fleeing a crime scene isn't his only transgression, as it happens, although his other one is much more noble. Because of the communist pogrom, he's actually only taking dictation from the real writer, Gil Mason, who's been blackballed as a communist. Why they never called that "red-balled' I don't know!

Charlie's doing this because he needs the work, and also because he's a good friend of the other writer's wife, Melba. He wants to help her and the children, since the man of the house is pretty much a no-good drunk at this point. The problem is that he happens to let slip that he knows that Valeria's death has been covered up. Gil is infuriated by the cover-up. And that's just the set-up!

I recommend this story - the beginning of a series, because it's so very well done. The writing is high quality - as I've come to expect from Brubaker from my admittedly limited acquaintanceship with his work. Breitweiser's coloring and Phillips's artwork are excellent - again, as I've come to expect. If you like film noir, you'll like this, as indeed you will if you like a comic well done.


Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Fatale Book 4 by Ed Brubaker




Title: Fatale Book 4
Author: Ed Brubaker
Publisher: Diamond Book Distributors
Rating: worthy!

Illustrator: Sean Phillips
Colorist: Elizabeth Breitweiser

This is quite an amazing and a rather disturbing graphic novel, written for a mature audience. I haven’t read any of the previous volumes, unfortunately, so I came into this hitting the ground running, which isn't the best way to join a story! I can’t speak to what came before, but his portion concerns a woman who appears to be a fate or a muse, who leaves unintentional havoc wherever she goes. She's ageless and disturbing, and inspiring to the point where people become psychotic, and obsessive about her, trying to track her down long after she's passed through their life.

A struggling band needs money to make a video for one of their recordings, so why not rob a bank? One of them single-handedly brings this off, and on his way home after his successful robbery, he finds a young woman with no clothes, running in the road in the rain - the pouring rain - with only a sheet for modesty (of which she has little). Yes, it rains throughout this entire novel (subtitled 'Pray for Rain') and I'm not sure why, but it seemed strangely refreshing, and appropriate somehow!

He takes the woman back to the old house where the rest of the band is hanging out listlessly, rather festering in their impotence inactivity, and she starts to have an effect on all of them, inspiring the writer to create new and haunting music, and breathing life back into the band's stagnated career, but even as she rejuvenates them, she destroys them. She helps them to rob another bank, and they make that video. It features the woman, but when she dances, all the extras in the video lose all sense of restraint and begin taking off their clothes and indulging carnal desires quite different from the dancing they were hired to perform. Eventually, all that's left of the band is the one guy who robbed the bank in the first place, and the girl leaves him, saying she's no good for him. Now she tells him?

Like I said, I missed the first three volumes, and there are more to come in this series so I can’t speak for all of it, but this one volume was really good. The artwork was excellent, the coloring matching the mood perfectly, the dialog is realistic, and the story is really unnerving, playing out like a road roller, slowly but unstoppably subjugating everything in its path. I recommend it.