'Zatanna: Bring Down the House', by Mariko Tamaki and Javier Rodríguez, is a flawed, but magical and enjoyable new, Black Label retelling of the origin of DC's showstopping magician and superheroine, Zatanna.
The art is great, colourful, expressive, appropriately dark and shadowy when it needs to be, and just overall nice-looking.The storytelling structure, pacing, aesthetic, aura, vibe and feel is fast, flashy, sporadic, spooky, action-packed, funny, and sexy. The comic is, in essence, all-go, and there is all manner of zaniness, wackiness, supernatural otherworldliness, shadiness, shiftiness, and rift-iness going on in the plot.And rabbits. Lots and lots of rabbits.Mariko Tamaki's Zatanna is confident, sassy, funny, and self-aware. But deep down, she is a troubled woman with a traumatic past - and power, her very magic - that she is trying to hide ("I do tricks, not magic."). She is a very human lady magician - she is no one's assistant, patsy or victim - who will learn of and accept her potential and worth, and thus come into her own amazing power, over the course of her story. She will learn to not fear herself and what she might do to others (she has anxiety as well as PTSD), and will never give up and hold back again.No supressing. No repressing.Like all women, Zatanna is so much stronger than she thinks; than she gives herself credit for.Speaking of credit, I have to give it also to the creative team of 'Bring Down the House' for depicting Zatanna's father, Zatara, as the creepy, manipulative, villainous bastard he's in fact always been. Plus he's power-hungry and egotistical; rotten to the core. I don't care if that's a spoiler - it needs to be said, and it wouldn't be a review of mine if I didn't hold toxic, abusive men, fictional or not, accountable for their actions.Men like John Constantine. Oh yeah, he's in this comic. Of course he is.He's yet another creepy, secretive, diabolical, arsehole alpha male out to control Zatanna's life, and potentially ruin it carelessly. He doesn't deserve half the page time he gets here. Zatanna should just stop trusting him, and ditch him already. He's not worth it. What a pain.The (other) major flaws I perceive in 'Zatanna: Bring Down the House' are its too-fast pace, it being too short and in need of proper development in some areas, side characters who are given ridiculously brief appearances and then never show up again (in a few cases this happens suddenly, like in a few pages, or even a single page, and the characters get completely forgotten about, and you're left wondering what their point was and why they weren't cut during the editing process), and its rushed ending, that isn't nearly as flashy and cool as it should have been. Though the final page is an awesome sight.Really, 'Zatanna: Bring Down the House' is a fun ride. It's like a Vegas stage show in comic form, with plenty of tricks, twists, turns, and easter eggs up its sleeve. It could have turned out far more chaotic as a result, but it managed well. And did I mention the rabbits? (Hey, Easter is coming up, isn't it? What a coincidink.) There are as many white bunnies as there are playing cards in this story. They are as important as Zatanna's top hat.I would be remiss to not mention: 'Bring Down the House' is full of strong, complex female characters, who form complicated bonds with our own complex, three-dimensional, personality-filled main heroine. It's mostly female friendships and support all around.Bring down the house - meaning, bring down the patriarchy!Bring down the house of cards - bring down the house of cads!In conclusion: Not as feminist or cohesive as it could have been, but as it is, I enjoyed the girl power trip. And show. And human display that is clearly affectionate and respectful towards Zatanna.Zatanna - superheroine and witch/magician. She should be an absolute favourite character of mine. Sadly, due to her not being used much in any media, and me being unimpressed with how she's been written in the past - far too often as a victim and pawn of men's schemes and megalomania - she is not. But now, she might be getting there. She looks like Wonder Woman, but she acts like a magical version of Carmen Sandiego. She is like DC's version of Marvel's Nico Minoru, aka Sister Grimm, except she's an adult, and white, hetero, and a stage magician.For more, in-depth thoughts on Zatanna, I'll link my two previous comic book reviews about her:The good: 'Zatanna and the House of Secrets'The bad: 'Zatanna: The Jewel of Gravesend'Final Score: 3.5/5