I was at the library the other day and saw that they had Darwyn Cooke’s version of The Spirit, so I thought I would pick it up. I have been a fan of Cooke’s retro-styled artwork ever since I read The New Frontier, and this is another title that really benefits from it.
Now, I’m at a little disadvantage here, since I’m coming at The Spirit from the point of view of Darwyn Cooke, and not Will Eisner. So, while I can say that I enjoyed the stories as well as the art, I can’t tell you whether or not you will enjoy them as a fan of the original Spirit. Obviously, I have some reading to do, if only so I can sort that out for myself :)
As I said, I enjoyed the stories. They are set in Central City, a town which seems to be stuck in an interesting combination of 1955 and 2005. There are villains with outdated cybernetics consisting of “600K of UNIX space in [their] head.” People carry normal, pocket-sized cell phones. The Minutemen patrol the American side of the US-Mexico border.
But the retro craze has hit hard here. The Spirit isn’t the only one wearing a trench coat and a fedora. The women tend to look like pin-up girls, complete with wasp-waist and pointy bras. People write with a really nice brush script. Of course, this plays into Cooke’s talents as an artist, but it also helps to frame the pulp origins of The Spirit in the modern stories.
The stories are humourous, a little sexy, a little adventurous. The most interesting part, to me, is how little The Spirit seems to do in them. It is clear that he is a capable hero, but many of the stories seem to be happening to someone else, with The Spirit showing up to wrap things up. I am interested to see if this is true to the original Spirit stories, or is something Cooke brought to the title.
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