Reviews

Dial H, Vol. 1: Into You by China MiƩville

labunnywtf's review

Go to review page

3.0

First book recommendation by a new coworker.

I don't think I'm going to be listening to more by him because HOLY CRAP, this is an insane comic. I don't even think I can give a review of it.

If it weren't for him giving me an overview of the entire series, I would have literally no idea what was going on here. I can see why this comic didn't have an especially long run.

Finishing up the second volume now. Such potential, but damn, this is WEIRD.

colindalaska's review

Go to review page

3.0

Weird but on the right side of barely being sane.

shane_tiernan's review

Go to review page

4.0

China Mieville is one of my favorite authors. I've read almost all his books, and even though I didn't love all of them, a couple of them are probably in my top 10 books ever. So I was pretty excited to find out he was writing comics.

This had some of his trademark strangeness and some of his incomprehensible-ness to go along with it via alien intelligences speaking almost gibberish. Some of the hero ideas were absolutely ridiculous and really strange, but they were a ton of fun and we get some of the background behind "Dial H" (which I had never read before).

Looking forward to Vol 2.

manuelte's review

Go to review page

4.0

Loved it! This is DC Comics' attempt at pushing the envelope and it works amazingly well. Dialers and the voids

punt11's review against another edition

Go to review page

adventurous fast-paced

3.0

jcarter's review

Go to review page

3.0

Weird... Just weird. And the art is not my cup of tea.

themtj's review

Go to review page

2.0

Cool artwork, fun premise, failed execution. Storytelling was muddled, characters were underdeveloped and uninteresting, and it couldn't consistently hold my attention even long enough to finish a single issue. Pretty big disappointment.

gohawks's review

Go to review page

2.0

Only China Mieville could write a comic with a hero named Captain Lachrymose - a protagonist who feeds off the sadness of others to become powerful. Great idea with poor results here. An obese Joe Schmo accidentally discovers that he can randomly turn into different weird super heroes after dialing H-E-R-O into a payphone. (Do they still have these?) Anyway, part of the hook is that he quickly has to discover each time what his super powers are and how they work. Now, that is somewhat confusing in itself, but Mieville's relative lack of experience multiplies the disorder with messy panel layouts that make it hard to discern what is going on at times. Add in a villain that is actually an ally, an all-encompassing abyss as the super-villain, and a side kick/ ally that has a dial of her own and is actually a senior citizen. Perhaps you sense my frustration. There is so much wonderful stuff to be mined here, but there is too much work to get to it.

That being said, in the middle of this first volume is a stand alone issue that I might rate 4 stars on its own. The two dial heroes have only one working dial between them and are waiting and watching the news for their turn to use the dial and go out to save the day. The main protagonist is in full stereotypical Native American clothing, and he goes by the name of Chief Mighty Death Arrow. His super buddy won't let him leave the house because the get up is so un-P.C. She shows him a photo diary of all her past identities that include some very questionable heroes: Doctor Cloaca, SS Ilsa, Captain Priapus, Kid Torture. Oh my god, the possibilities for this stuff are just through the roof when the story is not hampered by incredibly convoluted back story of the magic dials and a rip off of The Neverending Story's the Nothing. It may get better, but there's not enough to make me stick around and find out.

davybaby's review

Go to review page

3.0

I read this as a fan of China Mieville. And while it is fun, it has nowhere near the imagination and glorious weirdness of his prose.

The story is that ordinary obese loser Nelson lucks into finding a magical phone. Whenever he dials HERO on it, he channels a random bizarre superhero from somewhere. These are often silly, and occasionally fascinating. Needless to say, Nelson stumbles into adventures. There are occasional bizarre concepts and interesting character moments, but most of the comic you spend waiting to see what the next weird hero will be. For example, my favorite so far...

Boy Chimney!

The book is funny and mind-bendy, similar in tone to Alan Moore's [b:Tom Strong Vol. 1|821801|Tom Strong, Vol. 1|Alan Moore|http://d.gr-assets.com/books/1348565569s/821801.jpg|2108133] For example, in one scene Mieville pays homage to the painful early days of comicdom when Nelson's partner in heroing won't let him leave the house as a racially insensitive hero:

description

The art is fine, but I think it would be very difficult as an artist to keep up with the abstractions and weirdness that Mieville routinely explores. For example, one of the main villains in the early story arc is a sentient void-being called Abyss. Abyss is made of the nothingness between stars out in space, and so moves through space feeding on light. Its body is essentially a wormhole into the darkness of space. The artist does fairly well with this very strange concept, but I think it's stronger as an idea than it often comes out in the book.

description

As I said, I enjoyed this, but it hasn't yet impressed me as equal to the rest of Mieville's work. I would be curious to see what a more abstract artist may do when teaming up with Mieville (Mike Mignola, Tim Sale, or Frank Miller come to mind).

Mignola's Hellboy
Mignola's Hellboy

Tim Sale's Joker
Tim Sale's Joker

Miller
Frank Miller's Sin City

Or perhaps an artist with a handle on the bizarre (Paul Pope or Dave McKean maybe)

description
Paul Pope

description
McKean's cover for Arkham Asylum

Sorry. This is getting out of control. I just figured out how to post a picture. I'll stop now.

Anyway, Dial H is fun, but I wouldn't necessarily recommend it for those who aren't fans of superhero comics. Because it way is.

merricatct's review

Go to review page

2.0

The best part of this was Mieville's dialogue, especially Boy Chimney and the Abyss. I wonder if the Abyss and the Weaver from Perdido Street Station are friends, because if they're not, they should be. ^_^ This is definitely a case of "it's not you, it's me", because I'm not a big fan of comics or graphic novels - I just read this because it was Mieville's work.