Dominic wrote:I am not saying "Emerald Twilight' was perfect.
Everything Hal Jordan did in that story was so far out of character that it robbed the story of any credibility. Details like the number of rings are trivial.
When I was reading Green Lantern and Emerald Twilight occurred I was in my 20s, so it had nothing to do with childhood memories. I never read comics as a kid. For me it was a case of getting into Green Lantern with "Emerald Dawn", growing to really like the character and concept, and then watching all of that crash and burn in three issues in the most unbelievable way possible. And if a decades-old character like Jordan was that disposable, why should I bother getting attached to any DC character? Zero Hour compounded the feeling, and I got out of collecting for a number of years.
I almost could have given it to DC if they just came out and said "Emerald Twilight" never happened. Instead, Johns and DC went and *expanded* on the stupid idea for why Hal "really" went nuts in the first place, adding Ion and then a whole rainbow of stupid corps that would have been recognized as a joke as recently as the early part of this decade.
While I'm not too fond of all the other corps coming out these days, I thought Rebirth was a credible attempt to explain all of Jordan's out of character actions while also exonerating him. There was no other way to do it, unless the audience would have been expected to accept the greatest mass murderer ever as the protagonist of Green Lantern. Parallax killed the entire universe and all of time for heaven's sake... it doesn't get much worse than that.
Simply pretending all of that never happened would have been worse. That would be an insult to the audience and all the Kyle fans who had followed the character for a decade.
Marz is a far more credible writer than Johns.
Marz may have improved, but I found his writing to be very lacking at the time. All of the praise that the long-time heroes heaped on Kyle may simply have been editorial mandate, but it got old really fast. Kyle Rayer was an idiot, the plots were unengaging, and the dialogue was flat and uninspired. And I loved seeing Kyle's girlfriend stuffed in the fridge. Lovely. And of course whenever Hal did turn up, every bit of his dialogue was a parody of Jordan fans. "I'm supposed to be Green Lantern. I'm just supposed to be!"
Kyle's grown into a decent character, and I enjoy seeing him as part of the Corps these days. He had a great role in Rebirth, and I'm glad he wasn't killed off. But in the early days the character was insufferable.
I am fine with heroes going bad.
I'm not. I don't care to invest time and money in following a character, only to see that character flushed down the toilet simply for the shock value of the event as an attempt to generate sales.
It's like your complaint that 'nothing sticks' these days. Stories don't matter and character deaths don't matter, because they'll just be undone down the road. It's the same thing... why invest in a character if that character can be so easily tossed aside during an 'event' storyline meant to draw readers in. What's the point?