now that Fred has returned, we get to see her helping out faith on a new undercover mission. and keeping in mind that the Buffy the Vampire Slayer has always been best when the kids were in school, we’re back in that environment — only this time, faith is undercover as a teacher.
Given my dislike of the writing of Victor Gischler, I was amazed that there were certain scenes that worked for me in these issues. They don’t add up to as much as I hoped they would — the overall story is still predictable and much too dependent on fight scenes — but I liked enough that I’ll follow through this storyline, because I do have a fondness for the title character.
Angel & faith season 10 #16 cover by Scott Fischer
Gischler is falling back on reintroducing favorite characters as a way of capturing goodwill, though. Which brings up one of my major complaints with these two issues: The end of #17 is one of those full-page, “oh, no, it’s them!” reveals. only while the likenesses by Cliff Richards are ok, they aren’t good enough for me to know instantly who that person is expected to be. I could guess, but I had to have it confirmed by reading ahead the description for the upcoming issue #18. too numerous creators don’t do the work needed to make these kinds of “surprises” work for all their readers (such as including dialogue clues), instead pushing the effort onto the fan.
Anyway, we open with a well-done, mostly wordless sequence of faith on her own. She’s moving into a new house and working on figuring out choices. Angel’s absent, currently crossing over to the Buffy series, although the two catch each other up through computer in issue #17.
A detective friend enlists Faith’s help in figuring out a dead body connected to a local prep school. He sends her undercover at the school as a gym teacher, assisted by Fred. The students are mostly standard roles: the nerdy girl who likes a popular man with a imply blonde girlfriend and the group of cats who bully her.
Angel & faith season 10 #17 cover by Scott Fischer
There’s a lot of dialogue as the characters discuss discoveries to each other, so much so that in some panels the font size has been shrunken to the extent I found it a struggle to read. It’s intended to illustrate whispering, I think, but a comic that reminds me I now have to wear bifocals isn’t very good escapism.
The bits I liked many about these issues, on a reread, are the ones we don’t get enough of. faith trying to manage a group of girls as an authority figure, for instance, or Fred being smart about helping. The character elements are a sad second to pages of plot exposition and kids threatening each other. This would have been great on-screen, with the actresses fleshing out the bits, while it’s just alright on the page.
The variant covers for these issues, drawn by Mike Norton, demonstrate much more humor and playfulness:
Angel & faith season 10 #16 variant by Mike Norton
Angel & faith season 10 #17 variant by Mike Norton
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