This week’s comics haul was light. Very light. Three (3) comics light, in fact. Yeah… THAT light. But, there were comics to be read, and I read them. So, here’s the take on this week’s reads:
Adventure Comics #8 (#511) – When I saw the cover to this issue, I smiled. A lot. Why…?
That’s right, it’s a Legion cover. Suffice if to say: They had my attention early with this one. Inside, there were three stories: The main story, with two foci — one in the 31st Century, one in the 21st Century and the backup story, which tells the tale of [SPOILER DELETED]‘s true role within Project: 7734.
The Legion story starts in the 31st Century with Brainiac 5. Over the years, Brainy has proven himself to be one of the – if not THE – most intelligent sentients in the United Planets. (I wouldn’t say he’s always the “smartest,” but everyone has their flaws.) In the first three pages of the story, we learn what the Brainiac title means to him and how he came to have it:
I didn’t get to choose my name.
My mother named me Querl Dox, after her great, great grandfather who was lost while mining Colu’s moon.
My father also chose a family name for me. One that made me a target.
As a child, I knew that “Brainiac” was a family name that hadn’t been used for generations. I didn’t know why. I quickly learned.
Brainiac 1 was my great, great, great, great, great grandfather, on my father’s side. He lived a thousand years ago, the most knowledgeable being in the universe. He should’ve been someone I looked up to. Inspiration for a small boy who needed it.
But, Brainiac 1 was flawed. He didn’t earn that knowledge through hard work or study. He stole it. Brainiac crossed the universe a hundred times over, kidnapping races and bottling them up so he could feed off their information, like some parts of our culture.
He was nothing more than a thought-thief…
…and my father had given me his cursed name.
After studying at the Time Institute, I begrudgingly joined the team, trying to do right by the name “Brainiac.” I’ve come to accept my name — even enjoy it’s implication.
It says exactly what I want it to say–
–that I know everything.
With three pages and a little expository back-story, Sterling Gates fills in volumes of information about Brainiac 5, most of which hasn’t really been touched in the past fifty years of Legion lore.
At this point, we see the Legion attempting a rescue mission: Saving scientists on a research outpost from a rift in space. Brainiac 5 soon discovers that the rift is a temporal anomaly anchored back in…
…the 21st Century portion of this story begins to fill in some of the gaps as to “why” certain members of the Legion Espionage Squad are in the past and why they have been tailing Superboy and Mon-El. It also serves as a tie to the LES’ role in the upcoming Superman: Last Stand of New Krypton.
All-in-all, it was a good issue. A lot of threads — including some from the JLA/JSA crossover, “The Lightning Saga” — are starting to be tied up.
Justice League: Cry for Justice #7 (of 7) – Prometheus (gagged and bound) versus the team comprised of members of the Justice League and the Justice Society. Sounds like a pretty unfair fight. You’re right. And, what’s possibly more surprising: Prometheus is winning.
This issue – this series, even – helps to cement Prometheus’ credibility as a truly dangerous threat, not just to the League, but to the everyday citizens of the DCU. He proves to be a strategist of Batman-like caliber. The difference being: There is be no moral center guiding his schemes and machinations.
There was action in this issue, but the climax was… anti-climactic. And, to be honest, the whole series just left me unfulfilled. Yes, I bought all seven issues, but the pay-off just wasn’t there for me. It seems as if the whole reason for the series was an attempt to heap a little more angst onto [SPOILER DELETED]… as if they needed more. I am curious to see how the repercussions of this story’s finale affect the characters of the DCU over the next few months or years.
Milestone Forever #2 (0f 2) – This issue concludes the “wrap-up” of the Milestone Universe. It also serves to fold the MiU into the mainstream DCU, as seen in Justice League of America #27 and 28. Dharma continues to attempt to unravel the mystery of who or what will cause/prevent the destruction of the Milestone Universe… and he’s unsure of how to proceed. In the course of his journey, he offers glimpses of the futures of Hardware and Static.
I was satisfied with the way that Dwayne McDuffie and company turned off the lights on the Milestone-as-a-separate-Universe and rolled it into the DCU. (And, they did it in less than 12 – or 52 issues, to boot!)