Ghost Rider #2 // Review
The new Ghost Rider series should be a slam dunk. This is one of Marvelβs most interesting and often most undervalued characters, and the hook of Johnny Blaze as king of hell gives the series a great engine (no pun intended) for compelling stories. Unfortunately, the second issue is hit or miss, with more misses than hits.
This issue continues Johnny Blazeβs quest to find escaped demons and return them to hell where they belong. Danny Ketch gets in the way, as it appears Blaze is going too far and attacking ordinary people. Or are they normal? It is unclear why Ketch thinks that or why we shouldnβt root for Blaze.
Writer Ed Brisson handles Danny Ketch and his supporting cast well, making them feel well-rounded, with motivations that make sense. Unfortunately, he doesnβt have nearly as good a handle on Johnny Blaze. Everyone reacts to Blaze as though he is doing something terribly wrong, but the storytelling is so vague that he seems to be acting entirely rationally and doing the right thing. If these characters arenβt demons, or if theyβre sinners who have paid their debt to the world in the afterlife and deserve freedom, itβs not at all made clear in the text.
The art is a mixed bag, as well. The book is credited to Aaron Kuder, with Craig Yeung, John Lucas, & Luciano Vecchio. Itβs not clear if Yeung, Lucas, and Vecchio are all different inkers, or if thereβs a second penciler splitting storytelling duties with Kuder. Still, specific pages have a radically different style, and itβs a bit jarring. The pages that are definitely penciled by Kuder are ornate but drawn with clean lines; some pages are muddier and sketchier instead. One suspects that multiple artists--be they a second penciler or second and third inkers--were brought in to handle a backlog of pages, which is alarming for a book only on its second issue. The coloring by Jason Keith and the lettering by VCβs Clayton Cowles are competent, but they donβt mitigate the jarring art issues.
All that said, the design of the demons is very cool, and when the team is firing on all cylinders (another engine pun!), the book really works. Hereβs hoping that the creators involved work out the kinks for issue 3.




