Saturday, December 26, 2020

"The Best Movie of 2020"...?


Birds of Prey (And The Emancipation of One Harley Quinn)...was in theaters for a month & a half. It had an R-rating, which kept kids from seeing it, unless accompanied by their parents; it had a limited budget, which meant the nature of the plot would be kept on a street-level, with little room for spectacle; the budget kept the wardrobe from access to creating elaborate superhero costumes; and it had a terrible trailer, fronting toxic misandry disguised as "woke" feminism. For a movie based on DC Comics characters, it performed below expectations, but two curious things happened this week that got people talking about it again. First, this Gamespot article:
    I usually confuse them with                             Game Stop.

Second, it has a better score on Rotten Tomatoes than Wonder Woman 1984:

I usually don't set up my conclusion this far after the intro, but the point I'm going to make is that I enjoyed Birds of Prey, but...to say it's the "Best Movie of The Year" has me wondering if there were any movies we missed before handing this movie that distinction, or, given everything that's happened in 2020, should this ranking be valid. Actually, there will be an Academy Awards presentation next year, so that point is moot; it's very likely that most of the films up for consideration will be films that debuted on streaming services...
  Begun..the Streaming War has..

As for the Birds of Prey characters and how they were depicted in the film..that team has gone through several incarnations in a short time. It began with just Oracle & Black Canary, with occasional appearances from Catwoman & Huntress, but also Male DC Comics characters like Robin, Nightwing and Blue Beetle. The 2002 live-action WB Network TV series debuted just before the comic book had even hit the five-year mark; I remember TV Guide critic Matt Roush dissed the series in just one sentence: "..a mechanical superhero dud that squanders its nifty premise with bad writing & acting." Yikes. Regardless, the comic book continued after that show evaporated, but the notion of having the Huntress be a core member of the team was incorporated into the comics when Gail Simone took over as writer after series co-creator Chuck Dixon left.


As a series, the comic has come a long way from essentially being a riff on Charlie's Angels, but has always been a middling success; in terms of sales, not as well as Batman or Justice League, more like Green Arrow or Hawkman, but better than Aquaman & Wonder Woman, popularity of Jason Mamoa & Gal Gadot notwithstanding. The most successful eras of the book were when Chuck Dixon was writing it in the early years, followed by the first couple years of Gail Simone's run. That was within the first 8 years. It has faltered creatively, been cancelled and relaunched several times the following decade, even rebranded as "Batgirl and The Birds of Prey" after Barbara Gordon, who had been Oracle after "The Killing Joke", became Batgirl again after regaining the use of her legs. The addition of Harley Quinn was inspired by the movie...and, contrary to longtime Birds of Prey fan opinions, I think her presence gives the book a lift - she becomes the straw that stirs the drink; people hate that she replaced Barbara, but I always found Barbara as Oracle to be a boring character. As inpirational & aspirational as Barbara is, whether as Batgirl or Oracle...being Oracle is a desk job. It's just endless panels of a woman sitting at a desk, facing computer screens. I will suggest that this allows for more identification with the audiences who love the character or can relate to her being in a wheelchair, but that's it. When James Tynion had Barbara reprise her role as Oracle, it was a miracle she wasn't put back in a wheelchair again..it just feels like the well has run dry, creatively, in comics right now.

Back to the movie. It is a weakness of it that you can find fan art on the internet that does a better job of outfitting Jurnee Smollett-Bell & Mary Elizabeth Winstead with wardrobe bearing a stronger resemblance to the comic book Black Canary & Huntress, but I thought the actresses made the most of what little they had to do, actually clocking in the same amount of time they usually get in the comic books. Cassandra Cain is not the same character from the comics, but I have noticed recent appearances of the comic book Cassandra incorporate elements of the film version's characterization, though I'm sure her hard core fans are apt to disagree.

Than there's Renee Montoya. This character had an interesting evolution: she starts off as a supporting character created for the 90's Batman cartoons, is then incorporated into the comic books..and then she becomes a new female incarnation of Steve Ditko's vigilante The Question. For this film, screenwriter Christina Hodson went back to the police officer incarnation of the character, offering a different take on her departure from the Gotham Police Department. I liked Rosie Perez, here, but I recall critics thought all of her scenes - and all the scenes with the Male cops in the precinct (her character is the only female cop present) - were cliches. With Batman, Commissioner Gordon and Harvey Bullock kept far offscreen, Montoya is going to be the only good cop in Gotham, a city long-established as being controlled by gangsters, where very few cops & politicians are good - everyone is either shady or looking out for themselves. Given this status quo, it tracks that Montoya would be manic - her only ally at the police department being the female District Attorney, which is a tenuous relationship, because she's her ex-girlfriend. Events play out understandably.

                
Now's as good a time as any to drop my theories about Renee Montoya's presence in this film: I'm watching the scene where Montoya is inexplicably chasing Harley Quinn through the "Pinata Alley" of the Toy District section of downtown Los Angeles, subbing for fictional Gotham City (this is the infamous "Egg Sandwich" scene; given the fuss for fried chicken sandwiches in 2019, this doesn't seem ludicrous to me)...and I'm thinking the chase dosen't make sense...unless it was intended for a different character to be chasing Harley Quinn...

I'm aware that the screenplay went through multiple rewrites. Batgirl was set to appear in this film at one point, until the studio executives decided to aim for having this film be R-rated, because "Joker" was also going to be rated R, but they mandated a core member of Batman's "family" was not going to be in an R movie, so I believe most of the Montoya scenes exist in an earlier draft, in a different context, with Batgirl instead. It would've been Barbara investigating the myterious vigilante (Huntress) who was killing mobsters, randomly chasing Harley through Pinata Alley, forming the team with Huntress, Canary & Cassandra at the end, surviving from getting shot by wearing Harley Quinn's bullet-proof bustier (I'm convinced that's a callback to TKJ)...and having her costume reduced to tatters, which I believe to be a callback to two different sources: a Batgirl arc in "Batman Confidential" where her simple costume is slowly picked apart during multiple brawls in long caper with Catwoman:

And in the 90's Batman cartoon episode, "Harley's Holiday", in which socialite Veronica Vreeland's designer outfit is not able to endure a long day of keeping up with Harley Quinn's antics:

The tone of the film reminded me a lot of "Harley's Holiday" and "Harliquinade" - two Harley Quinn-centric episodes of the 90's series in which Harley's antics leave a trail of destruction, played purely for laughs.


 Black Mask, a 3rd-tier Batman villain similar to Two-Face, with a different psychosis and creepier film noir-esque origin, fares worse than the gangster "Boxy", whose nightclubs get trashed whenever Quinn paid a visit; he's lucky to not suffer the fate of Black Mask in the film - blown up by hand grenade; after all, it was a cartoon for kids! Victor Zsasz is just a stooge in this film, but further proof of why I'm convinced Batgirl was going to be in this is she fought Zsasz before - memorably, for a moment where she pours salt in his open scars:

                       Nice.

So...I thought the movie was good. Definitely would've loved it more with Batgirl, but as-is, we got a live-action, poorly-marketed, farcical crossover that was likely meant to launch a spinoff series but didn't, because the fanbase was either too young to be allowed to buy tickets or miffed by uninspired, lazy, pandering marketing. It's an R-rated live-action film in the spirit of a 90's Batman cartoon (and early-90's superhero films, really), but would probably be downgraded to PG if you compare it to the far-edgier "Harley Quinn" series that debuted on the defunct DC Universe streaming service, but will continue on HBOMax. Barely a year later and it's become quaint..

Monday, November 23, 2020

Batman: Three Jokers

   I like those free playing cards...I 
  noticed nobody's talked about     them..

DC Comics' seems to be on the verge of planning a funeral for itself...how many more paroxysms can it take within a single decade? There's a rumor that 2021 might be the year that longtime fans might want to consider dusting off the free black armbands that were bundled with copies of Superman #75 from 1992 and I'll leave it at that:

           Who invited Darkseid?

I must note how some of the ongoing storylines have a weird, metaphorical quality; Scott Snyder's incomprehensible mini-series, Dark Knights: Death Metal, revealed that Batman and Superman are cadavers, keeping themselves alive to fight 'till the fight is won with mystic paraphernalia, to put it simply. In the main Batman book, Batman is acting oddly out-of-character, leaving his entire fortune in the hands of Lucius Fox, an employee, albeit a trusted one, via a conservatorship, but this is all preamble to establish one of Lucius' sons becoming the replacement Batman in an upcoming storyline, rather than heir apparents Dick Grayson or Barbara Gordon or his own son, Damian...well, it's your money, Bruce.

Let's get to the real meat among the potatoes: having finished reading Batman: Three Jokers, it is my belief that this mini-series is the last good Batman comic book we are going to see for a long time, if ever again. I'm not really writing this in stone by putting that statement in bold italics, but it feels that way right now; if there are any good Batman comics forthcoming...it's all gravy to me; I can't really see anything as good as, or better, than this mini-series; I don't believe it was intended as a finale or last Batman comic, but...I'm not sure we'll see anything better. We'll see, right? Meanwhile, I mean it with sincerity that this was the best Batman comic I've read since Mad Love. And I enjoyed it more than The Killing Joke. More on this in a bit..

Years ago, I remember an editorial from an issue of Comic Buyers Guide that described 2 types of Batman vs The Joker stories:

1) The Joker steals the Batmobile:
   ðŸŽ¶ And the Joker got away! 🎶

2) The Joker tortures Batman over a pot of tea:
   ðŸŽ¶A cuppa' arsenic, some tea    and you..🎶 

Three Jokers was teased as being like the first, but is really more like the latter. The tease came from scenes in 2 crossovers that are not particularly required reading:
                         This.

                       And this.

Eventually followed by the formal announcement:
Why wasn't this used as the cover art for the hardcover collection?

When it became clear the mini-series was going to be a sequel to The Killing Joke, everyone wondered if this was going to stick the landing. I'm not a big fan of Killing Joke, though I'm aware every dark take on Batman and The Joker takes it's cues from that story; fans of Oracle hate it, even though it's the only reason Barbara Gordon remained in a wheelchair, as a callback to that story. And Alan Moore is no fan of it:
 I saw that movie...Barbara is probably the only normal person Batman had a relationship with.

              Hey...Batgirl's hot.

                   This tracks.

The only scene I like is that whole "speech" Batman gives at the beginning - variations of which have been pastiched for decades since:
 I played with the lighting on this shot to make it readable; I dislike how Bolland recolored everything in the reprints. 

So, Three Jokers is revealed to be a sequel in that it changes the fate of a character that appeared in The Killing Joke...technically, 2 characters, really. Aside from that twist, the real focus is on the psyche of the 3 heroes featured: Batman, Batgirl and Red Hood - Batman's ethics & morality, Batgirl's ambivalence and Red Hood's neuroses. Each of the 3 Jokers correspond with each hero in different ways; the Clown has the same capacity for violent impulses as Red Hood; the Criminal is as ambivalent and pragmatic as Barbara; the Comedian, like Batman, holds more cards than he lets on and plays them close. 

Jason Fabok's artwork  is fantastic, Geoff Johns scripts are his most deftly-crafted; this is a love-letter to the pre-Knightfall Batman comic books of the late-80's - early-90's, right before Batman: The Animated Series began to permanently set the style; there's a nearly-forgotten era of deceptively simple, gothic tales by Alan Grant & Norm Breyfogle, Marv Wolfman, Peter Milligan, Jim Aparo, Jim Starlin, Christopher Priest and Dennis O'Neil in the ongoing issues of Batman, Detective Comics and Legends of The Dark Knight, read by many who were brought into comic shops by the success of the 1989 Batman film, where the stories were told from a street-level/rooftop-level perspective, and the ethos of the film's story structure seemed to be echoed by the writers and artists. It was a golden time to be reading Batman comics. It's an amazing triumph for Three Jokers. It even offers a happy ending! There's a punchline for you...

It was better than good...better than good enough..


Thursday, November 12, 2020

DullTales

I have no idea what the story is about, but the observational humor of this screenshot from the comics inspired me...it's true to life in ways we don't care to admit...

Saturday, October 31, 2020

The Lady From The Black Lagoon: Hollywood Monsters And The Lost Legacy of Milicent Patrick by Mallory O'Meara


Creature From The Black Lagoon is a popular choice of old-fashioned Halloween monster movie viewing, as an alternative to the numerous Dracula and Frankenstein movies out there. A recent release of the DVD for Creature shows that the text on the back of the container has stopped attributing credit for the design of the creature to Bud Westmore, the then-head of Universal's makeup department. This was not always the case; older editions of the film on DVD and VHS cassettes would give credit to Westmore, though the Blu-Ray edition did not.

      The cover of the current DVD.

So...what brought about the change? There's substantial proof that Westmore was a fraud who took credit for more work than he actually did; the design of the creature was created and drawn by Milicent Patrick, a former Disney Animator - she was an assistant to Bill Tytla for the character Chernabog on the "Nightmare On Bald Mountain Sequence" in Fantasia:

   That's right - she drew this guy!

Milicent Patrick had movie star looks and could articulate her ideas clearly; Universal's marketing executives concocted the idea of having Patrick go on a promotional tour of various TV and radio stations to promote Lagoon; this rubbed Bud Westmore the wrong way. As head of the makeup department, he wanted to be the only individual credited with anything and saw this as a coup, even though Patrick is on record as working hard to downplay her own contributions, knowing quite well that Westmore was fuming. It wouldn't have mattered; Patrick was doomed - Westmore came from a family of designers with considerable clout in Hollywood; he made certain she was fired from Universal and would never find work at any other studio as a designer. Wrongful Termination lawsuits in Hollywood did not become known, or common until the early-80s, both cases involving actresses; Cindy Williams sued Paramount after she was fired from "Laverne & Shirley" because the studio would not allow for maternity leave and her schedule would've required her to work while 9 months pregnant; in the late-80s, Valerie Harper sued Lorimar Telepictures, the company her self-titled sitcom, Valerie, when she was fired from the show after asking for a pay raise. 

Could Milicent Patrick have sued Universal Studios for Wrongful Termination? I would say yes, she could, but she didn't - most likely out of fear that she would never find any work at all. Mallory O'Meara's biography of Patrick does a great job of covering the essential details of her life, but stops short of insight into what Patrick was thinking afterward. Patrick passed away over 20 years ago at an assisted living facility; after being fired, she briefly took on a career as an extra, appearing in small parts in TV series and some movies, then married a wealthy man and spent the 1960s & 1970s as a philanthropist & socialite; in the 1980s she was living in squalor - the Hollywood mansion she occupied had fallen into decay after a mudslide. Her health had also fallen into serious decline; the last decade of her life was spent marking time. She had no children and was estranged from most of her family, except for one niece, who had whatever remained of Patrick's belongings that survived, including documents. There's no mention of Patrick keeping a diary, so she remains elusive. O'Meara admitted in the afterword that she could not find any corroborating information that could explain why Patrick once described herself as "..a Bugs Bunny expert." And O'Meara then has to hazard an educated guess as to what Milicent Patrick's mindset was like by finding correlations with her own biography; the end result was that I felt like I knew O'Meara more than I knew Patrick, which reminded me of the Julia Child biopic Julie & Julia, but I don't find any fault with her conclusions. I definitely recommend this book.

If someone were to tell you, "If you're good at something, stick with it," what can you do if you've been shut out of your chosen field? Milicent Patrick's life story starts off as a success story, then becomes a tale of someone who moved on after success was fleeting, then seems to fall into entropy and isn't vindicated until after her lifetime. It's sad, but it's real life..and monsters in real life don't have to wear fangs, green makeup or prosthetic gills; they can look like Bud Westmore...
      Milicent Patrick, Pioneer, RIP

Tuesday, October 27, 2020

Let's Get..The Spinoff!


I used that old press kit image of Darkwing Duck characters because I think it inspired the concept-heavy approach to reintroducing Darkwing Duck into the current Ducktales revival. In that picture, it's just a visual gag because the production team wanted to show Darkwing and his civilian identity, Drake Mallard, in the picture; for the 2017 reboot, however, it really is 2 different characters, now: Drake Mallard and Jim Starling. Jim was an actor who played Darkwing in a superhero TV series; Drake Mallard is the actor cast to play Darkwing in a big-budget movie. Jim went insane from the notion that he was passed over and the part was recast; he decides to sabotage the film's production and winds up becoming this series' incarnation of Negaduck:


Drake, in the meantime, having been a lifelong fan of the Darkwing character, decides to become the new Darkwing in real-life, relocating from Duckburg to St. Canard - the locale where all the classic Darkwing Duck adventures were set. His latest adventure introduces the new series' take on Drake's adopted daughter, Gosalyn.

And that's the new "Team Darkwing". I miss Jim Cummings as the voice of Darkwing/Drake Mallard, even though the production team has him onboard as Jim Starling/Negaduck, but it should be a law that the cartoon character's voice actor should only be recast if the original/defintive actor is either incapable of recreating their original performance, incarcerated or deceased. Cummings is alive and well, perfectly capable of recapturing every nuance that character needs. Chris Diamantopolous is okay as the new Darkwing, but he doesn't make me forget Jim. On the other hand, his performance is strengthened by the presence of Beck Bennett, who has been terrific as the new voice of Launchpad McQuack, and Stephanie Beatriz, who, in her debut as the replacement for the late Christine Cavanaugh as the new Gosalyn, is excellent here, as the character has been sharply revised to be more determined and/or less mischievous (the original version of Gosalyn had the capacity for this development and had similar agency, but often characterized as a wild card, often with no provocation).

           Prototype "Protoducks"

The 2017 Ducktales' Darkwing Duck would be the 3rd incarnation of Darkwing, though the 1st - Double-O-Duck (pictured) - only exists in concept art and some press kit material, including a lapel pin(!), but I'm inclined to count him and bring him up because the new take on Darkwing is closer to this prototype, from when it was initially conceived as a pitch by Tad Stones for a spinoff of the 1987 Ducktales featuring Launchpad & Gizmoduck as spies that was rejected by Jeffrey Katzenberg as not having "..a sense of family," then reworked, sans Gizmoduck, with a colorful new sidekick for Launchpad who was a single father...and ultimately reworked to be the real star of the show when the production team at Disney learned that they could not use "Double-O-Duck" because the owners of the James Bond brand owned "Double-O.." and had to come up with a new name.

Even though the new Ducktales show is considered a success and it seems like a foregone conclusion that Darkwing Duck is going to be picked up to become it's own series revival, it's something I'm ambivalent about. I find this Ducktales revival to be just okay; it's clear to me that the team behind the revival respected the success of the original Ducktales series from 1987, but with Darkwing Duck, the affection is a lot more genuine, so a revival of that will be much better than the Ducktales show we've had for the last 3 years. I figured if Disney is interested in keeping Ducktales in circulation like Warner Brothers does with Scooby-Doo, then expect additional revivals from other creative teams that might come closer to rekindling the appeal of the old series...as is, there's no denying the success..as another cartoon with talking ducks.

Saturday, September 26, 2020

Duck Avenger Strikes Again! (Commentary)


I don't know if this will be the last time Donald Duck's superhero disguise gets the opportunity to front a hardcover collection of Disney comics, but it's a very attractive cover - I had to take a picture of my own copy of the book; the only stock image I could find is an early mock-up that's probably more true to the content inside the book, whereas the cover we got is more akin to the modern take on the character:
  That image is somewhat iconic

What this book really does is collect 3 stories - 1 Donald Duck, 1 Mickey Mouse, 1 Scrooge McDuck. The Donald story is the 3rd appearance of himself in a superhero costume..more of a concept than a complete idea at this early stage - he's still a light parody of Italian pulp comic character Diabolik, hence the name Paperinik, which changes depending on which country reprints the comics; in some places, he's "Super Donald", "Super Duck", "FantoDonald", "Phantom Duck" and, in the United States, Duck Avenger. Only a scarce handful of stories have been reprinted in the United States with this particular spin on Donald's usual comic book antics; gradually, over the decades, his adventures resemble a precursor/forerunner to Darkwing Duck, only ironically enough, Darkwing's creator Tad Stones has admitted to not knowing this character existed, but becoming a fan of the short-lived Duck Avenger comic books published by IDW pretty quickly, even taking a crack at drawing the character a few times in his own art:
   He flies like Captain Caveman!

It's an intriguing concept - Donald's greatest triumph is one that he has to keep totally secret - but...maybe it's premature and I haven't read enough of the material to be fair, but I found the stories that have been reprinted to just be okay...the plots don't seem to realize the potential of what it means that Carl Barks' Donald Duck has spent over 50 years in comics living a double-life as a superhero - not even in the late-90s when the Italian publishers gave him a fancy-shmancy revamp in the form of PK: The New Adventures, which became a huge smash hit and resulted in a spinoff videogame in 2002 for Playstation 2/XBox/GameCube. That was my introduction to the character, though I have memories of thumbing through imported editions of Piscou/SuperPiscou Giant at magazine shops like Hudson News in the early-90s and wondering "What is this? Why isn't Gladstone Comics or Disney Adventures Magazine reprinting this? This looks cool!"

It turns out that over the years, we were probably protected with efforts at quality control - if it looks like a Carl Barks comic, it would pass muster at being reprinted faster than something outside that frame of reference, but it was still cool when odd images would pop up online - like those sketches of Duck Avenger drawn by Don Rosa upon request by the fan he was houseguest to while in Italy for a convention:
And the door to eventually getting reprints in the U.S. opened in 2000, when Disney introduced the PK version of Duck Avenger in a 3-part tale for Disney Adventures Magazine:
Honestly, the greatest contribution to Duck comics made by giving Donald a superhero costume is not just making Donald a superhero. My argument for the best thing about Paperinik is the introduction of this guy:
The Italian comics call him "Uno", so the American/English translations call him "One", but I prefer the name "Globus", which I think is the Germans name for him, but American comics went with One, so that's that. Now, observe this page:
And this page:
 Can you see the breakthrough that I'm seeing? In the comic books, One is Donald's best friend! He's also Donald's only friend! It's not weird, it's not stupid; One is a sentient artificial intelligence hologram computer program, created by Everett Ducklair to monitor all the gadgets, vehicles and secret rooms contained in the Ducklair Tower skyscraper, which Donald became building superintendent of in the premiere PKNA adventure, which established that Scrooge McDuck was the new owner of the building. So, naturally, One became the Alfred/Jarvis/Aunt May confidant to Donald's superhero disguise, but it also gave him a friend who wasn't a relative that he could talk to and confide in. It was actually Don Rosa who observed that, aside from cartoons where Donald hangs out with Mickey Mouse & Goofy, or dates with Daisy Duck or teaming with Jose Carioca & Panchito Pistoles in Three Caballeros adventures, Donald spends most of his time in the company of his relatives, particularly his nephews - Huey, Dewey and Louie - and his Uncle Scrooge. One is different. One is a true companion. I don't know if there are stories in which One appears in stories outside of Paperinik adventures, but his interactions with Donald open that character's world more than Donald fighting alien ducks in purple jumpsuits that act like outer space Beagle Boys.

I figured I'll get around to reading the Mickey Mouse story someday; it's really more about Ellsworth the crow in the Foreign Legion than about Mickey, anyway. What links the stories in this volume beyond having the same artist is that they feature characters created for Italian Disney comics: Duck Avenger, Ellsworth and Brigitta MacBridge.  Each new character offered a new element to increase story potential: Donald gets to indulge in parodies of pulp superhero genre cliches; Mickey has a new supporting character to play off; and Scrooge gets to be in a relationship with a female duck character that's not a witch after his dime or a retired showgirl.

Carl Barks' interest in crafting story ideas for Brigitta MacBridge might be more interesting than any stories featuring her, though I remember enjoying Secret of The Incas and The Funny Carrots. When Gladstone reprinted her 1st appearance in The Last Balaboo around 1988 or 1989, they included an editorial column that spotlighted her popularity and offered intriguing hints of a story, suggesting from a sketch Carl Barks offered Romano Scarpa, of Brigitta using a "Money Perfume" to attract Scrooge. Scrapa did a drawing that recreated what that sketch looked like, for what was then alluded to as a story called "The Golden Bunch"; I kept a clipping of that and added colors to it:

Over the years, Barks' sketch turned-up online and was alluded  to as "Uncle Scrooge and The Golden Helmet". It was reprinted and included in this volume:
And now, 30 years later, we get to see this collaboration reprinted in the United States for the first time:
I really miss my old smartphone; it had a better camera and could take sharper pictures and the colors would pop better..

Well, one thing for sure, neither  of the 3 titles attributed to this tale give proper indication of where the story goes, though the "Bunch" alludes to bananas; the "Helmet" alludes to the crown resembling a golden bundle of bananas that was destined to be worn by Brigitta's doppelganger; and "Bananaland" is where all the threads lead to in this tale, a lost land that's a far cry from Plain Awful or Tralla La, but not far from the Island of Golden Geese. I'll hazard a guess that Barks suggested Gyro Gearloose concocted the money perfume for Brigitta, along with the Beagle Boys in bird costumes and Brigitta having a doppelganger in some far away world-within-a-world is combining a lot of Barks' bag of tricks, whereas the visuals and pacing of the story are clearly left up to Scarpa - which is not bad, because Scarpa can do a good pastiche of Barks' story style. It's been a long wait for this, but it exists and it's available. 

That was always the best thing about the Disney comics; they were constantly being reprinted because it wasn't a hard sell; the older comics by Barks are well-crafted - it's not like reading The Spirit or New Gods and realizing that Kirby and Eisner are great artists and storytellers, but they can't write dialogue/narration well at all; Carl Barks can write, and anyone who imitated/pastiche his work was cribbing from a source that can be trusted to be of good quality. When left to his own devices, Scarpa's ideas veer more toward the farcical, but it's interesting how close his work is faithful to the master when working off his suggestions.