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Scott McDaniel

Auteur de Batman: False Faces

20+ oeuvres 741 utilisateurs 9 critiques

Séries

Œuvres de Scott McDaniel

Batman: False Faces (2008) — Penciller — 136 exemplaires
Nightwing: Year One (2005) — Illustrateur — 136 exemplaires
Teen Titans Vol. 05: Life and Death (2006) — Illustrateur — 127 exemplaires
Green Arrow: Crawling through the Wreckage (2007) — Illustrateur — 76 exemplaires
Batman: Dark Knight Dynasty (1990) — Illustrateur — 70 exemplaires
Green Arrow: Road to Jericho (2007) — Illustrateur — 50 exemplaires
Batman: Two-Face (1995) — Artist — 37 exemplaires
Countdown: Arena (2008) — Illustrateur — 32 exemplaires
Daredevil and Batman: Eye for an eye (Elseworlds) (1997) — Illustrateur — 27 exemplaires
Static Shock (The New 52) Vol. 1: Supercharged (2012) — Auteur; Illustrateur — 26 exemplaires
Static Shock #1 (2011) 5 exemplaires
Static Shock #8 (2012) 3 exemplaires
Static Shock #2 (2011) 3 exemplaires
Nomad [1992] #13 (1992) — Illustrateur — 3 exemplaires
Static Shock #6 (2012) 2 exemplaires
Static Shock #5 (2012) 2 exemplaires
Static Shock #4 (2011) 2 exemplaires
Static Shock #3 (2011) 2 exemplaires

Oeuvres associées

Batman: Bruce Wayne - Murderer? (2002) — Illustrateur — 179 exemplaires
DC Comics: Zero Year (2014) — Illustrateur — 82 exemplaires
Justice League: Cry For Justice (2010) — Illustrateur — 62 exemplaires
DC One Million Omnibus (2013) — Illustrateur — 41 exemplaires
DC Comics: The New 52 (2011) — Illustrateur — 36 exemplaires
Birds of Prey Volume 4: The Cruelest Cut (2014) — Illustrateur — 32 exemplaires
Superman: The Greatest Stories Ever Told, Vol. 2 (2006) — Illustrateur — 30 exemplaires
Daredevil - Fall from Grace (1994) — Illustrateur — 29 exemplaires
Birds of Prey Volume 5: Soul Crisis (2015) — Illustrateur — 26 exemplaires
Talon (New 52) Vol. 2: The Fall of the Owls (2014) — Illustrateur — 23 exemplaires
Forgotten Lives (1997) — Contributeur — 16 exemplaires
Strange Adventures (2010) — Illustrateur — 16 exemplaires
Robin 80th Anniversary 100-Page Super Spectacular (2020) #1 (2020) — Penciller — 10 exemplaires
Love and Bullets [1979 film] (2008) 4 exemplaires
Detective Comics # 868 (2010) — Illustrateur — 4 exemplaires
Detective Comics # 870 (2010) — Illustrateur — 4 exemplaires
Batman and Robin #19 (2009-2011) (2011) — Penciller — 3 exemplaires
Batman and Robin #17 (2009-2011) (2011) — Penciller — 3 exemplaires
Detective Comics # 867 — Illustrateur — 3 exemplaires
Detective Comics # 869 (2010) — Illustrateur — 3 exemplaires
DC Comics Presents: Batman #1 (2010) — Artiste de la couverture — 1 exemplaire

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For a "slug-o-thon" this wasn't bad. I liked the bickering of the Superman's and each version of the hero seemed to have a distinct personality. My biggest problem was how powerful Monarch is. If 3 Superman's, 3 Wonder Woman's, 3 Firestorms, and 3 Green Lanterns, can barely scratch him, I think he's basically the most powerful person in the DC universe. Also not a fan of the art.
 
Signalé
ragwaine | 1 autre critique | Sep 15, 2021 |
Static is great! Fun, fast read. Gooduseof science (better than most other superhero comics).
 
Signalé
Vulco1 | 1 autre critique | Oct 12, 2018 |
They tried so hard to rip off Spider-Man... well, even the writer said it turned out like crap.
 
Signalé
morbusiff | 1 autre critique | Sep 20, 2018 |
Access a version of the below that includes illustrations on my blog.

Nightwing: Year One is the last of the Beatty/Dixon-written "Year One" collaborations, both in my reading order and in terms of publication. This one expands on events only briefly chronicled in Batman: Second Chances to show how Dick Grayson decided to become Nightwing. It opens with Dick coming to Batman's aid in a battle with Clayface, but later than Batman would like, owing to Dick's duties with the Teen Titans.

They argue, and Batman ends up firing Dick-- this doesn't replace the firing depicted in Second Chances, though, as Dick declares he's been fired before, and the timeline of Dick's life in the front of the book includes the Second Chances firing in its events. So apparently much of Nightwing: Year One takes place during the single issue in Second Chances where Dick is fired and Batman first meets Jason Todd; the book as a whole overlaps with Second Chances a lot, as we don't see how Batman meets Jason or selects him as the new Robin, but we do see some of his training. In the meantime, Dick goes back to his old circus and gets a job there and meets Deadman, but the call of crimefighting pulls him, and building on a conversation he had with Superman, he decides to go into action again as his own man: Nightwing.

This book isn't terrible by any means, but it didn't really work for me. There are three main reasons, I think. The first is that Bruce Wayne is just an absolute asshole here. In Second Chances, he "fired" Dick because he was worried for Dick's safety. Here, he does it because Dick can't live up to the impossible standards he imposes on him, refusing to allow Dick defeating criminals with the Teen Titans to excuse him from working with Batman. I feel like you could write these two men drifting apart as they both grow older without making one of them as an arbitrary jerk, but I suppose no one ever hired Chuck Dixon to write a comic book with subtlety in its characterization.

The second issue I have is the book's last few chapters, which do retcon some of Second Chances out of existence specifically, the "ONE YEAR AGO" issue where Dick first meets Jason. Here, Bruce manipulates Dick into participating in Jason's "Gauntlet," his final test to be a full-time Robin, where the two of them are meant to team up to save Alfred from Two-Face (although Two-Face is actually Alfred in disguise). Things go awry, but the two succeed in saving the day without the help of a sedated Batman. It's a fun adventure on its own merits, but it's a weirdly Batman-centric choice for the climax of a volume about Dick Grayson becoming his own man. I'd rather have seen him fighting his own villain(s), far away from the whole Batman clan.

Lastly, there's the art. I've never liked the team of Scott McDaniel and Andy Owens, not since they were Judd Winick's artists on Green Arrow, and I don't like them here. I think it's their way with faces, which just look weird and indistinct to me.

This is a likable book. Dixon is always good at writing action. The appearance of Deadman is fun (if a little pointless), and I liked Dick's talk with Superman. Alfred's final gift to Dick is pretty nice, and makes perfect sense. I wanted to like the flirting between Dick and Barbara more, but I don't think McDaniel and Owens made their body language work, and Barbara felt weirdly subordinate to Batman in his secret plans-- she's usually much more off on her own in my experience. Overall, Nightwing: Year One is fun, but kind of misjudged.

Batman "Year One" Stories: « Previous in sequence | Next in sequence »
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Stevil2001 | 1 autre critique | Jul 4, 2016 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
20
Aussi par
22
Membres
741
Popularité
#34,276
Évaluation
½ 3.4
Critiques
9
ISBN
34
Langues
2

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