Monday, December 5, 2011

DC ZOMBIE EAT MARVEL: Mark Waid's Daredevil



     Join me, a lifelong DC Zombie, as I attempt to remedy my woefully limited exposure to the Marvel Universe. Be prepared for opinions forged in the depths of a mind that is completely dedicated to the DCU. I promise to be as objective and honest as I can be--even if that leads to contradictory opinions. Updates will be rare, considering I have limited money for buying new comics (and the fact that I would rather spend my limited funds on DC Comics). 

     I am going to say something that might seem stupid now. Mark Waid is one of the most underrated writers in the comic book industry. Look, don't try and argue with me—I've given this quite a bit of thought. No other writer has churned out such consistently high quality work over such a large amount of time without being constantly mentioned alongside the most important names of sequential art history. There is no doubt that he is respected or well-liked, instead it seems as if he is the forgotten superstar of the industry. Perhaps, Waid is too consistent to draw the adoration or ire of most comic readers—doomed to fly below the radar by his own unerring competence. As legendary writers build bodies of work and flash-in-the-pans flare up and burn out, Waid continues to turn in books that define some of the most iconic characters in the superhero genre. While every new writer is the next Miller, Moore, or Morrison, I have yet to hear of one heralded as the next Waid. Yet, for years now, he has held the reins of some of the comic book industries biggest franchises. From seminal runs on The Flash and Fantastic Four, underrated books like the Legion of Superheroes three-boot and lauded works like Kingdom Come, Waid has quietly cemented his rightful place in the upper echelon of comic creators. He might be the unnoticed titan of the medium, but he possesses a unique ability to capture or create the perfect pitch for whatever characters he is writing. Currently, Waid has set his gaze on MARVEL's man without fear—producing one of the best superhero comic books on the market.
     Last week, while writing about Thor:The Mighty Avenger, I alluded to the current Daredevil as the kind of comic book that the industry needs more of. Though it is not a book aimed at an all-ages market like Thor was, Daredevil still captures much of the same superheroic joy within its pages. Matt Murdoch has been a character mired darkness for a long time. From the Frank Miller era to the more recent Brian Michael Bendis run, Daredevil's life has been one grim and gritty tragedy followed by another. Yet, in his first six issues with the character, Waid has turned the character on its head. The life of a superhero can never be too happy, after all violent encounters are part of the job, but Waid's take on the character is so much more open and free than some of his predecessors. With brilliant art from Marcos Martin and Paolo Rivera, Daredevil is the kind of comic book where the hero smiles as he encounters fisticuffs and, before you know it, you are smiling along with him. Where Bendis wrote a brooding, troubled Murdoch that was constantly the target of some gangster scheme or superhuman assassin, Waid fills his book with corporate espionage plots and more traditional supervillainous fare—like echos of Klaw and Bruiser, a luchador-masked fighter moving up the superhero power ladder.

     One of my favorite things about Waid is that he will often write a character so that the reader has a clear understanding of character's superpower and its implications. For example, his run on The Flash did quite a bit to explore the extent of what being “The Fastest Man Alive” meant when put into action. In Daredevil, we are treated to a similar examination of Murdoch's extra-sensory powers. In some of the first issues Martin and Rivera drew beautiful pages allowing the readers to “see” through Daredevil's “eyes.” There's no doubt that he has one of the most unique superpowers within the medium, but presenting these powers in such a distinctive and visually appealing way was a smart move.
    Under Waid's scripting and Martin and Rivera's art, Daredevil is most certainly one of the best new superhero books of the year and maybe even one of the best of this very young decade. If Daredevil was a DC book, I would extoll it as a product that understood the New 52 initiative—a comic that clearly defined it's character and showcased his uniqueness from page one. It is too bad Daredevil only barely predates the DCnU, seeing as it would have been a great blueprint for the kind of thing that DC is trying to achieve. Waid's exclusion from the DCnU is kind of baffling considering that he has written tons of stuff for DC in the past, and he seems like a natural fit for the kind of things they are currently attempting. Perhaps Waid and DC had a falling out, I don't generally keep up with that kind of thing. Or perhaps DC somehow forgot about the quiet superstar of the comic book industry.

No comments:

Post a Comment