Sparky Prime wrote:andersonh1 wrote:I'm sure Sparky could tell us why Sinestro looks so old and worn out here.
Haven't been to the comic book shop to get a copy yet... But the last we saw of Sinestro, he was still weak after his battle with the Paling Bishop, and was about to become host to Parallax again. I'd have to guess due to his already weakened condition, rather than just a streak of grey hair, Sinestro's overall appearance was affected.
Edit: Ok, so I see Sinestro has yet to become host to Parallax again, so I've got no clue why he looks so old here. Also, Parallax wasn't being used to power War World, he was being used to stabilize the core of the prison planet Sinestro took over and renamed New Korugar. Doesn't seem that Venditti did a very good job finding out what happened in Sinestro's title before writing this. And I've got no clue how the continuity with Darkseid War is supposed to work when that showed Hal already back in his GL uniform, Oa was still in one piece and the GLC wasn't missing... But that one I'd say is Geoff Johns fault.
It's ironic. After Flashpoint, Green Lantern was one of the few titles to have the strongest sense of continuity. But with Rebirth, it's got one of the weakest.
That was one of the selling points of DC You: story over continuity. I thought it was a bad idea, and continuity mix-ups like the one you describe prove the case. You should have been able to read the final issue of Sinestro's series, then pick this issue up and have them flow seamlessly together in a continuing narrative. But instead there are discrepancies that get in the way of just enjoying the ongoing Green Lantern narrative, because characters are not where they should be, and there is no explanation. Maybe one will be forthcoming. Green Lanterns #1 showed Hal in his GL uniform with his ring, when he had last been seen with the Gauntlet and renegade outfit in his own series, and there was no explanation, but we got it this week. Things were just published out of story order. So maybe we'll get an explanation for Sinestro's condition that fits with his series. We'll see.
Did you notice that on the cover, the design of Hal's ring changed between the ads for this book that appeared last month, and the final cover this month? In the ads, Hal has an old style ring with Sinestro reflected in it. On the actual cover, it's the band with the curved symbol that we see in the issue itself.
Detective Comics #936
I called it. I said Batwoman's father, a general, would be the villain of this story. To quote myself: "He's in the military, so in comic book land, that makes him automatically shifty and evil. No doubt he's running some secret black ops program that's off budget and is his own little private army. And he knows that Batman is Bruce Wayne, so that automatically makes him suspect." This type of villain and this type of plot is so cliched. It doesn't speak well of the creativity of the writer here. And that's a shame, because he does a nice job keeping the other characters distinct and likable, and they interact well with each other. Tim Drake in particular shines in this issue.
So last issue ended on a cliffhanger with an army of the bat-men attempting to capture Batman. We find out this issue that they succeeded. Batman himself only appears in footage taken by the Batmobile cameras, being beaten in the fight. Tim calls in Batwoman once he sees the footage, and then she calls in Spoiler and Orphan. She also calls in her father, General Kane, and of course he betrays them all and calls in the bat-men, because he's "doing his duty to his country", blah blah blah. I'm just rolling my eyes at this point. I can't take a "rogue general who gives patriotic duty speeches" as villain seriously any more. Tim and Clayface get everyone out, so the little group of Gotham vigilantes is on the run, and Batman is in the custody of the military.
Good art, great cover, good mix of characters that are well written, but the plot is old and stale. The sooner this story is over, the sooner I can see if future issues can provide something better in the way of storylines and if I want to stick with the series or not.
Wonder Woman #2
The odd-numbered issues are set in the present day, while the even-numbered issues are a "Year One" storyline. If you're familiar at all with Wonder Woman's origin story, this issue ends about where the original began, with Steve Trevor's plane crashing on Paradise Island, so we don't get far into the origin story at all. The book spends its time alternating between Diana's life on the island, and Steve Trevor's life on the mainland, showing how different the two of them are, but also a few similarities. Their relationships with others, leisure and work activities and other aspects of their life are shown, so this is more of a character establishing issue than a plot-heavy issue. It's a series of vignettes rather than a story per se. It does a good job presenting Diana as far more young and innocent than we ordinarily see her, and it also shows her as unique among the others Amazons as someone who looks out to the horizon, wondering what's out therei, clearly hinting that she'll be the one to leave the island, even if we didn't already know that was going to happen.
The most interesting incident is near the end, when Diana is out exploring the island. She's near a tree, when a snake bites her and nearly kills her. She takes weeks to recover. I'm not sure of the significance of this incident, unless it's meant to simply show that life on Paradise Island isn't as unalterably idyllic as it's been presented throughout the issue so far. But given the Greek mythology roots of Wonder Woman's backstory, there could well be more too it. The crash of Steve Trevor's plane is given a more tragic aspect than in past tellings of the origin by showing that he was not the only person aboard, and his friend that we've seen him with all through his scenes, who got married and just saw his child born before he and Steve left on the mission, dies in the crash.