Construct: A Racing Car (built from the engine out)
Generated by: Simon Baz
Appeared in: Green Lantern #14 (vol.5), 2012
Due to a recent bout of illness I have fallen behind on my Green Lantern reviews so I hope you’ll excuse the brevity of my commentary on GLC #14 while I work to get caught up. I had considered skipping a couple of titles altogether but decided against it. This issue includes several incidents that deserve to be noted.
In common with many
of my fellow comic book fans I can find myself worrying about every aspect of
my treasured hobby. Generally, of
course, the object of my concern is something as trivial as the existence or
not of Power Girl’s ‘boob window’ or the headache that is the Robin timeline in
the compressed New 52 continuity. But
just occasionally I manage to raise my nose from the weekly pull pile just long
enough to notice that the global economy continues to go through uncertain
times. It makes me wonder if I am
justified in spending so much of my hard earned cash on comics, some of which
will be read once and relegated to a long box for all eternity. The question I have to ask myself is, “Am I
really getting value for money?” It’s
not news that publishers have already tried every trick in the book to keep our
favourite monthly titles competitively priced.
For DC that means keeping the page count for a $2.99 comic to 20 pages. Even
those who are lucky enough to enjoy a discounted delivery or digital service
can’t help but feel ripped off when they sail through their latest purchase in
5 minutes flat.
He finally
manages to shake off the heroes my creating multiple car constructs to cover
this getaway. The geek in me questions
why Flash didn’t use his speed to zoom round them all, or Cyborg didn’t
satellite track the occupied vehicle, or even Superman utilise his X-Ray vision
but it’s easy to set aside. The sight of
Supes holding aloft a green sports car like a kid shaking his money box is just
too good to pass up on.
When Sergio Leone described the personalities of his
three protagonists in Il buono, il brutto
e il cattivo he could not have known how apt it would become in summing the
single figure of Atrocitus in DC Comic’s Red
Lanterns. Atrocitus and his Corps dispense
a lethal, rage fuelled justice across the Green Lantern universe on behalf of
the victimised and abused. Herein, of course, lies both the good and the
bad. And the resulting devastation, much
like their leader himself, sure as heck ain’t pretty. ![]() |
Justice Society of America Vol. 3 #21, 2008
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