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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: hawkeye, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 14 of 14
1. The All-New, All-Different Marvel Rundown Week Six

Marvel Comics has an interesting problem on their hands. If you’ve been following the comics publisher or even the Diamond sales charts, it may have been brought to your attention that Marvel is unleashing a ton of brand new #1’s in advance of the conclusion of the landmark Secret Wars event. However these #1 issues […]

2 Comments on The All-New, All-Different Marvel Rundown Week Six, last added: 11/15/2015
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2. Cable Visits the Stately Beat Manor Staff Pull for 9/16/15

Last week, we learned that we had an internal leak at Stately Beat Manor, home of the staffers of the Comics Beat, the world’s greatest information sources of all things comics. One of our newest writers had secretly been operating a blog for Marvel ‘90s villain Stryfe. The antagonist had secret correspondence with the staffer […]

0 Comments on Cable Visits the Stately Beat Manor Staff Pull for 9/16/15 as of 9/16/2015 12:33:00 PM
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3. Preview: The final issue of the Fraction/Aja Hawkeye run hits next month

hawkeye 22 cover

Holy cow! It’s taken some time to finally see the conclusion to Matt Fraction and David Aja‘s wonderful Hawkeye run. Even Marvel moved on, releasing Jeff Lemire and Ramon Perez‘s relaunched series before we even reached this final issue.

It’s not for me to guess why it’s taken so long to get to this point, but this particular issue was originally solicited for February and saw multiple delays. Even Aja, at one point, wasn’t sure when the book would be coming out when he recently tweeted:





But, according to Entertainment Weekly, we’re finally getting there next month and they’ve got the unlettered preview of the upcoming Issue 22. Time for Pizza Dog to come to the rescue, one more time. I’m very glad to see this multiple Eisner nominated run will get to close on its own terms with the team that started it all.

HAWKEYE #22

(W) Matt Fraction (A/CA) David Aja

• Hawkeyes vs. Tracksuits. Final Round!

Rated T+

Item Code: AUG140839 In Shops: 7/15/2015 SRP: $4.99

Release Date: July 15

hawkeye-03

hawkeye-touts

hawkeye-02

 

0 Comments on Preview: The final issue of the Fraction/Aja Hawkeye run hits next month as of 6/18/2015 9:12:00 PM
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4. Since April 19, 2015...

After Easter and the jury duty kerfuffle...

...to which I didn't have to go!
Happy dance, happy dance, everybody happy dance!

... I got a rejection on a query I sent to an agent about a month before.  Technically, she never responded to the query, which per the guidelines basically meant the same thing.  No reply, no acceptance.
Tears may have been shed.

But that's okay.  I dusted off my poor weeping query, gave it a little spruce up and sent it bravely back into the big wide world of agents.  I may have whispered a prayer to send it on its way.

Then I had a wedding I went to, last week of April/beginning of May, wherein my sister Amanda (keeper of the blog, Hit and Miss) designed floral arrangements for the altar, and we cleaned bucketloads of roses, carnations, baby's breath and greens and I made 15 centerpieces in glass milk jars for the reception.
Or rather:  Design ALL the flowers!

Speaking of which, I don't think I want to go to weddings anymore.  Waaaaaay too many people!
Way too many people I don't know, and way too many random people wanting to talk to me.
Talk? Talk?!   What makes you think I'd want to chat?  I haz nothing to say.  Unless we speak geek.  Then perhaps we speak.

Then we got BACK from the wedding and the weather has been liek dis:
Grey
Rainy

And liek dis:
*snarf, grumble, grouch
*whaaahaaahaaaaaa!












It hasn't been NICE.  It has been the opposite.  It has been DARK.  My mood goeth downhill.

Directly after getting back, we were into Mother's Day week.  Which made the flower shop a crazy busy place.  Which meant yours truly got to work a six-day work week, after a weekend filled with flower arrangements and wedding feels and socializing.
Source

Socializing, for me, can be physically more draining and damaging than a solid week's work, so piling MOTHER'S DAY WEEK on top of that was... was...

Sorry, words fail.

However, good news.  Before driving back from the wedding in Bakersfield, we stopped at Target and all four of us who had attended the wedding picked up copies of the Target Edition of Josh Groban's STAGES, which contains 17 tracks and are all of them amazing.
Make sure you get the TARGET edition with 17 tracks! The normal version
only has 13, so make sure it 's the special TARGET edition you're getting!

Josh has this superpower that never fails to make me marvel at how PERFECTLY he sings.
IMHO, he sings the only acceptable version of Somewhere Over the Rainbow.
*Oh Groban!

Speaking of Superheroes and Marvel, I also watched the first two episodes of Daredevil on Netflix during that wedding weekend, so when I got back from the wedding I proceeded to watch the other 11 episodes.


Matt Murdoch is the best!  I refuse to say anything, because, as Yoda say, "If Netflix you have, Daredevil you should be watching."  Seriously, he's a new favourite Marvel superhero.  He is so amazing and cool!  Unfortunately, now that I'm done with those 13 episode, the next season won't be up until 2016!  Netflix, why? Why? Whyyyyy?


Then I saw Age of Ultron.
Source

All I'm going to say about THIS is, OH MY GOSH! HAWKEYE!! TONYSTEVETHOR! QUICKSIIIIIILVER!  JARVISJARVISJARVIS!! And never, ever, ever have I let a ship sink as fast as I let Black Widow's and Hawkeye's.  I was surprisingly okay with it.  I waved a hand and thought, I don't mind Natasha and Clint being friends.

After this, Teresa and Jack and I started watching Harry Potter.  I have never really watched Harry Potter.
I know, right?

I had read up to the fourth book (which *I* thought was horrifying) and then watched the fourth movie which, IMHO, did NOT live up to the fourth books horrifyingness (which is not a word, but I don't care.  I'm a writer.  I do what I want).  Frankly, the fourth movie rather bored me, so I gave up on the series.

Then, I dunno, after the final book had been published and was no longer talked about, I thought I might as well finish the book series, and while I thought J.K. Rowling did a fine job with writing, I wasn't entirely sold on the series.  I don't know why.  I just wasn't a fan.
Sorry.

So I have had no urge to watch the movies until after Valentine's Day, when after a long grueling day at work I came home, ate something fortifying and turned on the TV, and discovered The Chamber of Secrets was playing.  Having nothing better to do, I watched it.
I mean, after all, why not?

Since then, I've been off again, on again wanting to watch them, and we started our sporadic marathon about two weeks ago.  While the first four were nothing special (for me, anyway - and btw, the fourth movie is NOT as boring as I remembered it being.  Perhaps one needs to have been away from books and movies for a significant amount of time or something), we just finished Deathly Hallows part 1, and I'll admit the 5th, 6th and 7-1/2th movies engaged me more and made me feel a bit more connected to the characters.  (Though, and I'm speaking from my experience of having read the books YEARS ago, I am pretty certain the scriptwriters could have clarified Harry as being The Chosen One.  That shtick sort of makes an appearance in the Half Blood Prince, and while I *think* it was clear in the book, it was NOT AT ALL CLEAR in the movie(s), and I honestly can't remember how or why or who or when Harry became this Chosen One or even what it has to do with the plot.)
I feel ya, Minion

I don't think I'm still (yet) techinically a fan.  I haven't entirely finished the series, after all.  Deathly Hallows part 2 will possibly (probably) happen tonight, but now that I've watched the movies I can see why people have become fans.  I will be honest even more and state that I do have a bad tendency to quote HISHE or Honest Trailer lines during crucial moments of the movies (such as, Wizzzzard lightning battle! or, Look out, Harry, he doesn't have a nose!, or, "Just saving your life.  And countless others.  In the future.  It's a long story.")  But overall, my favorite characters are Snape, Professor McGonagall, George and Fred, and Harry.  I like Ron and Hermione, but those first five are my favorites.
Source



Lastly, to bring my month to a close, the query I'd dusted off and sent back out came back with a request for the agent to see the full manuscript.
I may or may not have woken up my sister at the obscene
hour of 5:00 a.m. to show her the joyous news.


So I sent the full manuscript to the agent, and now I must wait up to 60 days to see what she thinks.  It's a bit torturous, but she was nice enough to admit that it was torturous, which was good to hear.  Empathy, empathy.  So all I can do now is pray... and hope... and pray... and, you know, hope.

So, that's been my month!  I hope yours has been just as exciting and eventful as mine, albeit less gloomy.  *Rain, rain, go away, come again some OTHER day.*

Until next month...

Cat! :)
Leopold!

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5. Holiday Gift Guide: Gifts for the Hawkeye Fan

hawkeye 1 Holiday Gift Guide: Gifts for the Hawkeye FanBy Kyle Pinion

I love Matt Fraction, David Aja and Annie Wu’s Hawkeye. It’s by far my favorite monthly (which I realize is a stretch to still call it that at this point) comic coming from the Big Two. Its mixture of high impact super-heroics, indie sensibilities, film influences, and raw emotion have paved its own niche in the crowded world of cape comics. With its rampant critical success and sales that aren’t anything to sneeze at, Hawkeye (along with Mark Waid’s wonderful Daredevil) sent Marvel into a more idiosyncratic direction that spawned a number of titles that could be noted as “auteur-driven”.

One of the more unique trends I’d seen regarding the series was how it had served as a form of gateway comic for a number of new readers. In my travels at various convention settings, I’ve learned that a lot of these (often-times younger) readers aren’t quite sure where to head next in their comics reading, or whence to dig further into the various references and influences of Fraction, Aja, and Wu that have informed or been worked into the title.

With that said, here’s my take on a “Hawkguy” shopping guide..

Where to go if you’re looking for more Clint and Kate

young and secret 1000x305 Holiday Gift Guide: Gifts for the Hawkeye Fan

Secret Avengers and Young Avengers – The obvious place to jump off point if you’re a fan of a series that dictates itself as “What Hawkeye does when he’s not being an Avenger…” is to read about what he’s up to when he is. With Ales Kot’s and Michael Walsh’s work on Secret Avengers and Kieron Gillen and Jamie McKelvie’s Young Avengers, you can do just that for both Clint and Kate respectively. While other Avengers books, including the previous Nick Spencer-written run on Secret Avengers, also feature Hawkeye at times, Kot and Walsh’s Secret Avengers comes the closest to Fraction’s work in overall tone and feels somewhat of a piece with the sort of “knowing” vibe found in the series. It’s also absolutely bonkers and worthy of attention on its own merits. Young Avengers is, conversely, like all Gillen-McKelvie collaborations, a tonal pop record of a comic. It gives you another look at Kate, with a great focus on her romantic entanglement with Marvel Boy, while also featuring an incredibly diverse cast. Also, both books are colored by the incredible Matt Wilson, Bonus!

Films and Television that inspired the series

Hawkeye is, as previously mentioned, inspired by visual media, with both subtle tonal similarities, and much more overt homages. Here are a few worth noting…

the long goodbye 300x180 Holiday Gift Guide: Gifts for the Hawkeye Fan

The Long Goodbye – Remember Harold from Kate’s adventure in LA? The cat food buying freelance writer that Kate would encounter in the grocery store and would inspire her to become a “hero for hire”? While the character was created for Tomb of Dracula by Marv Wolfman and Gene Colan, Matt Fraction and Annie Wu basically transformed him into a pastiche of the hero of Robert Altman’s hazy LA noir classic The Long Goodbye. Recently released on Blu-ray this week, treat yourself to one of the best films of a film-making master.

Rio Bravo John Wayne Dean Martin 300x169 Holiday Gift Guide: Gifts for the Hawkeye Fan

Rio Bravo – What this John Wayne Western classic, that also stars Dean Martin and Ricky Nelson, actually has to do with the finale of Hawkeye is still to be determined. But, the solicit of Hawkeye #21, the first of the upcoming two-part finale, explicitly references it. While it still remains to be seen how much the tale of a small-town sherriff and his unlikely band of allies keeping a murderer behind bars from the attempts of a brother trying to set him free will actually play into the finale…we’ll play it safe and say its a big influence.

hot fuzz 300x187 Holiday Gift Guide: Gifts for the Hawkeye Fan

Hot Fuzz – In interviews, Annie Wu has specifically cited Edgar Wright as a major inspiration for her work, particularly in her tendency to have disembodied hands pop up into close-ups to deliver notes or a phone. A slighter inspiration for sure, but well worth viewing for those unfamiliar with his work. Given the subject matter at hand, Hot Fuzz, one of Wright’s more under-appreciated films and one based more on a (very!) heightened version of reality than the sci-fi or horror outings that surround it, is probably the way to go.

enter the dragon 1973 685x385 300x168 Holiday Gift Guide: Gifts for the Hawkeye Fan

Enter the Dragon – So much of Hawkeye, especially in its earlier issues, is indebted to 70’s action films. Really, you could find any suitable choice to fill in this slot, from the Steve McQueen starring Bullitt or the Gene Hackman fronted masterpiece The French Connection; but given that Fraction was recently interviewed by NPR about his love of Enter the Dragon, the titular Bruce Lee tour de force, we’ll go with that. You can’t go wrong with the Hackman vehicle either!

Rockford Files 300x170 Holiday Gift Guide: Gifts for the Hawkeye Fan

The Rockford Files - Even in the promotion of the first issue, Fraction was drawing parallels between Clint Barton and Jim Rockford, the hero of the unusual for its day 70’s detective series The Rockford Files. When you break it down, the similarities are definitely there: a private detective taking on cases of the lost and the dispossessed while living in a trailer off the coast of Malibu, with his life in some state of financial disarray, resorting to humor over violence. While his original James Bond-esque take on the character appears in the two-part Javier Pulido drawn “The Tape” story-line, James Garner’s atypical gumshoe informed a great majority of Fraction’s scripts surrounding it.

Comics at the root of Hawkeye

The comic book inspirations that drive Matt Fraction and David Aja are wide-ranging and could fill up an entire post by itself, but for a wide overview its impossible to overstate the influence of Los Bros Hernandez, Warren Ellis and Howard Chaykin on Fraction, while David Aja is clearly indebted to the work of illustrative wizard David Mazzucchelli. I’ve cited three key works from the first three creators that Fraction himself has signaled out that are must reads, and for Mazzucchelli, while his superhero career was sadly all too short, his revolutionary take on Daredevil with Frank Miller is fitting given that we’re talking about another Marvel character.

MAGGIE 1 241x300 Holiday Gift Guide: Gifts for the Hawkeye Fan

Maggie the Mechanic – The first chapter in Jaime Hernandez’s decades-spanning LOCAS story in the legendary Love & Rockets. While both Hernandez brothers were/are equally influential in Fraction’s formative story-telling growth, its the punk rock aesthetic and energy of Jaime that rings closer to the tone of Hawkeye. This is a journey worth taking from the beginning.

bornagain 203x300 Holiday Gift Guide: Gifts for the Hawkeye Fan

Daredevil: Born Again – For my money, maybe the best thing to ever host the Marvel logo. Buy it, if you haven’t already.

PLAN OMNI DJ copy 300x438 205x300 Holiday Gift Guide: Gifts for the Hawkeye Fan

Planetary – What The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen is to Victorian Literature, Planetary is to Pulp and Comic Books. Everything critics were praising in Ellis’ short run on Moon Knight had its start here. Ellis has worked many comic book wonders, but Planetary is his best, at least for those with a predilection towards superheros and their archetypes.

American Flagg 193x300 Holiday Gift Guide: Gifts for the Hawkeye Fan

American Flagg – When it comes to the 80’s works that revolutionized comics everyone talks about Watchmen, The Dark Knight Returns, and Maus. Yet had American Flagg ever stayed in print regularly, there’s no doubt that Howard Chaykin’s opus would be in that conversation as well. Sleek, sexy, whip-smart, and colored like an EGA computer game, American Flagg‘s first 12 issues are must reads for anyone wanting to get a masterclass in great comics.

If anyone has a great suggestion for influences on Annie Wu’s art, please toss them at me in the comments! My knowledge only goes so far.

Music to play in the background while you’re reading all those new comics

pet sounds 300x300 Holiday Gift Guide: Gifts for the Hawkeye Fan

Pet Sounds – Not only because its an unimpeachably great album, but a Brian Wilson-esque character plays a big role in another one of Annie Wu’s LA based issues. More than 50 years later and this is still the sound of Southern California to my ears.

Or you could check out the various songs and pieces that David Aja listed in the back of a number of the earliest issues of the series, of which someone was kind enough to post up a good deal of on Youtube. I’ll never turn down free Miles Davis.

If you can’t get enough Fraction in your life

Though, if you’re into Hawkeye, you may just want to chase down more Fraction books, and who can blame you? Chances are, you’ve probably already heard about or read Sex Criminals, his very popular Image Comic with artist Chip Zdarsky. It’s great of course, as is his team-up with Howard Chaykin, the 50’s television mystery Satellite Sam (which, like Hawkeye, is going to have its own peek into New York and LA) but I might also recommend the following specifically…

iron fist 195x300 Holiday Gift Guide: Gifts for the Hawkeye Fan

The Immortal Iron Fist – Fraction and Aja’s other team-up on a blonde Marvel hero. This is where the Enter the Dragon inspiration really comes to the fore, especially in the masterful tournament storyline “The Seven Capital Cities of Heaven”. Its also a series that was for a time, co-written by Ed Brubaker.

casanova 200x300 Holiday Gift Guide: Gifts for the Hawkeye Fan

Casanova – Though my pick for favorite Fraction book is the multi-dimensional spy saga Casanova. One part Pynchon, one part Morrison’s The Invisibles, and a whole lot of great Fabio Moon and Gabriel Ba art. This is a writer completely unfiltered and is the kind of series I find myself reading at least once a year, where I discover something new every time. Image has just started to release brand new hardcovers as well, so there’s never been a better time to introduce yourself to Casanova Quinn.

Fun Hawkeye swag

hawkeye minimalist logo 300x300 Holiday Gift Guide: Gifts for the Hawkeye Fan

Hawkeye Messenger bag – From the fine folks at WeLoveFine, I got this at San Diego Comic Con this year and I love it.

pizza is my business 300x300 Holiday Gift Guide: Gifts for the Hawkeye Fan

Pizza Dog shirt – Also for you Pizza Dog lovers, there’s now a shirt!

Looking into the future

Hawkeye 1 Ramon Perez c5b04 195x300 Holiday Gift Guide: Gifts for the Hawkeye Fan

And lastly, you may know that Jeff Lemire and Ramon K. Perez will be taking the reins from Fraction and Aja starting in March of next year. You might be curious about what they’re bringing to the table. Rest assured, the works below, including Lemire’s first take on an archer character in his New 52 Green Arrow run, his rural Canadian hockey saga Essex County and Perez’s essaying of Jim Henson’s A Tale of Sand script should leave you feeling pretty excited about the future of your favorite purple clad hero.

green arrow kill machine 195x300 Holiday Gift Guide: Gifts for the Hawkeye Fan

Green Arrow: The Kill Machine

essex county 200x300 Holiday Gift Guide: Gifts for the Hawkeye FanEssex County

a tale of sand 202x300 Holiday Gift Guide: Gifts for the Hawkeye FanJim Henson’s A Tale of Sand

Happy Shopping!

hawkeye 1000x402 Holiday Gift Guide: Gifts for the Hawkeye Fan

0 Comments on Holiday Gift Guide: Gifts for the Hawkeye Fan as of 12/1/2014 12:48:00 PM
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6. NYCC’14: New Hawkeye Creative Team Announced

By David Nieves

During Marvel’s “Axel-in-Charge” panel at NYCC, the publisher’s editor-in-chief Axel Alonzo announced that Spring would see a brand new creative team on Hawkeye Vol.2. Marvel enlisted the creative team of Jeff Lemire and Ramon Perez.

Lemire was quoted on the panel as saying, “I think it’s a high water mark for modern comics. I cannot hope to replicate their (Fraction and Aja) success, but I can hope that I can tell my story as best I can… I’m really, really proud of what we’re doing.”

Hawkeye #1 by Lemire and Perez is scheduled for a March 2015 release.

Hawkeye 1 Ramon Perez 670x1028 NYCC14: New Hawkeye Creative Team Announced

1 Comments on NYCC’14: New Hawkeye Creative Team Announced, last added: 10/12/2014
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7. First Look: Hawkeye Vs Deadpool #1

Hawkeye vs Deadpool 1 Cover First Look: Hawkeye Vs Deadpool #1

This sells itself doesn’t it: hawkeye takes on the most popular Marvel character of the moment in a Halloween adventure. by Gerry Duggan and Matteo Lolli with a cover by James Harren (!) and a Jason Pearson variant. ANd Cap, Black Cat and DD are all in on the fun…or are they?

This October, the no-holds-barred antics of the Marvel Universe’s most unlikely duo continue in HAWKEYE VS. DEADPOOL #1 – the official first issue of the blockbuster comic event of the fall. Even though this is really the second issue, but who’s counting? Gerry Duggan and Matteo Lolli return for the battle of the century (maybe) as the Merc with a Mouth battles the Avenging Archer! It’s Halloween night in Brooklyn, and that can only mean one thing – disaster is around the corner! And candy, always candy. The names and addresses of every active S.H.I.E.L.D. agent are about to be released, and it’s up to one Avenger and one (sometimes) X-Man to stop it. But is it trick or treat when they encounter bad guys dressed like good guys? Will Deadpool and Hawkeye kill each other before the night is through? Find out when the clash continues this October in HAWKEYE VS. DEADPOOL #1!

 HAWKEYE VS. DEADPOOL #1 (AUG140824)

Written by GERRY DUGGAN
Art by MATTEO LOLLI
Cover by JAMES HARREN
Variant Cover by JASON PEARSON (AUG140825)
FOC – 09/15/14, On-Sale – 10/08/14

Hawkeye vs Deadpool 1 Preview 3 First Look: Hawkeye Vs Deadpool #1 Hawkeye vs Deadpool 1 Preview 1 First Look: Hawkeye Vs Deadpool #1 Hawkeye vs Deadpool 1 Preview 2 First Look: Hawkeye Vs Deadpool #1

 

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8. The Blue Ear Triumphantly Returns to Marvel Comics

Last year, Marvel received a letter from the mother of a young fan, Anthony Smith, who had hearing difficulties, and had been told by doctors that he would require a hearing aid. The mother was wondering if there were any heroes who had ever had hearing difficulties, who might serve as the inspiring spark for Anthony to accept the hearing device.

On getting the letter, editor Bill Rosemann not only pointed her to Hawkeye, who has in the past suffered from hearing problems, but also spread the letter to the Marvel offices.

And that’s what led Marvel to create a new character called The Blue Ear, who doesn’t let his hearing problems stop him from saving the day. Created with Marvel staffers Manny Mederos and Nelson Ribeiro, the character is based on Anthony himself. You can read Blue Ear’s origin story in my original post announcing the character,

Now, though! That’s not the end of The Blue Ear’s work with Marvel. Last month Marvel held a special event honouring him, as they partnered with Phonak, a hearing aid supplier. Anthony and his family were invited along, as Marvel unveiled a new poster which will be distributed nationally, in which we see Iron Man meet a young boy who is being bullier for having a hearing aid. Written by Christos Gage and drawn by Paco Medina, the poster encourages people to never feel like they should be ashamed of their disability:

blue ear The Blue Ear Triumphantly Returns to Marvel Comics

 The event also saw Iron Man attend in person – awfully nice of him to teleport over from the 616 Universe – and meet Anthony. After receiving a copy of the poster from Iron Man, the Avenger also then gave him a second gift – an Iron Man costume of his own.

blue ear2 The Blue Ear Triumphantly Returns to Marvel Comics

Which, he immediately put on.

blue ear 3 The Blue Ear Triumphantly Returns to Marvel Comics

As I said last time – isn’t it now time for The Blue Ear to join The Avengers?

2 Comments on The Blue Ear Triumphantly Returns to Marvel Comics, last added: 3/8/2013
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9. Mini Marvels: Hawkeye #8 – My Bad Penny

Hey bro. Bro! You reading Hawkguy bro? Missin’ out bro.

hawkeye 08 cover Mini Marvels: Hawkeye #8   My Bad Penny

So I’m not exactly a new Marvel reader. I’ve read decades of old titles and kept up with Daredevil til a few years back. I’m a returning reader perhaps. But until recently, I didn’t buy any Marvel single issues, and the trades had started to be far too confusing even for this pro bookseller.

Now I’m reading four titles on the regular, and somehow keep picking up the occasional other to try while sneaking covetous looks at the various X-Men titles. A couple of things had always put me off previously: the double shipping on some titles; the sheer number of similarly titled comics; and, I guess, the strange behaviour of an editor online. But with DC cancelling all my favourite books, and thanks to some amazing cover art, Marvel intrigued me.

Most of all though, it was Matt Fraction and David Aja’s Hawkeye. I saw some pages on a review or preview somewhere, and those covers, and went out and immediately got the issues I needed to catch up. Because brilliant storytelling + phenomenal art + great characterisation + amusing plots = omg, want.

hawkeye fight Mini Marvels: Hawkeye #8   My Bad Penny

It’s been a consistently fantastic comic ever since, and although Aja isn’t on every issue it somehow makes his ones all the more special (and the others, by the by, are still fab). Like #8 which also has the genius contributions of Annie Wu in the form of romance comic covers inserted throughout the story. These are not only super cute but inform the storyline while being part of the plot in a completely different way too. And did I mention cute?

We get the return of the mysterious red-haired woman in another of Clint’s misadventures on his downtime from the life of an Avenger, and the first pages make a passing nod to his life outside of this title with the various women in his life not terribly impressed by his shenanigans. This link up to the other titles Hawkeye features in isn’t the norm, but even here it’s pretty easy to read without any other knowledge. I have some passing ideas of what is going on in the other titles from reading reviews and write-ups, but as a non-reader it wasn’t an issue.

hawkeye wu Mini Marvels: Hawkeye #8   My Bad Penny

And that’s kinda the extra win in the formula of awesomeness that is this comic: continuity is not important. Sure it fits in the right slots within the larger Marvel universe, but picking this book of the shelf requires no prior knowledge whatsoever. Never read a Marvel comic before? Try this one. And there is a huge number of people out there who a) haven’t read a Marvel comic before and b) like Clint Barton from that Avengers film that pretty much rocked. Can you imagine if every great character had a book you could just pick up and have it be a bloody good, hella enjoyable read with absolutely no pre-requisites? Black Widow? Wolverine? Spider-Man?!

hawkeye dogs Mini Marvels: Hawkeye #8   My Bad Penny

That’s also probably the reason why my other two current Marvel favourites are Captain Marvel and Young Avengers. Those have a bit more complexity in the character histories to work around but they’re still really accessible. And clever. And fun.

Because comics should be fun, really, they’re entertainment. And Hawkeye is bursting with energy and heart, real heart, from car chases to dog rescues to hurricane empathy to Dog Cops. Reading this comic gives me the same buzz as watching an episode of my favourite tv series, or having seen a really good new film. It’s daft and it’s original, and underneath all that it is truly brilliant in terms of panel composition, sequencing, storytelling and rhythm.

Upcoming plots include an issue told by pizza dog, and one incorporating sign language as Clint goes back to having hearing difficulties. As someone who spends half their times trying to entice the UK reading population into trying a comic, this stuff is gold dust.

If you’re not reading it bro, you’re missing out.

[What other mini Marvels am I missing out on? Suggest away - please!]

hawkeye 08 1 150x150 Mini Marvels: Hawkeye #8   My Bad Penny hawkeye 08 150x150 Mini Marvels: Hawkeye #8   My Bad Penny hawkeye 08 3 150x150 Mini Marvels: Hawkeye #8   My Bad Penny

Hawkeye #8
Writer: Matt Fraction

Artist: David Aja, Annie Wu
Colourist: Matt Hollingsworth
Cover Artist: David Aja

Letters: Chris Eliopoulos
Editor: Sana Amanat, Stephen Wacker
Publisher: Marvel

If you like, try: Young Avengers, Saga

7 Comments on Mini Marvels: Hawkeye #8 – My Bad Penny, last added: 3/7/2013
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10. Review: Hawkeye #7 – Don’t Say The ‘B-Word’

TweetI’m not saying it! I don’t think I’ve seen a single review of Matt Fraction’s superhero-free series which hasn’t eagerly slipped in at least seventeen b-words inbetween sentences. We’re better than that here at T’Beat, promise. The most recent issue of Marvel’s new most-praised book was a fill-in issue brought about at the last minute [...]

5 Comments on Review: Hawkeye #7 – Don’t Say The ‘B-Word’, last added: 2/6/2013
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11. The Hawkeye Initiative launches—and genderswapping will never be the same

Over the weekend someone on Tumblr got the great idea of satirizing anatomically unlikely, and overtly sexualized comic book covers by replacing the women with Hawkeye.

As far as we can make it out started withthis post by artist Blue which remixed a Marvel cover on Saturday:

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tumblr medstiyYUB1qas8ce The Hawkeye Initiative launches—and genderswapping will never be the same

By morning, it was a huge vast thing called The Hawkeye Initiative. One more example:

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Hundreds more all over the place.

One of the reasons the meme caught on was that Jeremy Renner, who plays Hawkeye in The Avengers, is so fond of hitting the brokeback himself:
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Hawkeye Initiative participants also noted that Renner has a nice ace, which makes it even more effective. Sometimes the stars align and magic happens.

We also recommend this.

8 Comments on The Hawkeye Initiative launches—and genderswapping will never be the same, last added: 12/4/2012
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12. The Hawkeye Initiative

The Hawkeye Initiative:

About 12 years ago for a class project in art school I argued that sexism was not inherently embedded in the female nude in art (or images of women, period, as argued by the hardcore feminists there), but coded in the poses. Wish I’d thought of the following to make my point: The Hawkeye Initiative exposes what we’re so used to seeing that we don’t notice any more. It shows the ludicrous and the sexploitative in comics by replacing heroines with the buff Hawkeye character in the same pose—-drawn by whoever wants to participate, with some pretty hilarious results.

0 Comments on The Hawkeye Initiative as of 12/3/2012 2:11:00 AM
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13. Advance Review: Hawkeye #1

By Steve Morris

Hawkeye’s appeal is, as Matt Fraction nails immediately in issue #1 of his new series starring the character, that he is the ‘normal’ Avenger. He doesn’t have any powers, only his skill with a bow and willingness to commit to a full gym schedule. However, for the past ten years his main characterisation has been ‘bit of a dick’, and that’s also something Fraction nails, for better or worse.

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Hawkeye #1 is a strong issue both in terms of writing and (this will be a shock to no-one) David Aja’s art. Aja has long been one of the smartest and most creative artists in the industry, whose storytelling is without comparison. He excels here once more, with a series of scenes which could’ve looked utterly boring, but are instead visually intricate and fascinating. There are a lot of conversational scenes here, with Hawkeye barely in costume, and yet Aja manages to create diverse panels, laid out in a manner which enhances every scene.

The fight scenes are chaos when they need to be, and yet still filled with details – check the line he draws for Hawkeye’s deft flick of a playing card, which flies straight to the throat of a mafia goon from the fingers. It’s a tiny detail which builds on the rest of the panel, and yet draws all the attention. While Aja’s Clint Barton does look a little like Danny Rand with lighter-hair, his body-language and fighting style are noticeably different.

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Also, he draws a lot of puppy-dogs. I know this will be a draw for many of you.

Fraction’s script reads like a Tarantino film, as it features a non-linear timeline and a small-scale look at crime in the Marvel Universe. This works for the most part, although some of the verbal tics – like a gangster who keeps punctuating his speech with ‘bro’ – are a little irritating. There’s also a lot of blanked-out swearing, which has always served to take me out of a story in the past. It just looks silly, and takes a lot of threat out of the villains who use it.

The rest of the dialogue is pretty decent, but the narration is the main driving force of the story, here. Cutting between scenes rapidly and with some great twists, Hawkeye’s narration punctuates the shifting time-line and strengthens the issue. We see Hawkeye act like a complete dick for almost the entire issue (in classic Hawkeye fashion) but his narration is blind to just how annoying he is. There’s a very interesting disconnect at play here – whether it will be explored in future issues is, however, up for debate.

Much like the previous Captain Marvel #1, this issue is very much a one-shot story which doesn’t give us much of an idea about the overall narrative Fraction wants to put in place, here. Marvel do seem to be concerned with establishing their characters by having them take part in a single, wrapped up story, which gives them some definition but doesn’t establish the ongoing threat. Here again we have Hawkeye dealing with some small-scale threats, but we see him more as Clint Barton than as an Avenger. Once the story wraps up, there’s no idea what we might have coming next, and readers looking for big superhero feats are going to be disappointed.

I don’t know if this structuri

15 Comments on Advance Review: Hawkeye #1, last added: 8/1/2012
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14. Marvel Creates New Superhero for a Hearing-Impaired Fan

Much of the recent focus on Marvel has seen them as a corporate behemoth, crushing the innocent as they march across America in their golden boots. But a recent news story reported by the Huffington Post reminds that the people working for the company are still doing everything they can to support and entertain their fans, and help out wherever they can.

When 4-year old Anthony Smith, a young comic book fan with hearing impairment, was told by Doctors that he needed to wear a hearing aid, he refused. He didn’t want to feel like he stood out and was alone. So his mother, superheroic Christina D’Allesandro, sent an email to Marvel comics, asking if there were any examples of superheroes who also wore an aid - if she could find pictures showing her son that there was nothing unusual about wearing an aid, perhaps he’d change his mind about wearing one himself.

Not only did Marvel point her to a famous storyline where Hawkeye temporarily damaged his hearing (during his time with the West Coast Avengers, fact-fans); but editor Bill Rosemann decided to take Anthony as his inspiration to create a new superhero, called The Blue Ear.

Here’s a look at Blue Ear in action, as drawn by Nelson Ribeiro:

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Bolstered by D’Allesandro’s email, a number of Marvel’s staff started to draw their own Blue Ear artwork, and sent it over to Anthony. And now he’s not only a superhero – but a superhero who hangs out with the Avengers, Anthony has now happily started wearing his hearing aid. After all, he’s got Hawkeye backing him up now, as drawn by Manny Mederos:

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Now the only thing left is to bring him into Marvel continuity!

5 Comments on Marvel Creates New Superhero for a Hearing-Impaired Fan, last added: 5/24/2012
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