Dale Eaglesham
Author of Villains United
Works by Dale Eaglesham
King Kull: Caresses Of Mine Enemy 2 copies
Alpha Flight (2011) #5 - The Last Refuge — Illustrator — 2 copies
King Kull: Invictus 1 copy
King Kull: Traitor’s Gold 1 copy
Associated Works
Supergirl and the Legion of Super-Heroes: Adult Education (2007) — Illustrator — 75 copies, 2 reviews
The Multiversity: The Just #1 (The Multiversity, #3) (2014) — Cover artist, some editions — 5 copies
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This is a weird-ass spin-off, but still is a little satisfying. Scooby Apocalypse volume two, picks up right where the first volume ends. The gang is trapped in Mall-Mart surrounded by monsters. In volume one, Velma's nanite creation was expanded and bastardized by her four brothers who used it to unleash hell on the world. Feeling guilty and responsible, Velma is trying to figure out how to fit in with the gang when she feels responsible for the apocalypse. To top it off Fred has gone and show more got himself injured so the gang really needs to stick together and tread carefully to survive. Amusing, I'll eventually get around to reading volume three. show less
As Lex Luthor unites the villains of the world into a new Secret Society, only six villains remain outside of his organization: Catman (who I remember from Green Arrow where he got eaten by an alien portal or something), Cheshire (a recurrent enemy in Birds of Prey), Ragdoll (son of the villain from Starman), Scandal (daughter of Vandal), Deadshot (I think he's a Batman villain?), and Parademon (a parademon from Apokolips). Like the old Secret Six, they're working for a mysterious show more Mockingbird whose true identity and agenda remain an enigma to them.
Simone, as anyone who read Birds of Prey knows, is good at writing teams, and it is in the character dynamics that this book shines. There's a lot of fun to be had in this group of people: shame about Parademon, actually, and I was surprised by the extent to which I immediately came to like Scandal. Someday, I suppose, I'll read the Secret Six spin-off and find it's as good as everyone says it is.
Where this book becomes less interesting is in the machinations that tie more directly into the impending Infinite Crisis: half of the Secret Society's leadership is actually comprised of lame villains (I am opposed to every story which tries to convince me Deathstroke the Terminator is legit, but this group throws in "Doctor Psycho" too whose power is I think being short), and then there's some stuff about Firestorm that's not really clear; I guess I am supposed to be reading his book. (I don't know why Firestorm always has a key role in these big crossovers, but it's a tradition that has roots going all the way back to 1982's "Crisis on Earth-Prime!" See also Crisis on Infinite Earths, Legends, Millennium, and Identity Crisis. He died in that last one, and he's still back for this one! I look forward to seeing him in Final Crisis.) I must admit, though, that the Mockingbird revelation is really quite neat. I wish I hadn't known about it ahead of time.
DC Comics Crises: « Previous in sequence | Next in sequence » show less
Simone, as anyone who read Birds of Prey knows, is good at writing teams, and it is in the character dynamics that this book shines. There's a lot of fun to be had in this group of people: shame about Parademon, actually, and I was surprised by the extent to which I immediately came to like Scandal. Someday, I suppose, I'll read the Secret Six spin-off and find it's as good as everyone says it is.
Where this book becomes less interesting is in the machinations that tie more directly into the impending Infinite Crisis: half of the Secret Society's leadership is actually comprised of lame villains (I am opposed to every story which tries to convince me Deathstroke the Terminator is legit, but this group throws in "Doctor Psycho" too whose power is I think being short), and then there's some stuff about Firestorm that's not really clear; I guess I am supposed to be reading his book. (I don't know why Firestorm always has a key role in these big crossovers, but it's a tradition that has roots going all the way back to 1982's "Crisis on Earth-Prime!" See also Crisis on Infinite Earths, Legends, Millennium, and Identity Crisis. He died in that last one, and he's still back for this one! I look forward to seeing him in Final Crisis.) I must admit, though, that the Mockingbird revelation is really quite neat. I wish I hadn't known about it ahead of time.
DC Comics Crises: « Previous in sequence | Next in sequence » show less
Much better than most event comics, although this isn't as much an event comic as it is a prelude to the Secret Six series DC published. Gail Simone manages to make these people villains, and she doesn't sugercoat them, yet they are villains that we can root for. She fleshes them out and gives them depth, and it works wonderfully. It's also a beautifully illustrated book.
An improvement over the choppy first volume, I think -- the wordless underwater issue is just a total drain on the pacing (Eaglesham's a great artist, but even he has trouble keeping this thing going), but the rest is some great building on the first volume's hints of changes to come, as it becomes clear that the Four are headed straight towards being caught in the middle of something nuts. I could have done with a bit more background explanation -- it still feels like I missed a Volume 0 or show more something somewhere -- but this is the kind of weird, super-science adventures I want out of a Fantastic Four comic. show less
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