Mild Mannered Reviews - Justice League Comics

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Justice League #2

Scheduled to arrive in stores: August 3, 2016

Cover date: October 2016

"The Extinction Machines" - Part 2

Writer: Bryan Hitch
Penciller: Tony S. Daniel
Inker: Sandu Florea
Cover: Tony S. Daniel & Tomeu Morey
Variant Cover: Yannick Paquette & Nathan Fairbairn

Reviewed by: T.A. Ewart (aka liheibao)
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The Justice League is about saving as many people as possible, while the world is beset with rolling catastrophes, however, the find themselves attacked by the very people they save, as the Kindred possesses them. The League reforms and learns the cause of the tremors is coming from the Earth's core. Simultaneously, the world is attacked anew by the Reapers. The League goes to deal with all that plagues the world, while the Batman goes to enlist Superman's aid on an "impossible" mission to the centre of the Earth.

4Story - 4: Three for three. The latest incarnation of the Justice League merges the early Silver Age status quo with a healthy portion of Grant Morrison's modern JLA run. The original days of the League sported a team that was absent Superman, and for good reason, for when Superman did show up, he usually slapped the problem away in seconds... much to the consternation of loyal readers at that time. Morrison's run reserved the big, astounding, impossible tasks for Superman, though usually after he was sidelined somehow to give the other players a fair go. Hitch applies that same ethic with his run, giving readers a fine display of Flash doing what he's aptly named for.

Justice League

Batman's reluctance of involving Superman is both welcomed and exasperating. On one hand, why should the Batman work with someone he doesn't trust implicitly? The fact that Batman has a distrustful or adversarial nature with Superman undermines the two working together in any fashion, and it's good to see that fact acknowledged however slightly. However, as Batman has worked with Superman, albeit another one, and the world is going to hell in a handbasket, his resistance is bordering on stupidity at this point. When lives are on the line, you do what's best for the people, misgivings and egos are left at the door. Still, seeing Superman being given a task that only he can accomplish, or hope to even try is good form, and very much welcomed. Mark Millar and Bryan Hitch, at one point, we're positioning themselves to do a run on Superman that never materialized. Readers who got wind of it were very intrigued, but it didn't happen. However, Hitch's regard for Superman remains, and it has left me eager to see how he'll handle Superman here, even after his use of New 52 Superman on Justice League of America.

Justice League

3Art - 3: What has happened to Tony Daniel? His linework here is just pedestrian and lackluster.

Justice League

Wonder Woman looks like an emaciated super-model, in a cosplayer's outfit, and one of quite limited skill. There is no robustness to Daniel's renderings. He seems tired and unconcerned with quality, which is the converse for DC's usual formula of pretty pictures disguising atrocious stories.

3Cover Art - 3: It's been the same cover design for the last three months. It's as if mediocrity is mandated.

2Variant Cover Art - 2: I usually don't review the variant covers, but this one was bad enough that it warranted a say. Wonder Woman looks reminiscent of the ancient urn art, where women looked like beardless men. She's closer to Achilles in this image than Diana of Themyscira. It's obvious what Paquette was going, but it's such a miss.

Mild Mannered Reviews

2016

Note: Except for digital first releases, the month dates are from the issue covers, not the actual date when the comic went on sale.

January 2016 February 2016 March 2016 April 2016 May 2016 June 2016 July 2016 August 2016 September 2016 October 2016 November 2016 December 2016

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