Superman and the Legion of Three Worlds #3
I'm glad this issue finally came out because it was spectacular. The visuals are incredibly dense, which is sort of a given with Perez penciling, but they're still perfectly clear, so they make it feel like you're getting much more story for your money than the page count would indicate. I've said at length how little I like the Silver Age, but the Legion may be one of my few exceptions to that. I preferred Waid's Threeboot Legion for the more sophisticated underlying themes he injected into the series, but if I'm being honest, those themes basically left with Waid. The stories following Waid's departure, while good, were just not quite on the level of Waid's stories. Even the youth movement idea sort of fell by the wayside in favor of more standard superheroics, and the format became more like an Ultimate Legion, where familiar characters from previous incarnations were introduced into Threeboot canon in different and sometimes awkward ways. Still good, don't get me wrong--I liked Bedard's run--but just not distinguished enough from the Silver Age Legion, which was making a comeback by then, to make me really care. I could see the writing on the wall: the Threeboot Legion was obviously going to be retconned away in favor of the Silver Age Legion.
Here, we see the beginnings of that. The Threeboot and post-Zero Hour Legions are both retconned to coming from different Earths in the Multiverse, which means if they survive this mini, they'll go back to those Earths and we'll probably never see or hear from them again. But, like I said before, the Threeboot Legion has been so homogenized with the Silver Age versions that I won't really miss them. I never knew much about the post-Zero Hour Legion, but I'll actually miss them more, since they actually introduced a lot of cool new characters into the Legion, like Gates and XS. Hopefully some of those new characters stick around.
Of course, the big deal in this issue is that Bart is back. It was pretty predictable, but I'm glad it came through. It was a shame that they rushed him into being the Flash and then killed him off so unceremoniously. And, hey, he's in the Kid Flash costume again, so maybe that means Wally won't get downgraded all the way back to Kid Flash in Rebirth. I'm still not a fan of those ridiculous Flash rings, but I get the symbolism with the rings being important to the Legion and the GL Corps and everyone else in this series. So Bart gets his own ring to distinguish himself.
All in all, a pretty great issue. Bart returning is the highlight, but the rest of the issue was frenetic and fun, and I'm not too into any of these characters, so Johns killing them off by the bucket doesn't really bother me. Except the Karate Kid. I swear, "Karate Kid" must be the most dangerous superhero name to take because none of them survive very long. I guess someone at DC just really hates the Karate Kid. Oh well, good issue.
Agents of Atlas #1
Great start to this series. The conflict for Jimmy that was set up at the end of the AoA mini-series a few years back--being a 100% good, upstanding man forced to take over a criminal organization--is brought to fruition here nicely. The new status quo works pretty well with the Dark Reign backdrop, too, since the rivalry between Norman and Jimmy marks the first time I've actually found Norman Osborn interesting since he died.
There's not a ton of meat to this issue, since it's mostly set-up. It was pretty satisfying to see the Sentry totally get owned by Venus, though. Other than that, it ended on a pretty great cliffhanger, as well--Temugin is now gonna be a rival to Jimmy for the seat of Atlas' power. Makes sense given the hereditary rulership of Atlas by descendents of Genghis Khan.
Then there's the backup story with Wolverine, presumably included to guarantee a few more sales from the Wolverine fanboys. It's a throw-away piece, of course, detailing the first time Wolverine and the Agents met. This is back when Wolverine was working for shadowy government agencies in the '50s, so no adamantium and no claws (that he knows about), but not as much berserker rage, either. So Wolverine is portrayed here as a slick, cunning secret agent, which is much better than Wolverine's usual, tired man/beast duality to me. The story's solid as a flashback tale, but it feels pretty tacked-on. The ending is a little silly, too. Apparently, Cuba's leadership is under the influence of bugs. Eh.
But the present-day stuff in the issue was great and promises more greatness in the future, so I can forgive the silly ending of the backup.
I also got Iron Man this week and plan to start reading the series. I skipped it initially because Director of SHIELD was still around and I was already enjoying that, plus I don't like Salvador Larroca's ugly new art style. But Tony on the run with his whole world turned upside down sounded fun to me, so I got past the art and picked it up starting with this week's issue. My shop's out of the two previous parts of this arc, but I think I'll be fine just starting from here. I haven't read it yet, but I'll post my thoughts when I do.