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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
1982, before Watchmen, before The Dark Knight, there was-,
By
This review is from: American Flagg! Volume 1 (Paperback)
American Flagg.
If Watchmen is a symphony, if The Dark Knight Returns is an elegiac funeral march, then American Flagg is in your face Rock 'n' Roll, loud, exciting, dirty, and sexy. Written and illustrated by Howard Chaykin at the very top of his form and with amazing lettering by Ken Bruzenak which here is utilised as an integrated part of the art, this is a graphic story of the like you have never experienced before. It's 2031, the environment is in a mess, society has fragmented, the Plex (government) has relocated to the safety of Mars, and fired porn star of Sexus Rangers, Reuben Flagg has joined the Plexus Rangers and is the new guy in violent and corrupt Chicago where the gangs run rampant, the women look like a fetishist's wet dream, there are names like mananacillin, Bob Violence, Jerry Rigg, the guns sound like PAPAPAPAPA OOOOOOO MOW MOW! and there's a talking cat named Raul. Is Reuben the man to sort it all out, if he can keep his pants on long enough that is? Packed with action and every panel packed, overflowing with sex and violence, delicious in its wit, satire and inventiveness, this is a science fiction comic of the like you have never seen before and it stands comparison with those two mentioned up above. 27 years old and it's still as fresh and funny as it always was. A magnificent achievement. This, and volume 2, contain the first 14 issues of the ongoing series which stands comparison with the best American comics. As with Swamp Thing, I have all the original issues but I wanted these collected editions which are printed on much better quality paper than the originals. If you can afford it and though these are nice, go for the one volume hardback -I wish I had.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
American Flagg v1,
By Landboy (UK) - See all my reviews
This review is from: American Flagg! Volume 1 (Paperback)
Even though over twenty-five yeasrs have passed, Chaykin's seminal work is still refreshing, funny and well worth a read!
Strongly recommended!
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta) Amazon.com:
5.0 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews) 2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Deserves a Salute,
By N. Bilmes "bookaholic" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: American Flagg! Volume 1 (Paperback)
American Flagg helped pave the way for Frank Miller's Dark Knight, and served as a pivotal work in the comics genre when it debuted in the mid-1980s. The artwork pulsates with energy, and the storyline rushes headlong without stopping to spell out every nuance for the unintelligent reader. There is social commentary on politics, TV, religion, and sexual mores imbedded in the narrative.
This, like Watchmen, is a graphic novel you will reread regularly.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Raise the Flagg,
By Zack Davisson "japanreviewed" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: American Flagg! Volume 1 (Paperback)
"American Flagg!" is one of those comics that I have heard about for decades, and heard was great, but had never read. I finally picked it up and, no surprises, it is as fantastic as reported.
Howard Chaykin and his series "American Flagg!" get the term "groundbreaking" attached quite often, and after reading it I see how true this is. Published in 1982 through First Comics (the same year Blade Runner] came out, which does not seem to be a coincidence), "American Flagg!" laid the groundwork and set the stage for the comic book revolution that would come in 1986 with Watchmen and Batman: The Dark Knight Returns. In his introduction, Michael Chabon (The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay) goes so far as to compare "American Flagg!" to Citizen Kane, as having shown the world what could really be done with a medium that hadn't yet realized its own capabilities. Aside from just upping the sex-and-violence quotient to be more adult - something Chaykin would continue with his own famous revamps of The Shadow and Blackhawk - "American Flagg!" mixes politics, anti-corporationalism, and tongue-in-cheek irony combined with an entirely non-ironic patriotism and love of the American ideals of free speech, free press, and free religion. And maybe free love. In 2031 (a day not quite as far in the future as it must have seemed to Chaykin when he wrote it), a eco- and war-devastated Earth has been abandoned by the rich and powerful in favor of a terra-formed Mars. The Earth has been almost entirely purchased by a mega-corporation called The Plex, who pits the remaining population against each other in violent battles that it sells as top-rated programming to Mars. Rueben Flagg arrives, drafted into the Plexus Rangers, a corporate security force. Flagg was once a video star of the series Mark Thrust, until The Plex realized they had captured enough footage of him that they could holographically simulate the character without the actor. Flagg, who is Jewish, finds that Earth is a cesspool of discrimination and racism, with gangs battling against each other every night for Mars' entertainment. The Plex broadcasts a TV show, Bob Violence, loaded with subliminal messages to ensure the Earth folks keep fighting. But Flagg is an idealist, who has grown up on the dream of America, and decides that a little underground rabble-rousing is just what the country needs. And maybe a pirate TV station. I was happy to see that "American Flagg!" is not at all dated. There is a bit of the early 80s here, especially with pastel fashion, white suits, and the pre-AIDS sexuality that has Rueben Flagg as a cavalier James Bond type who can't go thirty feet without a woman taking off her dress and throwing herself at him. ( Interesting that Chaykin had all that fun catch up symbolically a bit later, when in "The Shadow" the sex-driven couple both caught AIDS.) There are some political issues that seem dated; one wonders why a future-society so sexually free would still be freaked out by homosexuality. Ultimately, "American Flagg!" lives up to its reputation. This is Good Comics. And any true lover of comic books who hasn't read "American Flagg!" is missing out. |
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