Showing posts with label Book of Black. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Book of Black. Show all posts

Saturday, 16 February 2013

HEROES & FRIENDS – GREEN LANTERN #16 and GREEN LANTERN CORPS #16

 Wednesday 23rd January 2013 was unofficially branded Green Lantern Day. Due to last minute changes in their publishing schedule DC Comics released Green Lantern #16, Green Lantern Corps #16 and Green Lantern: New Guardians #16 all on the same day. The excitement amongst Lantern fans was high and, given the recent disappointment of all three titles, I am pleased to report our excitement was suitably matched by great improvements in quality and storytelling.
 
For the first time since ‘Rise of the Third Army’ began 13 issues previously we finally got two books where the story lead naturally from one title to the next in a way that fans would traditionally expect of a crossover.  While GL:NG continues to tell its own story with Kyle Rayner (and more of that soon here at Flodo’s Page), Green Lantern and GLC form a two part story in which our heroes begin to turn the tide on the Guardians’ mindless forces.  I suspect the event was produced with the specific goal of making each book able to stand on its own so that readers weren’t put off by feeling obliged to pick all four participating titles.  For me, however, this diminished the appeal.  I was getting the all of books because they shared the ‘Rise…’ banner and the fact that they lacked cohesion was ultimately a factor that detracted from my overall satisfaction.
 
 
Thankfully I can put all of that bad feeling behind me now.  Green Lantern #16 marks Simon Baz’s first real introduction to the Corps.  Veteran Lantern B’dg has arrived on the scene looking for Hal Jordan and is surprised to find Baz wearing a power ring that had been shared by Hal and Sinestro.  He is even more surprised to discover it depowered and on the finger of Earth’s newest recruit.  And so begins Green Lantern ring slinging 101 – class is in session.
 
One of the main focuses in the issue is building Baz’s reputation and proving he is worthy to be a member of the Corps.  Rather than go with FBI agent Fed to prove his innocence of the terrorist charges that have been levelled at him, he puts his GL mission first and follows B’dg in the search for Jordan.  In the meantime Fed places a call to Amanda Waller.  Cue introduction to JLA, the newest offering from DC Comics coming out in February.


Before he can do anything Baz needs a ring charge. Luckily squirrels from across the universe all speak the same language and the furry B’dg is able to get directions from the local wildlife to where Hal and Sinestro dropped their lantern in Green Lantern Annual #1, right before the Guardians helped Black Hand banish them to the Dead Zone.  I don’t know about anyone else but I get goosebumps every time the oath appears in a GL book and now is no exception.  Baz, of course, doesn’t know the oath so in a novel twist the lantern itself takes over the master class and says the sacred words for him, “Beware YOUR power, Green Lantern’s light!”

 
As with most geeks, I’m a bit of a stickler for accuracy in my comics so correct me in the comments for this post if you think I’ve got the next bit wrong.  We see B’dg returning the lantern to the pocket dimension it was removed from.  Now we know from the first arc of the current Green Lantern Corps run that GLs no longer use a pocket dimension for storing power battery (Hal kept his in his locker at Ferris Air).  So does this mean that B’dg has just sent Baz’s lantern back to Sinestro’s ‘Batcave’ hideout?
 
In any case, he unravels the message that we saw stored in the ring in GL#12 which basically gives us a recap of what happened to Hal and Sinestro in the annual.  He pockets the Book of Black and then makes the mistake of telling Simon he cannot keep the ring, that it must be returned to Hal Jordan.  As you would expect of any wielder of willpower Baz takes this as a challenge and sets off on his own mission which will test the ring’s powers to the limit.  Along the way he effortlessly conjures up a phone construct and calls his sister to meet him at the hospital.


Simon Baz’s plan is to do the impossible.  To use the ring to wake his brother-in-law from a coma.  B’dg tells him the ring can’t be used to raise the dead or cure any ill.  We’re not living in the silver age any more where the Green Lantern Power ring changed at the whim of a writer from one week to the next and all things were possible.  Nevertheless Simon summons up all of his determination to force the green energy it into his best friend’s motionless body.  The writing and the art complement each other brilliantly here.  Geoff Johns doesn’t rush the pace, giving time for Doug Mahnke to depict a true effort of will.  Sparks crackle of both men and tears stream down the Lantern’s grimaced face.  Just when all seems fruitless Nazir rises from his hospital bed, much to the astonishment of B’dg and the watching doctors.
 
Through the overused narrative device of a television newsflash the GL’s learn of Guy Gardner’s imprisonment and take to the skies out nearest window moments before police come crashing into the room.  Their fate awaits them in Green Lantern Corps #16.
 
In the meantime Johns brings us back to the Dead Zone for the big reveal of the hooded character who has been leading Hal and Sinestro through the zone.  And the mysterious figure is… (drumroll… trumpets…) Tomar-Re!  In the original silver age origin Tomar-Re was the first Green Lantern Hal Jordan came into contact with after the death of Abin Sur.  He met his death at the hands of long-time GL villain Goldface during the time of ‘Crisis on Infinite Earths’.  In all my wildest speculation it never once crossed my mind that Tomar-Re would be the man behind the hood and let me tell you now, my little fanboy heart leaped in my chest and I couldn’t possibly be happier.
 
 
The deceased hero warns that the First Lantern must be stopped before reality unravels and “changes lantern history as we know it.”  The cynic in me says, “Oh, Green Lantern’s very own Flashpoint.  How convenient”.
 
Putting all that aside I continued in my Green Lantern Day celebrations by immediately turning to Green Lantern Corps #16where the Guardians of the universe continue to show little of the emotionless balance they profess to hold so dear. Instead they submit to downright pettiness as they turn the Third Army’s attention towards Guy Gardner. The news that the recently resigned GL has been jailed on Earth is again received via the device of a corny TV newsflash, only this time it is transmitted a billion miles telepathically via the eyes of a Thirdite on the rampage in Atlanta Georgia.
 
 

If there was ever any doubt that Guy is as hard as the proverbial nails this issue quells it.  He knocks out his huge cell mate with a single below without so much as raising his head from its melancholic stupor.  Playing successfully off the rebooted origin featured in Green Lantern Corps #0 Guy’s brother and sister visit him in prison only to wind up standing shoulder to shoulder with him as the Third Army assimilate everyone around them.  The Gardner family are made of sterner stuff than your average Joe.


The action briefly hops several sectors away to where John Stewart and Fatality have encountered a giant spaceship threatening a defenceless world.  The ship’s weapon is powered by fragments of the GL fan favourite Mogo, a former sentient planet destroyed by Stewart himself.  One thing I love about Green Lantern is the scale of the world they operate in.  With 7,000 Corps members policing an entire universe rescuing a planet single-handedly is basically a pre-requisite for the job. And teamed with a Star Sapphire?  Let’s just say those terrorists really didn’t stand a chance.  Peter J. Tomasi has been teasing Mogo’s revival for several issues now we are hanging on a knife edge of ‘is he or isn’t he?”.  The answer must surely be just around the corner.


Back on Earth the heroics continue as Baz and B’dg join the fray.  Again, in GLC #16 the new Lantern’s portrayal is the epitome of of a comic book stalwart.  He is brave and ferocious.  He is self-assured but his priority is protecting the people around him from becoming victim to the Third Army.  He shares many of these traits with Guy Gardner and I loved when the veteran showed his admiration saying, “Kids got a little outlaw in his eyes”.  A very Guy kind of compliment.

I did wonder how the Green Lantern rings have suddenly become so effective on the Thirdites?  The green energy can blast great chunks out of the creatures now whereas previously in this event they are shown to be impervious to its attack.  However, I am entirely prepared to let it pass.  The battle scene was tremendous.  Tomasi has a knack for writing Green Lantern Corps like the very best war movies.  The heroes hold their own against impossible odds and finally secure victory by containing their enemy in a construct and detonating two dozen army missiles on them. Fernando Pasarin matches the tempo with his art.  Every panel is packed with action.  Exploding weapons and exploding guts.  Bodies flying in all directions.  I have heard criticism of some comic art as visually static.  Completely contrary to that description, GLC #16 is powered along by characters in constant motion.


The story ends on the moon with Guy learning Hal’s and Sinestro’s garbled message. Before that we confirm a response to the question that has persistently followed Simon Baz since DC released the first images of him last summer. Unusually for a Green Lantern he carries a gun. He has been caught out by the ring running out of charge once already and he is not about to get left without a weapon again.


Without a shadow of a doubt I can say that these were two great issues. The Green Lantern team is firing on all cylinders again. Our Emerald Crusaders show their willpower in abundance, courageously overcome fear and shed their unflinching light over evil. The conclusion of ‘Rise of the Third Army’ in Green Lantern Corps Annual #1 promises to be a hell of a showdown between the Guardians and their Corps.

 
 
 

Monday, 27 August 2012

ALL ROADS – GL#12, GLC#12 & GL:NG#12

 It doesn’t take a genius to know that something big is about to explode across the Green Lantern universe.  The comic press has been full of titbits exposing earth’s new Green Lantern and the Rise of the Third Army for weeks.   But even if you have had your head buried in the sand or you’ve turned your back on the mighty god that is internet, the creators behind the Green Lantern titles have been waving a pretty hefty signpost in the comic books themselves.

I decided not to do individual reviews for Green Lantern #12, Green Lantern Corps #12 or Green Lantern: New Guardians #12.  Not because they weren’t of sufficient quality to warrant personal attention – they absolutely were.  But more importantly, what we have seen in all three titles (and to a lesser extent in the runt of the litter, Red Lanterns #12) is a carefully orchestrated coming together of themes and ideas in readiness for the Green Lantern crossover event touted for October.  All roads lead to the Third Army.

 
As ever, it is the Guardians of the Universe who are to be found at the core of all things GL.  As the founders and legislators of the Corps they have been central to a huge number of lantern stories since the early 1960s.  Immortal beings who had set themselves up as the protectors of life everywhere.  Their actions have often appeared questionable but, baring the work of a few renegades, they have always been more or less just. Enigmatic and manipulative, for sure, but with the noblest of intentions.  The Guardians appear only fairly briefly in all three GL titles this month and yet in a few panels they steal the show over and over again.

In Green Lantern: New Guardians #12 Kyle wraps up a storyline that has been 12 months in the telling.  He defeats an extremely power enemy in Invictus and does not even get 30 seconds to revel in victory before his entire world is undone with the revelation that the Guardian Sayd had murdered their fellow Corps members in order to bring the New Guardians together.  A response to her brethren lobotomizing the Guardian Ganthet in the first step of whatever dastardly future is about to be unleashed on us.

And in Green Lantern Corps #12 another arc is wrapped as the Alpha Lanterns are literally obliterated out of existence.  John and Guy’s victory is at best bittersweet.   As with Ganthet, the Alpha’s fate was sealed at the machinations of the Guardians.  They appear to have taken another powerful player off the board to avoid any possible contest of their plans.  The final splash page of the book shows a suitably melodramatic and somewhat chilling Ganthet confirm our suspicions that no character’s future is safe in the months ahead.

Green Lantern #12 is not quite the final issue of the current Black Hand narrative.  That comes later this week in Green Lantern Annual #1.  The book has a very final feel to it nevertheless.  Hal Jordan takes down Black Hand briefly by frying his synapses and, together with Sinestro, he defeats a zombie hoard several hundred strong.  Sinestro sacrifices his final tie to his old life when he uses his yellow lantern as a light bomb against the undead mob.  It is here in the main Green Lantern title that the Guardians are most explicit.  At the whim of Geoff Johns‘ scripting we learn from them that Sinestro was not chosen to be a Green Lantern by the power of his ring.  The Guardians secretly forced the ring on him to neutralise his position as leader of the Sinestro Corps.  Their mission is to replace the lanterns of every Corps with the Third Army and then, ominously, to “replace everyone”.

Meanwhile, never short of a prophecy to throw a spanner in the works, the Book of Black delivers Black Hand the news he definitely didn’t want to receive…  Hal Jordan will be greatest Black Lantern of them all !!

 
The stage is set.  Battle lines have been drawn (even if it’s only the Guardians who know where exactly those lines are).  Wednesday’s annual and DC Comics’ forthcoming zero month promise to make tremendous opening salvos for what lies ahead.  And I do meaning opening.  For make no mistake about it, by the time #13 issues roll around the stories told in the Lantern books up to this point will be done and dusted.  Finito.  The Green Lantern universe is about to turn a corner.  A brand new tale from the Corps is just beginning and I am suggesting you grab your power rings and hold tight because we are in for one hell of a ride.  


 

 

Saturday, 28 July 2012

GRAVE EXPECTATIONS... GREEN LANTERN #11


 Right then, then let's get one thing straight before I even try to tackle this book... Black Hand is in it and he is newly undead (again!).  Ergo, this is a horror book.  You can't make your main protagonist an evil undead serial killer and expect to get away with calling your book an action story or a sci-fi adventure.  As long as we can all agree on that the next bit should be easy.

The other thing about Green Lantern #11 is that it is gloriously cinematic.  Somebody forgot to tell Doug Manke that he is supposed to be pencilling a comic book and so instead he has produced a story board for as good a big screen Green Lantern movie as you are ever likely to see.

The issue opens with Sinestro engulfed in a mind altering Indigo Tribe construct.  His mouth is covered by a mask of sorts and vaporous tendrils twist across his body, creeping up his nose and embedding in his skin.  His sub-conscious dreams of his earliest days as Hal Jordan's mentor.  In a shocking close up of an eyeball we see the green energy of will power assert itself with a tiny Green Lantern symbol appearing in the centre of his pupil.

Sinestro wakes to find himself released into Hal's custody by the Indigos against their better judgement.  Hal and the Indigo guardian, Natromo, have corrected the Earth Lantern's ring so that it is no longer ineffective against Sinestro.  Hal tests the success of their work by knocking his companion off his feet with a quick blast of energy.  For anyone who is reading Geoff Johns' Justice League each month and can't reconcile the character of Hal between that book and this, look no further than the beaming smile he wears having finally freed himself from Sinestro's control and knocked the Korugan on his ass.  That's our cocky young League member right there.

Despite this, only Sinestro noticed that Black Hand is no longer among them.  In the previous issue the death obsessed villain had escaped the control of his Indigo ring and was beating a hasty retreat with the unwanted accessory in close pursuit.  He had thrown himself to his death from a cliff top only to spawn another ring which transformed him into an undead Black Lantern.

The artwork continues to be vital to the telling of Black Hand's story.  What seems to be a oddly harmless image of Hand clutching a Chinese meal in a bag is followed up with a single panel of the restaurant he had left behind.  Mutilated bodies dripping with Black Lantern ooze.  Again the focus is brought back to the meal, this time propped on a tombstone.  And in scenes deliberately reminiscent of Blackest Night, Hand touches the ground and utter one word, "Rise".  And rise they do!  A sequence the equal of any Zombie movie shows the Black Lantern's own decayed family crawl from their graves to be greeted with the very eery "I've brought dinner".



Geoff Johns' writing is at its very best in this issue.  He flits with ease between humour and drama, finding the perfect balance to pull the reader into the story on his terms.  A page showing the Guardians of the Universe tracking Sinestro's journey from Oa seems to be almost throw away. It contains very little in the way of meaningful information.  What it is actually does is tie the wider Green Lantern universe together without intruding on the story.  If you are not picking up the other three DC Lantern titles you really do need to have a word with yourself...

Black Hand sitting down to eat with his family in their old home is simply chilling.  Apparently a conversation is taking place but we are only privy to one side of it.  And while Hand tucks into his food the other meals go cold beside untouched chopsticks.  In any normal psycho thriller you would swear that Black Hand was delusional, talking to rotten corpses that don't talk back.  But let's not forget that these particular corpses dug their way out of the ground by themselves, walked into the house by themselves and sat down at the table all... by... themselves.

Meanwhile, the Green Lanterns have made their way to Sinestro's secret base on Korugar where he has hidden the Book of Black.  They open the book to access the prophecies it contains and are immediately transported into a vision which predicts dire consequences for the Green Lanterns of 2814.  The splash panel for this vision is probably the single most exciting image that any GL fan has laid eyes on since the introduction of DC's New 52.  And let me assure you that is not a statement I make lightly!

 

The Vision:  Up front and centre is the masked lantern who first appeared in the DC Free Comic Book Day release battling the Justice League.  Solicits suggest that this character will be taking the lead role in this very book in a few months time.  The mind boggles.  Below him is a Green Lantern emblem dripping a liquid that could well be taken as symbolic green blood.  This distorted symbol is the only image that appears on the cover of next month's Green Lantern Annual.  The last time DC released a cover like that Superman died!  This is looking serious folks.  To the left of that we have a close up of a clenched fist adorned with a white lantern ring.  We have not seen one of those since the conclusion of Brightest Day.  A depowered and forlorn Guy Gardner is depicted as captured in a prison cell.  Kyle Rayner spews napalm as a Red Lantern.  John Stewart writhes and screams under a direct attack from the Guardians.  The manhunters are alive and well, and from my interpretation are being led in a battle charge by Atrocitous.

Above all of this the Guardians gaze across the vision with a look that that is as impassive and devoid of emotion as we have seen from them in many a month.  Added to all of this there is one more mysterious image that deserves some attention.  Two hooded figures skulk in the shadows unseen.  I discussed in my recent blog on the 4 issue connecting cover for the Rise of The Third Army that Hal Jordan and Sinestro are not depicted.  Could these shadowy figures be Hal and Sin, pushed to the sidelines in the forthcoming battle and waiting for their moment to strike back at the Guardians?  In this very issue Hal agrees a plan with Indigo 1 to force brainwashing Indigo rings onto the fingers of the Guardians in a desperate attempt to halt their destruction of the Green Lantern Corps.  Could this be the consequences of that plan having gone awry?

As if all of this wasn't enough to take in, with their vision complete the book ejects the Lanterns in a place they least expected - at the feet of Black Hand and his reanimated family.  How's that for a cliffhanger? 