Monday, January 4, 2010

Noble Causes Archives Vol. 1

Noble Causes Archives Vol. 1 by Jay Faerber and various artists. The volume consists of Noble Causes: First Impressions, Noble Causes #1-4, Noble Causes: Family Secrets #1-4, Noble Causes: Distant Relatives #1-4, and the Noble Causes ongoing series #1-12. Reprinted in black and white (originally the series came out in color). 598 pages.

For $19.99, this collection is very cheap given that it has 598 pages. The catch is that it is printed in black and white instead of color. However, I like the idea of having the series reprinted in two huge volumes instead of needing to get many trades.

Given that I never read this series in color, I don't know what I am missing, but what I can say is that Noble Causes as it is, is fantastic. The comic follows the Noble family, a family of superheroes. This superhero comic book differs from most in that the essence of the story does not boil down to fights with supervillains. The story is driven by characters. We get to meet very interesting superheroes in scenarios that we normally don't see in superhero comic books. A teenage heroine that gets pregnant. Marital problems between two superheroes. The whole series moves more like a soap opera than an action series, but it does in a very entertaining way. I can't help but care about these characters.

One character I like a lot is "Rusty". Rusty was a very powerful superhero that almost died in a battle. His father, being a scientific genius, transferred his mind to a robot (reminding me of Doom Patrol's Metal Man). Rusty has marital problems because of this and after the divorce he finds true happiness with a heroine that has the power of manipulating metal. All of a sudden, Rusty is able to feel again because of his new girlfriend. Rusty goes from being an annoying, mean character to being a very nice, kind character. The isolation he had because of being unable to feel had changed him, but love brought him back to the kind man he once was. This is the sort of thing I enjoyed a lot about Noble Causes, the characters change right in front of our eyes, little by little.

Another character I love is Gaia. She seems to be a really cold, calculating woman. She gives great one-liners that shut up everybody and she is cold when it relates to spinning the stories to the media about the family. However, Gaia has a bastard child, Frost, and when we see in flashbacks how Gaia was tender when seeing Frost and how Gaia loves Doc, we see another side of her. We see the personality that she wants to hide from the outside world, the vulnerability that only her husband and Frost have seen. She was hurt by her husband before, so now she shields that from everyone else with extra zeal. This is the sort of thing that the author conveys to us through images and dialogue. A fantastic job.

The series has very clean pencils, which I think help the story move smoothly. This story is not about exploring with beautiful images, but about understanding characters. I liked the art and I love the writing. This is a great series to check out and for a very good price.

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