Masks #2
Geez, judging from some knee jerk fan reaction on the web, this might as well be titled Masks #2: No More Alex Ross. The complaints are completely unfounded. While the luscious, meticulously painted pages done by Alex Ross are a hard act to follow, Dennis Calero comes in this week and does a fantastic job. If he had been the artist from day one, he'd be getting nothing but raves for his really excellent pencil work here. There is no need to worry about the future of the art in Masks, this issue puts any fears of a post-Ross decline to rest.
The Masks crossover was, of course, always intended to be partly an awesome way to promote Dynamite's pulp hero line and give exposure to the lesser characters as well as testing the waters for new titles. The first issue paved the way by introducing the well-known Green Hornet, Kato, and the Shadow. It also gave the Spider an awesome entrance and laid groundwork for the a couple more characters in the future. This issue wastes no time in introducing Ms Fury and Green Lama in the first few pages. We don't learn anything of their history, but their are two more characters (Black Bat and Zorro) who's origins continue to unfold. The story is still unfolding and characters still being introduced here, so the plot doesn't move to far along , but this still manages to be an exciting issue.
Already the Black Bat has been announced as a new title coming in 2013 from current Flash writer Brian Buccaletto. It seems to me that Ms Fury can't be far behind. Masks is a smash success on it's own and I have little doubt that it will go down as the crossover of the year, but what it is doing for the entirety of the pulp comics from Dynamite is a humungous bonus. With the announcements of Black Bat, Mark Waid on Green Hornet, Wagner on The Shadow Year One, and even Francavilla's New Black Beetle over at Dark Horse, it really looks like Masks is ushering in the year of pulp.