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Wednesday, May 15, 2024

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Black, White & Green #1 Review


 


Writers: Declan Shalvey, Dave Baker, Jesse Lonergan, Gigi Dutreix, Lorenzo Hall, Paulina Ganucheau

Artists: Declan Shalvey, Jesse Lonergan, Gigi Dutreix, Paulina Ganucheau

Letterer: Nathan Widick

Cover Artists: Declan Shalvey, James Stokoe, Paulina Ganucheau, Dan Berger

Publisher: IDW

Price: $5.99

Release Date: May 8, 2024

 

Donatello, Raphael, Leonardo, and Michelangelo form an effective crime-fighting team. Yet what might the heroes in a half-shell get up to on their own? Let’s grab a pizza, leap into the four stories in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Black, White & Green #1, and find out!

 

Green Screen

Story

Donnie wants to track all the crime reports in New York City. But the perfect algorithm eludes him. So, he blocks out the world while he sits before his computer monitors, wrestling code to compute the most effective way to fight crime. Declan Shalvey's story is aptly named. Once exclusive to TV and film studios, now everyone can use green screens to simulate reality. It takes Master Splinter to point out the obvious. His team needs him, even if only to prevent the pizza from getting cold.

 

Art

Declan Shalvey opens his story in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Black, White & Green #1 with a shot of NYC skyscrapers. The TCRI building rises in the center of the panel. He then moves to a dog, walking on a leash with his owner. Shalvey follows with a shot of the subway before finishing with Donatello hunching toward four monitors, surrounded by pizza boxes, drawings, and his bō. The progression suggests his mutant heritage forced him to live underground, so Donatello works hard to justify his relevance to civilization. Once he realizes where he belongs, Donatello moves swiftly to catch up with his brothers. He peers down into a warehouse where his brothers battle an enormous enemy. Cowabunga!

 

Nathan Widick fills white dialogue balloons with large green uppercase letters in Green Screen and shares Donatello's thoughts with light green lowercase type in green narrative boxes. The letters are less distinct as if printed on a dot matrix printer.

 

The Brutal Sword Of Leonardo

Story

Dave Baker and Jesse Lonergan contribute a sword and sorcery tale to Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Black, White & Green #1, as Donatello's experiment with interdimensional travel goes wrong. Or perhaps it goes right, as Leonardo arrives in a land that needs him. Leonardo bands the locals together, battles the monsters that beset them, and protects the Crystal Shard Of K’azz that powers their citadel. When a foe steals the crystal, Leonardo leads a quest to reclaim it. Baker and Lonergan's story reminds us how circumstances mold us and how power deludes us into believing we are indispensable.

 

Art

The Brutal Sword Of Leonardo may only be seven pages, but Jesse Lonergan packs each with a rampaging horde of panels to give his story an epic feel. Leonardo wields a broadsword and leads his animal friends through many dangers to the keep of Castle Death. The fantasy characters, settings, and situations evoke stories from Robert E. Howard, Mike Mignola, H. P. Lovecraft, and J. R. R. Tolkien. While I agree with his brothers that NYC needs Leo, I'd love to see a sequel. As Jesse Lonergan lavishes green on his art, Nathan Widick fills white dialogue balloons and narrative boxes with large, black uppercase letters. 

 


 

 

The Flame That Fuels You

Story

Raphael tried to combat the Foot Clan alone. His brothers came to his aid, but it didn't go well. As they return home, the turtles are wounded and frustrated. Did Raphael forget he was part of a team? Raphael dreams of fighting alone in Gigi Dutreix and Lorenzo Hall's story. Now, he doesn't have to play by their rules. What might he accomplish if he didn't have to coordinate with others and could fight crime without restraint?

 

Art

Gigi Dutreix’s ink wash art gives Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Black, White & Green #1 a ghostly appearance. With arrows protruding from their arms and the wind buffeting their bodies, the turtles shout at each other and exchange blows. Yellow-green flames surround Raphael as he sleeps and burn at panel edges as he dreams. The flames swell to an inferno as Raphael demonstrates his might. Yet a significant realization banishes the yellow-green flames, replacing them with a vibrant green plant. Nathan Widick fills yellow-green dialogue balloons with black uppercase letters. Anger swells dialogue and prompts color change, while immense sound effects enhance the action in Raphael's dream.

 

Identity Theft

Story

Michelangelo brings Donatello a substance in a jar. Mikey accuses him of playing with snot, but Donatello can’t be bothered, so Mike grabs another of Donatello’s inventions. Donatello doesn’t crave solitude in Paulina Ganucheau’s story, so he plays videos of his brothers’ antics as he works. Then he realizes they’re having too much fun with his invention, and he leaves his lab to make sure he doesn’t miss out.

 

Art

Paulina Ganucheau imbues this story about a young inventor with an all-ages appeal. This final story in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Black, White & Green #1 focuses on the turtles' camaraderie and doesn't take itself too seriously. Green fills Donatello's cellphone screen, his jar of goo, and what happens when his experiment takes on a mind of its own. Nathan Widick brings more green uppercase letters to white dialogue balloons, while the recorded videos speak with black uppercase dialogue in white balloons with green lines. Sound effects boost the fun quotient of Identity Theft as Donatello's creations attack their creator with snotty fists of fury.

 

Thanks to IDW for providing a copy for review.

 


 

 

Final Thoughts

The stories in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Black, White & Green #1 ponder the most effective means of crime-fighting, the influence of power, and how creation often springs from mistakes. Donatello dominates this quartet of turtle tales, reminding us how his genius helps the team battle their superpowered foes.

 

Rating 9.5/10

 

To preview interior art for "Green Screen" see my review at Comic Book Dispatch.

 

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