Thursday, June 16, 2016

Reading Comics 190 "DC Rebirth Week 3, 4001 AD, DKR: The Last Crusade, Dept. H, and catching up with Secret Wars"

4001 AD #1 (Valiant)
Valiant's latest event series takes a look at the future courtesy of the ever-resourceful Matt Kindt, imagining the tyranny of New Japan and the rise of a new Rai to challenge it.  Once again Valiant has proven that its unique superhero vision, the first comprehensive ongoing revision of the 21st century, has incredible legs, where just about anything's possible, and it nearly always seems completely plausible, not to mention remarkably cohesive.  It's not like others haven't tried, but it helps to have talent like Kindt and Jeff Lemire leading the charge.

Batman #1 (DC)
Tom King's first regular issue of the series once again demonstrates his remarkably analytical mind, as Batman and Duke Thomas pull back the curtain on what it takes to pull off the impossible.  Of course, it's also Batman doing so at the expense of his own life, in yet another layer of King showing that Batman isn't like other superheroes.  When an out-of-control plane threatens to crash in Gotham City, he can't just fly in and guide it safely down.  No, for someone like Batman, it takes considerably more effort.  If this were the movies, you might expect something like this from the show-stopping exploits in the Mission: Impossible series.  Few writers would be bold enough to expose Batman's limits in this way.  King is merely setting himself up for that moment you though you'd never see: some other hero calling Gotham his home, someone who can fly, who represents everything Batman can never be.  This ain't no Superman.  Is King preparing to White Martian us?  Time will tell...

The Dark Knight Returns: The Last Crusade (DC)
This prequel to the original Dark Knight Returns depicts the circumstances in which Batman originally retires.  It's in effect his last statement on Robin, the Boy Wonder, too.  In the Dark Knight universe, Frank Miller offered up his judgment quite effectively: Dick Grayson goes insane.  Yet there was also, before "A Death in the Family," a dead Robin to account for.  The Last Crusade is a rephrasing of "A Death in the Family," actually, the Joker once again being responsible for the death of Jason Todd, under the same circumstances, the second Robin increasingly demonstrating that he isn't mentally prepared for Batman's crusade.  And yet, unlike "A Death in the Family" and its follow-up, "A Lonely Place of Dying," Miller (along with co-writer Brian Azzarello, around so Miller can't go wildly out of control again) has determined that the problem isn't Jason's attitude, but Batman's notion of having a kid sidekick in the first place.

This was what he was getting around to explaining in All Star Batman and Robin, the Boy Wonder, I think, and as I'd hoped, The Last Crusade is the finishing statement we'll probably never get from the earlier project.  All Star Batman became a joke among readers for its brutish portrayal of the Dark Knight, a true maniac who was difficult to root for, in a story featuring Dick Grayson's initiation into crime-fighting.  Miller never conceded that it was a good thing.  Comics fans never really picked up on that, and they probably still won't with The Last Crusade, even though by this point his conclusions are unmistakable.  The Batman of this story is aging, and his body is fast betraying him.  He reveals that he hoped Robin would prove to be his successor.  On the second try, he's proven brutally wrong.  You can only duplicate so much of what created Batman. 

It's an incredibly bold statement.  I think the whole concept of the Dark Knight stories is creating a reality where Batman exists in a finite world, where he can't escape consequences.  This can never exist in the ongoing comics, because fans will always clamor to see old favorites return, and creators will always be there to help them in that goal.  In Miller's reckoning, Batman is human, and as such is completely fallible, and bad things happen as a result of his actions, whether to himself, to those around him, or in the world around him, not because of anything he does, but because that's just a fact of life. 

As a summation, The Last Crusade may be the most crucial element of the most important Batman story ever told.

Dept. H #2 (Dark Horse)
Matt Kindt again, in his creative follow-up to Mind MGMT, his innovative look at the spy world.  Dept. H seems to be an unrelated story, but Kindt is once again handling writing and art chores, so the look is the same, and so is the storytelling.  In this second issue, someone has died, and someone else, burdened with a perfect memory, realizes that it could only have been murder.  Clearly, Kindt continues to have the mind on the mind, and this continues to be a good thing.

Green Arrow #1 (DC)
I tended to skip Green Arrow in the New 52, but figured I'd give the guy another shot in the Rebirth era.  Not only is Black Canary back in the picture, but so is Oliver Queen's moral compass.  At his best, Green Arrow will always be the Batman whose inner Bruce Wayne dominates his goals more than his crime-fighting.  This is one of those rich guy characters whose transformation into a superhero made him socially conscious for the first time in his life.  This issue does a good job of bringing that back into focus.

Green Lanterns #1 (DC)
Jessica Cruz and Simon Baz don't play well together.  They have conflicting mindsets, and as rookies, they both have plenty to prove.  That rounds out to good Green Lantern storytelling, as we learn more of what makes Baz stand out (we now have him deemed the bearer of Emerald Sight), which is an important distinction for all these human Green Lanterns, as the new Red Lantern threat continues to unfold.  I'm so glad DC is letting this franchise return to its recent Geoff Johns roots.

Secret Wars #9 (Marvel)
Flashing back to the last Marvel event, and its ending, we find Jonathan Hickman closing out the book on his Fantastic Four adventures, imagining the last conflict between Dr. Doom and Reed Richards.  Doom had found himself in possession of ultimate power, and decides Richards is, once and for all, jealous of him, because he could never do as good as Doom.  Someone decides to put that to the test, and so the Marvel landscape is reshaped (to its current state), and Richards retires from the superhero game to act as a kind of gatekeeper (thus allowing Marvel to remove the Fantastic Four from its lineup).  Hickman was always a big game hunter, and I guess it was appropriate that he wound up telling the biggest Fantastic Four story ever, so we'd see what that finally looked like. 

Superman #1 (DC)
Tomasi and Gleason reprise their Batman and Robin act, this time on the grand stage.  Once again, a DC icon has a son struggling with his place in the world, and once again, Tomasi and Gleason are ready to knock it out of the park.  I couldn't be happier for them.  The story starts out pretty heavily focused on Superman, but then we meet his son Jonathan, who is struggling with his new powers.  This was something Tomasi and Gleason touched on in Batman and Robin, when Damian briefly gained superpowers in the wake of his resurrection.  It's one thing to have an indomitable youth on your hands.  It's another when it's Superman's son.  All these years, whenever someone wanted to tell a story about the young Superman, it was always the exception, and then more often than not something glossed over until he hit puberty and, in some continuities, became Superboy.  This is the first time we'll see it play out in an ongoing capacity.  Framed as Superman's son, this is an intriguing opportunity, and again, Tomasi and Gleason are well up to the task.  They know when they need to provide dialogue, and when the story speaks for itself.  Anyway, I'm hugely, hugely glad this is happening, no matter how long it lasts.

Titans: Rebirth #1 (DC)
The return of Wally West continues, as he reconnects with his oldest friends, the original Teen Titans, in a series of encounters that prove all over again how personal these DC stories are to these characters, and how they can connect on an emotional level with fans, too. 

1 comment:

  1. In wondering whether anyone can replace Batman, we should really wonder if anyone SHOULD replace him. Especially since it's the thuggish Frank Miller version.

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