I realize that I hardly ever give any books below a seven out of ten rating anymore, and that's just kinda silly. Seven out of ten is a pretty solid rating, and certainly not every book I read is that solid. So from henceforth I resolve to be a lot stricter with my ratings. That's right, I'm going to rate the
hell out of these books!!
52 Week 29
Another solid week. How many times have I said that about this series?
I liked the JSA story here, if only because I like Alan Scott's family and would like to see more between him and Obsidian, whose reaction in this case is pretty understandable, if not actually agreeable. There's some pretty clear statements that DC is making here regarding iconic older heroes and newer, young Gen-Y upstarts, but I'm not quite sure what it is yet...
I don't know what I think about Veronica Cale's characterization here. Obviously Rucka is involved so she can't go
that wrong, and it's not her overly sexual direction that I'm concerned about here -- in the past she's obviously never been shy about using her looks to get her way, within reason -- it's that in the past, she would have never considered herself a supervillain or evil in any way. Of course she had no illusions about who she was and the methods she employed, but imo she would have considered working right alongside such men like Sivana and Morrow as beneath her and very likely would have been far more contemptuous of them. She had nothing but contempt for Dr. Psycho, for example, and I don't see what's the big difference between him and the scientists on this island.
Steel's back to normal. "Huzzah" or "Uh oh"? What's nice about this series is that you're never quite sure. Next week: the Bats!
(8.9 out of 10)
Connor Hawke: Dragon's Blood #1
The really good thing about having a character's longtime writer come back to write the character again is that there's no question that the character will be treated with respect, will be very well understood, and well be portrayed as the fans like him/her to be portrayed. This was the case when Ron Marz returned to handle Kyle Rayner recently. The
bad thing about having a character's longtime writer come back to write the character again is that, very often, events and progressions which happened
after said writer stopped writing the character will be forgotten, ignored, or mishandled. That's unfortunately the case in this instance as Chuck Dixon comes back to write Connor Hawke.
Connor's back at the monastery where he grew up and hanging out with Eddie Feyers, which at once seems a bit odd considering what he's been doing for the last few years. It's not out of character for Connor to return to the monastery for solace or reassociate with Eddie of course; it's the motivation that seems odd, the motivation being that he's feeling adrift and conflicted towards Ollie. But the idea of Connor still having a lot of unresolved father issues regarding Ollie just rings hollow right now. Sorry, but it does. I realize that it was a significant plot point throughout Dixon's run, but that was when he thought his father was blowed up good and he would never have a chance to properly resolve those unresolved issues. Since Ollie's return, writers like Smith, Winick, and Meltzer had done incredible things in reference to those very issues, and while Connor may not have been on the shiniest of terms with his father the last we've seen him, I think it's fair to say that he's long since moved past the point where he'd have scary dreams with his dad shooting him with arrows and calling him second best. And I can't, in all honesty, drum up that much enthusiasm for a miniseries that's likely going to be
filled with those ideas. It made sense when Ollie was dead. But nowadays when Ollie's just a phone call away and more than capable of (if not actually
willing to) hearing his son blab about his issues, it just rings hollow.
With that particular tidbit out of the way, how does the rest of the issue stand up? Well, it stands up mostly as an introductory issue, which means that we got a lot of exposition and set-up, which means not a lot actually happens and a lot of characters are introduced that we don't really care about yet. Which is just fine; this is just the intro, and it does its job well. I'm looking forward to this archery competition and all of the wackiness that's bound to ensue.
And the ending of the issue was a real treat; Shado's back, and of course everyone knows that Shado's the mother of Ollie's other illegitimate child, which promises a lot of fun angst very very soon. For all my rantings about Connor's father issues, Ollie's infidelity and basic ****in' ways is one of those issues that actually makes sense for Connor to still be hung up about, given that it obviously influenced him directly and is one of the few things we've seen to actually get him full-on pissed.
And hey, props to the artist for actually remembering for once that Connor is mixed.
So I give this issue a...
(6.8 out of 10)
...with the acknowledgment that it might, and probably will, get significantly better.
Wonder Woman #3
And ironically enough it's often the new, untested writers who will remember the most about a character's continuity and put it into their stories.
I was frankly and pleasantly a bit surprised at just how much of Wonder Woman's history and post-Crisis canon that Heinberg managed to remember and put in here. Oh sure, he glossed over Hercules' rape of the Amazons in all but the most subtle of subtexts, but to fit in "Harold Campion" from Byrne's run? Hell, I'm not even sure that Byrne remembers he once had Hercules be Champion. When all of WW's post-Crisis history seems to be in a bit of an upheaval following Infinite Crisis, it's good to see much of it still intact.
I honestly love Heinberg's characterization of Diana. It's just enough like Rucka's that it doesn't nearly feel like a completely different character -- and I'm looking at you, Johns and Waid -- but with some genuine progression and added depths built onto the preexisting Diana. She's still the same confident, intrepid woman she once was, but there's also a shade of doubt and uncertainty and insecurity that colors everything she does. She says "Wonder Woman is a symbol. She's not me." but it's almost as if she's trying to convince herself. For someone who used to know the truth about everything, this is a very interesting turn.
Before Heinberg started this run, pretty much my worst nightmore for Wonder Woman would have been for her to return to her Diana Prince roots and turn into a secret agent character-type character again. But now I see Agent Prince in action and it's really sort of fun and interesting in that not-quite-campy way. I like Agent Nemesis in the series too, in that generic male costar sort of way. On the one hand I hope that whoever continues this book after Heinberg really keeps this whole Department of Metahuman Affairs angle, but on the other I keep seeing ways for other writers to screw it up. So we'll see.
Also props to the Dodsons for making Circe much more visually intimitating that the leather-clad dominatrix that she'd become in recent years. Not that I mind the prior interpretation, but there's something about flowy robes and bling bling for a sorceress that's really cool.
Does the lateness of the book bother me? Yeah, it does. While the book's quite good, it's honestly not that good as to require months upon months of delays. The story and the art are both top-notch, but it's really not as if either the writer or the artists are just swamped with that much work right now. In a nutshell, there really should not be any reason for this book to be taking this much time getting out. But as usual with books like this (Astonishing X-Men and Heinberg's other title Young Avengers to name a few), most often the good parts of the series takes the edge off the lateness.
(8.7 out of 10, minus a bit for the lateness)