Hero Complex: Breaking comic book news and the offshoots they inspire - for your inner fanboy

'Ex Machina' is art imitating ... art?

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I've told you before how much I admire "Ex Machina,"  and I wanted to let you know about a fun surprise in the newest issue, No. 40, which hit stands today. (Stop reading now if you don't want any cats let out of any bags. ...)

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The story, written by Brian K. Vaughan and drawn by Tony Harris, finds Mayor Mitchell Hundred seeking collaborators for an autobiographical project -- a graphic-novel account of his first term as the chief executive of New York City. The final few pages of the issue have some guest creators drop by, and they are none other than writer Garth Ennis and artist Jim Lee. Nice!

-- Geoff Boucher

Image credits: Wildstorm/DC Comics


Barack Obama gets hero worship, George W. Bush and Bill Clinton get 'MAD'

Mad_coverToday's mail brought plenty of politics. I'm just back from vacation and there was a large pile of parcels waiting for me in the newsroom, and the first one I opened contained "MAD About Politics" (Insight Editions, $34.95), a fancy new pop-up book from "the usual gang of idiots" at MAD Magazine, and the second one contained a T-shirt featuring an especially heroic vision of Democratic candidate Barack Obama drawn by Alex Ross, one of the true superstars in comics since his landmark 1990s work on "Astro City" and "Kingdom Come." It's pretty clear it's election season, isn't it?

First, the book: I'm a big fan of MAD and, in fact, I don't really trust people who don't like it. I was talking to the novelist Brad Meltzer last week and he mentioned that MAD usually seems to be the common link between him and the people who become his closest friends. Roger Ebert has said on several occasions that MAD inspired his entire approach to film criticism and Joyce Carol Oates and Patti Smith are other vocal devotees. So I expected big things from this pop-up book. And it delivers -- although it's not as long as you would hope, neither in page count nor in historical depth.

The book is only 12 pages long but, of course, with its intricate assembly of pop-ups and pockets, this is a book you climb into, not one built for a "scan and flip" reader. There's great stuff in here, all previously published, but still great to see again. I especially enjoyed "Goodnight Room," a parody of "Goodnight Moon" as ode to the winding-down days of the Clinton administration ("Goodnight lies, Goodnight fries.Goodnight soft money with Chinese ties") and a recovered legal pad covered with George W. Bush's notes and doodles from a cabinet meeting ("Change name of state to Oilaska!").

Read Full Story Read more Barack Obama gets hero worship, George W. Bush and Bill Clinton get 'MAD'


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About the Blogger
Growing up, Geoff Boucher always wanted to be a mild-mannered reporter working for a major metropolitan newspaper....or maybe a wookiee. He came to the Los Angeles Times in 1991 and, after years covering crime and local politics, he switched to the Hollywood beat covering film and music. Now he's the paper's go-to geek.

Also contributing: The Legion of Super-Bloggers here at the Hero Complex includes Jevon Phillips, a Times staffer who specializes in our favorite television shows, especially "Heroes" and the frakking brilliant "Battlestar Galactica;" Denise Martin, another Times staffer, who has an undying passion for "Twilight" and anyone ever enrolled at Hogwarts; Gina McIntyre, a Times editor who learned her craft by watching too many slasher films; and Yvonne Villarreal, whose earliest memory of wanting to be a journalist stems from watching broadcast reporter April O'Neil on the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles television series.

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