
Showing posts 126 - 130 of 137 matching: costumes
Tuesday, July 19, 2011
Countdown to Comic-Con 2011: 2
Continuing the count down to Comic-Con, the following image of Booster Gold and Skeets at Wondercon 2011 was published by Comics and Dakine back in April.
Booster Gold and Deathstroke may seem like an odd couple, but don't forget who got the best of whom in Booster Gold, Volume 2, #24!
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Monday, July 18, 2011
Countdown to Comic-Con 2011: 3
The 2011 San Diego Comic-Con International kicks off this Thursday night. To get everyone in the mood as we count down the days to Friday's "Justice League" panel (which will hopefully contain some real news about the upcoming Justice League International series), let's take a look at some Booster Gold costumes that have appeared in just the last year.
What better way to start the week than with one of the latest fantastic fashions by Gina of Uncanny Adventures in Comic Costume Creations. This costume was worn to Wizard World Philadelphia 2011. It's hard to see in the above picture, but the star on that costume glows! (Follow the previous link to Gina's site for more details.)
We've met Gina before: she's responsible for that great costume featured here in the Boosterrific Blog back on January 20. Booster Gold is lucky to have such a fan.
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Friday, July 15, 2011
A Triumph of Design
DC has now released covers for October solicitations, among them Justice League International #2. This gives us a newer look at at Booster Gold's new costume. Triangular golden breastplate? Arrow gauntlets? Pants-less unitard? Why do I feel like I've seen this somewhere before?
Ah, Triumph. Unloved bastard child of 1990s angst and design awkwardly coupled with DC's Silver Age mythology. Triumph was an energy-wielding, time-displaced hero-turned-crybaby who left the Justice League after too many bad decisions. That doesn't sound familiar.
Surely it's just a coincidence that Jim Lee's new unitard design for Booster Gold is strongly evocative of Triumph's costume. Isn't it?
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Friday, June 10, 2011
DC Stands for Dumb Committees
Last Friday, I made a fuss over Booster Gold's new costume. After careful contemplation of what I wrote, I stand by my original assessment.
THIS COSTUME STILL SUCKS.
However, I laid all of the blame for the vomit-inducing misguided costume redesign on DC Co-Publisher Jim Lee, largely because that's who DC blamed it on in their original announcements. However, yesterday Lee announced that he would not be taking the fall alone. On DC's The Source blog, Lee wrote:
Months ago, when the decision was made to launch 52 new number ones, Co-Publisher Dan Didio, Editor-in-Chief Bob Harras along with DCU Executive Editor Eddie Berganza and VP-Art Direction and Design Mark Chiarello and I went over the entire proposed DCU lineup and bookmarked the characters we felt would benefit the most from a visual redesign.
... Realizing the amount of time and effort it would take to complete the long list of designs, Mark Chiarello and I enlisted artist Cully Hamner onto the team, giving us not just another set of hands but another style altogether so we would have a variety of styles to literally draw from.
... And of course, all the designs were shaped and refined by the input of a series editor, writer and artist. In the end, we wanted to make sure all the key creators on a title were satisfied with the final look of the characters as the creative teams were the ones who had to live with and draw the new looks on a near daily basis.
So now that we've gotten an eyeful of the worst costume designs since the 1990s, Lee is being sure to drag everyone else down with him give "credit" to all the other artists involved. What a great guy.
Does this mean that Dan Jurgens, a "key creator" for the upcoming Justice League International title, was a significant part of the team that designed that Booster Gold costume? Being pretty familiar with Jurgens' artistic history, I somehow doubt it. Would Jurgens' involvement in the creation of that costume make me hate it less? I somehow doubt that, too. This would be at least the third Booster Gold powersuit that Jurgens had a direct hand in designing, and it is by far the worst.
Not every costume in this entire shake-up is bad. The problem is that most of them are. And they are all coming at the same time, so rather than being given time to acclimate to the horrific appearance of, say, a Jersey Shore-Superboy or an anime-Deasthstroke, we readers are forced into making a snap decision: do we want to pay to look at these abominations Hot Topic-inspired fashions or not?
Jim Lee, I don't care whose fault it is, I just don't want to look at the comic books you are publishing anymore.
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Friday, June 3, 2011
DC Stands for Dumb Costumes
I had almost gotten used to the steady stream of terrible news coming out of DC Comics this week. Every book is getting cancelled so that titles can restart at number 1? Stupid, but I survived the 1990s once. DC will be launching 52 titles over the course of a month? Ridiculous, but I survived the DC Explosion, too. Creative teams are being totally reshuffled? Pointless, as the best teams will still be on the books with the highest selling potential. Every DC character dons a new costume designed by Jim Lee. Uh oh.
There's no denying it: Booster's first costume was a time-capsule of its era. Love it or hate it, it screams 1980s, as did the character of Booster Gold: a selfish corporate crusader who saw super-heroics as a means to capital wealth. For good or ill, the high-collared costume became indelibly associated with the character.
By the 1990s, both Booster's status and costume were destroyed. His costume was redesigned to look completely ridiculous, like a football player's pads on steroids. This was done intentionally, allowing a slow transition during which his costume design could evolve alongside its wearer, eventually emerging with typically 1990s flair. These costumes weren't all good -- that was the point -- but the changes were story-driven and organic.
Booster was reunited with his partner Blue Beetle in the 2000s, and his costume was miraculously and inexplicably restored to its 1980s glory. Take note, if you are going to make changes to a design without explaining how or why, tried-and-true is the direction to go. Someone must have realized that this costume wasn't new-millennium enough, and the collar was dropped and the gold sections of costume were linked by wide stripes. Sponsorship patches were added and removed, all in the name of character development.
But now DC decides to change everything just for the sake of changing everything. This is a marketing event, plain and simple. Somewhere someone said, "Jim Lee's art sells, so let's let Jim Lee do all our art!" Make no mistake about what this really is: a travesty.
THIS COSTUME SUCKS.
While Booster's costume was once iconic and unique, it now looks like every other "future-tech" costume in comics. Yes, Booster has a blue star on a gold field. And he's wearing goggles with exposed blonde hair. It's almost like there was a corporate-mandated checklist for what Booster's costume had to incorporate for licensing purposes. (You don't really want the kids who see Booster Gold on Batman: The Brave and the Bold, DC Universe Online, and Smallville to wonder who this dumb-looking character is, do you, DC?) After that, it goes quickly to hell. From the top down:
- Head: Booster Gold now has a visible forehead. This means that either his goggles are responsible for holding his cowl up, or he has a very stiff and uncomfortable head covering. On the upside, artists now have space to draw sweat on Booster's brow! Hoo-ray?
- Face: What is the need for the gold on the mask around the face? Is Lee just curious to see how fast he can make the colorist screw it up? The design makes Booster look older and wider. Apparently now "Booster Gold" should be synonymous with "fat head."
- Neck: Why a "w" encircling the neck? This is artist shorthand for "technology" and does nothing but make the neckline busier. As if we didn't already know it, Jim Lee demonstrates his belief that you can never have too many extra lines on a costume.
- Shoulders: Yay! More extraneous piping on the shoulders. At least Booster doesn't have full-scale 1990s shoulder-pads, but I'm guessing that's only because someone realized that would be too obvious.
- Arms: I suppose it was too unrealistic to have his Booster Shots mounted on the back of his gloves anymore, so now Booster has sleeves. What kind of high-tech design is that in gold at the end of the sleeve, anyway? Atlantean? Apokolipsian? Arrows? Please, not arrows. Surely by now Booster Gold knows which end of his arms to point at the bad guys without context clues on his costume.
- Waist: There is no such thing as a great male super-hero costume without a belt or similar costume element separating the torso from the waist. Otherwise the costume ends up looking like a unitard, and no one looks great in a unitard.
- Feet: We can't see them here, but I promise you they look terrible. The new costume probably doesn't even have golden boots, but terminates in solid blue stocking feet in keeping with previous costumes. Couple that with the lack of a belt, and Booster's new costume would look like elaborate footed pajamas.
Will this redesign stick around? I sure hope not. It already looks like garbage. The sooner DC takes out this trash, the better.
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