Awards season is coming to a close with the grand finale of the Oscars this Sunday.  But not to be outdone, we present last, but certainly not least, the esteemed nominees for the 2010 Meltdown Comic Awards!

It’s been an amazing year for our favorite genre and choosing the best of the best was no easy task.  This year’s Golden Melty list was comprised from multiple “Best of” lists, sell-through numbers, reviews, Publisher’s Weekly lists and combing through dozens of message boards to hear what true comic fans are saying.  So, without further ado, the nominees are:

 

Best Indie Comic Series

  • Green Hornet (Dynamite)
  • The Walking Dead (Image)
  • Scarlet (Icon)
  • Chew (Image)
  • Stumptown (Oni)

 

Best Superhero Comic Series
  • Invincible Iron Man (Marvel)
  • Batman and Robin (DC)
  • Thor: The Mighty Avenger (Marvel)
  • Irredeemable (Boom!)

 

Best Non-Superhero Comic Series
  • Daytripper (Vertigo)
  • American Vampire (Vertigo)
  • Kill Shakespeare (IDW)
  • The Unwritten (Vertigo)

 

Hero of the Year
  • Captain America/Steve Rogers (Marvel)
  • Scott Pilgrim (Oni)
  • Kick Ass (Icon)
  • Zack Overkill – “Incognito” (Icon)

 

Villain of the Year
  • Nemesis (Icon)
  • Skinner Sweet – American Vampire (Vertigo)
  • Red Skull –  Captain America (Marvel)
  • Norman Osborn (Marvel)

 

Most Horrific Death
  • Ares – “Seige #2″
  • Nightcrawler – “X-Force #26″
  • Bras – “Daytripper” (all issues)
  • Cable – “X-Force #28″
  • Multiple robots – “Transformers: Last Stand of the Wreckers”

 

Best Return from the Dead
  • Aquaman, Hawkman, Firestorm, Martian Manhunter, etc. –  ”Blackest Night #8″
  • Batman –  ”Batman and Robin #8″
  • Dracula – “X-Men #3″

 

Best New Series
  • Northlanders: Plague Widow (Vertigo)
  • Black Widow (Marvel)
  • Green Hornet (Kevin Smith, Dynamite)
  • Secret Avengers (Marvel)

 

Best Graphic Novel
  • Dark Tower: Fall of Gilead
  • Absolute Justice
  • Batwoman: Elegy
  • Buffy the Vampire Slayer: Season 8

 

Best Writer
  • Ed Brubaker – Captain America (Marvel)
  • Mark Millar – Nemesis (Icon)
  • Jason Aaron – Scalped (Vertigo)
  • Geoff Johns – Brightest Day (DC)
  • Mark Waid – Irredeemable (Boom!)
  • Grant Morrison – Batman and Robin (DC)
Best Artist
  • J.H. Williams – Detective Comics (DC)
  • Steve McNiven – Nemesis (Icon)
  • Fiona Staples – North 40 (Wildstorm)
  • Naoki Urasawa – Pluto : Urasawa X
Best Celebrity-Written Title
  • Green Hornet – Kevin Smith
  • The Guild – Felicia Day
  • Frenemy of the State – Rashida Jones
  • Pantheon – Michael Chiklis

 

Best Event of the Year
  • Artifacts (Top Cow)
  • Heroic Age (Marvel)
  • Brightest Day (DC)
  • Second Coming (Marvel)

 

Best WTF Moment
  • DC issues go back to 2.99
  • Nick Simmons accused of plagiarizing “Bleach”
  • Lady Gaga gets her own comic
  • The ending of Greek Street
  • Sony Pictures making “Green Hornet” with that script instead of Kevin Smith’s
  • Tron – ’nuff said
Best Cover of the Year
  • Spiderman #641 ”One Moment in Time”
  • Batwoman #0
  • The Avengers #1 – Variant 7
  • I Zombie #1
  • Superman #702
  • We Will Bury You #1

 

Were your favorites nominated?  Who gets your vote this year for the best of the best in comics?  To find out who will take home the Golden Melty, check back here next week for the winners of the 2010 Meltdown Comic Awards!

Follow us on twitter @TVStaceyLevin and @GoTodash!


 

by: Stacey Levin

Hey, fellow Melties, don’t you hate it when you invest in a new title, shell out a hundred bucks, tell other people to read it (like, say in a published column) and then it limps to the finish line like the Dodgers did this season?   Yeah, I hate when that happens, too, and sadly, several recent books have let a lot of readers down.  Let me warn you now, this is gonna get a little ugly, peeps.

Let’s take a look at “Air,” shall we? “Air” was touted by many very respectable reviewers and publications for its originality and strong lead character.  Hell, Neil Gamian even compared it to the works of Salmon Rushdie.  I was in – actually from the very first columns I posted here, I told people to read “Air.”   And for the first half of the issues, it lived up to the hype.  I thought the story moved, the plot unfolded in good arcs and cliff hangers and the characters evolved weekly.  But some where around issue 14, “Air” started to lose its way.  There were several issues where the story literally just stopped like Wilson had run of out ideas or pulled a thread in her own story.  But I was invested and kept reading hoping “Air” would find its way back to its innovative beginnings where it utilized historical characters and events and simultaneously tapped into a universal fear of terrorism that we all felt deep inside.  But no such luck.  It became clear by issue 17 that the “Air” we had come to love was no more.  The story limped along almost painfully till the inevitable announcement that “Air” would end its run in issue 24.  I wish I had some other word for the ending of “Air” other than lame, but that’s honestly how I felt about it.  24 issues of wasted investment.

Now let’s take a drive down “Greek Street” – yet another title I personally touted early on.  ”Greek Street” was well received by the comic community and rightfully so – it was a modern, violent take on Greek mythology.  Utilizing classical literature and characters in comics is one of my favorite lines of storytelling, so “Greek Street” was right up my alley.  With each issue, the story became more intricate – even becoming a little hard to follow at times.  But I’m all about using my noggin, so I welcomed the depth and complications.  I even forgave the side story focusing on the British soldier who returned from the war – a deviation I never really liked.  However, by the time the story got back to Eddie’s self-loathing crisis, it seemed like there weren’t many places left to go with it… maybe “Greek Street” became too smart or clever for its own good because it clearly had taken a wrong turn and the inevitable ending was announced.  Well, when I finished the last issue, I was completely annoyed that I had bothered to read the series at all.  In case you’re still reading, I won’t blow it for you, but trust me, it’s an abrupt, unsatisfying non-ending to what started out as an above average foray into modern genre fair.

So what’s really the problem here?  Is it writers who pitch a title, but don’t really have an ending to their own story?  Or does the fault lie with the publishers who flake on their writers early not allowing them to finish what they actually did have planned?  Having come from television, I saw examples of both sides of the question – i.e. those of you who got pissed when “Firefly” was cancelled in the middle of its first season know what I’m talking about.  Well, comics are no different.  As a fan and reader, nothing gets me more than investing in a title and then having it yanked so the writers are forced to abruptly end the story without much thought.  And as a writer, I get equally irritated when a writer gets a shot at publishing something new and exciting, but never really had an end in mind.  Trust me, comic book fans remember both of these scenarios when it comes time to decide if they should give a new series or a new writer a try.

Now, I don’t want to give the impression the publishers get it wrong.  A recent example of doing it right is “Daytrippers” – a complete story that was well executed in the number of allotted issues.  At the end, I didn’t feel cheated or hoodwinked – I felt respected because the writers obviously knew the story they wanted to tell and accomplished it in ten issues.  The same could be said for the genius story of “N” which was told in completion in only four issues.  See, it can be done without a huge commitment from either the writer or the publisher.  Or, it can be done on the opposite end of the scale as in “Y: The Last Man” – an amazing, in depth story that took 60 issues to be told in its entirety.

So, what I’m asking is pretty simple.  Publishers, since we’re the ones shelling out the 2.99 or 3.99 per book, show us a little regard when you abruptly decide to cancel a title in the middle of its run before the writer has a chance to honor the end of the story for the people who have been reading it.  And writers, getting the opportunity to publish a book is a rare and privileged one – please honor the chance you’re given by having a worked out story to tell when you embark on the first issue so those of us who go along with for the ride get a satisfying experience.

Whew, that was like a purging!  You know how when you get really drunk and the next day you’re so totally hung over that you spend hours praying you’ll be able to just “get up?”  And once you do, you feel SO much better?  Yep, that’s how I feel right now.  And btw, Vertigo guys, I didn’t intentionally target you.  Just so happens I was invested in these titles which both ended recently.  But then again, if you threw us a bone with a review copy once in a while, it wouldn’t be as financially painful when one of our favorite titles goes down.  No disrespect, but I’m just sayin’.

Peace, love and all that jazz.

Follow me on twitter: @TVStaceyLevin

 

by Stacey Levin

…Stephen King, that is, because the sovereign of scare has done it again with his newest entries into the comic arena – “American Vampire” and the limited series “N.”  The King (That’s my nickname for him.  Cause we’re friends.  And friends have nicknames for each other.  Ok, fine, I don’t actually know him… yet.) has been writing comic books and graphic novels for over 25 years.  In fact, on his website, he lists “Creepshow,” the companion comic to the movie, as his earliest comic credit back in 1982.  But most fans readily associate his comic work as extensions and companions to his existing published titles such as “The Dark Tower” and “The Stand.”  All great stuff, but with “American Vampire” and “N,” The King has gone back to the roots of his horror story telling which is what I love the most.  Ok, yeah, so this is a completely biased ode to The King.  Sue me.  Well, I guess you could stop reading, but it’s STEPHEN KING, people!

In Marvel’s “N,” which is based on SK’s short story and written by the talented film and television writer Marc Guggenheim, The King tells a chilling tale about living in a personal hell of paranoia and obsession when his lead  character descends into the dark world of mental illness.  A lead character with a mental  illness is not new territory for S.K.  Some of his most famous creations were really just  batsh*t crazy folks.  (Hello, Annie Wilkes!  How ya doin’, Jack Torrance?)  But what’s  different about Dr. John Bousaint in “N” is that he starts out sane.  Actually, he’s a  psychiatrist who is literally driven crazy by the mysterious circumstances that surround  the death of one his patients known only as Patient N.  Patient N committed suicide –  pushed to the ultimate limit by hanging out at an odd geological formation of rocks in a  barren field.  Wait, what?  The rocks made him kill himself?  No, that can’t be and it sounds  illogical.  Well, that’s what the good Doc thought, too, until he went to investigate the place  and soon found himself catching the same kind of madness that Patient N suffered from.  So  you’d think people would stay away from the weird rocks, right?  Not in a horror comic,  peeps.  That’s just the beginning.  From there, The King’s story and Guggenheim’s expert scripting literally describe every pain staking moment of what it must be like to slowly go  insane… to know it’s happening to you, but be helpless to stop it.  I can’t think of too many  things more frightening than that.  Artfully drawn by the accomplished artist Alex Maleev,  the imagery in “N” makes you feel as if you too might be catch the insanity if you read too  much.  Effing brilliant.

With Vertigo’s “American Vampire,” The King takes on the overused area of vampiressszzzzzzz.  Continue reading »


 

Worlds collide and universes are shattered as we make it official! Sam “the Hammer” Humphries is welcomed as the newest permanent member for the Meltcast (and the internet couldn’t be happier).

To celebrate, we bring aboard a double shot of guests for your listening pleasure! First off, we welcome Michael Holmes (adapter), Ryan Johnson (musical director), and Marz Richards (the devil) of the Sacred Fools Theater Company (sacredfools.org) to discuss their current show: FORBIDDEN ZONE: LIVE IN THE 6TH DIMENSION, a stage adaptation of Richard and Danny Elfman’s 1982 video cult classic. They also keep us posted on the status of SERIAL KILLERS, MAGNUM OPUS (literal performances of the worst screenplay ever found) and the upcoming and first-ever Hollywood Fringe Festival.

In the second segment we lose our collective shit and welcome a unified Meltcast favorite as Joshua Dysart, writer of UNKNOWN SOLDIER from Vertigo Comics joins the discussion! We talk the recent heartbreaking news of the series’ upcoming cancellation, his plans for ending the story, and upcoming projects like the final completion of  BUDDHA (Liquid Comics) and the upcoming NEIL YOUNG’S GREENDALE (Vertigo) with Cliff Chiang on art duties.

Many bothans died and even more tears were shed to bring you this information.

 
 

Green is king (at least for one of the members) on this St. Patrick’s day extravaganza! We hoist our cups and muse over the second trade of UNKNOWN SOLDIER by Joshua Dysart and Alberto Ponticelli from Vertigo, THE KILLER from Archia Press, Terry Moore’s Echo, WOLVERINE: WEAPON X, THE BRAVE AND THE BOLD, JONAH HEX, JOE THE BARBARIAN, and BRONX KILL from Vertigo Crime, Chris rants about women in refrigerators, and we’re not hung over yet as we discuss SIEGE #3.

 

©2012 Meltdown, Inc. WP retouched by the hand of FD for Meltdown, Inc.