Tuesday, June 17, 2014

Sinestro #1 (DC)

writer: Cullen Bunn
artist: Dale Eaglesham

via DC Infinite
Ever since the launch of the New 52 in 2011, Sinestro's profile has been raised significantly.  After all, he was technically the title ring-bearer of Green Lantern at that time.  Geoff Johns used his final few years with the franchise focused in part on the one-time villain.  An ongoing series for the character has been all but inevitable, but it's still a little surprising that it actually...happened!

The franchise received a significant expansion in the relaunch.  One of the more debated titles from the start was Red Lanterns, which is still running and arguably stronger than ever after a recent tie-in with Supergirl.  Larfleeze ran for nearly a year.

And now there's Sinestro.  In a lot of ways, it seems more unlikely now than in the fall of 2011.  When Johns left with Green Lantern #20, he put the character back in the box, made him pretty distinctively villainous again, putting this series more in line with Red Lanterns than than one of its emerald brethren, or even the isolated antics of Larfleeze, which sadly had no real fan support.  One of the knocks on Red Lanterns from the start was that it was a curious decision indeed to focus on a pack of villains, which is still unusual in comics despite a steady stream of Thunderbolts and other such efforts.  It still seems inconceivable that The Joker existed in the '70s (for about as many issues as Larfleeze forty years later), and no doubt you're barely aware that even happened.  With good reason.

But here this is, and so what's there to say about it?  I may be biased.  I find Sinestro to be fascinating, with or without a green ring, yellow ring, what have you.  Comic book characters subsist in large part on healthy egos, but there are few to rival Sinestro in this regard.  Most of what has been done with him in recent years, almost exclusively by Johns, is to provide nuance to such a reputation, make him sympathetic.  

When we last saw him, Sinestro had gone into exile, and that's where Cullen Bunn finds him.  I have little experience with Bunn.  I really only know him from a Deadpool comic I read earlier this year, and as the writer of The Sixth Gun, the Oni series that isn't Wasteland.  And I wasn't impressed with Deadpool that time.  Surprisingly or not, Bunn settles into Sinestro seamlessly.  The panel at the start of this review is a perfect encapsulation of the character, the comic, and Bunn's understanding of both.  The ego's still there, but the guy has been humbled (as much as possible, anyway).

Since this is a series and not a one-shot, however, you can be sure the story picks up considerably from that point.  Lyssa Drak, the blue-skinned disciple from Sinestro's largely-abandoned yellow-ring-fear-based corps, shows up and soon enough he powers up again.  With a yellow ring.  And by the end of the issue, Sinestro's daughter, Soranik Natu (who debuted in Green Lantern Corps: Recharge and has been an off-and-on signature character since), shows up.  And that relationship is still complicated, to say the least.

The other thing the panel displays is the art, obviously.  The artist is Dale Eaglesham, who is making his return to DC after five years.  His signature work had been Justice Society of America, with Johns.  I'm not hugely familiar with his work in the meantime, but if anything, he has significantly improved.  The cover isn't so impressive and not really particularly indicative, but the stuff inside is truly exceptional.  I don't know how much credit colorist Jason Wright deserves for this.  It's similar to Mike Mayhew (who knocked The Star Wars out of the park) or Mike Perkins (who similarly stood out in the pages of The Stand) at this point, and as such repositions the entire series in a different light.  You don't have to approach it as a fan of the Green Lantern franchise.  It's now a kind of epic all its own.  You don't even need to have read much of Sinestro previously.  Everything you need to know is recapped within this debut issue.

So this is a heck of a thing.  I have no idea what its chances for long-term survival are, but if Bunn and Eaglesham, or creators of similar quality and motivation, remain attached to the series, Sinestro has unexpectedly become one of the better titles DC has to offer.  The character always had this potential, so it's good to see it fulfilled.

2 comments:

  1. Sinestro in the recent comics is certainly a lot different from the Superfriends one.

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    Replies
    1. Hopefully everyone's different from those days. Or many comic book characters would have died in vain.

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