quarta-feira, 17 de julho de 2013

Review: Earth 2 #1


Last week was a heavy review week and I am still catching up with 2 more books to go after today's review of Earth 2 #1.

I don't think that Earth 2 will remain a consistently reviewed book here and to be honest, I am still a bit up in the air as to whether or not I will be collecting the book long term. But as this issue significantly impacts the Superman and Supergirl of Earth 2 as well as the DCU as a whole, I thought I would give my thoughts.

All along, writer James Robinson has said that Earth 2 as a book is about world building, about creating something new and different from the classic E-2 heroes. The publicity pieces and pre-release interviews all made this world sound like an extremely dark place. 'Lois is dead ... what will make Superman cross the line and kill ...' etc., etc. It seems as though all of comics is in a dark place now. I don't know if DC needed a new world for dark stories when the E-1 world seems pretty dark enough. The question really is do I want to read a radically new version of Earth 2, and that is the million dollar question.

As usually, I wonder if those publicity pieces did the world a disservice. Sure, Earth 2 starts in a very dark place as played out here. But what is going to grow from that despair could be bright. I will admit all this 'Superman driven to kill' stuff almost made me shy away from buying the book. I was only lured in to see the set-up to Worlds' Finest. I have seen Dark Robinson in Cry for Justice. I have seen not dark, almost Silver Age reverence stuff in his later JLA books. So who knows which direction E2 is headed.

One thing I will say, Nicola Scott is wonderful on art, bring a clean sensibility to the pages even at their most action packed and war-like. She really does wonderful stuff here.

So what would drive Superman to kill? How about a full blown invasion from Apokalips.

The issue starts with the world at war, with parademons flooding the skies and Earth's military forces and heroes desperately trying to stay at a stalemate.

The problem here is that Earth 2 only has a handful of super-heroes: Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, Supergirl, and Robin. It is pretty amazing that there was a world with only 5 heroes and Supergirl was one of them. But things have not gone well for them.

All of Themyscira has been slaughtered sending Wonder Woman into a 'kill first, ask questions later' battle frenzy. I really don't like when the warrior aspect of Wonder Woman's persona is the only one we see.

Superman has lost Lois to the war and is wondering just how far this battle is going to push his ethics.

In fact, the only one of the Trinity who seems least emotionally distraught is Batman. He has figured out a way to reverse the effects of all the large Boom Tube generating towers on the planet, saving the day. He just needs to get inside. So Superman and Wonder Woman and Robin flying the batplane are all running interference. Robinson does a nice job in quickly showing how close Bruce and Helena are. I like that the proud papa says 'good girl' as she guns down parademons trying to get to him.

But this is a dark world, it's terrain damaged and looking more like trench warfare fields than a paradise.

As for the other hero on the table, Supergirl is overseeing plan B. If Batman's computer virus doesn't shut down the towers, the armies of the world are getting into position to nuke them all. And Kara is riding shotgun over many of them to make sure the bombs are not destroyed.

We have only met this Kara a little bit but I have to say I like her. And Scott draws her beautifully.

Robinson does a good job of setting the table with familiar names of classic Earth 2 characters that I am sure will ended up being a new hero comprising a new JSA at some point.

For example, guarding one of the nukes Sergeant Al Pratt, a brusque mission leader who is teased for being short. I guess he will reprise his role as the E2 Atom.

And the world isn't completely without super-beings. For one, we knew there were Amazons who have been killed. Here we see Mercury arrive saying the gods are also fighting the Apokaliptian forces but will most likely fall. Mercury has arrived to say that Diana's efforts have impressed the god enough to have him have faith in us as a race. Interesting ... and a foreshadow.

If Robinson is going to build a new world, he has to deal with the old world first. And it looks like it is going to be a tabula rasa for him to scrawl on.

Wonder Woman dies, impaled on the sword of Steppenwolf.

This is what seems to drive Superman 'to kill' as he screams 'I'll kill you'. Luckily (??) we don't know if he would cross that line because he also dies, immolated by some Apokalips tech.

In two panels, two of the Trinity are killed.

And Batman doesn't fare much better. He is successful in loading the virus into the tower but it triggered a self-destruction protocol. The virus will spread and shut down the towers but it will cost Batman his life.

It is a short but powerful scene with Batman telling Helena how proud he is and how she needs to live on for him. And Helena cries crying out 'daddy'. This is a different Helena than the tough one we have seen in the Huntress mini-series and over in Worlds' Finest so this must have toughened her up and made her bury these feelings. This is her Crime Alley, seeing her parents die. I wonder just how Batman-like she will end up. I thought these were the best panels of the book.

Hearing Superman's death cry got Kara's attention and so Supergirl sped to the scene. Here we see a reverse angle take on her and Helena flying into the exploding boom tube tower which ends up taking them to E1.

The war might be over, the Apokalips forces might have been teleported away with no way back, but the victory is a bittersweet one. This Earth has lost all its heroes. All of them. And this issue takes place 5 years ago!

Well we met Al Pratt already.

Now we learn the narrator much of this issue is Alan Scott putting together a broadcast commerating the event. It is hard to get a great feel for Alan Scott in this brief scene but he comes across as a bit smarmy and cocky, almost a Tony Stark sort of personality. I read the DC Archives of the classic GL stories a while ago. I don't think this is an homage to his origins.

And Mercury appears again. This time he tells a slacker Jay Garrick, a kid fresh from college with no direction, a guy just dumped by his girlfriend for not growing up, that the world needs a hero.

Jay as a directionless slacker trying to find his way? Hey, don't get me wrong, I love 'the hero's journey' as a character path. But Jay Garrick?

I know ... I know. I am an older guy who has read comics for over 3 decades. Maybe my time is up and the world is ready for a new Jay Garrick. And it was getting tougher and tougher to explain how that generation fought the Nazis and were still active.

But I don't know if this is a rebirth for these characters? Or an undermining of what they have been for so long? As I say, good stories trump everything so I guess we'll see. If I could accept a holy angel protoplasm/toubled youth as Supergirl, surely I can accept a young Jay Garrick ... assuming the quality is there.

And for a first issue, this wasn't bad, doing what it needed to do. It set the table. This is a world without heroes still recovering from the horrors of this interdimensional war. The world is a pock-mocked mess. What is coming that will spur the birth of a new generation of heroes? But as I said above, the million dollar question is are readers interested in a young and untested JSA nouveau. I wonder ...

I suppose that I will get the next issue to see just where this is all going. Certainly, Nicola Scott's art is engaging enough to warrant another issue.

Bullet Review: Earth 2 #0


I suppose that DC's Zero Month accomplished one of its goals when I picked up Earth 2 #0 this week. The purpose of the month is to provide a jumping on point for readers, an origin story of sorts to drum up some sales. I don't plan on grabbing as many zero issues as I did first issues of the DCnU but I was intrigued enough by Earth 2 and the idea of seeing that world's Superman again to pick this issue up.

Did it interest me enough to get me to go back and grab the issues I missed? To add the book to my pull list?

Written by James Robinson with art by Tomas Giorello, the issue tells the origin of "Mr. 8", the eighth Wonder (or super-hero) on the planet. Templated from another famous Earth 2 hero, Mr. 8 turns out to be the perfect representative of the DCnU, a dark persona who thinks himself a hero, who is willing to kill if he must.

This won't be my typical long review, just some bullets on the key parts of the book.

So this book takes place before the events of Earth 2 #1, so Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman are still fighting off Darkseid and his troops.

But this Trinity (or Ternion as Wonder Woman named them) aren't the only heroes on this world. Robin and Supergirl we knew about. (Nice fierce Supergirl by Giorello here.) Catwoman we kind of knew about.

And then there is Mr. 8, Terry Sloan, a government operative.

And a mystery hero ... someone unnamed. I don't know if I should know who this is, if it is something revealed in the issues I missed or if it is a mystery. But things like that grab my attention as a fan. Who is missing from a classic Earth 2 model that doesn't include the 'new heroes' of Green Lanter, Flash, Atom, and Hawkgirl?

Could it be Dr. Fate? The Spectre? The Crimson Avenger? Ma Hunkle??

Now Sloan is of course a riff on the classic take of Mr. Terrific. Of course, the original Sloan believed in Fair Play to the point of putting on fighting togs to right wrongs. What is this Sloan like?

Well, it turns out he is sick of this war mostly because it is a stalemate. He can't deal with simply stemming the tide of Darkseid's siege. He wants to win the war.

And in trying to find a way to boom tube the fight to Apokalips, he instead uncovers the existence of the multiverse. These visions either give him great clarity or make him mad. It is hard to tell.

But there is some interesting stuff in those visions. We see what looks to be the Michael Holt Mr. Terrific holding a gun over a dead body. One looks like Magog swinging an axe. The other looks like three shadows - Magog, Darkseid, Pandora?

So those shapshots also grabbed my interest. I love comic mysteries, or trying to figure out hints of things to come.

A large number of humans on Earth 2 have become basically zombies, mesmerized by the Anti-Life equation into slaves for Darkseid.

Mr. 8 realized the heroes can never win the war if these innocents are on the battlefield. The heroes won't want to hurt them. The heroes' plans will be hindered by these enthralled troops. Seeing those other realities, Sloan knows he has to eliminate them from the scenario. And so he develops 'opal Kryptonite' which temporarily enrages Superman. And while the others try to hold Superman at bay, Sloan detonates a device which razes the enslaved cities from the planet. It was great to see this world's heroes working together, seamless in their victories.

So first off, could Opal Kryptonite have some vague connection to Opal City, where Robinson's Starman was set?

But more importantly, when we saw these flaming pits on the scarred Earth in the first issue, I assumed they were Fire Pits set up by Darkseid. So having them be self-inflicted cautery by one the Earth heroes was a nice twist.Very nice.

We know that Mr. 8 was right. The heroes won the war albeit it at a great cost. But as he broods ... like Ozymandias ... he wonders if he is the hero or the villain.

So three nice plot hooks to grab me ... the eighth hero, the glimpses of futures, and the Fire Pit twist. I suppose that is what a zero issue should do. Grab me.

But Mr. 8 is a mockery of the memory of the Terry Sloan 'Fair Play' Mr. Terrific. He is yet another hero willing to kill ... here mass murder. It was that complete reimagining of beloved characters like Alan Scott and Jay Garrick that made me not pick up Earth 2past the first issue.That's not what Earth 2 classically means to me.

So will I pick up this title moving forward?

I don't know. I don't think so ... but I never can tell these things until the next issue is in front of me.

Still, James Robinson wrote a compelling issue which has me contemplating buying this title, something I didn't think I would want to do. Kudos to him!

Fonte: http://comicboxcommentary.blogspot.com.br/

Nenhum comentário:

Postar um comentário