Before diving into
the comics themselves, one bit of big news from the last couple of
weeks was the announcement, just a few years after the “DC Swirl”
shown above superseded the thirty-some-odd-years old “DCBullet” as the brand logo, that there would be yet another new
symbol. See here
and sundry other places. Once again it seemed the Internet was
breaking in half. Frankly, I prefer the swirl, but the new … peel?
… has its own simple elegance. Whatever. I'll use my pic for
these monthly commentaries whatever is on the books I'm reading, so
there will be a couple more months of the swirl.
Now for more
stream-of-consciousness Random Ramblings about the February-dated
comics I get from DC....
* * *
Justice
League International #4
“The Signal
Masters, part 4”
This issue is
info-dump time! Guy Gardner can't overcome Peraxxus, who has
overcome and transported all the other JLI members to his ship, where
he proceeds to tell them all his plans. Basically, he's a planetary
strip miner using ancient constructs called “Signalmen” to
destroy worlds and harvest minerals of value. See? –
Galactus-lite. The JLI rallies but still can't defeat him, and the
process begins.
I hate to say this,
but this title suddenly got a bit tedious. Overall, it gives me very
much a “so what?” vibe, which is not alleviated by Booster Gold
repeating his same joke from near the end of last issue about his
attackers grabbing him where a man don't want to be grabbed, nor his
melodramatic wail, “This can't be happening! If we go down, who's
left to save the Earth?” Well, it seems the “real” Justice
League isn't doing much of anything right about now – their book is
still in the “five years ago” origin story – at least as a
team. Where are they? Why hasn't Bats called in the Big Guns? I
like the characters and am staying with this title for now, but....
Action Comics
#4
“Superman and
the Men of Steel”
The
higher price-point of this comic with this issue gives us two
stories … sort of. Where the previous three issues have given us a
standard twentyish-page lead with “DVD extras” to fill out the
length, this one gives us a backup story expanding on a scene from
the lead story and taking it off on a narrative tangent away from
Superman himself. It's actually a cool execution.
The
lead story brings the attack by the Collector of Worlds on all
fronts, mainly in the form of robots and reminiscent of (and
doubtless inspired by or a homage to) the many earlier “mechanical
men” stories in the comics and newspaper strips as well as the
episode in the Fleisher cartoons. Lex Luthor proves pretty epic in
his cowardice. We get battles between the Steel Soldier John Corben
calling himself “Metal Zero” (Metal-0 = Metallo – that's pretty
clever as an updating) and Superman, with Lois trying to talk Corben
down, and John Henry Irons debuting in his own Steel fighting armor
to join the fray. Then Metropolis shrinks – and the way things
transpire Lois is trapped inside. Which brings General Lane to
swallow his pride and ask for Superman's help.
The
backup follows Steel's own battle with Metal Zero, who disappears in
time for Irons to come back into the main narrative on the last
couple of pages. It's basically a slug fest with Irons' inner'logue
telling his personal history, but we get to hear him proclaim, “I'm
not just any man. …
I'm a steel-driving man!”
Yep,
if there was any doubt, none now – the Collector is Brainiac
although he's not been called that and indeed the name was used here
previously for the Kryptonian super computer à
la the Animated Series. I'm
still pretty sure there's going to be revealed a merging/connection.
I think it's
interesting that Clark has different colored tee-shirts with the
“S”-shield iron-on (?) affixed. It emphasises that there is no
“uniform” as yet. So far I don't think we have any explanation
for why he's sporting the cape though. Well, or the shield, but I'm
sure both are coming. In any case, I'm still loving this series, and
am looking forward to seeing what happens next. There will be a
delay, though – the next two issues form an interlude revealing
more about Clark's background and origin. “Next: Interlude:
Rocket Song.”
Detective Comics
#4
“The Main
Event”
Well,
we get the end of the Dollmaker debut arc of the new Detective
Comics.
The villain escapes but will be back of course. At the end, the
Joker-face is still in police headquarters and there's hints that
there may be the beginnings of some kind of cult surrounding it.
Overall,
my assessment is that this was a bleh
issue in a bleh
storyline. Tony Daniel really disappointed this time. The reviewer
below liked it more than I did, but is still happy this arc is over.
I
don't have anything more to say than that. Oh – see below at
Batman: Dark
Knight
#4 for explicit refutation of any theory that this story took place
in the past.
“Crossbow at
the Crossroads, Part Three”
Helena's adventures in Italy continue. The
weapons-and-sex-slave-trafficking ring she's investigating is tied
into last year's “Arab Spring” movements across the Middle East
as well as a Khaddafi clone's efforts to buy European powers' support
for his son to inherit his position upon his retirement. Much of the
book has Helena taking on the smugglers among beautifully and I think
very accurately rendered ruins of Pompeii. Notice is even taken of
the problem that has developed in recent years of stray feral dogs
among the ruins.
Again,
not a whole lot to say but that this was quite an enjoyable little
read. Of even more interest to me than this particular issue is,
however, theannouncement made a couple of weeks back as part of the DCnU “SecondWave,” that Paul Levitz will soon be writing a new Worlds'
Finest
(note the placement of the apostrophe), starring Huntress
and Power Girl, “stranded on our world from a parallel reality, …
struggl[ing] to find their way back to Earth 2.” A companion of
sorts to James Robinson's Justice
Society
book rechristened Earth
2.
Is that the Huntress we're seeing here? Which again brings up the
question – exactly who is the new Helena? Bertinelli or Wayne?
The barely discernable documents in the first issue seemed to
indicate the Huntress of this
series is Helena Bertinelli. Of course, Paul Levitz had a hand in
creating the original version of the Huntress back in the 1970s as an
Earth 2 character, the daughter of the original Batman. Some
speculation I've seen online is that Bertinelli here is just an
alias. I'm hoping that my first speculation 'way back when the
present series was announced with Levitz as writer that this would be
the first appearance of a New 52 Earth 2 character turns out to be
the case. We'll just have to wait and see, of course.
Stormwatch
#4
“The Dark
Side, Part Four”
Apollo crashes back to earth near Midnighter and the alien attacker
from the moon that's absorbed the rest of the Stormwatch team into
itself. Midnighter arranges a blast of concentrated sunlight to
repower Apollo and rescues the team. Jack Hawksmoor manages to make
contact with the ancient city buried under Colorado – Alba Umbra
(which is Latin for White Shadow, by the way) – which resurfaces.
The team uses science from it to alchemically transform the attacker
into glass. All this happens without the leadership of Adam 1 –
then they find themselves literally jerked back to the headquarters
satellite in hyperspace where a member of the Stormwatch Shadow
Cabinet proclaims Adam 1 a failed leader – who must die.
I'm
guessing he won't. Somewhere I saw reference to how closely
Cornell's two books, Stormwatch
and Demon Knights,
are connected. Among the points mentioned – whether as a fact or
just wild speculation I don't know – was that Adam 1 here is Merlin
there, looking younger of course because Merlin famously lives
backward through time, looking forward to the past and remembering
the future. Which makes absolutely no sense whatsoever, but who's to
argue with T. H. White?
Superboy
#4
“Wise Men Need
Not Apply”
Meaning
less to me than other readers I'm sure is the confirmation of the
longstanding internet consensus that “Red” is none other than
Caitlin Fairchild, one of thirteen – Gen 13 … I have no
familiarity whatsoever with these characters other than passing
knowledge that there was once such a comic. Oh well. Do like I did
and find out a little more here,
although I'm not sure how much of the information there is relevant
here. Anyway, she's She-Hulked up (without the green) and giving
Superboy a pretty thorough beatdown until he telekinetically throws
half the room at her and she ends up draped senseless atop him.
Whereupon a different NOWHERE operative appears and takes a different
tack with Superboy, explaining his origin (although I question how
thorough he is being with what he reveals) and
giving him his freedom.
Superboy departs and the middle act of the issue is filled with his
mystified ruminations before he ultimately comes upon the
super-powered “Natural
Born Killers” from the beginning of the previous issue. Their
confrontation convinces him to come back into NOWHERE and help bring
in other teens who should not be allowed to run wild with
super-powers. “I have to thank you two,” Superboy declares.
“All this power I have? It was starting to go to my head. … I
was starting to think because I was made
better, that I am
better. … But you guys have made it clear that's not the case.”
And from his inner'logue once he's beat them down: “I was too late
to help the people here. … Not that I had any responsibility to
help them. … But … there is something about avenging them that
feels – right?”
In
some ways, this and the other of Scott Lobdell's books I'm getting –
Teen Titans
– are almost parallel stories in a biweekly comic. That are
converging in the next issue. I'm enjoying both these books more
than I expected to – this one because I had come to like the
pre-Flashpoint
Conner Kent so much, that one … well I get into that below.
Batman and Robin
#4
“Matter of
Trust”
I don't have a lot to say here. I'm still enjoying this comic, both
story- and art-wise. Here we get more philosophical debate about the
killing of criminals in the context of more strenuous interaction
between Bat-father and -son, which is of course the heart and soul of
this book. And we find out who Morgan is – the son of Bruce's old
trainer Henri Ducard.
Batwoman
#4
“Hydrology 4:
Estuary”
I repeat myself over and over. This book is rendered absolutely
beautifully, if maybe a bit fancily to the point it can get in the
way of following the narrative. But it's very possible to get lost
in the beauty of J. H. Williams III's artwork, like little else I've
ever seen in comics.
As to the story, the first few pages are rather brutal – a
juxtaposition of Bette, back in her Flamebird gear, going up against
a criminal and basically getting cut to pieces, against her aunt (? –
cousin?) Kate Kane and Maggie Sawyer having hot and steamy lesbian
sex. This is clearly adult material … my one real complaint
against the book is why DC markets it as “T+”? Anyway, the
juxtaposition continues as Batwoman finally makes headway on the
mysterious Water Spirit Woman case while remaining totally oblivious
to the fact that Bette is in the hands of the DEO, fighting for her
life (and losing, although that's not entirely clear, so maybe
there's hope for her yet), and that Cameron Chase is now hot on her
tail. So to speak.
A
couple words about Kate Kane/Batwoman's sexuality. It made a huge
splash a few years ago that the new Batwoman is a lesbian. While my
own personal morality would rather they hadn't gone that route, it is
very much part of who the character is, and handled realistically and
tastefully. For all my qualms against the rating of the book, it's
not handled in a prurient fashion. The scene cited above doesn't
show anything, but it
doesn't have to. I can accept the character of Kate Kane as she is,
according to the admonition, “Hate the sin, love the sinner.”
I'm certainly not going to throw out a book this outstanding because
I don't agree with the morality of the main character. Were it to turn into some kind of
militant homosexual diatribe, well, yeah, but it's not that and
hopefully never will be.
Man,
that Cameron Chase is cold. To the critically injured Bette Kane:
“Listen to me, please. I'm, um, Nurse Torres. You're in the
hospital. … We've done everything we can for you, but you've
suffered extensive
injuries. … We can't
save you. … I'm sorry.” Holding her hand, she continues, “…
I need to call your parents, your boyfriend,
anyone. … Please, I don't want you to die alone. If you can hear
me, give me a name.” Bette manages to murmur, “Huh...
Kate... Kate Kane...”
– “Now that can't
be a coincidence,” Chase steps back, folding her arms – you can
hear the change in
tone from the false sympathy to the cold government agent coming
through the words on the page. She has what she's looking for. –
An unnamed attendant warns, “She won't last the night. Not here,
anyway.” – Chase's orders: “Change her dressings, roll her
out, and drop her at Gotham General.” Wow. I got the Chase
trade paperback that came out last month, her series from the '90s
(early J. H. Williams III artwork). I am so looking
forward to reading it!
(Heh, this idea of writing shorter blurbs for each issue all at once
at the end of the month just ain't working out that way, is it?)
Batgirl
#4
“The End to
Dreams”
There
are more hints as to the circumstances of Barbara Gordon's mysterious
– miraculous? – healing in the form of dreams. It has something
to do with a clinic in South Africa and began a year ago with her
father hesitantly telling her about it. Anyway, she figures out how
to use Mirror's family memories to lure him in and defeat him. She
then spends Christmas Eve with her new roommate, Alysia, and we end
on a shocker cliffhanger ending when an older virtual lookalike shows
up on their doorstep … “Barbara? … Don't you recognize me,
Barbara? … I'm your mother.”
Hey, at least she brought some kind of gift.
Some
hint is dropped on the same page as to the rest of Babs' family when
Alysia queries her, “Hey, shouldn't you be spending Christmas Eve
with your family?” – “It's just my father and my, well, my
brother.” She goes on, “Dad's working tonight, I'll see him in
the morning. … I'm used to it. It's okay.” The brother? Could
it be James, Jr., from the immediately pre-Flashpoint
Snyder run in Detective
Comics?
No wonder she would hesitate over him … but in the New 52
chronology, if
Batman's only been around from five to ten years, and if
the great Batman:
Year One
is still in continuity (during which he was born), Junior is one
precocious five-to-ten-year-old! Not to mention that, assuming this
is Commissioner Gordon's similarly red-headed first wife, also named
Barbara, she's only been gone five to ten years, making Babs
currently seventeen to 22 years in age since near the beginning of
the issue her reappearance is set up via Babs telling Alysia that her
mother walked out on them when she was twelve years old. Is that
long enough for mom to think her daughter wouldn't recognize her? Of
course, Babs was nowhere to be found in Year
One,
which necessitated a later ret-con that she's really Jim Gordon's
brother's daughter, adopted by him at some point … with at least
one story hinting that, well, she's nonetheless his biological
daughter anyway. Not that I really believed that one. But if so,
maybe this is her biological
mother and it's been who-knows how long. It's confusing as all
get-out.
Demon Knights
#4
“In: Merlin
Watches the Storm”
Heh.
See how “Storm Watch” is hidden in this issue's title? Another
think keeping me getting these two dense and so far difficult to
follow series is the obvious connections and the idea that reading
them is going to pay off big time.
Anyway,
through a vision, we basically get to relive the backstory of the
Shining Knight along with her (yes, you read that right, although
most of her companions don't know that) – a knight of Old Camelot
as introduced in Grant Morrison's great (and even more dense,
difficult to follow, but very rereadable with pay-off each time –
that's Morrison for you) cluster of mini-series Seven
Soldiers
from a few years back. She ended up at some point impaled against a
tree but was saved by Merlin and the Grail, which is now lost. She
is continuing the quest to find it. An interesting artistic choice
in the telling of the story of the Grail is the image of Christ and
the Last Supper, which is basically DaVinci's. Shining Knight wakes
from her trance shouting about the “Demon Knights.” Jason Blood
(?) asks, “Is that us?” In the last pages, Horsewoman is
revealed as a traitor – at least that's what it looks like but I
suspect it's not what it seems.
Legion Lost
#4
“Coseismic”
I
really wish I liked this book more. It is quite a disappointment.
It shouldn't be. I mean: It's the Legion of Super-Heroes, my
favorite all-time comics group, the only
thing I've bought consistently and faithfully since I was a wee tyke
of six years old, so nigh on 45 years. It's by Fabian Nicieza, whom
I've liked writing anything else I had occasion to read him on. He's
not a writer that I follow, per se, but whenever he's taken up
anything I was reading anyway I knew I was going to get good, solid
story-telling, sometimes very
good. The art is by Pete Woods … ditto. But the whole here is
less than the sum of the parts. Mainly, I think it's that I find the
21st-century setting boring, especially since so far it's not been
used effectively as far as I can see other than to throw these
31st-century characters a thousand years out of their element. Yawn.
It would be better if somehow it were perceptibly tied into the
nature of the New 52, but if it is I can't tell. Enough of my
grousing. It's Legion,
I keep telling myself, knowing that if it's being published I'm going
to get it. I'm not breaking my run after a lifetime.
Anyway, this time it's Dawnstar's turn to deliver the inner'logue as
the other time-lost Legionnaires continue tracking their
not-so-dead-after-all teammate Yera trapped in the Okaaran Rrdrjj (or
something like that). Meanwhile Tellus and Dawnstar go up against
the villain (?) Alastor, who also has Carggite DNA and thus …
outnumbers them.
Yawn.
Matthew
E. has a better assessment, even as he expresses dismay that Nicieza
is leaving after #6 – Review:
http://legionabstract.blogspot.com/2012/01/legion-lost-4-review.html
Justice League
#4
“Part Four”
I've probably complained about this before and doubtless will again,
but it really annoys me to have the issue title and credits placed on
the last page.
Apparently
the mix of technologies that went into the armor/cybernetic body that
Vic Stone now sports included Apokaliptican (how?), giving him
abilities and insights such that when he pops through a Boom Tube he
can start to tell the assembled heroes about what he sees … “He's
coming … right here...” Just in time for Darkseid himself to
BOOOOOOO OOOOMMM
(yes, the sound effect is broken right in the middle) in. Sideways.
I don't like the sideways double-page
splashes either. Green Lantern: “I'm guessing that's the bad
guy.”
Batman, flexing his arms palm-to-palm isometrically: “Good
guess.” Then we're treated to another double-page splash, this
time right-side-up at least, wherein Big Bad basically hands six
heroes their asses all at once, CHOOOOOOOMM.
And finally another splash page, one this time, of Darkseid's ugly
mug pronouncing, “I
AM DARKSEID.”
My
own snarkiness aside, another enjoyable but kind of fluffy issue. It
just doesn't feel very meaty. But it looks pretty, and it's filled
with the little character bits that have come consistently
throughout, as the imperious Aquaman (Imperius Rex? – nah, wrong
aquatic character) introduces himself. There's plenty of
testosterone-driven posturing from Hal, who starts out with,
“Aquaman?
I thought Aquaman was a sketch on Conan O'Brien.” I don't watch
Conan O'Brien, but I have seen Craig Ferguson's “Advice
from Aquaman.” And it's impossible to name all the sport
that's been made of this character by so many comedians and sit-coms
– something that Johns is playing with in Aquaman's
own book. But it's getting a little old in-story. Just have to
remind myself this is five years ago … which brings up the question
of how he could be a joke on anybody's
show since I get the impression this is more or less his debut,
although Batman recognizes him, and Wonder Woman hails him almost as
an old friend. – Same page, Aquaman: “... I don't see a
leader.” – Batman: “Then you're not looking at me.” –
Green Lantern: “Give me a break.” And more, but I'll leave it
at that.
One
of the funniest segments comes later, as Hal … well, he looks
like
he has his hand on Wonder Woman's rump as he proclaims his intention
to get some military helicopter pilots out of harm's way: “I'll
get them out of the choppers and to safety. Not to be a good guy
like the Flash, but because I want to impress you. Most of what I do
is about trying to impress people.” – Batman: “What?” –
Hal: “No, I … What'd I just...?” – Wonder Woman: “You
were touching my lasso.” – “So what?” – “It makes you
tell the truth.” – “Are you laughing,
Batman … At a time like this?”
The art is outstanding, of course. But it appears my (and many
others') prediction that this would be the first of the New 52 titles
to ship late, since it is drawn by notoriously slow artist Jim Lee,
has come true. It won't really affect me, since I get my comics a
month at a time and the next issue turned out to be only a week late
but shipped within the same month, but what happened to the
much-ballyhooed ultimatum reported at San Diego that the
muckety-mucks in DC Comics' management delivered that lateness on the
New 52 would result in immediate replacement of the dilatory creator?
Oh, wait, Jim Lee is one of those muckety-mucks. Nice to see he's
leading by example.
This is another dollar-extra, thicker comic … in which you get
about twenty pages of story plus extras. Here, though, the extras
are frankly a waste. Who cares about personnel dossiers from STAR
Labs? And the drawing guide for the new Flash uniform. Maybe
somebody cares. It ain't me.
Wonder Woman
#4
“Blood”
There
is a framing sequence in which Apollo and Ares (who looks like Kevin
O'Neill's Allan Quatermain from League
of Extraordinary Gentlemen,
but needing a beard trim) discuss the opportunities offered by their
father's missing status. Their father being Zeus, of course.
Following from the revelation last issue, Wonder Woman doesn't deal
very well with her new knowledge, heading off to do some clubbing in
London. Strife has tagged along – does she really think Wonder
Woman wants her company? – even as, back on Paradise Island, Hera
confronts Queen Hippolyta. So I guess Hera didn't know Wonder
Woman's (hey, she doesn't want to be called “Diana,” right) true
parentage? Wonder Woman has a heart to heart with the new girl,
Zola, who in some weird way is something of an stepmother to her –
? –, which makes her repent her haste to turn her back on Paradise
Island. She returns – too late. She finds her sister Amazons
transformed into snakes and her mother turned to clay. (Everything
I've seen online says stone, but I think the irony must have it as
clay.)
Jim
Shooter skewers this issue and the whole new Wonder
Woman
series thus far on his blog: here,
here,
and here
– hey, he
wrote them out of order. I have a lot of respect for Shooter and
generally enjoy his blog immensely, but all I can say here is that
I'm
liking this series a lot. My opinion is more in line with the
following …
Supergirl
#4
“Escape”
Kara
is trapped on Tycho's space station, imprisoned within a tube of some
kind, tormented by Kryptonite – which we know was already familiar
to the Kryptonians as a mortally radioactive element before the
destruction of their world. The sympathetic commando from the team
that attacked her in issue #1 and with whom she connected helps her
in an escape attempt but is killed by Tycho for his effort. Tycho
holds her at bay by threatening a red sunstone, which she also
recognizes and hopes may hold the secret to her mysterious
transportation to this strange new world, demanding a drop of her
blood. She makes a break for it and does escape, destroying the
space station and severely injuring Tycho in the process … but when
he spies a spot of her blood on a guard's shirt he cackles weakly but
insanely, “heh heh hehhhh … I
win.”
Meanwhile, although she grabbed the sunstone on her way out, it's
cracked and she despairs of retrieving any data without “a
console.” She hesitates to ask “Kal,” and wonders, gazing at
the stars, “What if I just try to … fly
home?”
What
can I say beyond that I am enjoying this series quite a bit, as
fearful as I was going in, but I don't want to belabor that any more.
It looks like Tycho's going to be back, with a vengeance, and
probably a lot more powerful as a threat.
Batman
#4
“Face
the Court”
As
much a I like Scott Snyder's writing, he is one of the worst
malefactors as far as putting the issue title and credits at the end
rather than the beginning. While I don't mind so much as far as the
credits go, in my opinion saving the title for the end should be
reserved for very rare and effective instances. I've been reading
Julian
Darius' Improving
the Foundations: Batman Begins
from Comics to Screen,
and he makes a great point regarding that film's placement of the
title at the very end, that symbolically the whole film has been
leading up to
the point where “Batman Begins.” I'll do a review of the book
once I've finished it. My point is, that unless there is some kind
of symbolic purpose in its placement at the end, the title should go
near the beginning. (I'm too lazy, however to see where the sequel's
title, The Dark
Knight,
is placed within that movie.)
Anyway,
as to this particular issue: After he survives the blast in the
owl's lair he found last issue, most of this chapter is Bruce telling
Dick that he knows that there is no “Court of Owls” because as a
child soon after his parents' murders he tried to find it, ultimately
following “clues” that led him to be trapped in an abandoned
building for a week, almost dying. The lesson he took from that
experience was not to recklessly follow his emotions rather than the
evidence. This conversation takes place as his equipment analyses
the remains of Alan Wayne. Following the clues found thereby, Bruce
descends into the sewers where Alan died – and is ambushed by the
Talon, finding himself trapped in a kind of labyrinth.
One
interesting plot point along the way is that we, along with Dick,
discover that Alfred has apparently been drugging Bruce in order to
get him to rest.
Birds of Prey
#4
“Absolutely
Mental”
Starling
defuses Black Canary's head-bomb by knocking out out, then with
Poison Ivy and Katana she manages to shut down the other head-bomb
cases on the train, but they find out that the true scheme is far
more than human bombs. They call in Batgirl for help invading the
enemy's lair. At first, they seem to find nothing there, but
Starling deploys her new “laser” (that's what she calls it anyway
– I don't think a laser works that way) that Canary's “new
boyfriend at Wayne Enterprises” designed for her to detect the
enemy's light-bending “invisibility” suits. They are revealed to
be surrounded – but as they prepare to do battle against seemingly
impossible odds, a voice sounds in all their heads before they appear
in a deserted, rubble-strewn street, without
Batgirl.
“Next Month: One of Our Birds Has Gone Missing.”
I
think it's pretty apparent that despite my own lingering hope that
during the time Barbara Gordon was crippled she did briefly take up
an identity as Oracle and head up a “Birds of Prey,” that just
didn't happen. There's no allusion to such when she appears, just a
brief exchange between herself, Canary, and Starling – Canary:
“Thanks for the extra muscle, Batgirl.” – Batgirl: “Hey,
always happy to avenge the almost-death of a friend. … So, what are
we looking at, Starling?” So, there is the sense that they've
worked together, and Babs considers Dinah to be “a friend,” but
nothing more than that. Interestingly, Batgirl is unfazed by the
presence of Poison Ivy – recall Starling's rather violent initial
rejection of the idea of working with her.
For
me, Starling is hands down the best new New 52 character. At least I
don't think she had any progenetrix/prototype in the pre-Flashpoint
or Flashpoint
worlds. I did notice one minor snafu artwise – Starling has a big
bandage on her left upper arm and shoulder except in one shot (the
one where Batgirl enters the picture). I don't generally look
for those, but that one I noticed.
Catwoman
#4
“You...still
in the game?”
Selina
manages to get away from the cops while torching Lola's building,
destroying the evidence of their connection. At the funeral, she
encounters an old friend who volunteers to fence for her, but she
silently swears to herself to leave friends out of her dealings from
now on. We see a brief vignette of a GCP detective who is putting
together evidence linking a number of burglaries that will implicitly
lead him to Selina. She, however, is now focused on stealing from
drug dealers, but is unexpectedly attacked by a metahuman calling
herself Reach who throws her around with crackling-blue energy
tendrils. When Selina fights back, she ends up blasted a few
thousand feet into the air. Even if she lands on her feet this time
….
I'm
not sure where this is going, but it seems the death of Lola has
affected Selina deeply, possibly sending her more over to the side of
the angels? For that reason, I liked this issue more than the
following reviewer did, but much of what he says is dead on,
especially about how quickly Selina counters the GCPD's very good
reasons for at least wanting to question Catwoman about Lola's
murder. I mean, just 'cause she got away and dropped a dime on Bone,
they drop the investigation?
Nightwing
#4
“South
Beach Connection”
Haly's
Circus is in Miami, where Barbara Gordon shows up almost catching
Dick and … I can't remember her name … in bed. Not that Babs
seems to have any problem with his new ginger girlfriend. But it is
funny that others in the circus notice that Dick has a “type.”
Anyway, Babs has followed a recent foe called “Spinebender” who
is looking to sell some stolen microchips, and is using a request for
Dick's help to make up a bit after their rather strained parting in
last month's Batgirl.
They share an adventure vs. Spinebender, a shapeshifter, thwarting
his plans, then part ways without having sex. – Well, the way the
New 52 Bat-books
in general, and Nightwing
in particular, have gone so far, once again I wondered – and would
have been quite disappointed if they did. Not that I think they
don't belong together – frankly, I do, but the casual sex has been
a bit over the top for me in some cases as I've mentioned. So has
the violence and grotesquerie in some cases, but that's not here
either. This is just good, fun, superheroics (well, sort of super,
since part of what attracts me about the Bat-books
is that the heroes, at least, are not metahumans, just highly
trained). Only in the last couple of pages does the overall plot of
the mystery surrounding Haly's Circus advance a little, when Dick
finds a mysterious book with a list of names in it, the last of which
is his own.
Review:
http://batman-news.com/2011/12/23/new-52-nightwing-4-review/
– to answer his question, I agree that McCarthy's art better suits
Nightwing
than Barrows, pace
the latter.
Legion of Super-Heroes
#4
“Not
What They Seem?”
Basically,
to answer the cover question, Chemical Kid manages to muck with
Renegade's metabolism and take him out. Meanwhile, the Legion team
on Daxam investigating why a Daxamite is offworld in the first place,
discovers that Res-Vir (Renegade) had been working with the
restricted substance, Kryptonite, in the form of a meteor fragment
(shades of Smallville)
he had “found.” The rare element is critical in the formulation
of Mon-El's anti-lead-poisoning serum. In the seemingly unrelated
story thread – at least I don't see exactly how it's related,
except that it's what Brainiac 5 is mainly concentrating on,
participating only virtually in the “away” missions – inspired
by something Dream Girl says Brainy perceives that the key to
Glorith's powers is … time. Whoa. Didn't see that coming. (Yes I
did.) Anyway, having taken out their powerhouse and discovered how
they acquired him, the Legionnaires send the Dominators packing.
Are
there hints Shady and Mon might be reconciling? On the last page
she's no longer crying over Earth Man, but here tells him, “It's
good to have you back … and acting like yourself, too. It's been a
long time.” “You have no idea how
long, Shady...” he agrees, “No idea.” Neither do I.
Aquaman
#4
“The
Trench: Conclusion”
Aquaman
and Mera descend into the Trench, where they find an ancient
Atlantean ship crashed. They continue a philosophical debate
regarding the Trench creatures and the developing possibility or
probability that they are just a desperate race resorting to drastic
means for survival. But they find the people from the seaboard town
imprisoned in cocoons attached to the wall of the Trench, being kept
fresh for later. Philosophical qualms regardless, Aquaman rips the
entire wall away and sends Mera pushing it to the surface, himself
defending the rear. He is eventually forced to rip open a volcanic
vent releasing magma to seal the creatures in. Although he has saved
the surface people, he is again dissed by the cops although a kid
runs up and takes away the sting by proclaiming him his favorite
superhero ever. I'm that kid. Moreover, the original cop who sought
his help shows up at the lighthouse, bringing an orphaned dog to
them. Mera seems delighted at the prospect of teaching “Aquadog”
to swim. Aquadog
… that's a twist I'd've never foreseen! The issue ends with a
one-page forecast of a future story – regarding the mystery of “Who
Sank Atlantis?”
Incidentally,
here's a picture from New Orleans Comic Con. When I saw them I was never in a position to take a
picture, so I swiped this one off the Internet. According to the
Wizard World Facebook posting, she made the costumes herself. And
she fills it well...
[Edit: And what's even cooler? According to the Aquaman Shrine blog's first comment to its notice of this couple, I take it she's the geek and her husband "agreed to be Aquaman"!]
Review:
http://weeklycomicbookreview.com/2011/12/29/aquaman-4-review/
, complete with a great suggestion for the dog's name.
Superman
#4
“Mind
for the Taking”
Much
of the issue deals with the police and news aftermath of last issue's
events, primarily the disappearance of Heather Kelley. It turns out
that she's okay – but lying for Clark? His mental lapses are
getting more worrisome – then he blanks out and finds himself back
in his first apartment (which was the center of the action last
issue), fighting the creatures from issues #1-3. In the end, he's
overwhelmed as they adapt into the form of a swarm of cockroaches.
They keep talking about purging him. Wild speculation time – they
seem to be elemental in nature. Are they in some sense the Earth's
antibodies. I don't think that would fit their mantra of “Krypton!”
… or would it? Maybe they see Krypton as the source of the infestation. They also seem mechanical – they speak of being
made for their purpose … by Superman
– ?
This
is the first issue, I think, that ends on a true “cliffhanger” as
opposed to being a contained incident in a continuing story arc. As
I mentioned, Ispecifically thanked George Perez on Saturday for the
consistently satisfying experience each issue of this series is
providing as an
issue
rather than as a chapter that really doesn't work except as part of a
multi-part story. Sure there are continuing elements, plots,
subplots … but this is the right balance of serialized
storytelling, in my opinion.
Batman: The Dark Knight
#4
“Welcome
to the Jungle”
Well,
one reveal blows one of my theories out of the water. In a drunken
rant, Gordon makes reference to the events of Detective
Comics
as being contemporary, that he's still recovering from. Frankly, I
have no idea how these two series could fit together. At some point
I'll have to try and work that out … but not now. I get the
feeling that there will be no really workable resolution.
This
issue raises a lot of questions. Literally – a page and a half
that I guess is meant to point toward the major theme of this story
arc, Batman/Bruce's doubts. “It's
going to happen. Someone's going to get hurt. Someone who relies on
you. Maybe Flash. … What if he can't keep going? What if you and
he were wrong and the toxin metabolizes? … What if you finally
find a girl you can trust, but you still can't have her? … What
happens when she inevitably finds out she can't trust you?
… What will happen to your oldest and dearest friend [Alfred] if
you keep pushing him like this? What if his blood pressure medicine
stops working? … What are you going to do the day you lose him? …
What about Jim Gordon... have you damaged him enough yet? … All the
times he's covered for you. And now he needs you. Is this how you
repay him? … It's going to happen, and you're
going to be the one to blame.”
That's
somewhat interesting, but overall.... Let's see – fear toxin-based
steroid threat? – I'm sure everyone
was as shocked as me
at the “reveal” on the last page. Along the way, Batman is
attacked by Poison Ivy's guard-plants, analyses a coded message that
she left him (man, she really is working on the side of right now
isn't she?), finds the villain's possible hideout on an island where
he is attacked by 'roided up Deathstroke, then confronts [reveal].
Ho. Hum.
Justice League Dark
#4
“In
the Dark, part four: By the Light of the Moone”
Deadman
and June Moone end up besieged by another June and decide to take
Shade up on his offer – but she doesn't pass through the portal and
loses her protector. Zatanna goes up against Junes and must teleport
away, ending up with Shade. Constantine confronts Madame Xanadu –
he seems to be putting things together and knows she is the cause for
the Enchantress's madness – which is having an escalating effect
across the country. I continue to be amazed by Mikel Janin's art.
Teen Titans
#4
“Danger
Squared”
Our
young … metas? – Tim Drake's not, but he's lumped in with them,
apparently, by such as NOWHERE … have all assembled in New York
City on New Year's Eve 2011-2012. Red Robin and Skitter and Blockade
are at Tim Drake's penthouse. Kid Flash and Solstice show up in a
manner that's not entirely clear – to any of them, either. Wonder
Girl is in New York trying to find Red Robin – whatever she got
from the thug she had at her mercy in the hospital last issue has
apparently convinced her she'd better throw in with him. She's
ambushed by Superboy. The two young'uns (who were lovers in the
pre-Flashpoint
world, but those were different characters) immediately feel some
chemistry. He beats her down anyway. Then he questions where the
others are, not knowing they are right behind him.
I'm
honestly enjoying this title far more than I expected to. But Red
Robin's naming them off the cuff as “Teen Titans” still feels
like these are imposters. By the way, I think his implication in an
earlier issue that this is a new incarnation of an old team was a
snafu … despite the fact that if Dick, Wally, Gar, etc., were not
all Teen Titans with Koriand'r at some previous time as intimated in
Red Hood and the
Outlaws
#1 (shudder), what did Roy (or was it Jason? I don't remember, and
I'm not
revisiting that travesty of an issue just to find out) mean...? I
think some of the creators weren't really clear on what the “history”
of this supposedly “five years established” New DC Universe was
as they were writing the early issues, which contributes to an
impression that this was pulled off rather quickly and not entirely
thought through. But as an series on its own, especially as paired
with Lobdell's Superboy,
this is turning out to be better than I expected. I just wish there
were a real
“Teen Titans”
series.
Legion: Secret Origin
#3
“Connections”
Brainiac
5 is with Admiral Allon on the fleet guarding the wormhole by
Anotrom, which seems controlled in a manner beyond United Planets
science. They head off another ship coming through it from …
wherever … by “crossingthe T.” Been reading naval warfare, eh, Levitz? Phantom Girl
brings information on the invaders to the Security Directorate. The
Science Police are rather discomfited by R. J. Brande's growing army
of “children,” for whom he has a dream inspired by legends of
Superman. But things continue coming together for the nascent Legion
of Super-Heroes … and although Brande's dream is far beyond a
glorified bodyguard, mysterious assassination attempts continue
against him. One is thwarted by Invisible Kid.
Star Trek/Legion of Super-Heroes
#3 (IDW)
Well,
finally, crew of the NCC-1701 (no bloody -A, -B, -C, or
-D) Enterprise and the
Great Darkness Saga
Legion come together. I'm a bit disappointed it is with the
requisite comic-book fight scene, but they get past it pretty quickly
– mainly Spock and Brainiac 5 recognise how illogical it is. So
they exchange histories instead – a couple of double-page montage
spreads (the Legion
one includes Superboy and Supergirl! – this being a licenced
publication, I wondered) – and determine that they are not in an
alternate universe but rather an alternate time-line. I take it that
an alternate universe would mean their homes are “out there,”
while an alternate time-line means – oops – it's not, and we've
got to engage in some more time travel to restore their home
worlds/universes/time-lines. Anyway, they are immediately assaulted
by a Fatal Five reimagined Star Trek
style, e.g. the Punisher counterpart is a Gorn, the Emerald Empress
is … d'uhhh! … a Green Orion woman, and Validus looks like a
Mugato. No problem, working together, they overcome the villains,
seize their time platform, and split into two teams....
I
never thought I'd say this when it was announced that the Moys were
doing the art – I really liked them on the “Reboot” Legion
in the 1990s, and I think I heard they've done Star Trek
for IDW – but the art really looks rather clunky in this book.
What's up?
Note:
Extra points to those readers who identify and explain the two
somewhat obscure Star Trek
references above.
*
* *
Digital
comics ...
Batwing #4
Two weeks after the previous issue, David is still two steps behind Massacre, who kills another member of the Kingdom. Something about this gets him remembering about ten years ago when along with his brother Isaac he was a child soldier for a savage African warlord. The warlord eventually pushes them too far, they rebel, and Isaac ends up dead. David escapes, but steals back, captures the warlord, and leaves him for his enemies to find, swearing that he will never again take a life with his own hands. In the present, he determines not to keep chasing Massacre, but rather to beat him to his next victim.
I, Vampire #4
Andrew heads out for a bite (so to speak, ending up sharing in a dumpster-dive for discarded blood packs behind a hospital, although I wonder if they really discard expired blood that way), discovers a "newbie" vampire who has fought against his baser hunger because he almost killed someone he loved. In trying to show him that with the willpower to enable vampiric abilities comes the willpower to overcome the hunger, Andrew inadvertently unleashes the newbie's killer instincts, and has to clean up his own mess. And then finds out just who that "someone he loved" was.... Oh yeah, he has a short confrontation with John Constantine.
Review: http://weeklycomicbookreview.com/2012/01/02/i-vampire-4-review/
Review: http://weeklycomicbookreview.com/2012/01/02/i-vampire-4-review/
Cheers, and thanks for reading and reading and reading....
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