Showing posts with label Batman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Batman. Show all posts

Saturday, April 6, 2019

Deathstroke to Appear in Batman Universe #1 this July

While Deathstroke was featured rather prominently on the Walmart-exclusive Teen Titans books, I didn't pay much attention to them when they were announced and released.

The reason is simple; Deathstroke's appearance in these books was in a reprint of issues from the Titans book from 2003, written by Geoff Johns. The 100-page books all included four stories, three of which were reprints. Deathstroke did not seem to appear in the single story of new material.

That he appeared in the Batman story eluded me. Here is a portion of a press release (first seen on Newsarama, for the record) about these Walmart exclusives being reprinted for comic shops this summer.
Following the theft of a priceless FabergĂ© egg, the Riddler leads The Dark Knight on a wild hunt after its true owner: Jinny Hex, a descendant of the haunted Western hero Jonah Hex. Deathstroke, Green Arrow and some of the brightest stars in the DC Universe will join The Dark Knight on the chase to find this treasure! 
The covers to the early issues of these Batman books all seemed to give one of the reprints the spotlight. Check out Deathstroke at the bottom right of the fourth issue.


I believe that will be his only appearance.

While attempting to sort all that, I collected the covers from the Titans books which featured Deathstroke and those are now displayed below.




Tuesday, June 19, 2018

Deathstroke #35 Solicitation

September looks like another lean month, unfortunately.

Written by CHRISTOPHER PRIEST
Art by CARLO PAGULAYAN and JASON PAZ
Cover by ROBSON ROCHA and DANIEL HENRIQUES
Variant cover by FRANCESCO MATTINA 
In this corner: Deathstroke, suffering from a traumatic brain injury at the hands of Batman! In the other corner: Batman, with Deathstroke’s knife in his gut! All of this with the feds invading Wayne Manor—and now they’re in the catacombs under the mansion, which lead to the you-know-what-cave! If they’re going to escape, Batman and Slade are going to have to work together. 
ON SALE 09.05.18
$3.99 US | 32 PAGES
FC | RATED T+

I believe this is the final part of the Batman vs Deathstroke mini-series-within-a-series. We'll wait and see if the Deathstroke title can retain some of the additional readership it picked up as a result of the bat's guest-appearance.

Monday, May 21, 2018

Deathstroke #34 Solicitation

As revealed by, and copied from, CBR.com.


Written by CHRISTOPHER PRIEST
Art by CARLO PAGULAYAN and JASON PAZ
Cover by ROBSON ROCHA and DANIEL HENRIQUES
Variant cover by FRANCESCO MATTINA 
It’s part five of “Batman vs. Deathstroke,” and “The Stormy Present” finds our two marquee combatants locked in the Batcave, forced to resolve their differences—or die trying! The showdown only turns saltier when the feds seize Bruce Wayne’s assets, including Wayne Manor, after Slade drops a dime. And Deathstroke shows Batman he’s not the only detective in town, as Slade closes in on the mystery of his relationship with Robin. 
ON SALE 08.01.18
$3.99 US | 32 PAGES

I mentioned in the post about the solicitation for #33 that I'd want to have a look at the sales figures for the first installment of this six-part story. Based on what is provided by Comichron, issue 31 sold almost 39,000 copies. I don't believe that digital sales and such are included. That's good for 40th place for the month.

But is it good?  Only if the book can ride that momentum for a while. The previous issue sold well under 18,000 and placed 115th for the month. An intriguing guest-appearance by Batman and family is an excellent way to potentially showcase the book's quality to a new audience but it's going to have to stick. Those sales figures for #30 are about at the cancellation level.

That aside, Deathstroke will appear in the trade Paperback for Justice League: Justice Lost (issues 39-43 of the regular series) as well as Justice League: No Justice, both out in September.

Thursday, April 19, 2018

Deathstroke #33 Solicitation

Aside from the Beach Blanket Special mentioned a few days ago, Deathstroke's 33rd issue hits stores in July as the second half of the Deathstroke vs. Batman storyline begins.

Written by CHRISTOPHER PRIEST
Art by CARLO PAGULAYAN and JASON PAZ
Cover by ROBSON ROCHA and DANIEL HENRIQUES
Cariant cover by FRANCESCO MATTINA 
Forced to team with Deathstroke, a man he loathes, Damian Wayne must discover the truth of his lineage. Is he really Bruce Wayne’s son, or is Slade Wilson his true father? As Batman draws closer to finding them both, Deathstroke must complete a hit, while Robin shadows the killer for hire. 
ON SALE 07.04.18
$3.99 US | 32 PAGES
Despite getting terrific reviews, Deathstroke's sales totals were starting to tickle cancellation territory, based on March results on Comichron. I'm going to make a point to see how much of a bump the Batman guest-appearance gives him in April.

Wednesday, March 21, 2018

June 2018 Deathstroke Solicitation

In addition to issue #32 of the ongoing Deathstroke book, the trade paperback of The Lazarus Contract storyline combining issues of Deathstroke, Titans and Teen Titans comes out as well on July 18th. To this point, it was only available in hardcover.

DEATHSTROKE #32
Written by CHRISTOPHER PRIEST
Art by CARLO PAGULAYAN
Cover by ROBSON ROCHA
Variant cover by FRANCESCO MATTINA 
“BATMAN VS. DEATHSTROKE” part three! When a retired superhero gets caught in the crossfire between the World’s Greatest Detective and the DCU’s most deadly assassin, could an entire legacy be wiped out? Lines are crossed when Deathstroke and Batman’s feud takes its darkest turn yet—and there’s no going back! 
On sale JUNE 6 • 32 pg, FC, $3.99 US • RATED T+ 

Saturday, February 24, 2018

May 2018 Deathstroke Solicitations

The amount of anticipation I felt for The Lazarus Contract is dwarfed by how much I look forward to the Deathstroke vs Batman story within the Deathstroke book.

DEATHSTROKE #31
Written by CHRISTOPHER PRIEST • Art by CARLO PAGULAYAN • Cover by ROBSON ROCHA and DANIEL HENRIQUES
Variant cover by JEROME OPENA 
“DEATHSTROKE VS. BATMAN” part two! 
The war between Deathstroke and Batman escalates when the Dark Knight foils one of Deathstroke’s assassination attempts! Meanwhile, a mysterious package brings Commissioner Gordon to Bruce Wayne’s doorstep, and Adeline Kane—Slade Wilson’s ex—sets her sights on Batman! 
On sale MAY 2 • 32 pg, FC, $3.99 US • RATED T+

We already knew about Deathstroke being involved in Justice League: No Justice as a member of Team Entropy. Here's a look at the wraparound cover for that book.


And the surprise revelation this month is a hardcover omnibus of volume three.

DEATHSTROKE BY TONY S. DANIEL OMNIBUS HC
Written by TONY S. DANIEL and JAMES BONNY
Art by TONY S. DANIEL, SANDU FLOREA, TYLER KIRKHAM, PAULO PANTALENA and others
Cover by TONY S. DANIEL and SANDU FLOREA 
Tony S. Daniel’s entire run of DEATHSTROKE is collected in one hardcover! 
Slade Wilson’s life is turned upside down after he learns that his involvement in a top-secret mission was wiped from his memory. Now a mysterious enemy known as Odysseus has targeted Deathstroke and everyone involved in the decade-old mission. But Slade’s journey leads him to Gotham City—and into conflict with both Batman and Harley Quinn! 
Includes DEATHSTROKE #1-20, DEATHSTROKE ANNUAL #1-2 and a story from DC SNEAK PEEK: DEATHSTROKE #1. 
On sale OCTOBER 24 • 560 pg, FC, $75.00 US • ISBN: 978-1-4012-8475-6
Interesting. There's no doubt that Mr. Daniels has his fair share of fans but I didn't think this run warranted a hardcover omnibus. It has its moments and the art is often spectacular but much of the material, which was mostly inconsistent with the character's history, appears to have been cast aside with DC's Rebirth. I get that they want to give Deathstroke the proverbial "push" over the next few months/years but doing it partially through this series seems peculiar.

Sunday, January 21, 2018

Deathstroke Vs. Batman

Credit to Bleeding Cool.


Looking forward to an official announcement for this when the April solicitations are revealed. I assumed it's a mini-series and not a replacement to the regular Deathstroke title. To my knowledge, Deathstroke still sells well enough to continue for a while longer.

I'm curious as to the reason for the feud as well. It isn't as though these two haven't crossed paths numerous times in the past. They did in the City of Assassins story from volume one (issues 6 to 9) and in issue 4 of volume three in early 2015. Sandwiched between the two was a lengthy scrap in Detective Comics 710 in 1997, the cover to which, interestingly, was also done by Lee Weeks.


More recently, Deathstroke (and Deadshot) appeared briefly in part 3 of The War Of Jokes And Riddles in the main Batman book...


...and of course Batman also showed up in Deathstroke's current book. And that encounter was pure genius. Two strategic masterminds "fighting" one another without throwing a punch. It had been quite some time since I'd read something that cleverly done.


Christopher Priest wrote that issue so naturally expectations will be high for the Deathstroke/Batman book. He's set himself a high bar but there's every reason to believe he'll deliver.

Sunday, November 5, 2017

Have A Killer Christmas With DC's Holiday Special!

When the DC Comics Holiday Special was first announced, there was no mention of Deathstroke in its solicitation text.
Join Superman, Wonder Woman and the Flash as they deliver powerful messages of hope like only The Worlds Greatest Super-Heroes can! Plus: Sgt. Rock fights the Nazis on Hanukah, the Teen Titans take on the literal ghost of Christmas past, and Swamp Thing battles that creeping feeling of existential dread! And don’t miss the legendary Denny O’Neil’s return to comics with an all-new Batman story!
So the usual suspects. And Sgt. Rock.

No big deal, Deathstroke isn't exactly a Christmas kind of guy. One can only imagine the conversation at the dinner table.

But Den Of Geek received some preview pages from DC Comics and it turns out that Deathstroke does appear. And, as one might expect from Deathstroke, he has Santa Claus at gunpoint.





That's the original outfit, minus the split mask. So this flashback goes WAY back to prior to Slade Wilson having his right eye blown out by his now ex-wife. Here's the info that DC gave Den of Geek:
Out of the kindness of his heart Joey Wilson donated one of his Christmas gifts to charity. Little did he know that his father Deathstroke hid a nuclear trigger in the gift for safekeeping. Now Deathstroke and his partner Wintergreen have to get the trigger back and get to Deathstroke’s Sister-in-Law’s house for Christmas dinner.
Sounds fun. For more preview material, check out Den Of Geeks' own article about the book.

I was reminded of another Christmas encounter that took place in issue #7 of volume one involving guest-star Batman. Writer Marv Wolfman cleverly used a couple of street-level scenes to display the difference in perception and tactics between the bat and Deathstroke.

Batman drives by a break-in attempt. When the would-be thieves see him, they run away. His reputation is such that all he had to do was slow down momentarily to scare them off.

Deathstroke isn't quite so well known so he has to take far more direct measures.


 Better than any gift card that dude might have found in a stocking.

The Holiday Special will be in stores on December 6th.

Wednesday, August 2, 2017

Deathstroke vs Deadshot: Round 1

Yesterday, Bleeding Cool was kind enough to make us aware that Deathstroke and Deadshot have themselves a good scrap in Batman #28, released earlier today. Here's their description of it.
...in Batman #28 by Tom King, Mikel Janin and June Chung, published tomorrow by DC Comics, fans will get what they have wanted for ages. With Deadshot and Deathstroke divided by allegiances to the Joker and the Riddler as the War Of Jokes And Riddles — and Batman’s post-coital-and-proposal conversation with Catwoman — continues after the previous Peanuts-inspired interlude. 
And a full-blown, knock-down battle between the two across the streets of Gotham with a longevity more like a cricket game than a baseball match. And a little on the Miracleman #15 side, too…
The article in question mentions that they've been in conflict before but that it's not a regular occurrence. By my quick count, this would be the fourth and they're fairly well spread out.

For kicks, we're going to go over each one, starting with Deathstroke: The Hunted #41. But first, if you're somehow less familiar with Deadshot, here's some abbreviated background from the DC Comics website.
An assassin (and) expert marksman, Floyd Lawton lives by a simple code: do the job that you're hired for with the least amount of casualties possible—after all, you're not being paid to waste bullets. 
...Deadshot is obsessed with precision, firmly believing that the target who’s been paid for should be the only one taken down. In the midst of a successful career, Lawton was taken down by the Dark Knight and sentenced to life in prison...Deadshot joined the Suicide Squad—a team of villains recruited by Amanda Waller to carry out covert (and highly illegal) missions. Often the de facto leader of the team, Deadshot always aims to complete the mission at hand... even if it kills him.
Along with his ability to "never miss" his target, Deadshot possesses an unfulfilled death wish...His reasons for this are unknown—many speculating family upbringing, loss of a loved one or simply not having anything left to live for. However, this complete disregard for his own life, along with his commitment to the job, make Deadshot one of the most dangerous assassins in the world.
One of them. Deathstroke can lay claim to that title too. But in the first meeting, Deadshot got a clear upper hand.

In 1994, Deathstroke's solo book took on the sub-title "The Hunted". Slade was being framed for an attempt on the president's life so the government was hell-bent on bringing him in. They first sent Deadshot's Suicide Squad teammate Bronze Tiger after him, but when the man in charge of the operation (Sarge Steel) lost faith in Tiger, Deadshot was sent in as well. Deadshot showed up while Tiger and 'stroke were grappling.





During that era, Deathstroke had a habit of returning to life in a berzerker frenzy. As a result, he popped back to life in the next issue and would live on to encounter Deadshot again, several years later. But there's little question that Deadshot got the first solid punch in.

Before moving on, I want to point out that Deathstroke also appears on the cover to #30 of Batman, something I'd missed earlier.


Wednesday, June 21, 2017

Deathstroke September 2017 Solicitations

DC Comics' September solicitations were released yesterday and while we're now only getting one issue of Deathstroke a month, it does look as though he might show up in a high profile book again that month.
BATMAN #30
Written by TOM KING
Art by CLAY MANN
Cover by MIKEL JANIN
Variant cover by OLIVIER COIPEL 
“THE BALLAD OF KITE MAN” part two! 
In our second “War of Jokes and Riddles” interlude, it’s the making of a super-villain! He’s been pushed by Batman to snitch on The Joker, and cajoled by The Joker to betray Batman—now, the flunky who would be Kite Man finally snaps. He’s lost everything, and a life of crime is the only way to go. 
On sale SEPTEMBER 6 • 32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T
Not sure how he fits in exactly, but over in his own book, it looks like the father/daughter relationship is as strong as it's ever been.
DEATHSTROKE #23
Written by CHRISTOPHER PRIEST
Art by DIOGENES NEVES and JASON PAZ
Cover by RYAN SOOK
Variant cover by SHANE DAVIS and MICHELLE DELECKI 
“Defiance” part three! 
As the team begins to crack under Slade’s harsh leadership tactics, Defiance is called into action after a cruise ship gets hijacked on the open seas! It’s sink or swim for Deathstroke’s new squad when they’re put to the test against impossible odds! 
On sale SEPTEMBER 6 • 32 pg, FC, $3.99 US • RATED T+

Bah. I'm way behind on this series, but let's face it, he probably had it coming.  "Harsh leadership tactics" indeed...

Thursday, November 17, 2016

Somebody's Been Doing His Research!

Ah, Christopher Priest, you are the man.

I love a writer who makes use of everything, and everyone, at his disposal. Using an example close to home, Rose Wilson did not make a whole lot of appearances for many years until Geoff Johns decided to use her in a Titans book as the new Ravager.

Priest did something similar in issue 6 of the current series. It was such an obscure reference that I think that even some of people who have been reading Deathstroke since the first volume might have needed a refresher. I admit that I launched a loud profanity out of sheer surprise.

**Spoilers Below**

Deathstroke has determined that Rose's current boyfriend, going by the name Richard, is involved in an attempt on her life. He's captured him and while Richard is being interrogated by an...associate...of Deathstroke, we are shown the following flashback sequence.


Luis. Holy shit.

This kid first showed up during the City of Assassins arc that ran between issues 6 through 9 of volume one in  1992. In the story, Gotham police officer Pat Trayce was becoming increasingly frustrated and disillusioned with "the system". A hired gun was going to be getting away with his criminal activity because he was willing to provide information about certain organized crime figures and it was driving her nuts.

It was fairly evident at the time that then-writer Marv Wolfman had a plan for Trayce. For a random Gotham cop, she was given quite a bit of face time and dialogue.

Wolfman, of course, co-created the Adrian Chase Vigilante character that first appeared in the Titans comics and wrote much of that character's 50-issue series. It comes as no surprise that he still had an interest in the concept.

In the final issue of City of Assassins, Trayce took on the Vigilante identity and teamed up with Deathstroke and Batman to deliver a major blow to organized crime in Gotham (for what that's worth). And in the following issue, the spotlight basically shifted to her.



I remember not giving a rat's ass about this. I'd been a fan of Deathstroke since his initial appearances in the Teen Titans book. The last thing I wanted was for him to step aside for a new character, in his own book, within its first year.

But at least that issue featured Deathstroke co-creator George Perez on inks (over Art Nichols pencils), so it looked damn nice.


In one page, we find out that Trayce was a widow and that she also lost her (police) partner not long before this story takes place. And there's little Luis Jr. bawling at bottom right. He does a lot of that.

Trayce later explains that Luis Jr's mother passed away as well shortly after Luis Sr. did.  Junior was being raised by his aunt with Trayce's assistance. Furthermore...


So of course he had it rough growing up. This issue and the next revolve around Trayce's training by Slade but also Luis running around with a bad crowd because they make him feel accepted.


Awww....

Anyway, this Vigilante stuck around for a few more issues but when she did leave the book, it was never for very long (unfortunately, in my opinion).

Research reveals that she appeared in a Hawk and Dove limited series in the mid 90s. She was also included in a few issues of the first volume of Resurrection Man that I owned in which she as a member of the Forgotten Heroes. As much as Marv Wolfman seemed to love her, she never seemed to get any traction with readers, however.

And that I know of, little Luis was basically forgotten after that one story. Until Christopher Priest chose to work him into the current volume 24 years later.

Now we know that Priest is not going to shackle himself to past continuity. He may just keep the broad strokes of that story intact and add his own details. But apparently Deathstroke's fling with Pat Trayce has remained in continuity and Luis has a hate-on for him over it. Neat.

Wednesday, September 14, 2016

Deathstroke #4 Cover Reveals

As the solicitations for the various issues of volume four were released, several cover images were not made immediately available.

Newsarama today shared two for issue #4. The first is the standard cover for the book, done by Aco...


...and a variant, again by Shane Davis.


Loving this book so far, having read only the Rebirth issue and #1. Writer Christopher Priest has packed a lot of double-crossing and surprises in relatively few pages. Solicitations for issues 8 and 9 should be revealed early next week.

Sunday, July 5, 2015

This "Getting Young" Thing Is Getting Old.

I finally received the first volume of the current Deathstroke series in the mail last week. Entitled "Gods of War", it collects the first six issues, including some sketches and the variant covers.

Now it's difficult to maintain a blog about a character yet avoid spoilers because you're "waiting for the trade". If you're still waiting to pick up this book yourself, stop now and come back (please) when you haven't because there will be some spoilering going on.

Those who are still here are likely aware that Slade Wilson's youth was restored in this book. I had heard something to that effect, but misunderstood it.  I believed that he was going through a "Batman Begins" type of flashback in which his past was being back-filled. I didn't think he was literally going to be young again. But he is.

I don't care for this decision. It takes away a number of things that made Slade stand out among the pack.

In the character's first volume, Wintergreen refers to Slade as being in his 40's. If so, based on hair colour, it's late 40's. And characters that age are in a small minority.

His missing right eye has been "restored", too. Relatively unique features are being done away with. Furthermore, you'd be hard-pressed to read a random page and to differentiate him from Bruce Wayne.


It's not even particularly original. The reason Wintergreen referred to Slade's age in volume one was that Slade had become young again in the last few issues of that series.

Issues 53 and 54 of the first volume featured a two-part story called "The Borgia Plague" and, as you might have guessed from the title, it revolved around a biological weapon.

The story concluded with Deathstroke being caught in an explosion. And when he was later found in the rubble (in #55), he was about half his age.

There are a number of differences between the current "de-aging" and the one from volume one. From issue 55 until the conclusion of the series in #60 (June 1996), Slade was still missing his right eye and his hair was blond. His hair colour was consistent with prior flashback material from the Teen Titans series. I don't know why Tony Daniels saw a need to change it for volume three.

As you can see from the cover of #55, the newfound youth also led to a uniform change.

Deathstroke also lost his memory as a result of the de-aging in volume one, but it was restored by the time the series concluded. None of the other changes that were made to the character lasted very long, either.

His next appearance was in Detective Comics 708 (April 1997), written by Chuck Dixon.

This is the first chapter of a three-part story called "The Death Lottery". In this book, Slade's hair is still blond, but he seems to be back to his normal age, as evidenced by a supporting character at his African retreat asking him if he feels old after hunting a lion (to which Slade replies that he's not old, he's bored). No explanation is given so one assumes that the effect just wore off with inactivity. Sure, why not?

Slade would then show up in a few issues of Nightwing, as well as Green Arrow, Azrael and Robin. But the next story to be centered around him would be a three-part tale in The Titans called "The Immortal Coil". Running from issue 10-12 (December 1999 to February 2000), it was written by Devin Grayson and involved several characters that had a history with Slade, including Cheshire but most prominently his ex-wife, Adeline. It also marked the return of the traditional Deathstroke outfit.


So within a couple of years, all the changes that had taken place at the end of volume one were essentially erased gradually and seldom referred to, that I know of. Since I'm a bit behind, perhaps this "younging" is also already on the way out. Hope so because it takes away from the character instead of making him more interesting.

Tuesday, June 16, 2015

Deathstroke to Guest Star in "Robin, Son of Batman" #4 in September

The 10th issue of Deathstroke's own series, in which the Godkiller storyline concludes, is released in September. But our (anti) hero also makes an appearance in Robin, Son of Batman #4. Here's what we have to look forward to:
ROBIN, SON OF BATMAN #4
Written by PATRICK GLEASON
Art and cover by PATRICK GLEASON and MICK GRAY 
On sale SEPTEMBER 16 • 32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T 
It’s Robin vs. Deathstroke! The troubles in Maya’s past come back to haunt her. Will Damian and Goliath be forced to leave her to fend for herself, or can they find a way to help their new ally?

The best assassin in the world against a kid raised within a league of assassins. Should be spectacular!

Regardless of that similarity in their backgrounds, Deathstroke and the Damian Wayne version of Robin have had little interaction. The most prominent, to my recollection, was in the 11th and 12th issues of the Batman and Robin series that began in 2009.

At some point, Damian had had a chip implanted in his spine which, unbeknownst to him, enabled his mother (Talia Al Ghul) to control his actions remotely. Mom recruited another highly shitty parent to control Damian from a distance and attempt to beat Batman (who, at the time, was Dick Grayson).

Slade wanted Grayson to know who was pulling the strings and this caused him to reveal a little too much information (see below). Knowing who the enemy was, and understanding that their nervous systems were electronically linked, Grayson used electric shocks to Damian's heart to incapacitate Slade from afar.

Not too sure about the science behind that, but...it worked! And later, while Deathstroke was recovering in a hospital bed, Grayson dropped by and punked him out. But we won't dwell on that ugliness.


The episode also caused Damian to swear to kill Slade one day. With the September 2010 reboot of DC's comics line, it's often a little unclear as to what is still in continuity and what isn't. Most, if not all, of that series appears to still be in play though, so it'll be interesting to see if that scene is referenced.

Thursday, April 16, 2015

Deathstroke: The Terminator Vol. 1: Assassins

A mere 24 years after the release of Deathstroke's first series, its two initial story arcs are collected along with an issue of New Titans that, for all intents and purposes, served as a preview of the series. The story in New Titans did not lead into the series, but it gave us an idea as to what we were in for.

Both the digital and print versions were released a few days ago. For some reason, the solicitation on Comixology was totally butchered, but we'll try to patch it together.
Mercenary. Husband. Villain. Father. Killer. Friend.  
Slade Wilson has been all of these things. And and now his many past lives are finally catching up to him.  
After an attack at his home in Africa and a near fatal shooting that almost killed his ex-wife, Deathstroke is on the hunt for the man called the Ravager. After discovering what the link is between his family’s past and this masked super soldier’s vendetta, Slade must make it out alive against this dangerous new foe. However, the real trouble finds him in.

Then Deathstroke must travel to Gotham City, where someone is eliminating major crime bosses and smearing his reputation. There’s only one problem standing in his way: Batman. Even if he can somehow beat the Dark Knight there’s still the masked killer known only as the Vigilante waiting in the wings.  
Writer Marv Wolfman (NEW TEEN TITANS) is joined by artists Steve Erwin (CHECKMATE) and Will Blyberg (TEAM TITANS) in defining Slade Wilson as Deathstroke the Terminator, the breakout character from the hit TV show Arrow, in his first solo comic book series. Collects DEATHSTROKE: THE TERMINATOR #1-9 and the NEW TITANS #70.
Sample page below. I love the way 'Stroke so casually kicks the one guy out of the jeep.



That page is from the Titans issue mentioned above, basically a stand alone story which had nothing to do with the issues that preceded it (or, that I can recall, followed it).

But from there Deathstroke would come to be included in the Titans book for the next year and a half or so. First, he worked alongside a decimated Titans team and a handful of their allies to rescue teammates and friends from a group of armoured villains referring to themselves as The Wildebeests. That would lead into the three-part Jericho Gambit in which Slade Wilson would need to face a possessed version of his son Joseph.

All in all, the early 90's were a prolific period for Deathstroke as he frequently appeared in at least two books on a regular basis. He was also involved an a story called "Panic In The Sky" running through the various Superman books at the time. Not too shabby.

Assassins is not the first compilation of the early issues of Deathstroke's first series, it just includes more of them. Titans 70 and issues 1-5 of the Deathstroke series were collected in a graphic Novel called Full Cycle (the name of the first storyline) early in 1992.  The cover for that, by Mike Zeck, is copied below. The book has been out of print for some time now.


If you're a relatively new fan of the character, a collection of 10 issues from that era for about $20 (print) is a pretty sweet deal.

There is one downside; some elements of the Full Cycle storyline resurfaced later in the series, in issues 17-20 or so. That story, called "The Nuclear Winter", explains a number of things in greater depth. I'm not sure if there are plans to collect those issues as well, since some of it is told in Titans books (the Total Chaos crossover), but DC should really try to find a way to make it work.

Tuesday, March 17, 2015

City of Assassins

As stated in the "About This Blog" page, I'm using this page to organize my Deathstroke collection and refamiliarize myself with a character of whom I've been a fan for about three decades. While I won't be reading every single appearance in order, I did want to jump on City of Assassins ASAP.

I recall that there were "soft spots" in the first volume. Not all of it was gold, but as I recall the first year or so was outstanding, at least.

That includes the second storyline in the series, City of Assassins. A team-up with Batman bring high expectations and these books delivered. The storyline runs through issues six to nine inclusively.

The inevitable fight between the two characters (in the second part, issue seven) may be my favourite one-on-one Deathstroke scrap. It was written in such a way that Batman's image does not suffer from the loss and he is recognized as a formidable challenge.

After a face-off to build up the action, artist Steve Erwin fills the page with as many panels of action as he can fit. Batman appears to go down for the count, but gets back up for another exchange, underscoring his determination. Deathstroke ultimately gets the upper hand, but later acknowledges that he isn't sure he would have if not for his enhancements. So 'stroke wins (it is his book after all), but Batman is handed a disclaimer.

It's pretty great stuff, in my opinion. Because the two meet fairly late in the book, it felt as thought the battle may be brief, but the pace is so quick that the opposite turns out to be true.  Here's a sample page.


That I know of, this story has not been collected in trade format. Perhaps Deathstroke's recent "push" in other forms of entertainment will prompt DC to reconsider that but if you can get your hands on the individual issues of City of Assassins at a reasonable price, I would recommend doing so.