Sparky Prime wrote:Well, I have to say I felt Green Lantern Corps Edge of Oblivion was extremely disappointing...
I thought this last issue was good, but the series as a whole squandered an opportunity to really sell the despair of being in a dying universe, and didn't make that universe exotic and different enough from our own to make it feel like a completely different reality. And they left the Krona/Relic plotline hanging too.
Green Lantern Corps: Edge of Oblivion #6
Apart from my above criticisms about the series as a whole, I thought this particular issue was fairly strong. It's one big battle between the Blackest Knights, the life-devouring creatures, and what's left of the Green Lantern Corps. Guy Gardner narrates the battle as we see all the bickering among the Corps put aside, and they all do whatever they can to protect the people of the cities from the two creatures, with many Green Lanterns dying in the process. The scouting parties return, and report finding no way out of the dying universe, but a Green Lantern ring shows the way, as it detects the sector it should scan for a replacement through the fissure where Arisia and B'dg disappeared. Simon Baz decides to take a chance and go through the rift... and we know he finds his way home, because he shows up in Green Lanterns Rebirth. Presumably the rest of the Corps and Mogo, and all the inhabitants of the dying planet they manage to move to Mogo's surface will appear in the GLC series that's on the way. The Knights are trapped by the dying planet, and the issue ends on a cliffhanger, with the Corps and Mogo's passengers vanishing into the white void.
I enjoyed both Lost Army and Edge of Oblivion, with the caveats I listed above. It was good to have a whole issue where Green Lanterns 1) acted without fear, 2) acted selflessly and 3) worked together as a team. When they had their backs to the wall, their true colors came through, and I enjoyed seeing that.
Flash Rebirth #1
This series begins with Barry Allen getting visions from the Speed Force in the midst of a crime scene investigation. Barry has a talk with his father about the problem and then goes out for a run to clear his head. And then he runs right into Wally West as we revisit the scene from DC Rebirth #1, and Barry pulls Wally out of the Speed Force and regains a ton of memories. The two discuss the threat, and there are all sorts of little nods to the differences between current and past continuity, including Wally being surprised that Barry and Iris are friends, when of course they were married prior to the New 52. Wally mentions Linda, but no mention is made of his children Jai and Iris, so I'm wondering if he's forgotten them. But this sort of story is what makes DC so enjoyable for me: old friends with a long history together, enjoying each other's company and working on a plan to solve the latest threat. Wally heads out to find the Titans, while Barry goes to the Batcave to see Bruce, and the two of them examine both the note from Flashpoint Thomas Wayne as well as the Comedian's badge, which this issue says Wally deposited in the Batcave wall, explaining how it got there. This is the only direct follow-up to the story that Rebirth set up that I've seen so far, and it leaves Flash and Batman investigating, deciding to wait to tell the Justice League until they know what to tell them.
Detective Comics #934
This appears to be the team book for the Batman line. Batman contacts Azrael/Jean-Paul Valley at the begining of the issue, and he also recruits Batwoman to help him train Spoiler, Red Robin (Tim Drake) and Cassandra Cain, who I believe was Batgirl at one point pre-Flashpoint. I never read her series though. Here she' s Orphan, an assassin or some such thing. Batman also recruits Clayface. This version looks like it combines Basil Karlo and Matt Hagen by giving Karlo Hagen's abillites as a shapeshifter. I remember an old Alan Grant story, "The Mud Pack" where the three surviving Clayfaces got together, along with the remains of the dead Hagen, and Basil Karlo was able to give himself the shapeshifting abilites of Hagen, and the acid touch of Preston Payne, the third Clayface. So perhaps this is the New 52 version that sort of follows up on the events of that story. I really don't know. Batman says that someone is hunting all of Gotham's vigilantes, and so he wants to train them to work together to find and stop the threat. The threat, unknown to Batmank is an army with an as-yet unrevealed goal.
This was very much a "introduce and gather the characters" issue. I'm glad to see Tim Drake back in a more familiar Robin costume, and he's kept the Red Robin name he had near the end of pre-Flashpoint continuity. He had an outfit like Kingdom Come Red Robin, but I never liked it all that much, so I'm glad to see him back to his old look. Batman actually gets outdone a time or two in this issue, so maybe the "Bat-God" characterization is on the way out. I hope so. I like Batman to be very good, but not perfect and unbeatable by anyone. He's human, after all. I may continue to read this series, and I may not. Late 80s, early 90s Batman is my favorite period for the character, and that's the kind of tone I'm looking for in a Batman comic. I may not find it, I know, but it'll take a few issues to determine that.
Action Comics #957
It's the big one of the week for me, and I'll definitely be buying this series, since it's post-Crisis Superman back as the lead character. I'm not a fan of the new costume, and no in-story explanation is given for the change yet.
There's a hostage situation in Metropolis, and an armored Lex Luthor appears and ends it. He's wearing Superman's S-shield and red cape, and claims that he will step into the dead Superman's shoes as the protector of Metropolis. This is carried on the news, and seen by the just-moved Kent family as they unpack. Seeing Luthor wearing his symbol is the last straw, and Superman shaves off his beard, puts on the new costume, and heads to Metropolis to confront Luthor, demanding that he remove the symbol and cape. Luthor knows that New 52 Superman is dead, and he assumes this Superman is an impostor. They end up coming to blows, and fighting, with Luthor insiting that Superman is fake, and Superman insisting that Luthor's violence demonstrates who he really is. In the background, a man who looks like and who claims to be Clark Kent shows up, and then the original Doomsday appears, escaping from a vault that had been stolen while the terrorist attack was going on.
There's a lot going on in this issue, and it flies by. I'll be interested to see how the bi-weekly schedule works for the book. Lois and Jonathan comment on the fight as they watch it on tv, and there are a couple of scenes where Lois and Clark are shown trying to teach their son about responsibility and not using his developing powers to take shortcuts in life. Having a son who looks up to him changes the perspective on Superman's fights as well, since it's hard to tell Jonathan that fighting is the wrong approach when his dad is on tv slugging it out with Luthor. There's some definite new ground to be explored with Superman as a father.