From 1990.
I picked this one up because of the Rick Burchett art. Burchett was one of the artists who was later converted into Batman Adventures work, along with the late Mike Parobeck. I wanted to see how much he had to modify his work to conform to the Bruce Timm model. Turns out a bit more than Parobeck, whom I'd encountered in the pages of a Justice Society revival previous to the comics based on the Timm/Paul Dini cartoon. But the real revelation is that Burchett's work was surprisingly sexy, and the bigger revelation that Blackhawk was a pretty darn excellent comic book. This was its final issue, by the way, so it was another of those excellent comics that still somehow failed to find an audience. It's the bane of fans everywhere. But at least I've had the chance to discover this one, a quarter century after the fact. The last time I did that, I fell in love with Loeb and Sale's Challengers of the Unknown, from around the same period, so it was good news/bad news for attempts to revive older DC properties at the time, right? Blackhawk told the story of secret agents who were also pilots. The last time a revival was attempt was Mike Costa's New 52 series Blackhawks, which also was an underrated series, though this time my late discovery of it was far less forgiveable, as I'm a big fan of Costa's (he's coming back to G.I. Joe/Cobra next week, by the way, in the pages of G.I. Joe - Snake Eyes: Agent of Cobra) who nonetheless made a poor effort to try out his first mainstream superhero effort. My bad.
via Idol-Head |
From 2010.
The image on the left is Patrick Gleason's Martian Manhunter. Brightest Day was the biggest victim of my near-2011 implosion as a reader (this is the same time period in which I started this blog, so the whole journey has been documented for all its dubious relevance). I loved it when it debuted, but have never had the opportunity to read the complete story, which along with Flashpoint helped usher the age of the New 52. It was a bi-weekly series, but it's easily the best weeklyesque comic DC has managed since 52, and it was spearheaded, naturally, by Geoff Johns, working alongside Peter Tomasi, in the closest to an apprenticeship for the Tomasi who now writes the brilliant Batman and Robin as you're likely to find. Tomasi's chief collaborator, Gleason, is present and accounted for, naturally, and of course his portions of Brightest Day revolve around Martian Manhunter. This was a fact I'd forgotten until I picked up this issue. This was a time in which J'onn J'onzz was getting some of his best material. The Brightest material is in some ways a sequel to the 2006-2007 mini-series that was at the forefront of this era. The Deadman and Aquaman material are also highlights of the issue that remind me of other things worth remembering about the series.
Justice League America #89-90 (DC)
From 1994.
Parts 1 and 4 of the "Judgment Day" Justice League crossover event that tried to ramp up the significance of the League books at the time (a little over two years later, Grant Morrison's JLA rebooted the whole field), this was a big dramatic end-of-the-world-type story. The creative team is Dan Vado and Marc Campos, who soon after launched Extreme Justice, a series I followed throughout its run even though Vado and Campos left soon after it launched, apparently because of conflicts with the editor (so you see, New 52 creators, this was nothing new), Vado back to Slave Labor Graphics. The Vado/Campos team was heavily influenced into following the Image style of the day. The villain for "Judgment Day" was a kind of cross between Galactus and Darkseid, Overmaster, whom Vado chose in much the same fashion as Grant Morrison later would Libra for the purposes of Final Crisis, an afterthought of a character that could use a slight revision. There were three additional chapters to the event, which may be best known, if at all, for the death of Ice. I used to think it would make a nice trade collection. Booster Gold's post-"Doomsday" woes, in which his original costume and therefore source of powers had been destroyed, also saw progress during the event, from a ridiculously bulky set of armor to a more streamlined look, which eventually led back to the form-fitting version for which he was known. It was the start of Booster's transformation from a Bwa-ha-ha image to someone who could be taken seriously again, returning the focus back to his sometimes-anomalous background as coming from, ah, the future, who couldn't be relied upon to provide foreknowledge of major crises such as this and, yes, the whole Doomsday thing, which Blue Beetle rightly points out here as having been, in hindsight, a pretty dick move, since Beetle was among the ones severely injured during it, besides the cost to Booster himself. All of which is to say, no matter how awkward this particular era might seem, it was a necessary evolution or at least transition. Extreme Justice later addressed the Armageddon 2001 dangling issue of Captain Atom's involvement with the figure of Monarch, saw the return of Firestorm, and to Vado's chagrin the in-continuity debut of the Wonder Twins, one of the issues that drove him away from mainstream comics.
Action Comics #806 and 809 (DC)
From 2003.
Joe Kelly was part of the Man of Action alliance (also including Joe Casey, Duncan Rouleau, and Steven T. Seagle) that was a different kind of evolution, doing the Image founders one better by going into business for themselves outside of the comics medium, helping to create, among other projects, Ben 10 (Rouleau and Seagle also created Big Hero 6, which became a smash hit film in 2014). This was a sort of lost generation for DC, most of whom had been tapped to join Jeph Loeb as the new millennium Superman creative team. The first of these two issues features Traci 13 and Natasha Irons, who by the end of the issue has discovered a new set of armor forged for her by her uncle, Steel, who had recently undergone one of several crises (including a temporary death coming out of Our Worlds at War). Superman is basically a guest star in the issue. The second issue features Lois and Clark on a cruise, forced to contend with the irrepressible Jack Ryder, whose dual existence as the Creeper doesn't explain his human behavior. It's a character who is always interesting but apparently can't carry his own series.
Supreme #64
From 2012.
As you may be aware, I've become heavily invested in Warren Ellis's Supreme: Blue Rose. The previous attempt at a Supreme revival started with this issue from Erik Larsen, best known for his ongoing Savage Dragon. Larsen used as his launching pad a lost script from Alan Moore, who had used Rob Liefeld's creation as a platform for writing Silver Age Superman adventures in the '90s. That script was used for Supreme #63. Larsen threw Supreme into a whole clash of multiple versions of himself and brought back the idea Liefeld originally envisioned, basically a violent version of Superman. (Anyone find it ironic that Moore didn't want to use that version, from a creator who helped build his legacy on Miracleman?) The result is typical Larsen, whose only competition at one point for the kinds of stories he likes telling was, of all comics, Garth Ennis's Preacher. Larsen's profile has dropped considerably since he launched Savage Dragon, but he remains one of the more interesting subjects for critical analysis. And unlike every other Image founder, he's remained true to the cause.
Tangent: Superman's Reign #1 (DC)
From 2008.
Speaking of causes, Tangent was Dan Jurgens' big to recreate DC's Silver Age revolution, when new versions of The Flash and Green Lantern helped revitalize its landscape. Using familiar names but totally revamping the mythology, it jumpstarted the idea of legacy that became so important to the company. Jurgens didn't have any pretensions of such a large-scale effect, but he created a fascinating concept all the same, one he was able to revisit after its debut in the '90s thanks to Dwayne McDuffie's Justice League of America, which also served as a platform to temporarily mainline the Milestone heroes. It's amusing how subtle Jurgens can be as a storyteller when someone else is providing the art. This is something I've remarked on before, but it bears repeating. He scales back on excited speech patterns that remain the most unfortunate aspect of older comics in general, and allows himself the liberty to let loose creatively, something that was a highlight of his Superman at the start (he's also, remember, the creator of Booster Gold, the antithesis of the Man of Steel). Superman, meanwhile, is the villain of the Tangent universe. It's a concept that remains interesting. If DC ever did decide to undergo another radical overhaul, it could do worse than look here for inspiration.
Supreme #64
From 2012.
As you may be aware, I've become heavily invested in Warren Ellis's Supreme: Blue Rose. The previous attempt at a Supreme revival started with this issue from Erik Larsen, best known for his ongoing Savage Dragon. Larsen used as his launching pad a lost script from Alan Moore, who had used Rob Liefeld's creation as a platform for writing Silver Age Superman adventures in the '90s. That script was used for Supreme #63. Larsen threw Supreme into a whole clash of multiple versions of himself and brought back the idea Liefeld originally envisioned, basically a violent version of Superman. (Anyone find it ironic that Moore didn't want to use that version, from a creator who helped build his legacy on Miracleman?) The result is typical Larsen, whose only competition at one point for the kinds of stories he likes telling was, of all comics, Garth Ennis's Preacher. Larsen's profile has dropped considerably since he launched Savage Dragon, but he remains one of the more interesting subjects for critical analysis. And unlike every other Image founder, he's remained true to the cause.
Tangent: Superman's Reign #1 (DC)
From 2008.
Speaking of causes, Tangent was Dan Jurgens' big to recreate DC's Silver Age revolution, when new versions of The Flash and Green Lantern helped revitalize its landscape. Using familiar names but totally revamping the mythology, it jumpstarted the idea of legacy that became so important to the company. Jurgens didn't have any pretensions of such a large-scale effect, but he created a fascinating concept all the same, one he was able to revisit after its debut in the '90s thanks to Dwayne McDuffie's Justice League of America, which also served as a platform to temporarily mainline the Milestone heroes. It's amusing how subtle Jurgens can be as a storyteller when someone else is providing the art. This is something I've remarked on before, but it bears repeating. He scales back on excited speech patterns that remain the most unfortunate aspect of older comics in general, and allows himself the liberty to let loose creatively, something that was a highlight of his Superman at the start (he's also, remember, the creator of Booster Gold, the antithesis of the Man of Steel). Superman, meanwhile, is the villain of the Tangent universe. It's a concept that remains interesting. If DC ever did decide to undergo another radical overhaul, it could do worse than look here for inspiration.
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