Author Archives: Phil

About Phil

With 40 years of experience in comic reading, collecting and reviewing, English Professor Phil Mateer has an encyclopedic mind for comics. Feel free to ask Phil about storylines, characters, artists or for that matter, any comic book trivia. He will post your questions and answers on the AABC blog. His knowledge is unparalleled! He is also our warehouse manager, so if you are looking for that hard to find comic book, ask Phil!

Phil's Reviews — Stuff I Read and Put Back #59

Ultimates 3 #3 (of 5) — Writer: Jeph Loeb; ArtJoe Madureira Still bad — everyone, every single character, is unpleasant, yelling and poking each other (and sometimes shooting holes in one another) like hyperactive kindergardeners. Joe Mad gets to draw dinosaurs and has one good Iron Man moment, but then he does a nude scene that indicates he’s never seen an actual live human breast before. Oh, and Thor, inexplicably, isn’t talking Asgardian again, and we’re told (but not, thank God, shown) that “Pietro found in Wanda…a kind of love… that no one in this room can really understand.” Sure, … Continue reading

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Phil's Reviews — Stuff I Bought #58

Uncle Scrooge #372 — Writer/Artists: Carl Barks, Don Rosa Offering reprints of “Christmas on Bear Mountain” (the first Uncle Scrooge story), by Carl Barks, and a collected three-parter by Don Rosa, “The Treasury of Croesus.” There’s also a back-cover poster by Rosa spotlighting the ways that Scrooge’s appearance changed in his early years, and a one-page essay from Rosa about the poster. All of this will set you back $8, but it’s worth it: better than 50 pages of great, great storytelling, and if you have young kids and read these to them, you’ll create comics fans for life. Astro … Continue reading

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Phil's Reviews — Stuff I Read and Put Back #58

Green Arrow and Black Canary #5 — Writer: Judd Winick;  Art: Andre Coelho Ollie sits around angsting about the fact that he’s been a lousy father and his kid has no brain. He swears to give up being Green Arrow. Cue the shocking twist ending, after which he says, grimly, “Get me my damn bow.” Presumably, next issue something will actually happen. For now, I’ve just saved you all $3 and five minutes of your lives. Dead of Night #1 (of 4) — Writer: Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa;  Art: Kano (framing sequences by Nick Percival) Man-Thing’s origin retold. Unfortunately, everything just seems … Continue reading

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Howard the Duck's Presidential Run

Phil Mateer Waddling into History: Howard the Duck’s Presidential Campaign DC may think they’re trying something new in 2000, by running Lex Luthor for President, but ol’ Lex is hardly the first comics character to do it — or to get media coverage about it in the “real world.” Let’s go back 24 years, when it was a Marvel character who had his webbed foot firmly in the race…. You think the candidates aren’t very special THIS year? Think about 1976, when the options included Gerald Ford, best-known now for (a) pardoning Richard Nixon and (b) his cameo appearance in … Continue reading

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Steve Gerber: 9/20/47 – 2/11/08

Steve Gerber died. Boy, is that hard to type; back in the ’70s, as I went through high school and college, I wanted more than anything to be a comic book writer, and Gerber was the guy I wanted to be. He’d been part of the second wave of comics writers, the first fanzine-makers and readers of the early-’60s Marvel renaissance who’d transitioned into pros, and he brought a literary talent, a grown-up way with words and subject matter that still allowed for superhero fun and sly humor, that made the comics medium’s potential seem endlessly entertaining. For a while, … Continue reading

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