New Crisis, New Name

Well, that came as a surprise – the announcement at San Diego Comic Con that DC’s current big event DARK CRISIS was changing it’s name half way through its run to DARK CRISIS ON INFINITE EARTHS complete with a rather cool mini interview/trailer for the change that you can watch on DC’s announcement page.

Probably best if I get my butt in gear and catch up with the annotations, eh?

Random Retrospective #29 – JLA #2

Credit where it’s due, Grant Morrison’s revamp of the Justice League brand was a mighty breath of fresh air. The titles had been flagging for some time, JUSTICE LEAGUE AMERICA chief among them, where the stories had been tired and lacklustre for a year or two. Once that title was put to bed, there was a brief hiatus before the Mark Waid penned JUSTICE LEAGUE: A MIDSUMMER’S NIGHTMARE miniseries while Grant Morrison got their ducks in a row to relaunch the title with the “big 7” heroes as simply JLA.

And what a relaunch. I’ve said in the past I have some troubles with Morrison’s writing – they tend to be big on ideas but the execution tends to drift as the stories go along – but this first four issue storyline worked a treat. White Martians invade the Earth appearing as superheroes and using mind control to convinced everyone they’re here to help, with only the nascent JLA to resist them. It’s a classic story of the League splitting into smaller teams to fight the bad guys, something that Martian Manhunter acknowledges.

There’s a nice subtle shift of command there – Green Lantern asks Batman what’s next and he defers to Martian Manhunter.

Re-reading this for the first time in years, I was surprised at just how much of a dick Aquaman is at this point. This was the 90’s, though, and he was going through that harpoon for a hand, grim and gritty phase which, thankfully, Wonder Woman was having no part of.

The JLA get their collective behinds kicked, though, with the Hyperclan taking most of them out relatively easily, including even Superman:

This is issue #2, remember, so the JLA has to fall so that they can rise up in the next couple of issues.

JLA was a damn fine series and most of Morrison’s work still stands the test of time; I don’t know if it was the editors keeping them in check, but I remember each of the story arcs working nicely in tight, contained stories. And they were damn good stories, too – the JLA banded together to defeat the problems that no other group of heroes could, justifying their existence and showing why they were the best.