Poison Ivy #5 // Review
Pamela is having nightmares. Theyβre nothing she hasnβt experienced before. Sheβd been traumatized years ago. Normally they wouldnβt be anything dangerous, but she IS behind the wheel and running out of the road. (At least thatβs what a Batman-like figure seems to be saying to her.) Things arenβt likely to get much less dangerous for Pamela in Poison Ivy #5. Writer G. Willow Wilson continues her road trip with the appealing villain and would-be savior on her way out to Seattle. In the fifth issue, artist Marcio Takara once again brings the art to the page for the bulk of an issue that opens with a strange, dreamy fugue drawn by Brian Level. Color comes to the page courtesy of Arif Prianto.
It was years ago. Panela was getting pumped full of something in a hospital bed. The guy responsible was a real monster. Poison Ivyβs genesis was not a happy occurrence. It was awful. The visions of it are understandable. They probably shouldnβt be happening while sheβs traveling, though. Luckily enough, Batmanβs there with her. Heβll know what to do. Grantedβ¦heβs only a hallucination, but heβs on her side, so that counts for something, right? The rest of her past begins to catch up with her in other ways as well as she makes the journey west towards destiny and something more.
Wilson is increasing the pressure on Poison Ivy as the series continues. She might have seemed like some kind of vengeful goddess in the first issue, but real darkness and illness is overcoming her in so many ways. The addition of a hallucinatory Batman is a clever suggestion that she really IS looking to tap into the hero that she wants to be. Wilson has allowed that illness to become more and more prominent in the course of the past three or four issues. Now Poison Ivyβs illness is positively overwhelming as she finds herself face-to-face with that past that has made her what she is. Wilson IS giving her protagonist a bit more of a sense of control over things as the plot nears its inevitable end, but the strength of what Wilson has Ivy up against compromises some of the progress that has been made so far.
The visual impact of the story isnβt quite as powerful with Levelβs fugue as it is with Takaraβs shadowy horror. The darkness of Ivyβs memories and the reality of what sheβs going through are given a slippery fantasy that feels gruesome and nightmarish in places. Takara and Level maintain a sense of emotional grounding to it all from different ends. Levelβs rubberiness lacks the kind of resonance that Takaraβs work attained in the first four issues of the series. The nightmare end of the visuals really DO kick into overdrive this issue, so the change in tone and style of the art is not entirely jarring. Itβs just not as appealing as itβs been in previous issues.
Pamela was running out of road at the beginning of the issue, but Wilson is also running out of road, narratively speaking. The central heart of what sheβs exploring is spilling out all over the place, and there hasnβt been a lot of work done to keep it all carefully composed. The emotions of the story feel very real and very compelling, but any larger vision of anything beyond Pam doesnβt really seem to be in clear focus as the series approaches its sixth issue.




