8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Perfection would be an understaement., April 11, 2008
This review is from: Scalped Vol. 2: Casino Boogie (Paperback)
No doubt about it. Jason Aaron is the one to watch.
I read Scalped Volume 1 and liked it. I didn't love it, but I liked it enough to purchase Volume 2. I am so glad I did because this is "Grade A" writing and beautifully "gritty" illustrations that help tell this perfect story.
Jason Aaron holds nothing back while giving us new perspectives on the characters he introduced us to in Volume 1. Written in the same fashion as "Reservoir Dogs" and "Pulp Fiction", the reader is lead through the story from all viewpoints and through a time line line that bounces around, but is in no way hard to follow.
This is the perfect comic book.
SC
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
"...My dreams might again outnumber my regrets.", August 7, 2008
This review is from: Scalped Vol. 2: Casino Boogie (Paperback)
Casino Boogie collects Scalped issues #6-11 and serves as the volume two trade paperback. The much talked about casino opening from volume one (Indian Country) is the larger focus of this volume as each story part takes place on opening night of the Crazy Horse Casino on The Prairie Rose Reservation. Jason Aaron handles the scripts with a deft hand as he uses this event as the backdrop for supplying the reader with back-story for a number of characters including Dash, Lincoln Red Crow, Diesel, Catcher, Gina Bad Horse, Lawrence Belcourt and Dino Poor Bear.
Originally six issues, the story is divided into six parts. Aaron devotes many of the chapters' opening pages to flashback sequences which setup the focus of each part on a particular character. The reader is treated to scenes from Dash, Red Crow, and Diesel's childhood, for instance, before being brought back into present time to see where each character is on opening night. Red Crow's grim and murderous determination is really the center piece in my opinion, as his actions have a grand, sweeping effect on all the other characters to say nothing of the fact that it's HIS casino that's opening. That isn't to say that each of these other characters are necessarily caught blind in his wake though. Each chapter is written from the perspective of the focus character so the reader is granted a better understanding of their personal dilemmas and motivations. More is revealed on the murders of the two FBI agents from some twenty years back; Scalped's watershed moment and impetus to many of the book's current events. Read in their original, single issue format, each of the chapters succeed as stand alone stories.
The larger tapestry of the ongoing story is fleshed out as well with a few new wrinkles added to complicate matters for the residents of The Prairie Rose Reservation. Is Dash the only undercover FBI agent operating on The Rez? What is Red Crow's involvement with Hmong ganglords hailing from St. Paul, Minnesota and who is this "Mr. Brass" they've sent out to "help" him with his local troubles? What does Catcher's vision mean and what can we possibly expect from such a bizarre individual as he? In the young Dino Poor Bear, do we dare admit to the similarities between his and a young Dash's yearnings? All these personal stories are interwoven skillfully and the variety of characters and settings within really give R.M. Guéra an opportunity to shine as an artist and really define the look of the world he and Jason Aaron are masterfully depicting. The conclusion of this volume is nothing less than a visual and emotional gut punch; it's so cold-blooded and callous and it leaves so many character issues fatally unresolved while at the same time it serves as a lightning rod to drive the story forward to the dark days ahead.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Simply the best comic out there!!!, February 14, 2009
This review is from: Scalped Vol. 2: Casino Boogie (Paperback)
A vey engaging crime story full of great characters. Each issue leaves off with a great cliffhanger and makes you want to read the next issue right away. The art took a little getting used to at first but then one realizes that it fits the mood and tone of the story perfectly. Dark and gritty. I hope that the writer and artist are in this together for the long haul. The comic actually made me read up on recent native american history that some the story is based on. Buy it now! Start with volume 1 first.
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