Showing posts with label Oliver Nome. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Oliver Nome. Show all posts
Wednesday, June 6, 2012
Help Oliver Nome
I know it has been all over the web but I think the more this is promoted the better. Artist Oliver Nome was recently diagnosed with a brain tumor and needs help paying for the medical costs of treatment.
A fund-raising site has been set up here: http://www.indiegogo.com/friendsofoliver
As always with these things, every little bit helps. So donations range from a buck to $625.So please help out if you can.
I met Nome at the Boston Comic-Con in 2011 and had a great conversation with him. He also drew the commission above, my favorite from that con and an absolute steal.
I was also floored by his work on Flashpoint:Kid Flash Lost (written by Sterling Gates). Nome brought his electric style to the story but also did a great job evoking the death of Barry Allen in Crisis in a number of places.
So please check out the website. There are tokens of appreciation ranging from high fives to prints to original art for all levels of donation.
Thursday, September 1, 2011
Review: Flashpoint: Kid Flash Lost #3
Flashpoint: Kid Flash Lost #3 came out last week, adding another step to the journey ending the old DCU continuity. Written by Sterling Gates and drawn by Oliver Nome (with some help by Scott Kolins), the book is part of the Flashpoint storyline but still separate from the main world story. In that way, it is similar to Project Superman, sort of an adjunct title, adding some depth to the overall plot but set apart enough to stand on its own.
There is a lot to like about this mini-series, a story that pin wheels around a bit. This issue is such a great goodbye card to current Flash continuity, almost a love letter to the post-Crisis Flash family, a hero legacy which I think has lost much of its emotional punch with the resurrection of Barry Allen. Allen's sacrifice in Crisis on Infinite Earths was such an inspiration to every speedster, an important part of the Flashes' characterization, especially Wally. In this issue, Gates puts Kid Flash into Barry's shoes, Flashpoint being his equivalent of the Crisis. And in doing so, Gates is able to touch on a lot of Flash history bringing this hero family story to a satisfying closure.
Perhaps for me the most interesting thing is the flow of this mini-series. What started out as a relatively straight-forward science fiction Matrix-like story to this issue's race through time. I could not have anticipated that sort of jump from one rail to another. But it isn't distracting that the theme of the story changes so dramatically. It flows well. Besides, this issue is such a great finale for the Flash family, there is a lot to love. And that includes some nice homages to Crisis on Infinite Earths #8.
Oliver Nome's art is appropriately ragged for the plot, decaying and flaking their way through history.
The issue starts out in the late 1800's where we see Max Mercury (before he was Max Mercury) speeding to investigate a bizarre storm off in the distance. What he comes across is Bart now dressed up in a Black Flash costume.
The Black Flash is sort of a Death character, purportedly seen just before the death of a super-speedster. Last issue we saw Bart trying to reach Barry. So why is he here? And why is he dressed like that?
But this panel is clearly an homage panel. Look at Bart.
And now look at this panel from Crisis on Infinite Earths #2. This was one of Barry's appearances as he races back in time while saving the universe.
Bart is basically like Barry here, racing to save the world. This homage is just a nice way to get that point across.
In a bizarre twist of events, Bart ends up acting as the Black Flash draining Max of his speed force energy, killing Mercury.
For some reason the Speed Force has brought Bart to that point before whisking him away.
Will there be a Max Mercury in the DCnU?
But Max is just the first stop on Bart's deadly trip through super-speed history.
Next he comes across Jay Garrick right after he has 'inhaled hard water fumes'. And like with Max, Bart absorbs all the Speed Force energy and pushes him along. It is enough to make Bart wonder if there is a bigger plan here than just spreading death.
As he tumbles through time, Bart sees not only the harsh world of Flashpoint but also his past life, working with Young Justice and Teen Titans.
And then we get to Wally. Wally must have died in the Citizen Cold Flashpoint story. He is dead and buried.
Bart is still able to absorb the Speed Force from his body and move on.
But I agree with Bart. This is wrong. Wally shouldn't be dead. Wally shouldn't be gone.
Where is Wally? Does he even exist in the DCnU? And what a loss if he doesn't. For me, Wally is the Flash. Bringing back Barry just cheapened Barry and lessened Wally.
Juiced with Speed Force, Bart suddenly sheds the Black Flash suit. There is no more super-speed energy to gather.
It is clear to Bart that he needs to get all that energy to the person who needs it the most ... Barry.
So Gates has taken us to Max and Jay and Wally. He has shown us snippets of Bart's history.
And now we see Bart finally catching up to Barry who is also speeding through the time stream, I assume to set everything right in the DC timeline (or as right as the DCnU continuity can be called).
I love how Gates brings in images from Barry's life from scenes like outracing a car in Showcase #4 to imploding the Anti-Monitor's cannon in Crisis on Infinite Earths #8 to chasing down the Radion bullet in Final Crisis.
And then Bart tells Barry to run and save the world, giving Barry all the energy he has gathered.
Kid Flash sacrifices himself so Barry can be the hero. He becomes the White Flash, I suppose the giver of life. And despite disintegrating, despite dying, Bart is smiling as he falls through time.
Contrast that smile ... that peace with heroic sacrifice to this ...
Again, another homage to Barry's sacrifice, that decay and death ... that need for speed to save the world. But Barry's dread isn't there. Bart shows unusual maturity for him as he accepts his fate.
Again, the comparison to Crisis #8 works so well here as Bart is a secret hero in this Flashpoint world.
And so now it is a race for Barry, a race to stop Zoom from creating the Flashpoint world.
And Barry is racing for all the speedsters, all the Flash Family. Although to be honest, I wonder just who on this page outside of Barry and Bart make it into the DCnU. (I guess Jay will be on Earth 2, maybe Jessie there too).
Anyways, as its own story, I really liked Kid Flash Lost. But I loved this issue. Much like the endings of many of the monthly series, I think Sterling Gates used this issue to say goodbye to the post-Crisis Flash mythology. Those stories, especially the bulk written by Mark Waid, were superlative.
So thanks to Sterling Gates for letting me say a little goodbye to all that stuff, for showing just how tall and intricate the Flash Family tree is. And for once again showing that a hero's journey sometimes comes to an abrupt but appropriate ending.
I do find it interesting that the two pieces of Flashpoint I liked the best were on the periphery of the main story.
And now ... the DCnU.
Overall grade: A
There is a lot to like about this mini-series, a story that pin wheels around a bit. This issue is such a great goodbye card to current Flash continuity, almost a love letter to the post-Crisis Flash family, a hero legacy which I think has lost much of its emotional punch with the resurrection of Barry Allen. Allen's sacrifice in Crisis on Infinite Earths was such an inspiration to every speedster, an important part of the Flashes' characterization, especially Wally. In this issue, Gates puts Kid Flash into Barry's shoes, Flashpoint being his equivalent of the Crisis. And in doing so, Gates is able to touch on a lot of Flash history bringing this hero family story to a satisfying closure.
Perhaps for me the most interesting thing is the flow of this mini-series. What started out as a relatively straight-forward science fiction Matrix-like story to this issue's race through time. I could not have anticipated that sort of jump from one rail to another. But it isn't distracting that the theme of the story changes so dramatically. It flows well. Besides, this issue is such a great finale for the Flash family, there is a lot to love. And that includes some nice homages to Crisis on Infinite Earths #8.
Oliver Nome's art is appropriately ragged for the plot, decaying and flaking their way through history.
The issue starts out in the late 1800's where we see Max Mercury (before he was Max Mercury) speeding to investigate a bizarre storm off in the distance. What he comes across is Bart now dressed up in a Black Flash costume.
The Black Flash is sort of a Death character, purportedly seen just before the death of a super-speedster. Last issue we saw Bart trying to reach Barry. So why is he here? And why is he dressed like that?
But this panel is clearly an homage panel. Look at Bart.
And now look at this panel from Crisis on Infinite Earths #2. This was one of Barry's appearances as he races back in time while saving the universe.
Bart is basically like Barry here, racing to save the world. This homage is just a nice way to get that point across.
In a bizarre twist of events, Bart ends up acting as the Black Flash draining Max of his speed force energy, killing Mercury.
For some reason the Speed Force has brought Bart to that point before whisking him away.
Will there be a Max Mercury in the DCnU?
But Max is just the first stop on Bart's deadly trip through super-speed history.
Next he comes across Jay Garrick right after he has 'inhaled hard water fumes'. And like with Max, Bart absorbs all the Speed Force energy and pushes him along. It is enough to make Bart wonder if there is a bigger plan here than just spreading death.
As he tumbles through time, Bart sees not only the harsh world of Flashpoint but also his past life, working with Young Justice and Teen Titans.
And then we get to Wally. Wally must have died in the Citizen Cold Flashpoint story. He is dead and buried.
Bart is still able to absorb the Speed Force from his body and move on.
But I agree with Bart. This is wrong. Wally shouldn't be dead. Wally shouldn't be gone.
Where is Wally? Does he even exist in the DCnU? And what a loss if he doesn't. For me, Wally is the Flash. Bringing back Barry just cheapened Barry and lessened Wally.
Juiced with Speed Force, Bart suddenly sheds the Black Flash suit. There is no more super-speed energy to gather.
It is clear to Bart that he needs to get all that energy to the person who needs it the most ... Barry.
So Gates has taken us to Max and Jay and Wally. He has shown us snippets of Bart's history.
And now we see Bart finally catching up to Barry who is also speeding through the time stream, I assume to set everything right in the DC timeline (or as right as the DCnU continuity can be called).
I love how Gates brings in images from Barry's life from scenes like outracing a car in Showcase #4 to imploding the Anti-Monitor's cannon in Crisis on Infinite Earths #8 to chasing down the Radion bullet in Final Crisis.
And then Bart tells Barry to run and save the world, giving Barry all the energy he has gathered.
Kid Flash sacrifices himself so Barry can be the hero. He becomes the White Flash, I suppose the giver of life. And despite disintegrating, despite dying, Bart is smiling as he falls through time.
Contrast that smile ... that peace with heroic sacrifice to this ...
Again, another homage to Barry's sacrifice, that decay and death ... that need for speed to save the world. But Barry's dread isn't there. Bart shows unusual maturity for him as he accepts his fate.
Again, the comparison to Crisis #8 works so well here as Bart is a secret hero in this Flashpoint world.
And so now it is a race for Barry, a race to stop Zoom from creating the Flashpoint world.
And Barry is racing for all the speedsters, all the Flash Family. Although to be honest, I wonder just who on this page outside of Barry and Bart make it into the DCnU. (I guess Jay will be on Earth 2, maybe Jessie there too).
Anyways, as its own story, I really liked Kid Flash Lost. But I loved this issue. Much like the endings of many of the monthly series, I think Sterling Gates used this issue to say goodbye to the post-Crisis Flash mythology. Those stories, especially the bulk written by Mark Waid, were superlative.
So thanks to Sterling Gates for letting me say a little goodbye to all that stuff, for showing just how tall and intricate the Flash Family tree is. And for once again showing that a hero's journey sometimes comes to an abrupt but appropriate ending.
I do find it interesting that the two pieces of Flashpoint I liked the best were on the periphery of the main story.
And now ... the DCnU.
Overall grade: A
Thursday, August 4, 2011
Review: Flashpoint: Kid Flash Lost #2
With this post on Flashpoint:Kid Flash Lost #2, I have finally caught up with last week's comic reviews. Unreal! That was one heavy week.
After looking at the unrelenting dystopia of Flashpoint, I have come to appreciate thus series. Writer Sterling Gates does a great job mixing Bart's upbeat, frenetic, impulsive personality into the dismal future of Flashpoint. It is an odd mix and a tricky balancing act, but it works. Bart needs to remain Bart despite all the horror around him. And the Flashpoint world needs to remain a dark and cheerless place. It would be easy to have Kid Flash become grim when faced with this world, maybe too easy. But then ... it wouldn't be Kid Flash. And with the occasional humor that is injected into the story, it is a welcome respite from the harshness of the Flashpoint event.
And Gates only has 3 issues to get through this story and provide us some characterization to contemplate. While there are times Bart's silliness can shine, he also has to eventually step up and become a hero. There is some subtext here, some feeling that Bart needs to channel Barry, needs to live up to the legacy of the Flash family, and I liked that a lot. I love the idea of the Flash family, the legacy of the speedsters, and this story adds to that.
As for the art, Oliver Nome continues to shine. I wonder if inker Trevor Scott adds a rougher feeling to his pencils than he would if he inked himself. Francis Manapul does his usual stellar job on the cover. It took a while before I noticed that this is actually a cover of Hot Pursuit's helmet, Bart being a reflection.
Freed from his Brainiac pod, Bart is slowly fading away as history is rewritten. And he is cut off from the Speed Force so there is little he can do but hide in the bowels of Brainiac's ship.
As always, for me the hero's journey is a story that I enjoy. Something that I enjoyed in the book is the tiny moment that Patty Spivot gets discussing her drive to be a hero. She couldn't sit and let life pass her by. She needed to do something to better the world and the Hot Pursuit tech gave her that opportunity. That sort of personal resolve, the desire to be a hero, is such a fertile place for stories.
Looking to get some information, Bart slaps the Hot Pursuit helmet on, hoping to learn what has happened to the world. This is a great double page spread by Nome as we see elements of both the 'real' DCU timeline as well as the Flashpoint world. Seeing the two versions of Aquaman and Wonder Woman as well as everything else works. But it is too much for Bart to absorb. It is overwhelming.
But I love the perspective here, a large Bart in the background, the history spilling out onto the page.
With some luck, the two heroes escape Brainiac's satellite. It is a fun moment with Bart driving the time cycle while Patty clutches and curses. Again, that fun part of Bart's personality in the middle of Brainiac's technological nightmare is a nice contrast.
But that doesn't change the fact that the two need access to the speed force to power the Hot Pursuit cycle to go back and change time. Brainiac has the fuel tank. It seems hopeless.
But I love how Patty gets Bart re-focused by reminding him of the symbol he wears What would the Flash do? He would defeat Brainiac and set things right.
Ironically, Bart has a plan! Even he admits that usually means trouble.
Bart figures out that the only place he has had superspeed was in the VR world of the Brainiac's 'Matrix'. He allows himself to get captured and plugged back in. But of course, he needs to do it in a classic Bart way. Has anyone every said 'nyaaah' to Brainiac before? Wonderful!
Once plugged in, his access to superspeed allows Bart to rewrite Brainiac's codes. It is a nice reminder of Bart's origins of being raised in a VR world, a world he was constantly challenging and out-thinking. Once he knew he was in Brainiac's phony world, Bart had all the power and authority he needed to change Brainiac's defenses. Again, how great to see Bart say Brainiac is pwned.
This allows Patty to get in and grab the speed force tank while Bart extricates himself.
Despite these flashes of fun, Gates reminds us that this is Flashpoint. Patty gets perforated by Brainiac.
I suppose this is Bart's story but I was sad to see this happen. Patty was a 'normal person' trying to better her world. I would have loved to see more of her story. There is so much death in this world. It is a villains world. I hope Patty appears in the DCnU.
As she dies, she puts her faith in Bart, releasing the speed force stored in the tank, hooking Bart back in at least for a while. Even dying, she did what needed to be done.
Powered up, Bart is now running a race to find the Flash to go back in time and set things right. Again Nome shines here with this extreme perspective, Bart practically running off the page. I do like the ominous skull behind him. This is a race against death and that is a nice image to invoke that feeling.
But I think I know where this is going. A skeletal Flash, racing against the clock to try to save the universe?
Crisis on Infinite Earths #8. Will we see Bart go back in time trying to get to Barry? Is this a way of Bart fulfilling the legacy of the Flash? Becoming the Flash?
So this mini-series continues to rise to the top of the Flashpoint world along with Project Superman. It is such a satisfying and odd mix of despair and humor. That isn't an easy cocktail to make. Add to that the heroism of Patty and this was a very entertaining issue. It makes me lament the 'hinted at but never materialized' Speed Force comic Gates was supposed to write.
Overall grade: A
Friday, July 1, 2011
Review: Flashpoint Kid Flash Lost #1
Despite being one of those people who complains of 'event fatigue' in comics, I found myself signing up for a handful of Flashpoint mini-series, mostly based upon characters I follow. But I was thrilled when I saw the solicits included Flashpoint:Kid Flash Lost by former Supergirl writer Sterling Gates and relative newcomer Oliver Nome. This was a mini-series added to my pull list on the strength of the creative team alone.
Gates has always professed to be a Wally West fan and a Bart fan and at one point was linked to a possible Flash-family style book called Speed Force, a book which has yet come to pass. But when a creator has a passion for a character and finally gets to write them, the usual result is a great book. And so far, Kid Flash Lost is just that.
Stuck in the dreary reality of the Flashpoint universe, Kid Flash Lost actually reads a bit like a fun book, Bart's infectious, upbeat, and frenetic personality standing as a stark contrast to the horrors around him. Despite finding himself in the ultimate dystopia, Bart is still Bart. This isn't a murderous Aquaman or a rampaging Wonder Woman ... this is Bart equating his situation to movies he has seen, wowed by the cool things around him, and worrying about his future. For me, that is the key to the series. Who wants to read a dour Kid Flash? Not me.
So it is great to see Sterling Gates at the helm of this book as he has such an easy handle on the character. Bart's reactions are exactly as I would expect them to be. And Gates does just what he should do in an opening chapter of a book like this ... give me enough of the character so I get a sense of who he is, keep the action high, and give me a great hook to come back for more.
Oliver Nome's art is energetic and expressive with a hint of a manga influence. It occasionally looks a little rough which I think might be more of Trevor Scott's inks given the things I saw Nome doing at the Boston Comic Con.
The series first starts with a female Hot Pursuit sensing some massive chronal disturbance and teleporting away.
But the opening scene of the title character has Kid Flash running with testy and easily perturbed Barry. It doesn't feel right. More than anything, Barry has seemed to try to avoid Bart since his return. This more upfront and angry encounter doesn't sound like Barry.
I have to point out the small editorial gaffe of putting the creative credits on this page twice, once in the yellow circle and once in small red font right on the Flash's left thigh. Just a slight distraction, I know ... but certainly it is someone's job to make sure this doesn't happen.
Now outside of Barry's personality, Bart also notices slight imperfections in the city around him, miscolored signs, misplaced landmarks. Even Bart's slight pain from an old knee injury is gone. Someting is wrong and Bart knows it. Barry's anger was the tipping point. This has to be some sort of illusion and Bart is going to rebel. I thought this was a nice way to show that Bart is smarter than he sometimes lets on. I also liked the reference to his knee injury at the hand of Deathstroke.
Bart starts by attacking 'Barry'. Oliver Nome does a nice job using multiple fist images to show the superspeed assault Kid Flash unleashes.
In that rebellion is the equivalent of the taking the red pill from Morpheus in The Matrix. By rejecting this illusion, Bart awakens in a pod, hooked up to life support, and surrounded by technology. It certainly has a Matrix feel to it. Nice perspective of this panel, looking down on an isolated Bart surrounded by this machinery.
Bart immediately recognizes the decor as consistent with a super-villain's lair but before he can investigate more he discovers two things. One, he is cut of from the speed force and powerless. And second, his escape from the pod has been detected by robot sentries who swarm him to attack.
Bart is able to hide but he spies the night stick of Hot Pursuit.
These panels were my favorites in the book because they showcase the youth of Bart. I am not going to say immaturity because that is too pejorative. He is just young with a short attention span. The first panel with Bart peeking out from his hiding spot just has a Scooby Doo sort of vibe here. Did he really think that he could hide from robots that way?
And then the 'Kid Flash fact' that he is easily distracted. It both ties into the history of 'Flash facts' panels but rather than some science factoid we get a wonderful self-awareness. He should have kept moving but he paused when he saw the nightstick. That just gets to the core of who Kid Flash is.
It turns out that the super-villain is Brainiac, looking bleaker and more robotic than usual. I thought this was a subtle way to ground us in this Flashpoint world. Things are darker here. Even the villains look more monstrous, less human. And Kid Flash stands out as just being different in this world.
And the Matrix-feel continues as we learn that Bart was a battery, Brainiac draining him of chronal energy.
But before Bart can be put back in his pod, he is rescued by the now materialized Hot Pursuit.
Again, the beauty of this book was just how Bart reacts, how he retains his joy of life despite the craziness and grimness of everything around us. Bart has awoken in this nightmare world but he pauses to say he thinks the speed bike of Hot Pursuit is cool. It is that disconnect, that juxtaposition of some brightness in this bleak universe, that makes this such an interesting book.
Once outside the battery tower Bart basically calls this world the Matrix, saying he saw 'this movie' with Conner and neither of them liked it. It really does have a Matrix feel, people trapped in pods while machinery is everywhere like vines. I wonder if it might smack a bit too much like the Matrix.
Still, it makes sense that neither Bart or Con liked the Matrix. Both of their character histories have them trapped in virtual worlds, stuck away from reality. It probably hits home a little more to them. Of course they wouldn't like it! Small flourishes of characterization like this really stick with me in comics.
It turns out that the new hot pursuit is Peggy Spivot, the forensic scientist last seen in Flash. In that book, she is supposed to be a contemporary of Barry. Here she looks pretty young. Will she become a sort of romance interest for Bart here? Or a more appropriate question is how long before Bart tries to be smooth?
Her equipment tells her that they are in the 31st century, 500 years into Brainiac's rule of the planet. Again, the rewritten history of Flashpoint has future implications. This isn't the optimistic land of the Legion; this is hellish.
And that change in history means Bart was never born. While in Brainiac's fortress, Bart had some sort of chronal protection. But now, outside of that pod, Bart is literally fading away. He references doesn't name it outright but he says he saw this movie with Cassie ... obviously riffing Back to the Future.
So this was a very nice opening to this mini-series. Really the best opening chapter of all the Flashpoint mini-series that I have bought. It had good action, a great handle of the star character, and a very nice hook to keep me coming back for more.
The question really is where the heck do we go from here? Bart would need to go back in time and stop Flashpoint from happening to reset the right timeline. Could he be the hero of this thing? Or does he somehow get some more chronal protection? Or does he try to recreate his birth within this new timeline? Maybe he is going to flit around the timeline throughout? I have no idea where this is going ... and that is also another hook for me.
But really, the character of Kid Flash made this a lot of fun despite all the horror that has bubbled up in Flashpoint. And that was appreciated.
Overall grade: B+
Saturday, May 7, 2011
Boston Comic Con Commission #2: Oliver Nome
Next on my commission review from Boston Comic Con 2011 is this beautiful piece by Oliver Nome. I didn't know much about Nome until he was announced as the artist on the upcoming Flashpoint:Kid Flash mini-series. When I started to look on line at his work, I was blown away. Here is the link to his deviantart page: http://olivernome.deviantart.com/
I think this piece was a complete steal. It is really just a beautiful piece showing a strong Supergirl. As always with these commissions, color is considered a bonus. Here the added color to the hair, S-shield, and face just adds so much depth to the piece. This is just a great great commission.
I was pumped for this mini-series when I heard Sterling Gates was announced as writer. Then I heard Francis Manapul was doing covers; I thought it couldn't get better.
Now I think this mini-series is going to be a complete home run.
Just a great commission for me though!
Labels:
Boston Comic Con,
commission,
Kid Flash,
Oliver Nome,
Sterling Gates,
Supergirl
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