Showing posts with label Green Lantern: Rebirth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Green Lantern: Rebirth. Show all posts

11/9/11

Green Lantern #3 Review


One of the qualities that I've admired about Geoff Johns' run on Green Lantern is the sheer number of "holy crap" moments that catches readers off guard or makes us slap our head in wonder that no one else had come up with something he did when it's right in front of our faces.  Moments like the return of the Anti-Monitor at the onset of the Sinestro Corps War, or the Blackest Night teaser, or the death of the Hawks, or, well, you get the point.  Those moments stand out when you start to look back over the past seven years that Johns has guided this franchise to heights that it has never reached.  Issue number three has two of these moments wrapped inside a book of twenty pages filled with great story and character moments.  So for anyone who thought this series was going to slow down - you're about to be proven wrong.  With that said, let me warn anyone who hasn't read the issue that this review will contain images and details about the issue, so if you don't want to know, read no further.

The Story -
After leaving Hal standing alone in rain in the first issue, Carol Ferris arrives back at her place, symbolically turning over an photo of the two of them to signal that it's over between them despite all they've been through - as if they'll be able to stay away from each other.  Her phone rings and it's Tom Kalmaku, who urges Carol to turn on her television, providing her with the news coverage of Hal and Sinestro at the site of the bridge collapse from last month's Green Lantern #2.  Carol is of course shocked to see Hal with a ring, but can't believe that he is side by side with Sinestro, suspecting that there is more to this than meets the eye.

We cut to the aftermath of the attack by Gorgor and Sinestro is carving out his deal with Jordan.  Despite how screwed up Hal is and how Sinestro finds him inferior, the Korugarian trusts Hal to do the right thing.  And as far as Sinestro is concerned, the ring that he's offering Jordan is what Hal needs because he has nothing else.  The conversation is laced with alpha male digs at the mistakes of the other, and in the end Hal knocks Sinestro on his backside when Hal's desire to talk with Carol is denied in favor of getting to Korugar and rescuing Sinestro's people.  There is a great moment between the two men when Hal tells Sinestro that he'll help him clean up the mess he's made on his homeworld and that he needs to stop thinking that he's better than his human counterpart.  Sinestro, in true Sinestro form, laughs at the mere notion that it could be any other way.

Let the fireworks commence!
Back on Oa the Guardians are interviewing Ganthet after they did something to him back in the first issue.  We saw in New Guardians #2 that Kyle accused the Guardians of lobotomizing Ganthet based on the expressionless face he met when he approached the Guardians.  We see here that while a lobotomy might be a harsh evaluation, Ganthet is changed in demeanor and he has lost his distinctive ponytail in favor of looking and acting just like the rest of his fellow Oans.  

The Guardians discuss the failure of the Manhunters due to their flaws and how that led them to being replaced by the Green Lantern Corps.  But they, too, have proven too flawed to serve the will of the Guardians, with Hal and Sinestro offered up as two prime examples of those with the right abilities to wield the ring with power, but with deep faults that prevent them from being what the Guardians intended.  So the Guardians reveal their new mission - to replace the Green Lantern Corps with something better.  "Holy crap" moment number one, check!

The Guardians' new mission revealed
Two sides of the same coin
On their way to Korugar Hal Jordan and Sinestro continue to trade barbs as Hal uses his ring for a little fun, much to the disdain of Sinestro.  As they get closer to their target Sinestro reveals their strategy for taking down his Corps, a Green Lantern with his battery entering the Sinestro Corps Central Power Battery will act as the fail safe, disabling all the rings.  Sinestro tells Jordan that he is absolutely not to get involved until sundown and that he will take Sinestro's power battery and disable the rings while Sinestro distracts the army of Yellow Lanterns.

It's then that Sinestro reveals something that we've never seen before, as Geoff Johns mentioned at the New York Comic-Con - he turns his uniform black, taking another pot shot at Hal and pointing out that the Guardians haven't been up front with disclosing all that their rings can do.  As the two sit in waiting the Sinestro Corps members are herding citizens and one of the Yellow Lanterns decides he wants to make a meal of one of them.  Hal wants to pounce but Sinestro will have none of it, holding the Earth man at bay and reminding him that they have to wait or all the civilians will be killed. 

A woman leaps to the defense of her fellow Korugarian and Sinestro recognizes her as Arsona, someone of significance to him but has never appeared before.  When Arsona is knocked to the ground and about to be killed it is Sinestro who abandons his own plan and leaps into action.  As he wipes out one of his former corpsmen the civilians scatter and Hal takes this as his cue to do his part.  There's one lone Yellow Lantern protecting the Central Battery with everyone rushing their former leader.  Hal makes quick work of him and enters, sure that he's about to shut down the whole group.

Oh boy!
It's here that the second "holy crap" begins.  As Sinestro is fighting off the Yellow Lanterns, the Central Battery detects Hal and begins to disintegrate him.  Sinestro senses something isn't right and as the issue ends a rapidly disintegrating Hal Jordan accuses Sinestro of setting him up, while Sinestro seems shocked that his plan has failed, ending the issue with Hal disappearing into the yellow light.

The Writing -
Whew!  This one was awesome to say the least.  Plenty of action, lots of great character moments between Hal and Sinestro that continue to define their relationship as one of the most enjoyable powderkegs in comics.  They are so alike yet so very different and Johns has their voices nailed perfectly.  Every page the two share is charged with tension and that certainly makes these issues fun to read.  Please, Warner Brothers, let the man write the script of a Green Lantern sequel already!

I had the slap on the forehead moment when the Guardians revealed their new mission.  It's so obviously logical to think that if the Guardians branded the Manhunters a failed experiment that at some point they might do the same with the Corps in light of all the problems they've had over the years, yet no writer has gone there.  Like the revelation of the emotional spectrum I sat there muttering, "why didn't I see that one coming!?"  I've read these characters for almost forty years and Johns continues to come up with things that are fresh and exciting.  

I do kind of wonder why the news reporter didn't recognize Sinestro from his attack on Coast City during the Sinestro Corps War, acting as if he'd never seen the alien before.  I believe the bulk of Green Lantern  recent continuity was left untouched by the DC relaunch so I'm not sure if Johns is implying that the war didn't happen, that people don't recognize him with a Green Lantern uniform and him not trying to kill everyone, or if it's just a throw a way line.

I don't expect Carol to have finally closed the door on Hal - theirs is just too much between them for her to walk away and yet there's just as much between them to keep them from finding what they both need.  I've said it before and I'll keep on saying that their relationship is so dead on to real life and it's one of the most complex ones there when writers know how to play with it, and Johns certainly does.  I don't think they'll ever get it together because a lot of the attraction is the wanting of each other, and not the having and the further apart they drift the stronger the attraction will be to seek each other out.

Is Hal Jordan dead?  I don't think so - I think we're going to find him showing up on Qward as a victim of the Weaponer's defiance of Sinestro.  I'm speculating that the Weaponer constructed the Central Battery to transport any Green Lantern who entered it to Qward despite Sinestro's direction to make it the fail safe.  Hal's disintegration just looks a little too familiar to the way Sinestro himself disappeared near the end of the Green Lantern: Rebirth to be coincidental to me.  I could be very wrong, but that's what I'm thinking at this point.

The Art -
First of all, welcome back Ethan VanSciver with the great variant cover to this issue!  I commented in my review of the second issue that I had problems with some of Doug Mahnke's art, specifically with Hal, and for the most part his work in this issue was spot on.  I love the way he draws Carol in the opening pages of this issue and his work on Hal and Sinestro during their sparring really brought the dialog to life for me and made the tension seem palpable.  Likewise with the emotionally cold look on Ganthet's face and the action sequences.  David Baron's colors added a lot to the great artwork and it's a shame to hear that he won't be staying on the title.

What Do I Think?
Green Lantern #3 in my opinion is the best issue of the new series so far and probably my favorite since the War of the Green Lanterns wrapped up.  I think I might go so far as to say that it ranks up there as one of the best of Johns' run so far.  It hits every beat and has the right balance of action, character driven dialog, and don't forget about a couple of great jaw dropping sequences.  Five out of five lanterns.




6/8/11

Green Lantern: Emerald Knights Blu-ray Review



The latest DC Universe animated film, Green Lantern: Emerald Knights, was officially released yesterday in both digital and optical disk formats, the second animated film featuring Green Lantern.  While not linked to Green Lantern: First Flight in terms of continuity, the fact that the creators choose to take a shortcut and use the same character design could certainly add a bit of confusion if you began watching this feature thinking you were getting a sequel.  Like Batman: Gotham Knights, Emerald Knights is an anthology of five animated sequences held together by an over arcing story, however where the Batman anthology seemed a little disjointed by an unclear narrative and diverse art styles Bruce Timm and friends have done a better job to put together a film that serves as a primer for anyone new to the Green Lantern universe that remains satisfying to long time fans.

This review covers the Blu-ray edition of the movie, so some elements such as special features may not apply depending on the version you purchase.

5/5/11

Green Lantern: Emerald Warriors 9 Review

With all the Green Lantern movie news in the past week I nearly forgot that Green Lantern: Emerald Warriors #9 came out as part six of the War of the Green Lanterns.  When we last saw our four former Green Lanterns of Earth in Green Lantern Corps #59 they had just discovered the horrible news that Mogo had fallen prey to the corrupting influence of Krona and Parallax, with the issue ending with our four protagonists under attack by the largest member of the Green Lantern Corps.  As we cross the midway point of this crossover event the different story elements start to merge with the four heroes learning some of the events that we readers have already witness and the secrets of the Guardians' past start to get exposed.

The Story -
On Oa Guy, Hal, John and Kyle try to make a hasty retreat as Mogo continues to lay down an offensive assault, and the living planet is joined by more members of the Parallax controlled members of the Green Lantern Corps.  Leaving Ganthet behind the four men pull back as Guy Gardner, the wielder of the red power ring, lays down cover with Hal pulling a page from the Flash's playbook and suggests creating a whirlwind to mask their escape beneath the surface of the planet.

5/10/10

Absolute Green Lantern Rebirth Review

When the Absolute Green Lantern: Rebirth was announced months ago there was some trepidation that a book like this wasn't warranted since there weren't nearly as many pages of story to justify the Absolute treatment.  And some fans, perhaps rightly so, feel that enough time simply hasn't passed yet to determine if it stands the test of time and made it a story worthy an Absolute edition.

However, if you look at what Green Lantern: Rebirth has done for the entire Green Lantern mythos and the impact it has had on the greater DC Universe at large since it was printed in 2005, there's enough there to see why Rebirth got the Absolute treatment.  At a price tag lower than the other Absolute editions, is it worth picking up?

The Story
The slip-cased edition's back cover
I'm not going to recount the story for you in detail, but if you haven't read Green Lantern: Rebirth and are on this site then leave, go pick it up and read it because it truly is required reading for any self respecting fan at this stage of the game.  Ultra superfast version:  Hal comes back and the true nature of what happened during Emerald Twilight is revealed as a plot between Sinestro and Parallax, the entity of fear.  Oh, and Hal one punches Batman.

DC added the first issue of the new ongoing title to the Absolute edition as well as a Darwyn Cooke tale from the Secret Files that came out after Rebirth.  Also included are the preview story pages that appeared in Wizard Magazine.  So the added pages, plus the supplemental material, make the book a bit thicker than you'd initially expect it to be, hence the lower price tag.  The retail on this edition is $75, although you can certainly find it much cheaper at a number of online retailers.

The Presentation
The first thing I have to say is that the presentation is breathtaking.  The artwork on the slipcover, the dust jacket and the actual cover to the book are all unique - no duplication at all - and the colors just pop.  It appears that there's some silk screen or vinyl on the cover that further adds dimension to Ethan Van Sciver's art.  There's a sewn in green bookmark as well.

Green Lantern: Rebirth is perhaps the defining moment in Ethan Van Sciver's career, catapulting him the forefront of today's comic artists.  And, simply put, this Absolute edition is a showcase of Van Sciver's talent and the larger format really allows us to appreciate all the hard work that Ethan put into this miniseries.  

The Supplemental Material
The cover to Rebirth's third issue.
What makes the Absolute line stand out to me beyond just giving us a larger slip-cased edition are all the extras that supplement the actual story.  There's a lot of extra goodies to peruse once you finish reliving the resurrection of perhaps the greatest cosmic mythology in comics history.  

Right off the bat is the original proposal that Geoff Johns pitched to DC dated January 21st, 2004.  There's not much new to be learned from the proposal, but it's interesting to see how Geoff tackled any potential hesitation on DC's part by addressing a number of questions about the story and how things were going to work with his rationale for a number of the writing choices he made.

There's also a breakdown of all the issues as Geoff saw them at this point.  What's interesting here is to see some elements that were changed or removed all together as the story evolved.  Most intriguing to me was how Johns originally planned to have Parallax take over Batman and Hal overcoming a second attempt by the entity to possess him. The script for the first issue is included as well, showing us some of the direction that Johns was feeding Ethan Van Sciver and is a script for a flashback scene between Tomar-Re, Sinestro and Hal that was cut from the fifth issue.

Amongst the bonus artwork are some of the ads and promotional materials for Rebirth and prototype sketches from Van Sciver for a Hal Green Lantern action figure, complete with a 3D symbol logo that could be put in his chest.  Unfortunately for us it wasn't used in that first wave of Green Lantern DC Direct figures that came out shortly after the relaunch of the Green Lantern title since it's far superior to the one we did get.

I have, however, really disappointed in the lack of a cover gallery showing all the different covers used in Rebirth like we recently saw in the Blackest Night Directors' Cut.  There's also nothing in the way a retrospective from Geoff Johns about the evolution of the story and all that we've seen since 2005. 

The most glaring omission to me is the lack of a commentary or footnotes section like the wonderful included in the Absolute Edition of DC: The New Frontier.  I really felt that, especially with the recent conclusion of Blackest Night, a look at some of the symbolism and connective tissue that ties these two stories was certainly in order.

In the very least I expected to at least see the Wizard commentary included that talked about some really cool things like some of the symbolism that Van Sciver and Moose Baumann added.  For example, when we first see Carol Ferris in Rebirth she's wearing a scarf that Baumann colored yellow to symbolize that, at this point in the story, she's untouchable with yellow representing her separation from Hal.  The inclusion of that kind of information to me was absolutely essential to this volume to make it a "must have" - and even more so had it been updated to show some of the seeds that Geoff was planting for the future.  Fortunately for me I printed out those comments from Wizard's website for myself, but it's an incredible shame not to see them included.

What do I Think
The book looks gorgeous and Rebirth is one of those stories that will be shown to have left an indelible mark on the history of the Green Lantern characters.  If it weren't for the missing commentary and cover gallery the Absolute edition would be damn near perfect.  Even so, this book is the way to read Rebirth and I'd certainly recommend it to anyone, but shop around and get a good price for it.

Four out of five lanterns.


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4/11/10

Reynolds' Jordan Gets a Daddy

The cast of the upcoming Green Lantern movie gets another addition as Jon Tenney, currently starring in "The Closer", has let Superhero Hype know that he'll be playing Martin Jordan in the film.

Jon Tenney is Martin Jordan
 According to his comments on the site, "The Closer" will shoot around him in June so that he can film his scenes as Hal Jordan's father.  Tenney has done a lot of television work, notably "The Closer", "CSI", and "The Division".

Superhero Hype asked Tenney about his role, but he really couldn't reveal anything beyond what we already know about Martin Jordan's appearance. "Well, it's under lock down, that script. It's very, very secretive. They’re only releasing sections of it, so they're keeping everybody in the dark," he said. "What I've read is amazing. And 'Green Lantern' was one of my favorite comic book characters as a kid." 

In other news, comic artist Jason Palmer has posted on his Deviant Art page that he's doing some work on both the Jonah Hex and Green Lantern films.




Palmer's art via DeviantArt

The art, at left, is not based on any images of the actual movie costume or shots provided to him by Warner Brothers.  According to the artist the image was meant to be used as a cover page for the submitted artwork, but was not included in the actual submission, thereby allowing him to share the image without violating any confidentiality agreements.

While it's very encouraging to see the white gloves in the image, again the reality is that this is not indicative of anything we'll see in the actual movie.


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8/17/09

April 2010 - an Expensive Month


DC Comics solicitations are up for November, but in addition to all the Blackest Night tie-ins there were a couple of notable items listed that come out in April. In addition to the 4th series of Blackest Night figures were the first in a multi-part statue and "Absolute Green Lantern: Rebirth".

The statue is gorgeous, however the kicker is the price tag. Part 1 of the 4 part statue is $195. So in doing the math the complete statue will run you $780. I love my Green Lantern, but I love my marriage even more so I sadly am going to have to pass on this one. Unless I can get a good deal on selling my kidney...... Paging Geoff Johns - can you hook me up!? :>




The other cool news is "Absolute Green Lantern: Rebirth". This release will be an over-sized slip cased edition like all the other Absolute editions and will contain 224 pages retailing for $75. This edition will not only contain the six issues of the original mini series and the Wizard preview pages, but the first issue of Geoff John's Green Lantern run and the Darwyn Cooke story from the Secret Files issue that came out in 2005.

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