Secret Identities #1 review

I'm very much a two superhero universes person. DC and Marvel are all I really need. 
I try other takes every now and then, but so often it seems we're simply getting more 'extreme', supposedly more realistic copies. 

Image's Secret Identities certainly has some of the archetypes - speedster, magician etc - but adds enough fresh touches of its own to grab my interest. 

But I'm getting ahead of myself ...
The extra-length debut begins with our heroes, The Front Line, taking on the villainous Perdition and his personal mob of monsters. Sheer numbers look set to overwhelm the Toronto-based team, but reinforcements are on the way - watching from a distance is non-member Crosswind.

He's biding his time so his entrance has maximum impact. It's the kind of thing early Booster Gold might have tried, so long as loss of life wasn't in prospect, but the armour-suited Crosswind has a more sinister motive than headline grabbing. He wants to make such a big impression that the team offers him membership. Which they do, after he becomes the one to take Perdition down. 

Seems awfully convenient, and it is - it turns out Crosswind doesn't wish to join the Front Line because he admires them, but because he wishes to take them down. It was he and his unseen partner who arranged for Perdition to go on a rampage. 

Too spoilery? Not at all - this is page nine of a 28pp story whose writers, Brian Joines and Jay Faerber, want us to know Crosswind has ill intent. As fans of the 'Traitor Within the Legion Lad' trope - whose most famous example was New Teen Titan Terra - they want to put readers in the head of the cuckoo from the minute he enters the nest. 

Said nest is one of those original aspects I mentioned earlier - a giant, wrecked Sentinel-style robot operated by frog-like organisms. It's pretty cack as hero HQs go, but has sentimental value for the team. 

I like that after the incredibly crowded, inevitably confusing opening sequence, full of names and powers exposition, Secret Identities slows down to let us get to know the team members. 

🔸There's light blaster Luminary, whose dad has quite the impressive job. 
🔸Rundown, whose private life is, shall we say, complicated. 
🔸Bruiser Punchline, who wants to be a comic but can't come up with a funny line to save her life. 
🔸Cyborg centurion Helot, the only Front Line member who bothers trying to cheer up an old teammate forced out by circumstance. 
🔸Gaijin, floaty alien samurai with family troubles. 
🔸Recluse, long-lived sorcerer whose powers demand an awful price. 
🔸And Vesuvius, lava-loaded supposed survivor of Pompeii. 
They're a fascinating bunch, and I'm dying to see how Crosswind does in his bid to learn their every secret. So far, they're being cautious, keeping their true names from him and not letting him too far into the robot's innards, but sooner or later they'll allow him further...

Joines and Faerber do a splendid job of sketching in personalities, dropping hints that stuff is going on behind the already intriguing things we're seeing. I really appreciate that everyone gets a couple of pages to grab us, as opposed to the 'one player per month' approach used by the likes of J Michael Straczynski on his Squadron Supreme a few years back. The writers even manage to make the team's geo-political standing interesting, with Canada and the US vying for their loyalty. 

Ilias Kyriazis brings a classic approach to his pages, not trying to make things super-'realistic' or madly moody. His superhero house style linework ensures the shocking moments stand out all the more; the rest of the time, as coloured by Charlie Kirchoff, the work is just plain attractive.
Kyriazis's storytelling is strong, and there are striking individual character designs - Recluse, for example, brings a whole new meaning to the term 'domino mask'. The reveal of the robot is powerful, while there's a true tenderness to the scene between Helot and ex-member Diamond Jim. 
And the contrast between the smiley openness of Crosswind's induction and the gloom of the next scene, set in a dark alley alive with carrion, says it all. 

The lettering by Ed Dukeshire is strong too, friendly without being flippant. 

I mentioned JMS's Squadron Supreme, above, a story so decompressed and slow I can't say with certainty that it was ever finished. What this book reminds me of, a tad, is the original Squadron Supreme maxi-series by Mark Gruenwald, Bob Hall and co, a hugely enjoyable take on Marvel's JLA stand-ins. With that tone, and its own spice, Secret Identities succeeds in making a trip to a third superhero universe not just worthwhile, but compelling. 

Comments

  1. I don't know where you got the idea that alternate superhero universes were more extreme or transgressive than Marvel or DC anymore, as Image especially hasn't been anything like the Nu52 for well over a decade now, having arguably overtaken DC thanks to ridiculous sales numbers for the Walking Dead and stealing all of Vertigo's talent. I've found the Invincible/Savage Dragon/Guardians of the Globe/Wolf-Man sub-universe of superhero stories to be very traditional and reminiscent of mid-80s Marvel, if anything.

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    1. It's weird, I've never seen any Savage Dragon books in UK comic shops I frequent. Maybe they get massively under-ordered, meaning casual customers don't get to see them.

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    2. It's not just your local stores - my LCS actually refused to order Savage Dragon for me (as in they WOULDN'T rather than couldn't) for something like three years until I stopped asking. A mate who doesn't really read comics but is a huge horror/zombie fan had a similar experience with Walking Dead and wasn't best pleased when he found out what back issues were going for at auction.
      Possibly non Big Two titles don't travel to this side of the pond very well.

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    3. comixology has them u could order the paper versions from them or the digital versions easily

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    4. I'll echo that I've liked some Savage Dragon and Invincible, though it would be hard to describe it as not extreme I should think, 90's style violence is sort of its bread and butter, though the hero characters often seem more level headed than those 90's ones.

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    5. I shall see if there's an issue or two on Comixology - I like the idea that Savage Dragon runs in pretty much real time.

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    6. just be prepared while it has great stuff it can get a little raunchy and the beginning of the series is a little rough around the edges before it gets its groove

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  2. who was your favoriute member of the team i like gaijin but also former member diamond jim

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    1. Recluse is very intriguing. Least interesting so far is Gaijin, I'm usually bored by sword/samurai/ninja/whatever types.

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    2. but u have to admit that scene with her brother was really sad and sweet

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