Showing posts with label Comics Reviews. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Comics Reviews. Show all posts

5/30/12

Green Lantern: New Guardians #9 Review


The Blue Lanterns have probably been the most highly regarded of the new groups from Geoff Johns' exploration of the emotional spectrum yet they have not been given a lot of page time outside of Saint Walker.  With Green Lantern: New Guardians #9 the embodiment of all the Hope in the universe takes center stage as their base of operations comes under attack from the Reach.

5/21/12

Green Lantern Corps #9 Review

It was only a matter of time before John Stewart's decision making was going to get him in trouble, and right or wrong he has ended up on the wrong end of the Alpha Lanterns.  Green Lantern Corps #9 forces John to acknowledge what really happened to Kirrt back in issue 6.  With his actions now in question as well as his character, things are looking too good for John Stewart.

5/19/12

Green Lantern #9 Review


We know that there's a lot of things in store for the Green Lantern universe based on the August solicitations and the reveal on Free Comic Book Day that there's a new member of the Corps on Earth that was originally drawn to be Hal Jordan but changed.  I've speculated that the new Green Lantern might be Black Hand and recently on our podcast indicated that I have a hunch that Carol Ferris is going to meet an unfortunate end. While I'm loving all the things we have to speculate about I'm geeking out more about the overall quality of the Green Lantern books.  With issue nine in the post-relaunch Green Lantern series we have some history that's been played at since Blackest Night finally realized in what it the penultimate chapter in "The Secret of the Indigo Tribe".

Red Lanterns #9 Review


Since the very beginning of the Red Lanterns series there has been a slow, and some would say too slow, buildup towards a confrontation between Atrocitus and Bleez for control of the Red Lantern Corps.  Issue nine brings us a head to head confrontation between the two, but whether or not it is a satisfying confrontation or not depends on what the reader is hoping to see happen.

5/1/12

Green Lantern: New Guardians #8 Review


Kyle Rayner and the New Guardians survived their first run in with Invictus and now, free from the Orrery but burdened with the task of taking down Larfleeze, the group of unlikely allies literally need to recharge before going after Agent Orange.  Of course things don't go as planned since quite a bit has changed in the universe since the New Guardians had contact with the outside universe and how each member reacts drives the events in issue eight.

4/25/12

Green Lantern Corps #8 Review


After last month's pause in the action and the emotional story of Kirrt's family in issue seven, the eighth issue of Green Lantern Corps launches into the "Alpha War" as John Stewart begins to face the consequences of his actions during the Keeper battle.  Writer Peter Tomasi takes this first issue of his next arc to lay the foundation for a story that is likely to be filled with all the drama and action we've come to expect from him.

4/11/12

Green Lantern 8 Review


We know that there a very big story on the horizon for the Green Lantern books but right now both Hal and Sinestro have a bit of a problem that goes by the name of the Indigo Tribe to deal with.  When last we read in issue seven both men were being held prisoner and Sinestro looked like he was about the get indoctrinated into the Tribe.  This issue takes us to the midway point in the "Secret of the Indigo Tribe" story arc and as one would expect, things are about to get a lot worse before they get any better.

Red Lanterns #8 Review


It's no secret that I've felt that Red Lanterns has been a bit of a let down and I've made it a point to try to let it stand on its own merits and not color my opinion with my own preconceived notion of what the title should be by focusing on what it is.  I really felt that issue 7 was a step in the right direction and that the book had finally found a focus with the arrival of Rankorr and a brewing civil war.  Issue 8 adds another plot to the mix which could render the civil war a meaningless affair as the ghosts of Atrocitus' past comes back to haunt him in a most volatile way.

3/31/12

Green Lantern: New Guardians #7 Review


Green Lantern: New Guardians has had a wonderful buildup in terms of bringing together characters which should be at each others' throats and slowly melding them together into a unique team.  While they certainly aren't friends (yet), the alliance being built between the various Corps of the emotional spectrum is compelling and it's what motivates me to look forward to this title each and every month.  Tony Bedard's solid writing and Tyler Kirkham's great artwork doesn't hurt, either.  This week's seventh issue of the series provides some more great character moments and a compelling back story for Invictus - and perhaps a little bit more in terms of DC's cosmic history.  

The Story -
Saint Walker remains the last New Guardian standing from the assault of Invictus in issue six and the Blue Lantern's attempt to heal Invictus' pain is rewarded with getting a glimpse at the distant past when Invictus was one of many beings from the Vegan star system who brought peace and prosperity to the planets in the system such as Okaara, Tamaran and, surprisingly, Maltus.  

3/21/12

Green Lantern Corps #7 Review


With the battle with the Keepers over all that's left to do is pick up the pieces and honor the dead.  This is the focus of issue seven of Green Lantern Corps and the repercussions of John Stewart's decision in issue six to break Kirrt's neck start to emerge as he chooses to deliver the fallen comrade's body to his family.

The Story -
On Oa Morro delivers Kirrt's final rites in the crypts of Oa and it quickly becomes clear that John Stewart has witheld the true nature of Kirrt's last moments, painting him as the one who broke them free from their captivity and dying in the process.  Guy Gardner is called before the Guardians who begin to take him to task for executing two Sinestro Corps members to gain an advantage against the Keepers but the human relates his actions to those of the United States at the end of World War II and the choice to kill thousands in order to presumably save millions.

3/17/12

Green Lantern #7 Review



The Secret of the Indigo Tribe is a story arc I've really be looking forward to since Geoff Johns first mentioned it a while ago.  Of all the groups making use of the power of the emotional spectrum the enigmatic Indigo Tribe has really sparked my curiosity with their unusual language and the way in which they are chosen and, well, perhaps indoctrinated into the group.  Plus there's the intriguing connection between the Tribe and Abin Sur that  sparks a bit of creative speculation about how Hal's predecessor might connect to them which fuels me between issues.  This week the seventh issue of the post relaunch Green Lantern title kicks off the new story arc and it looks like we are in for another spectacular journey.

Red Lanterns #7 Review



There have been a lot of plots running through the Red Lanterns series but as many fans will point out there doesn't seem to have been a traditionally defined storyline through the first six issues.  That's not to say that the book has been completely scatter-shot as we've started to see some cross between the various plotlines.  In issue six most of the pages were dedicated to establishing Rankorr as the second Red Lantern of Earth, but unlike Dex-Starr the human recruit has shown to be a little different than most members of the rage brigade.  This issue starts to pull some of these subplots together and it seems that we are on a collision course for a major upheaval in the ranks of the Red Lanterns.

2/24/12

Green Lantern: New Guardians #6 Review


Last month's issue of Green Lantern: New Guardians ended on a great note with the visage of Invictus rising from the center of the Orrery vessel to confront Kyle Rayner and his fellow New Guardians.  Kyle's barely held together band had made their way to the surfaces of several worlds making up the solar system sized ship and the inhabitants called forth their protector, a being the likes of which we haven't seen before.  This issue the unlikely allies come face to face with Invictus, a being of mysterious origin that has a unique history with Larfleeze.

The Story -
On Tamaran, or a reasonable facsimile of the planet, Kyle and Glomulus attempt to warn the rest of the New Guardians about the coming of Invictus, however his Green Lantern ring is giving him problems in trying to use it to contact other agents of the emotional spectrum.  Kyle manages to get off a message to them all and urges them to regroup before Invictus can defeat them in smaller numbers.

2/20/12

Green Lantern Corps #6 Review


The War between the Green Lantern Corps and the Keepers reaches the final chapter but the events that unfold in Green Lantern Corps #6 create ripples that will be felt in this title for months to come with John Stewart once again making the tough choices needed to assure peace.  Guy Gardner and his band of action heroes make their assault on the Keeper home-world of Urak with their living fear bomb ready for their final assault in hopes of saving John Stewart and their fellow lanterns and preventing the Keepers from taking the central power battery.

The Story - 
On board the Interceptor Guy Gardner and his team are enroute to Urak with their fear bomb, the Sinestro Corps members known as Fat Man and Littleboy.  Meanwhile the leader of the Keepers continues to torture John Stewart and his fellow Green Lantern prisoners of war.  As their plan unfurls we learn that the portal being used by the Keepers are powered by members of their culture who keep the stargate powered by the energy of will absorbed by them during their time living in close proximity to all of the power batteries that were once stored on Urak.

2/17/12

Green Lantern #6 Review


The Sinestro Corps has been defeated and Hal Jordan is holding hands with Carol Ferris again, so all's quiet in the Green Lantern universe, right?  Yeah we know that's not true with the Guardians scheming to replace the Green Lantern Corps with the Third Army to be led by the mysterious First Lantern, plus there's the matter of the Keepers and Invictus in other corners of the galaxy as threats looming on the horizon.  But Geoff Johns takes the sixth issue as a break from all the cosmic hubbub to let us catch our breath, stopping to smell the roses for a moment before plunging Hal Jordan and readers back into the fight.

The Story -
Hal's drug of choice
Hal and Carol are deep in love again with Hal able to finally put her before the ring, but it's not all as wonderful as it seems when Hal uses Carol's bathroom break as a chance to get his adrenaline fix by getting in a fight that lasts just long enough for him to get back in time before Carol can get suspicious.  

2/5/12

Red Lanterns #6 Review


It's no secret that I haven't had the same enthusiasm for Red Lanterns as I'd like to have, but the book is still the first one I read for the week it comes out.  Part of that certainly from my bias as a Green Lantern fan, but the main reason is that I look forward to seeing if the latest issue makes the connection with me that I want it to.  The sixth issue promises to bring some of the plot threads together and it's my hope that that we'll finally be getting some cohesion and a solid direction for the series.

The Story -
Issue five ended with John Moore's recruitment as the new member of the Red Lantern Corps and this issue opens with an inner monologue as we live through the transformation from his perspective.  John, or Jack as he prefers to be called, is unaware of what's happening to him, but the words and actions of the police how beat his brother to death echo in his mind and trigger flashbacks to points in his life where Jack was bullied by others.  His attempts to warn the police to get away result in the horrifying death of one them as Jack struggles to communicate through his new rage-filled persona.  Taking to the sky John Moore begins to question what he has become as a result the changes he's going through.

John Moore's life is one that is one we can relate to, but is it powerful enough to warrant a red ring? 
On Ysmault the confrontation between Atrocitus and Bleez rages on and the moment that their tension has built to materializes when Bleez calls for new leadership.  Surrounded by his Corps Atrocitus is called out by Skallox, providing a moment of relief for Bleez who was about to be killed by her superior.  As the Red Lantern begins to explain  himself to his followers he suddenly realizes that he and they have somehow all been changed, hinting that Bleez may be infected them in some manner.

Atrocitus realizes something has changed, and not for the better
Back on Earth John Moore reaches out for a connection that might help calm the fierce emotions boiling inside him, flying to the cemetery where his grandfather is buried.  Rather than the peaceful solace he hoped to find the sight of the tombstone sends Moore even further over the edge until he finds a target to focus his now uncontrollable rage on, the man how killed his grandfather and indirectly brought about the death of his brother Ray.

Find the police cruiser transporting Baxter, John Moore attacks the vehicle and knocks it off the road.  Confronting the frightened Baxter John Moore uses his grandfather's headstone to begin bashing the man's head in when a familiar green light gets in the way.  The issue closes with Guy Gardner standing before Moore, telling the Red Lantern they need to have a talk - and that means fight in Gardner-ese.

John's transformation and inner dialogue are the high point of this issue. 
The Writing -
I enjoyed getting into Moore's head this issue and seeing how his humanity is struggling to stay alive on the slippery slope towards the inevitable consumption by his rage.  My assumption is that the fact that he's human is making his indoctrination a bit different, and while that might sound like an easy way out I think it allows us to learn more about the Red Lanterns and how their transformation changes them.  I'm not sure why he needs to be called Rankorr other than the play on the word rancor - or perhaps an ode to the Star Wars beast.

The scenes on Ysmault remain a muddled mess to me.  We now have this battle for supremacy in front of the Red Lanterns as their main plot and the missing body of Krona, the stealing of the Red Lantern ring that led to Bleez's appearance in New Guardians, and the other little subplots are still dangling threads that seem to be going nowhere.  

Apparently the Krona subplot will see an answer soon, but from my perspective the title just lacks focus, but I've been thinking about this a bit since reading the most recent issue and I'm wondering if this might just be intentional.  The thing about rage and anger is that it makes it very difficult to remained focused on any one thing for too long.  Is Peter Milligan intentionally trying to show us that the Red Lanterns lack the ability to control themselves effectively by moving between these threads without resolution as a way to illustrate how the rage controls the Red Lanterns more than they do the emotion?  Maybe it's wishful thinking on my part, but the Blue Lantern in me in hoping so.

The one thing I have to say about the choice of John Moore as a Red Lantern is that his rage isn't very strong.  Sure a life of being bullied leads to a lot of pent up anger, I can relate to that, but I can't help but think of a number of other situations that are very present in our world with much more power behind them and would have had more impact than what we've seen here.  

The Art -
I love Ed Benes for the most part, but I do think he continues to go out of his way for some gratuitous T and A that makes for more distraction than anything else.  As I read this issue one thing in particular also stood out to me and that was the lack of detail in so many panels.  So of that may be in the inking and coloring, but a lot of it is just backgrounds that have nothing in them. I also think that after seeing Atrocitus show up in the pages of Green Lantern: New Guardians #5 I really miss how ferocious and terrifying he used to look before we got this kinder, simpler Atrocitus.

What Do I Think?
This issue is better than most of the others in that I feel like we're finally starting to see some direction for this title, but I remain concerned that this is all happening too late for the title.  Red Lanterns #1 sold well at nearly 74,000 copies and by the fourth issue that number dropped down to just over 50,000 and dropping, a signal that the book hasn't found a stable audience yet.  The fifth issue was the number forty book for January so it doesn't seem like it's in trouble yet, but if the sales continue to fall something is going to happen to this book in the form of a creative shift or cancellation.

Issue six makes a step in the right direction in some ways, but fumbles over itself in others.  Three out of five lanterns.




1/28/12

Green Lantern: New Guardians #5 Review


At the end of issue four of Green Lantern: New Guardians the huge solar system sized ship called the Orrery made its debut after entering our universe through a gigantic white hole, leaving the New Guardians with a huge mystery on their hands.  Guardian Sayd has sensed an ominous presence on the Orrery, but who or what is it becomes the topic of this week's fifth issue.

The Story -
Reaching the galactic core the New Guardians are confronted with the enormity of the imposing ship, the Orrery.  Kyle's scans of the ships that preceded Sayd to the white hole reveals them to be completely empty less than a day since the Guardian and the ships' crews witnessed the arrival of the mammoth vessel.  Arkillo is not impressed with the disappearance of the beings and is instead intent upon wreaking terror on the beings inside the Orrery who caused the power rings to leave their bearers way back in the first issue.  Kyle's attempt to setting the Sinestro Corps member down backfires and Arkillo's temper flares as he lashes out at Saint Walker who last issue restored the creature's tongue in a scene that revealed more than Arkillo was comforatable with.

The planets in the Orrery prove to be unable to be scanned, promptly the uneasy alliance of the New Guardians to be split into teams to explore the vast ship.  Despite Arkillo's anger towards the Blue Lantern the only thing he opposes more is Kyle's decision to pair him with Glomulus so Saint Walker offers to team with Arkillo instead, leaving Kyle to work alongside Larfleeze's minion.  

Despite Arkillo's seeming hatred of Saint Walker, he's still a better choice in teammates that Glomulus
Meanwhile Bleez arrive on Ysmault and we now see where to New Guardians and Red Lanterns title interconnect with a scene that dovetails with event that transpire between the second and third issue of Red Lanterns and Bleez being cast into the Blood Ocean.  The scene reveals that Atrocitus chose Bleez to be the one he chooses in part because she cannot articulate what happened to the stolen ring. 

A slave to his desires
On Okarra we see that Sayd is monitoring the actions of the New Guardians for Larfleeze, who is dining.  The conversation between them reveals that this whole endeavor is an attempt by Agent Orange to protect  himself from his past.  Sayd warns that the New Guardians will end up discovering the truth about Larfleeze but the Orange Lantern is prepared to deal with that so long as the New Guardians can stop "him".....at least so long as they don't damage the Orrery, Larfleeze's next prized possession.  

Glomulus and Kyle Rayner breach the hull of one of the planets in the Orrery and we learn a bit more about the nature of the Orange Lanterns.  While it's been believed that the Orange Lanterns are constructs of the beings that Agent Orange has slain to keep possession of the power battery of avarice, Glomulus reveals to Rayner that his is perhaps a bit more than that and that he possesses his own free will.

Saint Walker and Arkillo have likewise breached the hull of another planet, revealing beings with orange skin and fiery hair who fly up to meet them.  The beings welcome them to Tamaran, the home world of Starfire.  Not much is known about the post-relaunch version of Tamaran, but whether this is really Tamaran or a world that they think is Tamaran remains to be seen.  The beings ask the two New Guardians if they were sent by the "archangel" and so Saint Walker requests that they tell him all they know about their mysterious protector.

Fatality and Munk have likewise entered one of the planets in the Orrery, one which Fatality finds oddly familiar.  Munk finds the dichotomy between her former life and her new role as a Star Sapphire an odd contradiction while she notes that Munk movements reveal a military background that flies in the face of being an agent for compassion.   While Fatality was willing to share information about her transformation, the Indigo Tribesman remains a brick wall through which his story will not pass.

The mystery behind Munk is teased just as the Indigo Tribe is about to be a focal point in the main title.
The two are attacked by the indigenous beings on the planet and their leader recognizes Fatality's fighting style, inquiring about where she learned it.  When the Star Sapphire mentions Okaara the leader proclaims the planet they are on to be Okaara itself, leading again to the notion that the beings have been transplanted without their knowledge and providing a link between the "archangel" and Larfleeze.

 Kyle Rayner and Glomulus touch down on the surface of the tenth world in the Orrery and the people there run in fear from the little orange being.  The two fly by a statue of an imposing looking man as the planet dwellers call upon the "archangel" to protect them.  A conversation with a hooded figure reveals that Glomulus bears the mark of the "beast", the archenemy of their protector.  A statue reveals that Larfleeze is the beast in question and as a claxon begins to sound we learn that the "archangel" is being summoned.

The scene shifts to the sun at the center of the Orrery as slowly a figure begins to emerge.  Invictus, the archangel, rises to reveal himself as the issue comes to a close and starting the painful wait until we get to see more about the newest threat to the universe.

The Writing -
I really have to give Tony Bedard a lot of credit for handling a cast so diverse as this and giving each one the subtle nudges they need to explore the emotional spectrum while not developing the characters at the expense of the plot.  A little bit is revealed about the nature of some of the Corps while we also learn about the ring bearers themselves, which is one of the biggest draws to this title for me.  And he pulls back the curtain just enough to whet your appetite and then moves on, leaving you wanting so much more.

Meanwhile we have the mystery of Tamaran and Okaara - are they the real planets or have the populace of those worlds just been transplanted?  Either way it's clear that the Orrery and Invictus have been to our universe on more than one occasion seemingly unnoticed.  And what of the history between Invictus and Larfleeze?  I'm really looking forward to finding that one out!

Speaking of Larfleeze, while he only has a minor presence in this issue his panel time is used for the maximum effect.  Bedard deftly avoids going too far with the comedy but also uses it to underscore how much Larfleeze is a slave to his own appetites and desires, a tragic figure ruled by his hunger for more so much that he is lost in it.  While on the flipside we learn that there is still so much to him that we don't yet know.

If I find any fault with the writing in this issue it's in the Red Lanterns scene.  On one hand as a reader it is great to see the inter-connectivity between this title and Red Lanterns and learning now how the events of that title dovetail with this one.  But where I'm left scratching my head is in seeing Atrocitus being very focused on the loss of the red ring to the point that this leads his decision making on determining who to throw in the Blood Ocean, but yet it's never referred to in the Red Lantern title once Bleez emerges an enlightened Red Lantern.  So while I'm glad to see that connection it does increase the feelings I have about the fractured nature of the Red Lanterns title.

The Art -
The rise of Invictus!
I love the sense of scale that Tyler Kirkham brings to the design of the Orrery, although I did noticed a coloring error on the opening splashpage where Saint Walker's energy trail was more orange than blue.    However that's one small thing in an issue filled with great images that helps bring Bedard's story to life.

I particularly liked the work on Atrocitus who once again looks best when he's ferocious and merciless, and likewise the art really punctuates the great sequence between Sayd and Larfleeze who has never looked better than his appearances in this title.  

As for the rise of Invictus - well, I have to say this it's one of the best moments graphically for me in any of the Green Lantern family of books since the relaunch and the impact of those panels really made me feel like Invictus is going to be a force to be reckoned with.

What Do I Think?
Initially I wasn't sure how much I'd like the New Guardians title, but five issues in and it's the book I look the more forward to after the main Green Lantern title.  And that says a lot about the book for someone like me who has never really liked Kyle Rayner to admit.  While it's the exploration and of the color spectrum and the cosmic science fiction elements that are bringing me to this book month after month, I truly am enjoying this series and this is the best issue yet.  Five out of five lanterns.



1/22/12

Green Lantern Corps #5 Review


It's the calm before the storm in this week's issue of the Green Lantern Corps and as both side prepare for war the mystery of the relationship between the Keepers and Guardians is exposed.  Guy assembles his strike force while John and the rest of the captive Green Lanterns are submitted to all matters of torture in an attempt to pry the information the Keepers need to breech Oan airspace.

The Story -
Where's a Snake Plissken reference when you need one?
Guy Gardner inerrupts Kilowog's training to get information about the toughest members the Corps has to offer (outside of himself, of course), but little does the human know that four of the roughest members have a secret hangout underneath Warriors and have been making liberal use of the bar's stock.  After discovering the hangout of the "Mean Machine" Guy recruits the four members unwinding there: Lee, Bronchuk, Aldo and Flint.  

Gardner's team, the four members of the Mean Machine, Hannu, Sheriff, Isamot Kol and Brik, are briefed by the Martian Manhunter, who shares the history of the Keepers.  Urak was a world with a unique structure that allowed the Guardians to tune the power rings and batteries in such a way that a portal would allow Green Lanterns to store their batteries on the planet's surface to be summoned when needed.  This was a measure that  answered the problem caused by the need for a recharge at inopportune times for Green Lanterns; a situation that led to more than a few deaths.

However Urak was inhabited by a species who was barely surviving on the sparse resources that the planet provided, so the Guardians struck a deal with the Urakians wherein they would be provided for in exchange for  tending to the power batteries.  The batteries in turn provided energy that fed the planet and allowed it to thrive while also infusing the force of will into the Urakians' DNA.  Then, for some unknown reason, the Guardians removed the batteries from Urak without notice, leaving the Urakians to fend for themselves on a rapidly dying world, leading them to respond by stealing the resources of others and now plotting to regain their connection to the power of will by taking the Central Power Battery.

With that the Martian Manhunter disappears and the team begins to think that the Keepers might be able to be overcome with fear, prompting Guy to think of using one of the Sinestro Corps members as a fear bomb.  They'll also need some guns, so after stowing their living fear bomb on an Interceptor the team sets out to get some weaponry.

Meanwhile the leader of the Keepers is torturing John Stewart and his fellow imprisoned Green Lanterns on Urak.  The mission of the Keepers is a very personal one for them having lost so much and survived the harsh existence that they have faced since the Guardians reneged on their agreement.  Promising to remove the ring finger from every Green Lantern and plant them in the Emerald Plains all the Keepers need to execute their strategy is a way to break through the forcefield surrounding Oa, but the resolve of John and his team continues to be a barrier that cannot be broken.

The scene between John and his captors is a highlight of this issue
The Green, the Bad, and the Ugly!
In deep space the Interceptor and her crew inserts themselves into a cosmic arms deal and achieve their goal of stealing the weapons they need to take the war to the Keepers and free their fellow Green Lanterns.  With that the issue comes to a close, promising an action filled conclusion to the first story arc in next month's sixth issue.

The Writing -
 This issue has some great high points and the reader can't help but see the connections between the Man Machine and the casts of action films over the years.  So since we're going there, here's the Good, the Bad and the Ugly about this issue from a writing perspective.

The Good - The whole sequence between the leader of the Keepers and John's team is superb.  After witnessing the well told story of the Keepers it's very easy to understand and empathize with their plight despite the severity of their response to being stripped of the existence they had as a result of their good faith agreement with the Guardians.  The leader of the Urakians in particular is a character I hope survives the melee to follow next month.  Likewise I really enjoyed the dialogue between Guy and Salaak about taking extreme measures to fix another Guardian mess, a recurring problem that hints that there is so much more going on behind the scenes that we don't know yet with regard to the Guardians and their actions both past and present.  

The Bad - While I think the references to old action movies is kind of a neat idea I'll admit that I found it distracting due to the heavy handedness of the characterizations, names and likenesses of the Mean Machine.  Lee, Flint, Bronchuk and Aldo are such obvious amalgams of people like Lee Marvin, Clint Eastwood, Charles Bronson and Arnold Schwarzenegger with perhaps some Lee Van Cleef, Chuck Norris and Brad Pitt's character Aldo from Inglorious Bastards thrown in for good measure.  It's not clever like Geneva spelled backwards in the "Treaty of Av-eneg" in issue four or Isamot being Tomais backwards and it just comes off as lazy writing to me.  We know not everyone is going to survive, gee what characters might that be?  And don't get me started on the Fat Man and Little Boy......

The Ugly - Last month the Martian Manhunter stated he'd be wiping Gardner's mind when their encounter was over and in this issue you get the impression that he he did just that when he leaves the team behind and  Guy's conversation falters, but later on Gardner references J'onzz in his dialogue with Salaak - a bad case of not following your own continuity.  Do Green Lanterns really need to resort to guns other than to complete the action movie shtick?

The Art - 
Like the writing the art has some ups and downs this issue.  I love the character design work Fernando Pasarin put in on the leader of the Keepers and the work on him really drives home the intensity of the Tomasi's dialogue.  Likewise the whole sequence where we learn the story behind the Keepers is very engaging and the panel design work is very creative.

On the downside I have a problem seeing the Mean Machine look like they walked off the set of a war movie and slapped a Green Lantern logo on their clothes.  These are not men who would be a part of a galactic peace force in my mind and the terminator like appearance of Aldo just pushed the cheese factor over the edge for me.  Likewise the weapons resemble Earth weapons waaaayyyy too much for my tastes.

What Do I Think?
Issue five had a great potential to be a great build-up for the conclusion of the first story arc for the Green Lantern Corps title, but it falls short with the heavy handed way that it compares this story to war and action  films of American cinema rather than letting the reader do that themselves.  What I'm sure was planned to be a great penultimate chapter in an outstanding story instead reads like a bit of a lazy effort depending on  how much leeway the reader is willing to give the creative team.  Three out of five lanterns.


1/16/12

Green Lantern #5 Review


Issue five of Green Lantern brings the "Sinestro" arc to a close in a story which spent as much time exploring the psyches of the two main characters as it did pitting them against the Sinestro Corps.  In the background the decision of the Guardians and the fate of the whole Green Lantern Corps begins to emerge in what may be the greatest threat to cosmic free will.

The Story -
Issue #4 left off with Sinestro being confronted with power ring wielding Korugarians bent on exacting revenge on the Green Lantern for the actions which originally got him expelled from the Corps.  We pick up right where we left off with Arsona, the main person who supported Sinestro in his rise to power, rallying her fellow Korugarians to strike back at Sinestro, to overcome their fear of him so that their rings will work.  Despite Hal's attempts to dissuade her from wasting precious energy Sinestro is able to goad Arsona into firing a blast so powerful that it knocks Hal on his butt in the adjoining cell.  

However, like Hal's construct ring the rest of them cannot harm Sinestro - a fact he used along with his somewhat cruel motivational technique to illustrate to his captive brethren how to use their new found power.  Hal again tries to insert himself into the dialogue from afar, but Sinestro is the one who's the mastermind behind the escape plan and he reminds everyone that while they are trapped inside Sinestro's battery is not.

Professor Insidd sees Sinestro's battery as the key to breaking the Green Lantern and it has all of his attention knowing that, should he be able to defeat Sinestro, he will become the leader of their Corps.  Staring intently into the battery as he notices a change in it, the battery burst free and heads towards the holding cell, instantly killing Insidd in a horrific fashion.

Reunited with his battery Sinestro frees everyone and the battle ensues as Hal recharges his ring and joins the fray.  He and Sinestro head toward the yellow Central Battery knowing that the construct rings the Korugarians wield only have minutes of life in them with Sinestro commenting that he couldn't have made them any stronger without breaking his own ring, something he has done twice before by pushing them past their limit.

Johns continues to make sure Sinestro is more than we ever thought he was.
Sinestro says that Hal's attempt to de-power the Yellow Lanterns was flawed because it did it wrong, but in reality the failed attempt came as a result of the battery mistaking Hal for Sinestro.  Sinestro drops a line that the experience may have done something to Jordan, but it's brushed aside as the rings Sinestro constructed begin to fade, making the chore of shutting down the central battery an immediate priority.  

A taunt, or is there more to this than meets the eye?
Sinestro uses his Green Lantern battery to funnel the yellow energy and pushing the yellow central battery to go into survival mode and pulling the energy from any of the yellow power rings in their proximity.  Apparently the Yellow Lantern Corps rings also shut down their bearers' minds should this happen, perhaps a fail-safe that Sinestro had built into them in case of power struggle in his Corps that he couldn't handle any other way.  

Mirroring the scene in Green Lantern #2 the Korugarians begin to cheer Sinestro for saving them, however on Korugar Sinestro holds the planet and its people in higher regard and addresses them as equals, telling the children that he does not deserve to be cheered.  That sentiment is mirrored by Arsona who tells Sinestro despite his apology that he will never be welcomed by his people and warning him that any return would be greeted with violence.

With the Yellow Lantern Corps and their central battery in tow Hal and Sinestro make their way to Oa.  Sinestro points out to Hal that the Guardians are a bigger threat to the universe than he ever was, that all he wanted was order.   Hal turns that around on Sinestro, pointing out that for him it's more about control than order and casting doubt on Sinestro's own self-doubts.  Calling into question Sinestro's guilt and accepting his failing Hal is jettisoned back to Earth complete with the power ring he was promised but sans a battery with which to charge it.

Arriving on Earth Hal immediately wants to find a power source but then stops himself realizing it's not really what he wants most.  At Ferris aircraft Hal stifles Carol's confrontation with a kiss and then has one of the most honest dialogues with her he has in the fifty two years he's been around, asking for a second chance knowing that it will never work for them, but hoping they have the will and the love to make it work this time.  Proving math isn't his strong suit Carol corrects him about the number of chances she's given him and the two embrace.

The most honest conversation Hal has probably ever had.
Switching gears to Oa, the Guardians of the Universe knew that Sinestro would defeat his own Corps and with the yellow power battery stored on Oa they believe it is now time to move forward with the formation of the Third Army.  This calls for freeing the First Lantern, referred to during the "War of the Green Lanterns" by Krona, from a place called the Chamber of Shadows to lead the Third Army.  Alluding to the other inhabitants of the chamber as obstacles the issue ends with the proclamation that anyone who stands in their way will die.

The Writing - 
Geoff Johns really stepped up his game this issue and tied up all the plot strings from this first arc in a great bundle while still leaving a few bits of connective tissue to tie it into coming events.  While Korugar is free once again both Sinestro and Hal Jordan have been changed by the experience and they have become stronger characters for it.  One only has to look at Johns' handling of Hal in the Justice League title to see that five years later his is more self-aware and reflective than they guy who called dibs on Wonder Woman after seeing her for the first time.  Likewise Sinestro may have just learned a little bit of humility although no one should expect it to be something we see on his well controlled features.

There are a number of points to ponder with the events of this issue both in terms of character and plot development.  While I'd be delighted to see Hal and Carol finally work it out and be able to balance their relationship with the baggage they bring to it, theirs has always been one fated to fail in light of Hal's greater responsibilities.  I don't know if the ninth time's the charm or not, but I trust Johns to make it interesting.

The line about Hal being changed by the yellow power battery seems like such a throwaway line but yet we've come to realize that Geoff Johns so rarely writes those kinds of things haphazardly that we have to wonder if something did indeed happen that will play out down the road.  Similarly I don't think that the yellow power battery going to Oa is coincidental and I have to wonder if in the end this is a gambit by Sinestro as an ace up his sleeve if things go South between he and the Guardians.

There's some debate among fan circles that Johns is turning Sinestro into such a strong character that they begin to wonder how Hal could have ever beat him in the first place and have ever been considered the greatest Green Lantern in history.  While I can see that viewpoint I liken this Sinestro to having grown significantly during the time he was sentenced to death in the central power battery.  This Sinestro is in better control of himself yet, Hal can still get under his skin and push the buttons needed to get him off his game.  And I also get that Johns has this philosophy that one side of the hero-villain equation has to grow in order for the other side to and while Hal's return pushed the need to grow Sinestro as a viable threat now it's Sinestro's turn to act as a catalyst that will in turn make Hal rise to the occasion.

And then to the subject of the Third Army, the First Lantern and the Chamber of Shadows.  The Third Army is an interesting concept and one that immediately conjures up the "will ninjas" of the Keepers - a loyal fighting force willing to make the hard decisions and sacrifice themselves for the greater good but still able to think for themselves.  It seems too obvious but knowing the long term real-life friendship between Johns and Green Lantern Corps writer Pete Tomasi it seems certainly likely that their two plots might converge at some point.  The Chamber of Shadows, other than sounding like the title to a Harry Potter novel, is a new concept and I think may reveal more skeletons in the Guardians' closet.

As for the First Lantern, well that is the mystery that I personally find the most interesting.  We've already seen the first Green Lantern if indeed it follows the history of the Green Lantern Corps.  Recent history indicates that story may not exactly be in canon as it reads and I'll be publishing a history on the character in coming days as well as how it might be reinterpreted for this new era.  What makes this so interesting is that they call this character the First Lantern and not the first Green Lantern.

The Guardians weave their tangled web
The Art -
Doug Mahnke does a fabulous job this issue with the action sequences and especially with his work on Sinestro this issue, although a lot of the success should also be credited to the rest of the art team on this issue: Mark Irwin, Keith Champagne, Christian Alamy, Tom Nguyen, Alex Sinclair and Tony Avina.  The color and ink work just brings it all to life and conveys the drama of the moment.  I think the standout scene for this issue for me were the words between Arsona and Sinestro where you can just read the emotion on both of their faces and see the tension that their history has brought to this one moment.  Likewise I had a similar experience in the moments between Hal and Carol where you can see how hard it is for Hal to be so brutally honest but willing himself to be push past the fear of exposing his emotions and Carol's realization that this is a real moment for both of them.  

However I do still find awkward images where Hal doesn't look quite right when he's not being Green Lantern.  Particularly when he arrives back on Earth and there's that closeup of his face where he makes the realization that Carol should be the top priority he's not quite right.  Similarly when he kisses Carol on the next page his jawline and facial shape seems out of sorts.  For me the art in those moments diminished what is otherwise a stellar issue.

What Do I Think?
The first arc of the new run on Green Lantern is over and while this story is not the galactic spanning opus that people seem to expect from Geoff Johns it is the kind of story it needs to be by exploring the characters and being the connective tissue between the last major event and what may be the next big one.  Rather than fill in the necessary quiet before the storm with something meaningless the "Sinestro" arc did a great deal to explore and expand our understanding of Sinestro and Hal Jordan and the relationship between them while fleshing out Sinestro's sordid past.  That and enough tantalizing morsels have been dangled to prepare us for what's to come.

Other than a couple of art missteps this issue was a more than satisfactory conclusion to the story giving it a four out of five lantern ranking.


Red Lanterns #5 Review


Red Lanterns has been a bit of a struggle for me to get as enthusiastic about as the other three books in the Green Lantern family of comics.  While I do enjoy the book and it's always at the top of the stack for the week when it comes out I know that a part of that comes from my love of the franchise.  Likewise my lack of enthusiasm my also be fueled by the expectations being an "uber fan" brings with it, so I frequently have to try to divorce myself from what I want the book to be and enjoy it for what it is and try to be a bit more objective about it.  With that out of the way I still find Red Lanterns to be an interesting exploration of anger despite some shortcomings that continue to keep the book from living up to its full potential.

The Story -
When we last saw Atrocitus at the end of the fourth issue he was standing over the resting place of Krona after find the body of the mad Guardian had vanished.   The fifth issue starts out with him going immediately after Bleez, driven by rage over his paranoid driven feelings that she is trying to undermine his leadership of the Red Lanterns.  

Atrocitus finds Bleez by the Blood Ocean waiting for Skallox, Zilius Zox and Ratchet to emerge from the crimson pool and he immediately confronts her about Krona.  Bleez denies any involvement and suggests that Krona may not be dead after all.  A quick cut away reveals that there is a shadowy being wandering about Ysmault who appears very weak,  hinting that perhaps there is a great deal of merit to Bleez's theory.

After more arguing Bleez is sent into the Blood Ocean to find her three fellow Corpsmen and we see more to Ratchet's back story where we witness his memories of being captured, maimed and tortured by the authorities for his attempt to seek out intimate relations.  Limb removed and force feed nutrients over decades Ratchet loses himself inside his mind until a day comes when the red ring arrives and he begins his new life as a Red Lantern.

Ratchet's fate is both compelling and rage inducing.
Meanwhile Atrocitus discovers the tracks of the mysterious figure and is attacked by him.  It appears that the being wants to talk with the Red Lantern, but when Atrocitus lunges at the figure there is an explosion of blood and then it all goes dark.

Is it Krona, or something more?
Bleez emerges from the Blood Ocean with Ratchet and Zox and the two changed aliens begin to have a dialogue about the nature of their mission as Red Lanterns when Zox alludes to the still missing Skallox.  Under the surface Skallox is still wrestling with his own demons and we see the rest of his story; one of a criminal who is burned alive when his lifestyle catches up with him and he fall prey to the same kind of violent end that he caused others.  Cast aside Skallox's anger swells at the betrayal and his own self loathing as the arrival of a red ring changes his fate.  

Bleez emerges from the Blood Ocean with Skallox and Ratchet makes the observation that the Red Lantern rings don't always come to the innocent who are wronged and that rage also comes to those who wrong others.  Atrocitus arrives and commits his corps to finding Krona before sensing a new ring bearer has been chosen.

Ratchet and Bleez's musings are one of the issue's strongest moments.
On Earth we pick up the story of John Moore and his brother, Ray, who is being taken away for his crimes.  Ray resists arrest and is beaten to death by the three British policemen while John stand idly by.  We see inside of John and learn that he has always been the calm one, but a great anger has always been there, suppressed below the surface.  But now, confronted with the realization that his own fear kept him from expressing the anger and helping his brother, John Moore explodes as years of rage of self hatred burst forth in one giant surge of emotion.  The issue closes with with red ring finding his hand and transforming him into the latest member of the Red Lantern Corps.

The Writing - 
There are a few really good scenes in this issue that start to pull some of the story elements from the past few issues together.  Peter Milligan really makes the reader empathize with Ratchet's plight while juxtaposing that with Skallox's "live by the sword, die by the sword" fate.  While I would have preferred to find out more about Zilius Zox personally, I can see where that might have muddied up the dichotomy that Milligan is trying to illustrate here about the nature of anger and rage by showing how two beings on two completely different paths can find themselves ending up in similar places.  

It's the nature of that exploration that is the best executed part of the issue.  While the mystery of Krona is certainly interesting, the way that the issue cuts to Atrocitus's confrontation with the mysterious being only to abruptly cut away again and then seem so inconsequential that it's not referenced later in the issue when Atrocitus appears again is jarring and disjointed.  In fact when I first read this issue it was the digital version and I found myself taken out of story because I thought that somehow panels were missing.

The big payoff of John Moore's fate also misses the mark.  You knew from their appearance in the first issue that one of them would eventually end up with a red ring and because of John's calm demeanor he was going to be the one because that's exactly what you shouldn't expect given how hot blooded his brother Ray was.  But because this took five issues to play out the ending has absolutely no surprise value to it. 

I understand that police brutality exists but the way in which it's portrayed here seems extremely unrealistic here if it is indeed a literal accounting of the events.  I find it unlikely that the three police officers would beat a man to death and then simply walk away leaving him dead outside his home.   However after re-reading this issue a few times I'm interpreting this particular scene differently simply because I can't accept it the way it looks initially.  So in my mind I'm reading this as the red ring was there and its presence "pushed" the anger levels in all five of them, suggesting to Ray to lash out and to the police officers to react with the anger filled faces we see.

In the end this issue follows a similar pattern of the rest of the series in that each one of the subplots moves forward a bit nudging them ever so slowly to a point of convergence.  While I think it could have been handled a bit better in terms of the pacing and that we could have reached this point two issues ago, I'm still enjoying the series but just not as much as I'd like to.

The Art -
Ed Benes  and Diego Bernard share the art chores on this issue and their art styles compliment each other quite well.  I thought the panel design was very inventive as was the use of the background page colors to show changes in time and place.  I'm still not getting what happened to Ratchet's face and how he can talk without a mouth, but hey, I'll give it a pass since there may be more to that story.

What Do I Think?
I've said this before, but I'm in like with this book and to me that's not what I was hoping for.  While this issue tries to deliver a payoff to the Earth subplot the pacing of the story made the ending far too predictable and lessened the impact it could have had.  Likewise the disjointed progression of the Krona subplot sullies the intrigue that the creative team is trying to create.  However the conclusion to the stories of Ratchet and Skallox are a big plus in the issue as is the solid art work, giving this issue three out of five lanterns.



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