- Joined
- Dec 18, 2019
I can't help but love Spiderman: Reign as a concept, despite Peter becoming a radioactive coomer.
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Doomsday Clock, if only because, unlike a Tom King comic, you actually expect it to have some semblance of quality. The original Watchmen built up to an epic confrontation between our heroes and Veidt on his moon base. Doomsday Clock builds up to nothing and ends with a disappointing whimper.
In the thrilling conclusion to our storyline, Dr. Manhattan praises Superman for 20 pages before
kidnapping a child and imbuing it with his power.
What did it all mean? Nothing! What role did any of the characters play? None at all! The whole thing was just multiverse porn for continuity-obsessed dweebs like Geoff Johns. What a fucking waste of time.
Using Watchmen to make your continuity more convenient is a gross squandering of the IP - and I thought, and still think, bringing the two together was a cool idea, so I don't hate the concept per se. The only one of the later issues that landed for me was the one where Manhattan is fascinated by Superman's importance and keeps tweaking the timeline yet finding Superman as a heroic paragon to be an inevitability.
I would still have accepted it as a worthwhile price if the Hickman Legion rumours had been true.
IMO, it would have worked better if it was just Dr. Manhattan who crossed over. They could have explained it as him being disillusioned with the Watchmen universe after the events of the comics so when he decided to leave humanity, he took it to the extreme and left the universe, only to discover the multiverse. That's where he saw Superman and became curious about him, wondering if his world could have ended up like the main DC continuity if they had a Superman. So, he makes changes to try and prove that it was just sheer circumstance that everything worked out, but then he realizes that, no matter what he changes, Superman will be Superman, and then he goes back to the Watchmen universe feeling hopeful and optimistic. He could still fade away into nothingness, but create the "Clark" child from the end that shows up with Silk Spectre/Nite Owl.
It looks like Johns restored the DCU to its Post-Crisis glory, aside from the slight tweak of Superboy having existed and thus inspiring the creation of the Legion. Considering how badly the removal of Superboy fucked over the LOSH continuity (until they could rejigger it with the 5 Years Later arc and then AGAIN during Zero Hour), putting a young Kal-El back in the Post-crisis canon makes sense.
I think the delay in Doomsday Clock was due DC needing to let the rest of the DCU ready for the changes and catch up. DC used this series to explain how the LOSH came back, and so that meant letting the series "pause" until the character redesigns for the new LOSH were ready.
If you look at the earlier scenes where Saturn Girl and Cosmic Boy's backs are shown in issue 12, it looks like they are wearing their classic outfits as if that was the plan until Bendis waved his dick around and said, "Hold Up. I'm going to turn the LOSH into the Burger King Kids Club. Give me a few months"
As the population gets more diverse, it gets more obese.
I read The Dark Knight Returns: The Golden Child #1 earlier tonight. Something about it seems off. Like, there’s a good story to be found here, but the weird Trump stuff seems sort of shoved in there. Trump is never mentioned by name, and his dialogue only vaguely resembles his real-life speech. He’s only referred to as “The Governor”. It almost feels like the artist and the editor chose to make the governor character Trump out of spite for the readers. The fact that they shoved the climate change mongoloid Greta into one of the crowd scenes also seems really out of place.
The book is mostly about Jon Kent and Darkseid who are both pretty well characterized. Frank Miller really needs to stop with having characters repeating the same few words over and over again though. It doesn’t actually add depth to the dialogue like he thinks it does.
I’m probably going to pick up the second issue since, despite the weird SJW shit, I do want to see what comes next.
Frank Miller's always been a little weird on politics. His instincts seem conservative, but he gets stuck into conservative figures more often in his works. It's been that way since Dark Knight Returns, which was transparently a reaction to the incredible crime and disorder that followed civil rights and the consequent population dislocations, but where Frank never quite articulated that well. Here, I find it hard to tell what he's saying other than maybe a vague 'Orange man bad' - but then, as you say, it's not such an obvious parallel in how the Trump anlaogue behaves (nor is the Trump analogue shown too offensively, despite Darkseid supporting him and what that implies), that it's clear that the message is so simple. Possibly he's simply someone who feels politically intense in a vague sense, but never examines his beliefs too closely and picks them up by osmosis from the fact he's surrounded by Democrats, and the confusion makes its way into his comics.
Despite the weirdness, I didn't mind it. It had some cool imagery - Darkseid actually seemed creepy and threatening for once - and I'm interested in the characters. Rather concerned at the love heart Batwoman sent on the phone at the end...
Frank Miller's always been a little weird on politics. His instincts seem conservative, but he gets stuck into conservative figures more often in his works. It's been that way since Dark Knight Returns, which was transparently a reaction to the incredible crime and disorder that followed civil rights and the consequent population dislocations, but where Frank never quite articulated that well. Here, I find it hard to tell what he's saying other than maybe a vague 'Orange man bad' - but then, as you say, it's not such an obvious parallel in how the Trump anlaogue behaves (nor is the Trump analogue shown too offensively, despite Darkseid supporting him and what that implies), that it's clear that the message is so simple. Possibly he's simply someone who feels politically intense in a vague sense, but never examines his beliefs too closely and picks them up by osmosis from the fact he's surrounded by Democrats, and the confusion makes its way into his comics.
Despite the weirdness, I didn't mind it. It had some cool imagery - Darkseid actually seemed creepy and threatening for once - and I'm interested in the characters. Rather concerned at the love heart Batwoman sent on the phone at the end...
Issue 28# of Immortal Hulk spoilers:
It's a political abortion. Elwing portrays the older more conservative Americans as religious lunatics who'd more than happily shoot their own daughter because they're afraid of them, because the "devil" got inside of them. He portrays the obvious teenagers who don't have enough life experience, and experience as the future, and obviously right. It all feels phoned in.
The new artist is still quite talented. He's not as good as the last artist, but even then its still nice on the eyes. The main minotaur villain is cool as well, and its hilarious how he pretty much made bank on this whole entire movement Hulk started by selling merchandise.
Issue 28# of Immortal Hulk spoilers:
It's a political abortion. Elwing portrays the older more conservative Americans as religious lunatics who'd more than happily shoot their own daughter because they're afraid of them, because the "devil" got inside of them. He portrays the obvious teenagers who don't have enough life experience, and experience as the future, and obviously right. It all feels phoned in.
The new artist is still quite talented. He's not as good as the last artist, but even then its still nice on the eyes. The main minotaur villain is cool as well, and its hilarious how he pretty much made bank on this whole entire movement Hulk started by selling merchandise.
i wonder what future generations will think of these stories.