"Just when I thought I was out, they pull me back in."- Michael Corleone (The Godfather III, 1990)
TNT may have canned Leverage after
a run of five seasons, but the creative force behind the series are exploring
new avenues to pull Nathan Ford and his crew back into the game, which is
possible because the show was produced independently, and a movie is a popular
rumor at the moment.
In the meantime, they'll keep us fans
hooked with a series of paperback tie-ins they've commissioned and the first
one in line, The Con Job (2012), proved to be a lot more fun than the
bland title would have you believe. Matt Forbeck penned the first novelisation
and I think it's a worthy addition to the canon, which also added to it, but
the best part is that it still felt like Leverage – and that we can tag
along with them again.
The Con Job takes place between The Gold Job and The Radio Job,
episodes 16 and 17 of the third season, and Alec Hardison, hacker
extraordinaire and resident geek, has found themselves a target: a disreputable
dealer, Lorenzo Patronus, whose been filching rare comic-books and valuable
cover art from their old creators. These were works from poor, freelance
artists who hung on to them as an alternative retirement plan. Well, that
pissed off a genius hacker/geek, who has a little Justice League of his own,
and they're off to Comic-Con – where their mark intends to sell off the stolen
goods.
As to be expected, the plot is littered
with pop-culture references, ranging from Star Wars to Spider-Man, cameos from
Stan Lee and Patrick Stewart, and even a sub-plot involving the manga publishing
industry and a few "play-fights" that the combat hardened Eliot had to
participate in – enough material for some of that Leverage humor. The
con they play is basically a "Devil's Contract" that could fulfill Patronus' boyhood dream, becoming a recognized comic book artist, which is a cue for Sophie
Devereaux's character, talent agent Jess Drew, to discover an unrecognized
talent. But there's more than meets the eye (pop-cult reference!), when an old
nemesis turns up, the less-than-scrupulous and source of general annoyance
Cha0s (Hardison's rival), which is not a weird thing in itself considering that
they're at Comic-Con, but when Hardison goes missing – they know that a third
party is involved.
However, it's the crew that, as to be
expected, stole the show in The Con Job and that’s immediately my only
quibble: my favorite character, "The Mastermind," Nathan Ford was pushed into
the background and gave Hardison the lead. His reluctance to enter Comic-Con is
one of those things that added to the character, but I preferred to have had
him a bit more in the front. That aside, I tremendously enjoyed tailing Eliot,
Parker and Sophie around the stands and watch them off-page deal with the
amount of unusual trouble you'd expect from Leverage. Heck, Eliot and
Parker cosplaying as a Stormtrooper and Princess Leia, as they struggle through
a crowd, should be the end all argument to bring the series back on the air and
kick-off the new season with an adaptation of this book.
Anyhow, what matters are that Leverage
is back and Forbeck penned a story that's very much in the spirit of the show. It's just unpretentious fun on an exciting and dangerous job. Far more than I expected from a TV tie-in novel and I'm looking forward to
the next one, The Zoo Job (2013), which I probably will get to next
month. A warning to the reader: avoid the reading the synopsis on the backcover of The Con Job, it gives away too much.
And to my fellow Leverage fans, if
you enjoyed The Con Job for more than just a continuation of your
favorite series, than I would like to draw your attention to Mack Reynolds' The Case of the Little Green Men (1951) – a comedic private-eye novel set in
the world of SF-and Fantasy fans and features a loveable loser detective. He’s
hired to by a bunch of oddball SF-fans investigate alien life on Earth, who
have been taking potshots at them with ray guns or dropping them from flying
saucers and the investigation takes him to an early SF/F con. It has been
reprinted and I think if you liked The Con Job, you’ll love this one as
well.
I see another in-joke in your description: Jessica Drew is the secret identity of "Spiderwoman."
ReplyDeleteThat one was acknowledged, but the were probably more that I missed.
DeleteMore great news - thanks TC< I had no idea there were tie-in books at all!
ReplyDeleteNeither did I, until I searched for news (read: rumors) on a possible re-launch of the series and found the tie-in books. And as I said in the post, there still might be some sort of future for Leverage outside of the books. Here's hoping! :)
DeleteI'd have to go back and read it again, but doesn't Wil Wheaton make a cameo (as himself), too? That would add to the hilarity of this being produced as an episode...
ReplyDelete