Showing posts with label New Guardians. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New Guardians. Show all posts

Friday, 19 December 2014

Inebriated Ramblings From Sector 875 (Unedited)




First up, don’t give intoxicating liquids to a gaseous life form… it screws our pharmacology right up!
So here it is.  News flash.  While your world continues to turn, any Green Lantern obsessive will tell you the biggest change in comics since DC’s Flashpoint has just occurred.  March 2015 solicitations are out.  I don’t normally read the solicits but Twitter hooked me up and this is one that I couldn’t ignore….
I buy most of my books in digital these days but print still holds a special, respectful place in my life.  Amongst the few titles that I still collect from my LCS are of course the Lantern books.  The GLU.  Of which there are currently 5.
But come March Green Lantern Corps, Red Lanterns and Green Lantern: New Guardians are all being hailed as final issues.  Gutted to say the least!
I love Green Lantern and Sinestro.  Robert Venditti and Cullen Bunn are both veritable geniuses.  But I ain’t about to enjoy my favourite comic book franchise being compressed by 60%.
In the last year Justin Jordan and Charles Soule have both been legends on GL:NG and RLs.  9 issues out of 10 they have taken the outer extremities of the Lantern universe to new heights and uncharted territories.  Told stories that have never been told before without spitting on the mythos that spawned them.
But for me the biggest loss is Green Lantern Corps.  Van Jensen has been irrepressible on this book.  He is obviously very close to Venditti, the writer on the main Green Lantern title, and the books tie in heavily together and are best read as a cohesive unit.  But they are not the same book.  Van Jensen has done his research.  He knows his main character, John Stewart.  He knows his own created characters, the new Green Lantern recruits.  And he knows the history of the GLC and pulls out character after character that we haven’t seen or heard of in a very long time. He writes action, politic, romance and intrigue with equal clarity. 
At the heart of his writing, whether consciously or not, he swears Corps up and down.
In short folks, DC Comics are going to have to think of something very clever to do to replace this book.  I will not accept that this is just going to be a gap in my life.
'Convergence' is coming.  Another apocalyptical event from publishers that will “change comics forever”.  And I am not being cynical when add the inverted commas because, to be fair, it might.  I just bemoan a little because I hate my favourite books being cancelled.
I have been touting on the interwebs that they might replace the book with something from the past, like an original Golden-Age Alan Scott book.  They might also bring out the long anticipated anthology book that deals with stories from all of the coloured Corps in the style of the much loved Green Lantern Corps Quarterly.  In my heart of hearts I think it is all a publicity stunt and at the very least Green Lantern Corps will return in some form or other.
The GL franchise was never going to sustain 5 books forever.  And I get that.  But it would be a travesty if we had to view everything through the eyes of the main players, Hal and Sinestro, from now on at the expense of the rich story-telling that can be derived from the rest of the expansive Lantern universe.
So cheers to the writers and artists who may (or may not) be leaving our GL family before long.  You will be missed and remembered.  Cheers to all the Fanterns because we know we care.  And I am going to go out on a limb and say cheers to DC Comics too, because I'm superbly confident they are not going to sell us short when it comes to Green Lantern (hint, hint...)  



Wednesday, 12 November 2014

A Curious Combination


Mark Twain famously said, “There is no such thing as a new idea. It is impossible. We simply take a lot of old ideas and put them into a sort of mental kaleidoscope. We give them a turn and they make new and curious combinations."

Impossible or not, I think I am on fairly safe ground to conjecture that the majority of ideas are routinely revisited in the world of comics.  Whether it is the retelling of an origin story, the resurrection of a formerly dead character, or the passing of said character's legacy on to the next generation, we all love to see elements from our favourite stories invoked in new material.  As I understand it both DC Comics and Marvel intend to take this approach to the extreme in 2015, overtly referencing a whole of host previously published storyarcs as the basis of each of their latest company-wide events.

At the other end of the scale to this are the little tricks and eye-catching gimmicks that innocently resurface every so often as comic book writers attempt to tap into the timeless essence of their chosen muse.  I stumbled across one such oddity not long ago while I was researching the earliest appearances of the Justice League of America.

Have a look at the delightful panel below from Justice League of America #3, vol.1 (1961) showing Hal Jordan think quickly to save the city from certain disaster.  He creates giant humanoid constructs with his power ring to prevent damaged sky-scrapers from falling and crushing the population below.

  
We can all agree this is a fantastic bit of ring-slinging from Hal which must have been very exciting for fans to read back in the early sixties.

Jump forward then exactly 50 years into the future and take a gander at this next wonderful double page spread which graced the pages of Green Lantern: New Guardians #1 (2011).


Note the collapsing building and falling crane destined to annihilate the terrified city dwellers below.  Note our green-clad hero swooping down from the sky to mount a daring rescue, and most importantly, note the big, green giants stretching their huge arms around the plummeting debris to halt its catastrophic descent.

It's the same concept in both panels!  Yes, the 2011 version has been considerably fleshed out and updated to entertain a more demanding 21st century audience (3 years on and I am still struck by the beauty and energy of the artwork) but when you boil right down to it, it is the same idea appearing in both comic books. 

I have no clue if the New Guardians creative team of Tony Bedard and Tyler Kirkham gave any thought to their historic Justice League predecessors, Gardner Fox and Mike Secowsky.  I sincerely doubt it.  But I like to think the idea first popped into heads of those silver-age creators back in 1961 and floated around in the ether for a good many years until it passed through Mark Twain's mental kaleidoscope to be turned and transformed into a new and very curious combination.


Wednesday, 14 August 2013

LIGHT UP ROOKIES, WELCOME TO THE CORPS



I’ve been approaching my Green Lantern comics with cautious optimism over the last couple of months.  Five Lantern titles hit the stands in July and although only one of them bore a #1 on its cover they might as well have all been brand new.  Every writer and most of the art teams were starting out on their respective book for the very first time.  In fact, with the exception Alex Sinclair’s irreproachable brilliance colouring constructs in the main title and a showing from old hands Keith Giffen and J.M. Dematteis, I didn’t know very much about the creators involved.  Having just said goodbye to the previous generation of stalwarts I didn’t have a clue what to expect from this new bunch.  Word on the street, or more accurately the internet, was that they were all pretty reliable so I tried to convince myself that I didn’t have any real cause for alarm.

What I did have were questions running around my brain about the future of the franchise.  Will it carry on along similar lines to the event laden stories of the last few years?  Or will it feel fresh?  Will the new teams introduce original concepts and directions?  Will the roster of characters remain largely unchanged?



So now that I’ve read the first two issues from each of the new teams I have to say that for the most part I’m impressed, and maybe a little bit relieved.  This is unashamedly a new beginning for the GL universe but it nods respectfully to the history that has come before it.  It seems to me that Larfleeze sits apart in its own world, perhaps choosing to remain outside continuity or in a different timeframe, but the other four books come together well to kick off the next chapter in our favourite ring-slingers’ lives.  They contain enough shared elements to achieve cohesion while putting their own stamp on the world being created (or should that be recreated?).  Each book has a very definite sense of style about it.  They each offer a tone that felt very suitable for that particular title without being a carbon copy of the preceding 20 issues.  There was a danger that the writers would struggle to move past implications of the First Lantern event and become bogged down in the past.  Instead they use this event as a springboard to produce great starting points for some exciting new storylines.  And they give me faith that they will successfully take charge of the Green Lantern mythos.

In the first issues (the #21s) the overarching theme of all four titles is reconstructing the Corps.  Losses are high and its reputation is in tatters.  Their base of operations on the planet Oa lies in rubble.  There seems to be an acceptance that the Templar Guardians would take over from their fallen brethren as leaders and advisors to the GLC but the Guardians want to educate themselves to the ways of the universe for a while before they take on the duty of protecting it.  I don’t know if I’d automatically want to place my trust in this unknown quantity just because they share heritage with the previous lot.  I mean, look at how those guys turned out.


  
Hal Jordan is chosen to shoulder the responsibility of command in the Templar Guardians absence.  He immediately is pulled in all directions and quickly realises his usual ‘fly by the seat of your pants’ attitude isn’t going to cut it.  He has to find and train new recruits and rebuild the citadel.  At the same time he has to protect his Corpsmen from the Red Lanterns, and he doesn’t trust his new bosses much either.  He relies on his closest allies, the Earth Lanterns, to handle the dangers for him.  This is the premise of Green Lantern: New Guardians (which has never been more aptly named by the way). Kyle Rayner is enlisted to guide and where necessary contain the new Guardians!  Get it?  Acting as Hal’s other man-at-arms, Guy Gardner is sent to fill the even less appealing role of an undercover spy in the Red Lantern Corps.  That he ends up defeating Atrocitus in combat and leading that Corps instead is on the one hand ‘sooo Guy’, and on the other a mind-boggling new angle that excites and surprises.  If all this weren’t enough, Larfleeze unleashes a brutal attack on Oa and all troops are called on to defend the planet.  A busy first day on the job.

John Stewart’s place in the shared world of Green Lantern is going to be very interesting in the coming months.  He will be the main focus of Green Lantern Corps.  Perhaps more so than Hal even, John feels that it is his responsibility to ensure the new recruits receive the training they need to represent the Corps honourably and, more importantly, live to tell the tale.  While Hal leads from the front, John is in among the rookies showing them how it’s done.  His new purpose is best described with his own words in Green Lantern Corps #22, “Lesson four, Rookie: never leave a lantern behind!”.

I have always appreciated that the Green Lantern titles exist in a shared universe, something that happens in one book impacts on the next.  Some readers find this daunting.  They would rather have a comic that tells its own story in isolation.  To those people I would say it is perfectly possible to pick up any of the four issue #21s and read it by itself without having to worry about missing something.  I would then advise them not to!  The four books weave together naturally to create a fixed point of reference before kick-starting their own adventures.  I very much look forward to them all coming together again down the road.  The creative teams have obviously put quite a bit of thought into making sure no book could be considered less relevant.  The much publicised new ‘Big Bad’ of the GLU is first introduced in Green Lantern: New Guardians thereby giving it equal weighting to its more famous sister titles.  Elsewhere some as yet unknown force is affecting the ring energies of all the coloured Corps and this is picked up through unrelated incidences in more than one book.  And having laid a strong foundation in #21, each title strikes out confidently with its own exciting storytelling in #22.


There is more than enough in each of these books to satisfy both old and new readers.  While the new creators have undoubtedly given the world we were familiar with a shake-up, they haven’t thrown away everything long-time fans hold dear.  One of the first things Hal does as leader is to send out the hundreds of rings belonging to his fallen companions so that they can seek out new Lanterns.  There are new faces to get to know in both Green Lantern and Green Lantern Corps.  But alongside them we get to spend time with fan favourites like Salaak and Kilowog who have to cope with massive changes to their lives following the fall of the Guardians.  The new writers did their research well and succeed in ensuring the personalities of our much loved characters continue to ring true.  I was particularly pleased to see Sinestro’s daughter, Lantern Soranik Natu, make her first significant appearance since DC Comics’ ‘New 52’ reboot began back in 2011.

In case anybody reading this blog is trying to decide whether or not to pick up one or all of the Lantern titles for the first time, or after a spell away, I will briefly relate my impression of each.  Even for a dedicated fan like myself the Green Lantern books have been quite a slog over the last several months, not because the writing wasn’t good (except possibly Red Lanterns where I have to admit it wasn’t) but because the books have been heavily entrenched in bringing to bear the huge concepts Geoff Johns had been working towards for a number of years.  They were not books that you could just pick up randomly at your comic book store and have any real hope understanding what was going on.  I enjoyed everything the ‘Wrath of the First Lantern’ crossover had to offer but it has been a breath of fresh air in the last two months to see my favourite characters roll up their sleeves and get back to focusing on the Corps again and having a few swashbuckling space adventures to boot!



Green Lantern #21 & #22 – As the flagship title of the collection and formerly penned by Johns for the best part of a decade all eyes are going to be on this book.  Robert Venditti has made a really interesting choice by placing responsibility for the Corps squarely at Hal Jordan’s door.  It gives us a chance to explore the character with fresh eyes which I think is important for any new writer taking on a book after his predecessor has been so long at the helm.  The last thing I want to read is a poor imitation of what has come before.  Issue #21 pitches straight into the action with a flashforward to a battle with Relic that we will do no doubt see more of soon.  The scene setting that follows is necessary but does not feel obligatory.  Before long we are taken back into the thick of battle as Larfleeze shows up to attack Oa knowing the Corps is at its weakest.  With constructs aplenty and new recruits having to learn their trade in the heat of battle there is lots for any GL fan to sink their teeth into.  I was particularly interested in the sub-plot of the unrepentant criminal who escapes her sciencell prison with the aid of a Star Sapphire ring.  Again, there is plenty to suggest that Venditti intends to tells stories unlike anything we have read before.  Like all of the new artists on these books, Billy Tan is still finding his feet but there is enough quality in there to give me confidence that he will be competing with the best of them on Green Lantern in no time at all.



Green Lantern Corps #21 & #22 – This book is a little different to the others in that it is the only one where the main character, John Stewart, does not start out on Oa.  Instead we find him on a mission with the Star Sapphire Fatality to save a planet from unidentified thieves whose miscreant actions are about to cause nuclear disaster.  In all honesty, despite my professed favouritism for Stewart over the other Earth Lanterns, Green Lantern Corps #21 didn’t work for me as much as I had hoped.  I put my misgivings down to two main factors: 1) Van Jensen is still finding his way with the book and his lead character’s voice – suffice to say by #22 this was no longer a problem and I was completely sold on the writer and the direction he and co-plotter Venditti are taking; and 2) Bernard Chang’s art felt ‘off’ to me – I put this purely down to the fact I have been spoiled by Fernando Pasarin’s outstanding contribution on GLC over the last couple of years.  Art is a matter of preference and often takes longer to adjust to than writing style so I fully expect to be singing Chang’s praises from the rooftops before very long at all.

The main thing a long time reader should be aware of with the switch in writers is that, thematically speaking, Green Lantern Corps has a new agenda (or seems to at any rate).  This title was primarily a war book under Tomasi’s guidance.  The Corps was an army marching into battle or dealing with the fallout from a previous skirmish.  John Stewart’s most significant contribution was his military court martial.  Under Van Jensen the book is much more about what makes people tick.  John’s complicated relationship with Fatality is put under the microscope.  Salaak’s reaction to the betrayal of the Guardians, and his fellow Corps members’ distrust of him as their closest associate are all put under scrutiny too.  And even more interesting are the new recruits that show up in this book.  While the rookies in Green Lantern are initially viewed through Hal’s eyes, Green Lantern Corps takes time to understand that each recruit has come from somewhere and has a past that makes them unique.  It poses the question of how a diverse group with different motivations and influences can work together to achieve a common goal.

With all of this high-brow soul searching you’d be forgiven for thinking the book might be short on the action department but not a bit of it.  Major run-ins with Khunds and Durlans in these two issues mean the book isn’t short on the blood and guts either.  All that and the first sight of the Emotional Entities in the New 52 make this a comic book with a whole lot of promise.  I am intrigued to discover if it can deliver.

 Green Lantern: New Guardians #21 & #22 - This is another title that is being rebuilt from the ground up by the new creative team of Justin Jordan and Brad Walker.  I imagine that Kyle Rayner, the lead figure of the title, could be a very difficult character to write these days.  From the very beginning of the New 52 he has been a man apart from the Green Lantern Corps, a renegade on the run from the evil manipulations of the Guardians of the Universe.  More recently, with the extraordinary abilities of the White Lantern at his command, there is a real danger that Kyle could suffer from the same foibles as many less than successful Superman stories over the years, namely that he is so powerful there is nothing of interest to challenge him.  Luckily this does not seem to be the case.  That he is the first Lantern to face off against Relic is not insignificant itself but, more to the point, Justin Jordan gets Kyle.  He knows who the man is and what he’s been through.  And he manages to write a story that is both a huge cosmic tapestry, very much complimented by Walker’s art, and an intimate personal tail sharing the hallmarks of a well written soap opera (if there is such a thing!).

Kyle feels a weight of responsibility on his shoulders surpassing even his own great gifts and when Hal asks him to accompany the Templar Guardians on their mission of learning he turns the new Green Lantern leader down flat.  The last thing he needs is to waste his time on a baby-sitting job when there is so much good he could be doing in the universe.  It is only when Hal points out that the Guardians are too powerful for anyone else to deal with if they stray onto the path of their evil predecessors that Kyle relents.

Something that caught my attention in GL:NG was Kyle’s “connection” with Carol Ferris, a fact neither hero seems to be consciously aware of.  The book doesn’t go into to detail on what this might mean yet but I get the feeling that the Star Sapphire is going to be a regular feature in the book and I can’t be alone in speculating that Hal Jordan might have a little competition on his hands on the relationship front.  With a track record of being unlucky in love these two look to be a great fit for one another at the moment.  If giant space sharks and villains from another universe aren’t enough to grab your attention then surely the possibility of a little bit of romantic tension is going to bring you back for more.


Red Lanterns #21 & #22 - Truth be told these issues were going to be make or break for me.  Peter Milligan's run was not ticking my boxes at all and since I am no longer doing regular weekly reviews here on Flodo's Page there was really nothing to keep me on the book except a masochistic Lantern completism.  What it also meant, however, was that this was the switch up I was feeling most positive about.

 As it is, all this positivity came crashing down around me when I opened issue #21 and was greeting with a maudlin Atrocitus spouting the same old theatrical nonsense he had for the previous 20 issues.  Luckily, it transpired this was just Charles Soule attempting to bridge the gap between old and new.  Red Lanterns continues to have its faults; the art is a little shaky and if I were to nitpick I could wonder why Dex-Starr has the ability to create construct bubbles in the same issue the Reds make it clear only Rankorr possesses this ability.  But I will not nitpick.  Instead I will tell you to go out and buy this book.  NOW.

 Soule has managed to capture the voice of Guy Gardner at his most, well ...’Guy-like’.  While the premise is that Guy is undercover in the Red Lantern Corps, it’s not long before we wonder if this isn’t where the angry man of the Greens should be in the first place.  There certainly weren't any complaints coming from this corner when he deposed Atrocitus and beat him to within an inch of his wretched life.  Guy brings a moral code to the RLs that they were missing previously but a question for the reader is how long will it be before the deliciously unfettered and unrepentant thirst for revenge overcomes him completely, and will anyone care?  We are only two issues in but already Red Lanterns is shaping up to be the no holds barred action thriller we had all hoped for way back in issue #1.


Larfleeze #21 & #22 I haven’t a whole lot to say about these books really.  If you were a fan of Keith Giffen and J.M Dematteis’ run on Justice League International or in the mini-series Formerly Known as the Justice League you’ll like Larfleeze.  If you are into comic books that are tongue-in-cheek or kooky you’ll like Larfleeze.  If you like your humor falling firmly in the realm of purile and pushing on the boundaries of good taste you will like Larfleeze.  And to be fair I like all of those things.  This is a funny book.  But if you want to read a Lantern book that has any consideration for previous continuity or has a bearing on the future of the GL universe Larfleeze is NOT the book for you.  In issue #21 the keeper of the light of avarice gives a version of his own back-story and even he admits it’s not exactly accurate!  So until DC Comics confirm any different I will take it that this title sits outside of the New 52 DCU.  I prefer to think of it as a bawdy romp for the sake of rompery all alone in its own little world.  And isn’t that how Larfleeze would want it in any case?

If you’re hoping to read a version of Larfleeze that pays its dues to Geoff Johns’ original ‘Agent Orange’ storyline you are better off sticking with Green Lantern #21 and #22 and leaving the revelry to somebody with a bit less nerd in their DNA…

So there you have it.  The rookies have landed and bar none they have made their mark on Green Lantern in one way or another.  And although there may be a few teething problems while writers and artists get to know their subjects in the same depth as many of us have had the pleasure of for a good many years, I think it is safe to say that the that the legacy of Green Lantern is in a safe hands. Big, green safe hands.   






Monday, 25 February 2013

B'ZZD REVIEW - GREEN LANTERN: NEW GUARDIANS #16


Welcome to the first B'zzd review, a short format blog post named after the tiny wasp-like sector partner of Mogo who showed size was irrelevant when he defeated the formidable Sinestro Corps usurper, Mongul. Basically the trials of real life (and a little laziness) have made it impossible to keep up with my own self-imposed review schedule. So in future I am going to mix up my standard spoiler articles with these punchy little B'zzd reviews. So without further ado...


GREEN LANTERN: NEW GUARDIANS #16
 
Brightest:

- For the first time since Kyle's quest to master the emotional spectrum began I feel he has actually been challenged with his struggle to obtain the violet energy of love. His refusal to battle to the death with former father figure, Ganthet, shows what a great writer Tony Bedard can be when he is at his best. This is what I had hoped to get from this story arc all along.

- Kyle's back story seems to be suffering from a fair amount of New 52 confusion of late. It is not clear (to me anyway) how much of his life as the GL torchbearer has been retconned. Certainly the party he hosts for Ganthet doesn't fit with any version of events that I am familiar with but it does have the bonus Easter egg of the first reference in the post-Flashpoint universe to historic fan favourites like G'Nort and Arisia.

Blackest:

- Aaron Kuder's art is a welcome improvement on recent fill-in artists but he does not seem to have got to grips Kyle's look at all. In the party scene mentioned above where Kyle appears without his mask I was confused to see two John Stewarts standing inches from one another!

- The only other problem that I had with GL:NG #16 was the couple of panels where they attempted to tie in Green Lantern: New Guardians Annual #1.  I thought it was a mistake in that book to include the current New Guardian line-up with the story that Keith Giffen wanted to tell and I think it’s a mistake to drag up the memory again here as Star Sapphire and her merry ring-slingers returnfrom their sci-fi misadventure.

Beware its power:

- Without a doubt the most amazing moment of this whole book is when Kyle becomes a White Lantern.  The culmination of 16 months of build-up from when the coloured rings first sought out the Green Lantern in the very first issue, through his transformation into an out of control Mega-Lantern in GL:NG #2 and the gathering of his power in the last few issues.  Ganthet drills him with an energy blast from behind, a kill shot.  The power of the seven emotions come together in that moment and breathes life back into his broken body.  New colourist Wil Quintana deserves a medal for his work throughout these pages but in the full page splash of Rayner embracing the spectrum and transcending all of its facets he truly excels himself.  I haven’t felt like this good about Kyle since Green Lantern #145 (vol. 3) when Kyle defeated Nero in the ‘Battle of Fire and Light’ and became Ion.  The Third Army and their twisted masters, the Guardians of the Universe, had better stand well back because White Lantern is coming to Oa and he isn’t going to be pulling his punches.

 
 
 

Wednesday, 20 February 2013

Changing Of The Guardians - A New Era For Green Lantern


  Last week DC Comics announced via the Associated Press that Geoff Johns will be ending his legendary run on Green Lantern with issue #20 (vol. 5).  l received the news via Twitter. I am lucky to be counted among the Green Lantern Twitter community and my thanks goes out to all the Fanterns who are kind enough to include me in their discussions.


Geoff has done much work in expanding the GL mythos and I would be frustrated if he was replaced by someone who did not cherish the source material as he does.  My favourite fanboy catchphrase is “In Johns we trust.”  As well as the obvious disappointment of losing one of the greats, my immediate thoughts after reading the news were occupied with the future.  If I were in control at DC I would switch Peter J. Tomasi up to the main Green Lantern title and get Tony Bedard back to what he does best writing Green Lantern Corps. Green Lantern: New Guardians would make a great title for a new creator to find their feet in the massive and presumably daunting world of the GL universe.  I tweeted my fanciful wish list to mixed reaction.

Imagine my surprise then the following day when further news hit my feed that it wasn't just Geoff that was moving on.  It was all change at GL with writers calling it a day on all four lantern books.  While other fans cried 'foul' to DC I couldn't believe my luck. I was convinced my premonition would come to pass.  In my interpretation of Johns' blog post on DC’s own website he is bequeathing the upkeep of the legacy to Tomasi.  Of course, you could take it as a final thank-you to Tomasi before he too moves on to pastures new but I chose not to.


Johns won't be completely detached from the green as he shifts his focus over to Justice League.  In light of the news of his departure it seems like Simon Baz might be a bit of a parting gift from Johns to himself.  Only the Chief Creative Officer of DC could get away with creating a brand new lantern to pack in his box of tricks for his new project.  Solicits reveal Baz will be feature in the government sanctioned super team, Justice League of America.
 

I am hoping for a bold ending from Geoff Johns for a run that rescued the franchise from relative obscurity in 2004 and put the character front and centre in the DC Comics line up.  Perhaps more so than ever before.  I mentioned in a previous post that I think he should decimate the coloured Corps of the emotional spectrum and strip Green Lantern back to basics.  This would give whoever takes over a fresh crack at the whip without being encumbered with the heavy burden of living up to Johns' legend. With the levels of power wielded by the First Lantern in the current crossover arc a complete do-over is entirely possible.

I don't know where this tactic would leave New Guardians. Perhaps the book will be ended which I hope is not the case.  As an alternative direction Kyle and whoever joins him could be literal Guardians of the white light of life.

Personally I am just about done with Red Lanterns in its current format despite my anticipation of the Inversions return. Maybe some new blood (no apologies for the double meaning) could be just what this title needs.


The impact of Johns’ departure cannot be underestimated.  At the same time he leaves behind a comic book franchise that is in high demand from the fans.  A few readers may drop off and follow him to his other books but then again, if DC play their cards right, this could be the jumping on point for new readers who missed out on the fresh beginnings experienced in most other titles with the publication of the New 52.

Only this morning fellow lantern aficionado @CorwinC sent me a link to the news released via MTV Geek revealing the names of all of the writers and artists who will be taking the reins of the GL universe.  As ever, my predictions were 100% wrong.  All four titles (possibly five if the debate around Larfleeze breaking out of Threshold holds water) have brand new creative teams.  A clean sweep.  Not that I am disappointed.  Robert Venditti has had nothing but good press for his work on X-O Manowar at Valiant Comics.  And Billy Tan’s first art release speaks for itself.  They will be working together on the main Green Lantern title.  Similarly the other names in the mix are being lauded as team-ups with great potential.  I'm excited to be in on the ground floor of a new era in the lantern mythology.  Venditti has already set himself a massive challenge in his first interview since the news broke, “If we execute the story the way we hope to, it’ll tie together every Lantern of every Corps who has ever appeared in any comic book.  Ever.  We’re going all in.”  I only hope he realises he is talking about a billion years of history here!
 
Green Lantern by Billy Tan
From the way things have been shaping up in recent books it looks like the Guardians of the Universe are on the way out too.  What this means for the Corps remains to be seen.  It is worth recalling the last time the Guardians disappeared from our pages in the mid-80s leaving the Corps to fend for themselves.  Hal Jordan, John Stewart and co. formed the Green Lantern Corps of Earth while Flodo Span and his companions became the Green Lantern Corps of the Klyminade.  Will power endured, the Corps survived and the Guardians returned because in comics nothing is forever.  The same is true of the printed page and the publishing office.  In recent times Frank Miller, Neil Gaiman and others have returned to the characters that made them famous and there is no reason why we couldn’t be saying the same thing about Geoff Johns in the not too distant future.  And it sounds like we have a lot to look forward to with our new Green Lantern creators in the meantime.   

 
 
 

Wednesday, 5 December 2012

WHO THE CAP FIT – GREEN LANTERN: NEW GUARDIANS #14

 
 

This is going to be another short catch-up review but the fact that I’m writing it at all is a little bit begrudgingly.  Whereas in my last review Green Lantern Corps #14 demanded commentary, I am of the opinion that GL:NG #14 is, by comparison, distinctly average.  This is disappointing for me to admit.  Until the zero issue this title was in my top 5 books month in, month out.  When I first discovered the current arc would focus on Kyle Rayner’s quest to master the emotional spectrum I was very excited.  I was looking forward to a change of pace growing out of a Kyle-centric story.  But if we were to take the analogy of an artist embracing his talents to create a masterpiece, this effort is painting by numbers at best.

The tale of a Green Lantern wielding all the powers of the other lantern corps should be immense.  I liken the concept to a quality martial arts film where the student develops under the tutelage of the legendary sensei.  Alas, this is not what we are given here.  It seems the skills Kyle gains are being ticked off a list in a perfunctory fashion.  Considering it is feat that has never been attempted by a Green Lantern before, his ability to take control of these energies comes a little too easily for my taste.

 

I’m not saying the book doesn’t have any merits.  It’s just that they are outweighed on the scale of excellence by irksome details that frustrate any attempt to become absorbed in the storytelling.  Nei Ruffino’s colours are great but the pencils are weak in the main.  I mentioned in my reflection on GL:NG #13 that the art has the appearance of a Saturday morning cartoon.  Well, the cartoon in question definitely isn’t Young Justice.  Its more like an episode of The Funky Phantom with its endlessly repeating backgrounds and not scary monsters.  Even the panels were Arkillo and Kyle confront their greatest fears while being tortured by constructs of Sinestro and Ganthet lack the dynamic, terrifying effect I’m sure that artists Andrei Bressan and Amilcar Pinna were going for.

It is interesting that this is the first chapter of the 'Rise of the Third Army' event that does not include any reference to the Thirdite creatures themselves.  Instead Tony Bedard explores the recently revealed alliance between the Zamarons and the Guardians of the Universe.  But again its not particularly gripping.  The Guardians are presented as stereotypical bogeymen.  They are missing the crazed zeal of the Geoff Johns and Peter Tomasi versions depicted in the other GL titles.

As a side note I've always had questions over the reinvention of Zamarons.  They have been given a purple skin tone that is much closer to the traditional Maltusan blue than their original Caucasian look… makes sense.  I love that their redesigned attire continues to pay tribute to the Amazonian battledress worn by the all-female race in earlier appearances.  What I don’t get is why they have evolved to no longer have need of a nose?  They’ve not got an air-breathing, sh*t-smelling nostril between them!

Anyway.  Back to the book.

Kyle obtains the power of the Indigo Tribe - check.  (And he asks did Indigo-1 if she knew Hal Jordan.  Seriously… I’m starting to wonder if he was even around for Blackest Night because he's finding it real hard to keep track of who knows who these days).  Kyle gets the power of the Yellow Lanterns – check.  (He also attracts another side-kick in Arkillo, who isn’t needed in other GL books in the way that Indigo Leader or her Red Lantern counterpart from last month are).  Kyle flies off to find Larfleeze and master the ancient and selfish power of Agent Orange in five minutes flat – check.  (Bonus prize to be confirmed). 





Wednesday, 24 October 2012

GET IN THE RING – GREEN LANTERN: NEW GUARDIANS #13


Something odd happened in Green Lantern: New Guardians this month. And before you say, I know something odd happens in this book every month. After all, it’s the kooky but loveable little brother of the GL family. But this was a very specific kind of odd that had me turning back to the front cover several times to check what book I actually had in my hand. And no matter how many times I looked it still claimed to be issue #13. Let me make myself a little clearer. For those of you who read last month’s GL:NG zero issue (and if you didn’t shame on you, you can catch up with my review below) you will know that it distinctly lacked any semblance of an origin story, which to my mind defeats the purpose of putting a big round “0” on the front of the book.

But now in issue #13 we are introduced to Kyle Rayner's earliest days as Green Lantern. It’s as if Tony Bedard received the zero month memo from the DC editorial but couldn’t quite squeeze the story he was telling into the preceding issues and had to spill over into this month. Not that I’m complaining I hasten to add. I was as disappointed as anyone that we haven’t had so much as a sniff of Kyle’s backstory since the opening pages of GL:NG #1. And I have to confess to have becoming rather nervous of late. Slowly but surely the New 52 is taking hold of the previously impregnable Green Lantern universe and reshaping it to mirror the youthful uncluttered image of the other titles in the DC Comics line.

For Guy Gardner this meant a new life, a new past and a new family. For Kyle it seemed that he had no life outside of his time as a ring slinger. We know that one of his greatest loves, the super-heroine Jade, has been blinked out of existence with the introduction of a reimagined JSA on Earth 2. And his most recent soul mate, Soranik Natu, has not be seen on panel since pre-Flashpoint in the War of the Lanterns event. When Rayner was first conceived by Ron Marz as a replacement for the disgraced Hal Jordan he had a girlfriend called Alex DeWitt who was infamously murdered by Major Force, Captain Atom’s villainous nemesis. With the drastic overhaul of Captain Atom in the New 52 it appears that Major Force is not on the table at present. By extension I supposed that Alex’s death, and possibly life, had not happened in the current continuity either .


Which brings us happily to the first panel of GL:NG #13 which opens with Kyle and a blonde girl called Alex sharing a bathroom as he prepares himself to meet her father. This playful scene is intercut with several panels showing our hero getting his ass handed to him by Atrocitous in a graveyard (cemeteries are featuring heavily in the GL-verse at the moment!). It transpires that Carol Ferris has engaged the Red Lantern to assist his green counterpart on a quest to conquer all the energies of the emotional spectrum. Atrocitus hurls him into a headstone, Alex’s headstone, which envokes memories in Kyle of the time he and Alex had shared together. She was there to pick Kyle’s original GL uniform from among the sketches he'd drafted. I was very pleased to note his costume remains unchanged from his introductory run in Green Lantern volume 3. And it is a bittersweet moment when we relive the moment Kyle finds her dead body in his fridge. In deference, I suspect, to the controversy that surrounded Alex’s death the first time around (she became a symbol of the poor treatment of female characters in the male dominated comicmarket) her corpse is rather more elegantly arranged here.


The pencils in this issue are taken on by two fill-in artists, Andrei Bressan and Amilcar Pinna. I am not familiar enough with either to know one from the other but the difference in their style is never more obvious than in their respective renditions of Atrocitous. In the majority of the book he is drawn (I suspect by Bressan) in a cartoon style reminiscent of Saturday morning television whereas the four or five pages by the other artist are depicted with much more realism. In a single page interlude reminding us of the rapidly expanding Third Army, a throwaway cameo from two other unnamed red lanterns is equally ‘cartoony’. Bedard’s script also bears the choppy unrounded finish of a kid’s adventure cartoon. As a result the books style belies the very serious subject manner that is handled throughout. At times the contrast can be a little jarring.


Having failed to spark the rage in Kyle’s heart with the tragedy of his own life, Atrocitus turns farther afield for horrific inspiration. He brings the GL to an Arabic nation and, pinning him in place, he forces him to witness the execution of a father in front of his son by gunmen on the hunt for rebel fighters. This is enough to send Kyle into a furious frenzy and he is transformed, ring and all, into a flaming napalm spewing Red Lantern. He quickly wipes out the armed troops, injuring civilians in the process. The double page splash of Red Kyle is suitably impressive, although I am not entirely sure about eyeless gladiatorial helmet he has donned for the occasion.


We also get a compressed account of Atrocitous’ own origins as the only survivor of the massacre of Sector 666. This is an oft told story over in the Red Lanterns title but, dare I say it, Bedard’s imitation of Peter Milligan’s narrative voice reads better than the original.

Having already mastered the blue energy of hope in the previous issue, Kyle Rayner is able to heal the wounded before heading back to Carol in New York. She is using her Star Sapphire powers to replace Alex’s damaged headstone with a beautiful pink crystal construct. Kyle, however, is not interested. The residual rage still fills him and he has little consideration for anything accept progressing in his personal quest. Apparently we are going to follow him as he conquers a different coloured energy each month, again unintentionally referencing the Saturday morning ‘toons' model. And next month is yellow.



This is actually quite an interesting development because, despite the depiction of a new team of New Guardians on the cover of the last two issues, it would seem that Kyle is going to encounter most of his allies individually. This departure from the formula established early in the run is no bad thing. I am excited by the prospect of a Kyle-centric book that takes time to elaborate on the peculiarities of each emotional Corps set in a context where they are not struggling to be noticed in the confines of a 22 page comic book.

In keeping with the other Green Lantern books this month the last page cuts away to a scene of the Guardian’s Third Army attacking a spaceship in sector 2819 and forcibly inducting its crew into their ranks. If anything is to be said on this episode it is that its not as creepy as Green Lantern #13 and its less graphic than Green Lantern Corps #13. Where it does succeed is in reminding us that the Third Army marches on, growing in number with each fresh victim and no-one in the universe can be considered safe from their attentions.