World Comic Book Review

25th April 2024

The Uncanny Avengers #10 (review)

The Uncanny Avengers #10
(Marvel Comics, August 2016)
Writer: Gerry Duggan

A visionary entrepreneur and technologist, Elon Musk, the owner of electric car manufacturer Tesla Motors, is worried about artificial intelligence. Mr Musk is reported by Wired magazine to have this year funded $10 million towards AI safety research.

The concept of artificial intelligences seizing control of the planet has spawned very successful science fiction movies. Perhaps the best example is the cold malevolence of the sentient Skynet military system in the “Terminator” movies (1984, 1991, 2003, 2009, 2015). Upon becoming sentient, Skynet decides the best way of dealing with humans is to initiate a nuclear war. The other popular example is “The Matrix” trilogy of motion pictures (1999-2003), where artificial intelligences farm the vestiges of humanity as a type of biofuel, trapping each person’s mind in an illusory reality while their bodies are leached of electricity.

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Prometheus: Life and Death #1 (review)

Prometheus: Life and Death #1 (review)
Dark Horse Comics, June 2016
Writer: Dan Abnett

Motion picture director Sir Ridley Scott made the movie “Prometheus” (2013, Twentieth Century Fox) with great anticipation from the avid fans of the original “Alien” movie (1983, Twentieth Century Fox). The movie was a self-indulgent and at one point dreadfully misogynistic disappointment. Yet a sequel is nonetheless in production.

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Detective Comics #935 (review)

Detective Comics #935 (review)
(DC Comics, August 2016)
Writer: James Tynion IV

This story follows the classic bridge format of serialised superhero comic books: a pillar of action at both ends, supporting a broad span of melodrama. It stars DC Comics’ major character property, Batman, and over half-a-dozen ancillary characters: Red Robin, Spoiler, Orphan, Azrael, Batwoman and her father Colonel Kane, a young Clayface, and Batman’s loyal butler Alfred Pennyworth. Missing are the other significant associates: Nightwing, Robin, Red Hood, Man-Bat, and Batgirl, no doubt caught up in their own or other titles.

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New Suicide Squad #21 (review)

New Suicide Squad #21 (review)
DC Comics, August 2016
Writer: Tim Seeley

On the back of our recent and very positive review of “Harley Quinn and the Suicide Squad April Fool’s Day Special“, we engaged in precisely the sort of consumer behaviour that US comic book publisher DC Comics wished us to do: we purchased the latest issue of DC Comics’ related publication, “New Suicide Squad”. DC Comics were hoping to ensnare new readers with this sales strategy, but in its execution, offering to new readers such a poorly crafted issue as an entry, the publisher fails entirely.

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