Ratings20
Average rating4
This is a book worth reading and rereading. It's definitely one to return to and think over. Mr Miracle is an exploration of mental health and the big existential questions through the lens of a story alternating between big cosmic conflicts and the everyday of life. Tom King remains one of my favorite writers, and his work and ideas draw me back over and over. Mitch Gerads work is haunting and beautiful. There is a fascinating duality in this work that will make you want to discuss it with everyone
Great artwork, interesting characters and uncertainty about what is going then not caring in the end because the ending was about developing as a person and accepting.
“Stand.”“...Standing”
This one was a bit of head-scratcher, but as always internet reading and articles cleared things up. I was definitely intrigued to know more about one of DC's more background heroes, who also belongs to the celestial and whacky “Fourth World” of Jack Kirby. Having heard so much about this famous run on the ordinary man turned escape artist Scott Free/ Mister Miracle, I decided to give it a shot and wish there was just a bit more context at the start. I did like the opening origin story, and the art throughout was delightful; nine-panel pages which flow seamlessly and have a cartoony but realistic style alongside some weird ‘fizzles'. Following big bad (dad) Darkseid's acquisition of the Anti-Life Equation, our protagonist tries to escape from Death by committing suicide and the entire run deals with his PTSD, depression and individual coping mechanisms through combat, his family in Big Barda and the insane worlds in which he lives in. Whilst this overlap between mundanity suburbia and cosmic warfare sometimes dulled the suspense, the colourful supporting cast and rhythmic sense of it all does work. There is a clear and really beautiful conclusion, and I fully support the creative team for writing a single-story comic that doesn't want or need to spawn a series, spinoffs etc. Like Darkseid, it just is.
I'm trying to understand the Tom King hype and I still don't really get it. Maybe it's because he keeps writing characters that are dear to me and not doing as much with them as I'd like. Idk I liked Supergirl a lot
Mind. Blown. Expanding my idea of what a super hero comic book can do and say. Existential crisis, confronting past trauma, trying to have a life vs godly purpose. The ugliness of war. Is there such a thing as a noble sacrifice if you're dealing in other people's lives?
What baffles me is that given the content (⚠️suicide attempt, PTSD, mental health concerns, child abuse, recounting torture) they chose to censor the still included nudity and swear words?!