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Comic Books & Graphic Novels DC Comics

JUSTICE LEAGUE DARK (NEW 52) # 8 (2012 DC Comics)

Written by Peter Milligan

Art by Daniel Sampere; Admira Wijaya; & Dave Sharpe

Cover Art by Ryan Sook

SUMMARY:

Continuing a crossover with I, Vampire, DC Comics released this issue for June 2012.  It’s entitled “The Leaving, Part 3 of 5: Rise of the Vampires.”  Accessing an ethereal void, Deadman & John Constantine seek to recruit Andrew “I, Vampire, Bennett to help fend off Gotham City’s vampiric invasion. 

Elsewhere, a depleted Zatanna Zatara, Madame Xanadu, Shade – The Changing Man, & their new ally, Mary – Queen of the Vampires, are steadily losing ground against an army of Gotham vampires.  Briefly seen, Batman is faring no better.  Having regained a distracted Shade’s attention, Zatanna & Xanadu risk a last-ditch retreat.      

A reunited Justice League Dark is surrounded by vampires and faces imminent doom.  The plot moves to I, Vampire # 8.

REVIEW:

Issue # 8 packs all the necessary creative components for a consistently satisfying read.  Bolstered by the art squad’s appropriately ghoulish visuals, writer Peter Milligan devises some welcome plot twists.  Even for non-fans of DC’s New 52, Issue # 8 offers a worthwhile addition to any comics collection.     

ADDITIONAL CONTENT:

Including cover reveals, the two-page “Dark” spread hypes Justice League Dark # 9; Animal Man Annual # 1; and Resurrection Man # 8.  A plethora of Issue # 9 cover reveals highlight Swamp Thing; Resurrection Man; Frankenstein, Agent of S.H.A.D.E.; Animal Man; and Demon Knights. Alison Gill, Senior VP of DC’s Manufacturing & Operations, poignantly pays tribute to the memory of her colleague, Roger Bonas.   

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                7½ Stars

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Comic Books & Graphic Novels DC Comics

JUSTICE LEAGUE DARK (NEW 52) # 5 (2012 DC Comics)

Written by Peter Milligan

Art by Mikel Janin; Ulises Arreola; & Rob Leigh

Cover Art by Ryan Sook

SUMMARY:

Entitled “In the Dark (Finale): There Was a Crooked Man,” DC Comics released this issue for March 2012.  Concluding the franchise’s first story arc, the world is besieged by chaotic supernatural terror.  Opposed by Deadman, John Constantine resorts to reintegrating a frightened June Moone and her unstable alter ego, the Enchantress, to end the madness. 

Working an alternative game plan, Madame Xanadu, Zatanna Zatara, & Shade, The Changing Man face ghastly, mind-altering dangers breaching the haunted farm where the Enchantress previously resided.  Mindwarp re-enters the fray.

In spite of Madame Xanadu’s protests, dissension seemingly ends the makeshift team.  Yet, a new horror awaits.   

REVIEW:

Writer Peter Milligan devises a coherent and satisfying supernatural thriller that doesn’t telegraph its plot twists.  Enhancing Milligan’s intriguing plot is an effective art squad.  Hence, Justice League Dark # 5 continues a well-played take exploring DC’s reinvented ‘dark side.’    

ADDITIONAL CONTENT:

The theme for a two-page spread hyping New 52 is Issue # 6 covers for these titles: Batman; Justice League; Red Lanterns; I, Vampire; The Savage Hawkman; and Batman: The Dark Knight.  The “DC All Access” column includes cover reveals for Animal Man # 7; All Star Western # 7; and My Greatest Adventure # 3.    

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                   7 Stars

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Individual Tracks (CD's) Jazz & Blues Music & Radio Shows

HA! (by Dianne Reeves: The Grand Encounter)

SUMMARY:                      RUNNING TIME: 3:27 Min.

Composed by H. Mussullini & C. Ventura, this upbeat, 60’s-style jazz tune appears as Track # 7 on Dianne Reeves’ 1996 jazz/blue album, The Grand Encounter.  Roger Holmes arranged and transcribed the tune.  Accompanying Reeves are: James Moody (saxophone & vocals); Clark Terry (trumpet & vocals); Al Grey (trombone & vocals); Phil Woods (alto saxophone); & Kimberly Longstreth (vocals).   

REVIEW:

Reminiscent of Mel Tormé’s trademark style, this classy jazz/bop tune is practically a jazz time machine.  Leading an exuberant \jazz ensemble, Dianne Reeves shares the spotlight well.  Well-played! 

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                       8 Stars

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Individual Tracks (CD's) Music & Radio Shows Soundtracks (CD's)

RETURNING HOME {1985’s North and South) (by Bill Conti & The London Symphony Orchestra: Highlights from The Right Stuff/North and South)

SUMMARY:                                RUNNING TIME: 2:14 Min.

In 1985, composer/conductor Bill Conti and The London Symphony Orchestra released an instrumental album consisting of highlights from 1983’s The Right Stuff and 1985’s epic North and South TV mini-series.  This bittersweet piece recurs throughout the North and South saga, including some of its pivotal moments. 

Note: As of 2008, a limited-edition CD set of Conti highlights from North and South Books One & Two was released.

REVIEW:

Though North and South fans should quickly recognize this classy theme, others will only recognize it as a melancholic track.  Conti’s “Returning Home” effectively conveys the dramatic turbulence stirring among North and South’s Hazard and Main families.    

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                       6 Stars

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Comic Books & Graphic Novels DC Comics

HARLEY’S LITTLE BLACK BOOK # 3 (2016 DC Comics)

Written by Jimmy Palmiotti & Amanda Conner

Art by Joseph Michael Linser; Hi-Fi; & Dave Sharpe

Cover Art by Amanda Conner & Alex Sinclair

SUMMARY:

Designed as Harley’s off-the-wall team-ups with DC’s major players, Harley’s Little Black Book ran a total of six issues.  Entitled “Dispirited Spirits,” DC Comics released this 48-page issue for June 2016. 

Primarily told in flashback, the intro and epilogue bookends presumably occur a few days later, At Harley Quinn’s Coney Island apartment building, she is hosting her four loutish British pals dubbed the ‘London Legion a’ Superheroes.’  Booked by Harley’s associate, Big Tony, as a guest performer for his Freakshow, a motorcycle-riding Zatanna Zatara is assigned the building’s second-floor spare room. 

With their century-long sanctuary facing imminent demolition, three ghosts from a 1911 carnival desperately need Zatanna’s help to evade a demonic presence stalking them.  In the spirit realm, Zatanna & Harley face off vs. not one but two hellacious demons to defend their new spectral friends.  Yet, even the veteran Justice Leaguer is startled at what impulsive stunt her new ally is willing to pull off to win.   

Notes: Linser produced the variant cover (no image available here).  There’s also a continuity glitch: despite what this story claims, Zatanna has previously encountered Harley (i.e. 2002’s Harley Quinn # 24).

REVIEW:

Justifying the T+ advisory label, co-writers Jimmy Palmiotti & Amanda Conner evidently had a blast depicting Harley’s supernatural comedy hijinks with Zatanna Zatara.  Through Harley’s boozing British cronies are walking clichés, Palmiotti & Conner spin the haunted-house premise into an undeniably wacky caper – with several risqué innuendoes. 

More so, Zatanna’s unpredictable ‘Odd Couple’ chemistry with Harley is well-played.  The sole risk is overplaying Harley’s deviant charm for a whopping 48 pages.; hence, her incessantly childish antics may start grating on readers as it understandably does Zatanna.

The art team’s cartoony visuals, however, prove enjoyable compensation.  Hence, one should consider Harley’s Little Black Book # 3 a guilty pleasure read for adults and mature teens.       

ADDITIONAL CONTENT:

Though the writer isn’t identified, the “DC All Access” column hypes Scooby Apocalypse.  

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                   8 Stars

Categories
Books & Novels General Fiction History & Biographies (Books)

THE KILLER ANGELS

Written by Michael Shaara

SUMMARY:

First published in 1974 by David McKay Company, Inc., Michael Shaara penned this 374-page hardcover depicting the four days (June 30-July 3, 1863) encompassing the Battle of Gettysburg.  Starting on June 30th, a confederate spy delivers reliable word to General James Longstreet that Union cavalry has reached Gettysburg nearby, which infers its far larger infantry isn’t far behind.  General Robert E. Lee is skeptical, as he hasn’t received confirmation from General J.E.B. Stuart, who is evidently still roaming in the field somewhere. 

Meanwhile, at Gettysburg, Union General John Buford grimly concludes securing the best available high ground is his outmatched cavalry’s sole option until reinforcements arrive the next morning.  Complicating the Union’s predicament is a change in command to the starchy General Meade, which fails to boost morale.  Advised of this unexpected command shift, the Confederacy senses a historic opportunity to exploit vulnerable gaps amidst Meade’s reorganization of Union forces.

Told through rotating perspectives, the battle commences early on July 1st, as Buford’s troops barely withstand Lee’s initial strike.  The Union is soon stunned by the abrupt death of its best field general.  With the Union struggling to muster adequate leadership, the Confederacy seemingly wins the first day of the bloody engagement. 

Col. Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain’s regiment from Maine joins in on the second day, as the Union defiantly refuses to budge any further.  Lee remains intent on keeping the Union Army’s largest force pinned down.  His endgame for the Confederacy is to discreetly breach Washington, D.C., to pressure President Lincoln into ordering the Union’s surrender.   

Heavy losses continue mounting on both sides, which later reveal an estimated near-50,000 casualties combined, making it the Civil War’s deadliest conflict.  Longstreet increasingly urges a tactical retreat, which conflicts with Lee’s wavering ‘now or never’ strategy.  Finally acknowledging bitter reality, Lee’s depleted forces withdraw on July 3rd.  Though the war would rage for nearly two more years, its ominous pendulum has at last shifted come Independence Day, 1863.    

Shaara’s novel inspired the faithful 1993 epic film adaptation, Gettysburg.

Notes: This title has also been released in paperback.  Please also be advised of some racial slurs appearing in the dialogue.

REVIEW:

Michael Shaara’s poignant, well-researched account is an intriguing cross-section of gritty fact and historical romanticism.  He describes the battlefield’s scenery, as well as the various soldiers, down to every last vivid and/or bleak detail.  Readily acknowledging that he has tweaked the manner of speech for contemporary audiences, Shaara’s ensemble cast is relatable as down-to-earth mortals that most anyone can identify with.  To Shaara’s credit, virtually no one becomes a walking cliché.  Case in point: the sole person remotely vilified is an arrogant Confederate General that even his own superiors don’t like.

Trading off narratives are primarily Longstreet and Chamberlain representing moral compasses on opposing sides.  Buford is later supplanted by Lee as Shaara’s strongest supporting role.  Curiously, Shaarra relies on further ‘accounts’ by other Confederates (i.e. Lewis Armistead, Harrison the spy, & British observer Fremantle), but not from the Union. 

Hence, the novel’s sole letdown is not incorporating supplemental POV’s (no matter how brief) from Generals Hancock or Reynolds, let alone the bewildered ex-slave that Chamberlain encounters on Day 2.  Such additional perspectives would have further enhanced the novel’s readability.  Inevitably delving into outright gore, Shaara’s precise storytelling translates the battle’s tragedies as an increasingly horrific event that will forever haunt its survivors. 

Ultimately, a convincing argument can be made that The Killer Angels is the best Civil War novel ever written.  One may ponder Shaara’s accuracy channeling the Battle of Gettysburg’s various historical figures; yet, one is left concluding that he is likely close enough.      

ADDITIONAL FEATURES:

Shaara’s brief word to the reader spells out his intent interpreting these historical figures.  A somber foreword introduces the novel’s most pivotal players, and, fittingly, an afterword briefly describes the survivors’ destinies.  Shaara includes a series of single-page maps updating troop tactical movements.

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                  9 Stars

Note: Randy Edelman’s Gettysburg soundtrack might be an ideal accompaniment.

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MURDER, SHE WROTE: SMOOTH OPERATORS (Season 5: Episode 12)

SUMMARY:                    RUNNING TIME: 47:00 Min.

First broadcast by CBS on February 12, 1989, Anthony Pullen Shaw (Angela Lansbury’s son) directed this midseason episode off Gerald K. Siegel’s script. 

In New York City, Jessica Fletcher (Lansbury) aids her friend, NYPD Lt. Timothy Hanratty’s (Martin) investigation of a suspicious death that his glory-seeking boss (Winter) wants credit for.  Missing a shoe, the presumably homeless victim is soon revealed as alcoholic hospital accountant Eliot Winston.  As his corpse was also missing relevant identification, Winston’s personal property later turns up in the possession of a local wino. 

Smelling a potential rat, Jessica goes undercover as a wealthy hypochondriac at the for-profit hospital Winston worked for.  The slickster physicians (Coster and Benedict) she encounters gives her cause to believe that Winston’s demise was indeed no fluke. 

Jessica Fletcher: Angela Lansbury

Dr. Craig Zachary: Nicholas Coster

NYPD Lt. Timothy Hanratty: Barney Martin

Dr. David Latimer: Dirk Benedict

Grace Fenton: Shirley Knight

Dr. Robert Markle: Dennis Patrick

Lisa Hilboldt: Stephanie Holtz

Dr. Sid Lantz: Peter Van Norden

NYPD Capt. Everett Larson: Edward Winter

Leon Schnable: Michael McGrady

Officer Donatelli: Stewart J. Scully

Wino: Mario Roccuzzo

Dr. Lowell Wheatley: Rudy Challenger

Greg Lewis: Phil Cashman

Eliot Winston: Uncredited

REVIEW:

An intriguing premise is let down by an underachieving guest cast and some contrived plot twists.  Though Angela Lansbury & Barney Martin anchor the story well, the ensemble’s weakest link is The A-Team’s Dirk Benedict.  Exhausting his arsenal of ‘smooth’ TV schtick far too soon, a miscast Benedict is utterly unconvincing as a supposed surgeon.  Faring better, Nicholas Coster plausibly conveys a greedy doctor, though he isn’t given anything memorable to do. 

Generally, the script holds up okay to the climax.  The sinister reveal re: the culprit’s elaborate means of killing and disposing of Winston, however, ends up a disappointing shrug.  “Smooth Operators,” accordingly, is worth catching just once. 

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                 4 Stars

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MURDER, SHE WROTE: MURDER TAKES THE BUS (Season 1: Episode 18)

SUMMARY:          APPROX. RUNNING TIME: 47:00 Min.

First broadcast by CBS-TV, on March 17, 1985, Walter Grauman directed this early episode off Mary Ann Kasica & Michael Scheff’s script. 

From Cabot Cove, Jessica Fletcher (Lansbury) accompanies Sheriff Amos Tupper (Bosley) on a cross-state bus ride to attend a police conference that evening in Portland, Maine. 

On this dark and stormy night, the bus driver (Constantine) stops to collect an enigmatic new passenger (Chandler) just released from Maine’s state prison and, then soon after, a stranded motorist (Glover).  Forced to pull over at a secluded restaurant, the passengers huddle inside while the drenched bus driver attempts repairs on the disabled engine.  Flooded roads from the torrent rain will keep them there for hours.

Amidst the storm, one passenger is found murdered.  Jessica & Amos are now stranded with an assortment of suspects possibly linked to the victim.  At stake is long-lost loot from a notorious bank heist years before.

Jessica Fletcher: Angela Lansbury

Sheriff Amos Tupper: Tom Bosley

Steven Pascal: John Glover

Jane Pascal: Linda Blair

Ben Gibbons: Michael Constantine

Miriam Radford: Rue McClanahan

Professor  Kent Radford: Larry Linville

Carey Drayson: Don Stroud

Ralph Leary: Mills Watson

Joe Downing: Albert Salmi

Gilbert Stoner: John Davis Chandler

Cyrus Leffingwell: David Wayne

REVIEW:

Anchored by Angela Lansbury & Tom Bosley, this cast of familiar TV faces contributes satisfyingly low-key performances more reminiscent of  a classy Agatha Christie adaptation than the routine episode they’re actually in.  The only caveat is a gimmicky last plot twist, which risks rendering too much of the story’s second half as superfluous. 

Still, “Murder Takes the Bus” delivers a solid mystery, even for non-fans.

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                     6½ Stars

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MURDER, SHE WROTE: WE’RE OFF TO KILL THE WIZARD (Season 1: Episode 7)

SUMMARY:            APPROX. RUNNING TIME: 47:00 Min.

First broadcast by CBS-TV, on December 9, 1984, Walter Grauman directed this early episode.  Visiting relatives in Kansas, Jessica Fletcher (Lansbury) is approached by theme park impresario Horatio Baldwin (Coco) to license a macabre new attraction based off her books.  Declining his offer, Jessica isn’t too surprised by Baldwin’s fake public civility, as compared to his cold-fish personality behind closed doors. 

When a nasty Baldwin is later found dead inside his locked and heavily-secured private office, Jessica helps her nephew-in-law (Stephens) probe this baffling homicide case.     

Jessica Fletcher: Angela Lansbury

Police Detective Lt. Bert Donovan: James Stephens

Carol Donovan: Anne Kerry Ford

Billy Donovan: Joaquin Phoenix

Cindy Donovan: Summer Phoenix

Erica Baldwin: Christine Belford

Michael Gardner: George DiCenzo

Laurie Bascomb: Kim Darby

Arnold Megrim: Richard Sanders

Capt. Davis: John Schuck

Horatio Baldwin: James Coco

Nils Highlander: Gene Evans

Skycap: Henry G. Sanders

Guard: Vince Howard

Clerk: Laura Leyva

REVIEW:

Including a young Joaquin Phoenix, this roster of familiar TV faces is an impressive catch.  Most of them perform well, but James Coco clearly phones in his performance as the disposable Baldwin.  As for the plot, it’s strictly a locked-room mystery formula lacking any memorable twists.  Still, Angela Lansbury’s reliable chemistry with her co-stars makes this routine episode worth viewing once. 

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                   5 Stars

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MURDER, SHE WROTE: HOORAY FOR HOMICIDE (Season 1: Episode 3)

SUMMARY:             APPROX. RUNNING TIME: 47:00 Min.

First broadcast by CBS-TV, on October 28, 1984, Richard A. Colla directed this early episode.  A mortified Jessica Fletcher (Lansbury) is in Hollywood to protest a movie’s studio’s sleazy approach filming her signature novel, The Corpse Danced at Midnight.  Frustrated that she faces protracted legal action to force necessary changes, Jessica soon stumbles across abrasive producer Jerry Lydecker’s (Saxon) own corpse on the set. 

Initially deemed the prime suspect, Jessica tries to clear her own name by probing others in proximity.  Apparently, they are several viable suspects who despised Lydecker’s manipulative bullying.     

Jessica Fletcher: Angela Lansbury

Eve Crystal: Melissa Sue Anderson

Marty Strindberg: Lyle Waggoner

LAPD Detective Mack Brody: Erik Holland

Marta Quintessa: Samantha Eggar

Norman  Lester: Ron Palillo

Scott Bennett: Morgan Stevens

Jerry Lydecker: John Saxon

Ross Hagley: John Astin

Allan Gebbart: James MacArthur

Elinor: Virginia Mayo

Captain Ethan Cragg: Claude Akins

Paddy: Hank Rolike

LAPD Lt. Mike Hernandez: José Pérez

Sunny Finch: Marianne McAndrew

Ted Lafferty: Paul Ryan

REVIEW:

Despite a guest cast filled with familiar TV faces, the episode’s rudimentary plot won’t impress anyone.  More so, the paycheck acting is indicative of how everyone is coasting through a blah script.  Still, Melissa Sue Anderson does fine work, as far as getting the best opportunity amongst an array of clichéd characters. 

If one is seeking a forgettable forty-seven minutes, then “Hooray for Homicide” sure fits the bill.  Otherwise, considering how it playfully tweaks a similar premise, Season 4 – Episode 8 ‘s self-parodying “Steal Me a Story” is a satisfying alternative by comparison.

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:               3 Stars

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