Aw yeah. Welcome to the dark side, anderson!
andersonh1 wrote:I have no idea what all the past plot references entail, only that Daredevil has recently been through something bad and is trying to rebuild his life and career, while dealing with it all via a enthusiastic attitude about life. He comes across as very positive, and I really enjoyed that. I enjoy a grim hero as much as anyone (Batman being one of my favorites), but I equally enjoy seeing a super-hero enjoy his life.
Those "bad things" that DD's gone through? That's pretty much his whole life since Frank Miller took over his book back in the 80's. With the exception of a short run by Karl Kesel in the mid-90's, Daredevil's been the hard-luck hero. I mean, Spidey's got it bad, but DD's got it worse. The last thing involved Matt being possessed by a demon and taking over leadership of the Hand, the ninja clan that he's regularly fighting against. I don't know everything that went down during that story, but I'm pretty sure that Daredevil killed Bullseye whilst possessed. Honestly, I can't imagine any jury in the world would convict him. Bullseye's killed two of Daredevil's love interests (and one of 'em stayed dead), and he killed DD's mom. Who wouldn't wax this jerk?
I'm with you on enjoying DD's attitude. I especially like how he's got that upbeat, positive attitude and his life is still really hard. It's a great contrast.
andersonh1 wrote:
Daredevil is also like Batman in that he's just human, meaning he too can deal with crime stories or superheroics equally well. The first issue demonstrates this by having him crash a Mafia wedding to fight a teleporting super-villain.
Well, just human except for the ninja training and the hyper-senses, but yeah. Not super-strong or super-tough, but I'd say that 360 degree radar sense and being able to identify people by the sound of their heartbeat is something special. But yeah, it's a neat thing about the character that DD works in noir stories as well as bright-colored superheroics.
Bad news on the artist, though. We get a new one as of next issue, it seems. Good news is, this guy's really good, too.
Yeah, this guy'll do nicely, I think. I've really enjoyed the art on this first two issues as well, dude manages to evoke a Silver age feeling of fun and coolness, but like I say, new guy'll be just fine.
Oh, yeah, and quasi-spoiler if you're interested. Won't affect the story at all, just a bit of background info:
Those robots? Those are actually parts of longtime Marvel villain Klaw, who is actually made of solidified sound. So you can imagine why soundwaves that are vibrating at the right frequency to be solid would play all kinds of hell with DD's senses.
I like what I've read so far quite a bit. I'm in. I haven't bought a Marvel comic since I quit collecting the Hulk back when Peter David was the writer, and the green and grey Hulks shared the book for awhile, but I enjoyed these two issues enough to keep reading.
GLad you dig it, man. If you like some Hulk, may I recommend you hit up your library and scope out some of Greg Pak's work on the Hulk? I held off forever, and have just been reading the most recent arc (Pak's last, sadly), but man, it is good-time stuff. It reminds me of when David was in his prime on Hulk. Not that it's derivative, but in that it's a lot of fun, and it's in the upper echelon of what Marvel's putting out these days. I think Pak's run started with "Planet Hulk", which, c'mon, Hulk as an alien barbarian king? That's a damn good idea right there.