This week’s main reviews are Masterpiece #1, Beyond Real #1, and Underheist #1. Plus, the Wednesday Comics Team has its usual rundown of the new #1s, finales and other notable issues from non-Big 2 publishers, all of which you can find below … enjoy!
Masterpiece #1
Writer: Brian Michael BendisArtist: Alex MaleevColorist: Ian HerringLetterer: Joshua ReedPublisher: Dark Horse Comics
Review by Beau Q.
You know Emma. Emma is a student…until she’s not. Emma is a normal anxious teen until she’s confronted with kidnappers, then she’s cool as ice. Emma is the protagonist in a high concept blackmailed to do a heist plot. If you don’t know Emma, then you may know an Emma. But truth of the matter is we don’t know the Emma of Brian Michael Bendis and Alex Maleev’s Masterpiece.
We think we know Emma. From the outset, the story is framed with introductions and twists in mind. Emma presents herself as ‘Emma’ at school, but the FBI agents know her as ‘Masterpiece.’ Hell, we think they’re FBI agents until they’re kidnapping her for a billionaire. Here’s where someone who knows Emma (and a lot about her) steps into the foray. We know him, Zero Preston. Zero Preston is a billionaire. Imagine one. That’s him. He knows Emma more than we do. He knows her provenance and wants her to do one heist. The twisty-turvy heist doesn’t stop there, but with that Bendis and Maleev have set our expectations up for failure and our minds at unease.
We think we know Emma, at least in this moment, because traditional comic thinking would tell you “this is this moment in this character’s life”– Emma is a whip-smart today teen capable of seeing through the bullshit. But the more we read, the less we know about Emma than our initial perception, and it changes the pace of the back half of this pilot issue. Just as Emma is thrown into the deep-end to survive this blackmail scheme, so too are we expected to pick it up as the hits keep coming. We the reader are having to parse out our protagonist and plot in simultaneous progression, which can help obfuscate Masterpiece’s high concept that teeters on its own tropes by adding twists before the stage is set; you think this would layer subversion, but instead it disrupts the plot’s aim.
We think we know Emma and her world, what, with its clearly defined foreground, middle ground, background planes, and their realistically expressive faces, but how could we with Maleev obscuring so many characters (incidental or not) with stark black shadow? Well, sensing how adept readers are to twisting thief fiction, Maleev uses his trademark hyperrealism to manipulate our expectations further. We are asked to question why he chooses not to render faces in moments of high dramatic turn. We are asked to reexamine power dynamics when the layouts are staged in a way that keeps Emma’s playing field level with Preston and his goons. We are being pressed to question the validity of Preston’s statements when Maleev uses a beautifully mid-century modern spread that feels artificial to Emma’s hyperreal world. Really, the only moment that doesn’t feel like Maleev pulling another one over us with his layout design is how different Emma’s webcomic looks compared to today’s webcomics– their black and white nature sell more 90s web strip than the ones we have bookmarked on our phone.
We think we know Emma’s world with its realistic grime, because colorist Ian Herring deems it so. With a sandy chipboard texture, Herring tries to complement Maleev’s inks with a natural yet pulpy palette, but the saturation is turned up enough the noise grain can feel louder than normal on backlit screens. Emma is cast in a cool blue shade when put upon in interrogation. Her world fills with sickly chartreuse when Preston brings unease and opulent terror to her day. But nothing stands out in this palette quite like Herring’s orange red; a caution. From a glass of wine, a flash drive, the sunset, some Daredevil glasses, or even a word balloon’s outline, orange red is a warning to Emma and the reader.
We think we know how Emma’s world sounds thanks to longtime Bendis/Maleev collaborator Joshua Reed booking the dialogue. Bendis is a wordy sort with a heavy emphasis on dialogue moving plot and capturing the emotions in those moments. Reed packs these multiple line segments into balloon stacks that use verticality and size to convey tone. Most wouldn’t notice a hamburger stacked balloon from a diamond stacked one, but Reed draws attention to particular lines by using an uniformed through-line to his balloon stacks, so that when one slips out, it warrants attention, or at least, a change in tone. However, if you’re not a fan of dialogue hanging on an ellipsis to connect scenes through a page turn, avert your eyes! That particular application doesn’t feel as fresh as hardcutting scenes between spreads.
With this, you might think you know Masterpiece, know Emma, and maybe even know where this book is going, but I assure you, you do not. There’s no way to know from where I am in time if you have or haven’t read Masterpiece, and therefore have gotten to meet Emma. But even then, we still do not know her. The only way for us to know Emma and how she’ll get out of this heist is for us to keep reading. Maybe then. If ya want.
Beyond Real #1
Writer: Zack KaplanArtist: Fabiano Mascolo and Toni FejzulaColorist: Jordie Bellaire and Toni FejzulaLetterer: Hassan Otsmane-ElhaouPublisher: Vault Comics
Review by Tim Rooney
Beyond Real by writer Zack Kaplan and artists Fabiana Mascolo and Toni Fejzula is a book focused on what it means to be alive. As questions arise around the ethics of Artificial Intelligence and predictive algorithms, Kaplan, Mascolo and Fejzula asks questions about the nature of our own sentience and purpose.
The book follows June, a young woman, in the days after a tragic car accident that has left her boyfriend comatose. She finds herself experiencing strange glitches in reality and is unsure what is real and what might be hallucination. Already skeptical about the ideas of fate and purpose in life before reality begins to bend around her, June is quickly thrown into an existential panic. The book plays with simulation theory and ideas of destiny and our human perceptions of choice and self-determination. These ideas in themselves are not new but they are newly urgent as our economic structures work overtime to remove the human from art and creative endeavors.
The artists, Mascolo and Fejzula, whose work blends seamlessly one into the other, leverage the comics page to make dynamic and disorienting imagery that undermines June’s fabric of reality. There is a clear delineation in style between the moments before the accident and everything that follows. Those early pages are rendered in straight forward, rigid panels with standard and realistic, nearly flat colors. They are well crafted but unremarkable in visual. After the accident, the world is set off-kilter, with Fejzula and Jordie Bellaire’s colors creating rainbow ripples in color and space. Images are offset with chromatic aberration as if June’s vision is constantly riddled with stars. Figures appear and dissolve across panels and static backgrounds, the skyline is reduced to a 3d wireframe simulacrum and the very structure of life breaks into their component parts.
By the issue’s end the reader’s sense of the real is thrown into question altogether as June’s reality is completely obliterated. Hassan Otsmane-Elhaou brings his usual excellent lettering skills, providing a structure to the dreamlike haze of the art. The visual feast is undergirded by the emotional heart of Kaplan’s story of love and grief. It’s part Matrix, part The Notebook and the effect is a dazzling work of comics storytelling. Art this good earns a BUY on its own, but paired with a compelling emotional story, this is a debut issue you won’t want to miss.
Underheist #1
Writers: Maria and David LaphamArtist: David LaphamColorist: Hillary JenkinsLetter: David LaphamPublisher: BOOM! Studios
Review by Jordan Jennings
Underheist #1 is the newest crime-noir comic from Maria and David Lapham. The story focuses on David a man who struggles with gambling addiction have cost him everything. In deep debt with a bookie and staring down a dead-end life, David seeks to turn his life around. With a tip about an impending bank heist, David gets together a crew to rob the robbers and break out of this vicious cycle of pain and debt. However they quickly learn that a simple task is never that simple.
Noir comics are familiar territory for the Laphams and it shows here in Underheist. There are familiar elements to the story of people in a bind as they look for quick way to make a buck. That is the quintessential American experience in a lot of ways. Yet there is more at play than just a heist. There is an underlying supernatural theme present in this story. In a flashback we see David getting punished by the bookie with a rather ornate dagger which leaves a mysterious scar. Throughout the story David is constantly scratching at the scar as it becomes more defined and takes the shape of something sinister.
This hook gives the story something beyond just a well-executed crime story and makes it unique. The slow burning reveal leaves me wanting more in a good way. Just to be clear, while the supernatural aspect is a low burn the actual comic is anything but. The overall pacing is brisk and wastes no time to get to the heist. The way the story just jumped in gives this comic a lived-in feel that made me think the comic was a sequel. This doesn’t make the comic impenetrable. Everything that needs to be explained is clearly explained as it comes up. It is just impressive that the chemistry between the characters feel like it has been going for some time.
David Lapham’s art is stylized and fitting of this kind of noir story. The people are all distinct and ugly in the best of ways. It gives the world a bit of texture and grit. He utilizes a traditional 8-panel grid throughout the comic to control the pace. Lapham spices it up by cutting between different scenes on the same page which results in a sense of synchronicity between events. Hillary Jenkins compliments Lapham’s art with a naturalistic color palette.
Underheist #1 is a strong start to the series. I am curious at what the future holds for this series, though. The overall success of this depends on how the supernatural turn plays out. As for now, I am enjoying it and I look forward to the next issue.
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Masterpiece #1
Beyond Real #1
Underheist #1




