Chicago doubled for Gotham in a lot of Begins and TDK, ironically. Also, Metropolis in MOS as I recall (and the surrounding suburbs were Smallville.) That's always kind of fun to see stuff like that, where you're like "Oh, I've been to that IHOP Superman just got thrown into."
I even remember liking that the 90s Hawkman series took place in Chicago. New York gets so many characters! So it's always fun to see your stomping grounds represented (even if it isn't always flattering.)
Now that it is confirmed to end i hope Green Lantern War Journal has a good ending in #12
X-Men Forever
It is something of a comic trope for African-American female super-heroes, isn't it? I believe that Microwaveabelle of Hero Hotline also lost her husband to gang violence.
On the Waller front, I like to think that hiring John Ridley to remix her origin is a tacit admission from DC that they've *really* screwed up the character, so they're bringing in a Heavy Hitter With Nigh-Unassailable Bona Fides to clean up the mess.
And who knows, maybe I'll be wrong. But I'll put down five bucks right now that Waller's new "why I hate all super-heroes" origin will have something to do with loved ones getting caught in the crossfire.
I'm glad there's a Bat/Cat backup in here
I'll be curious to see if this origin will explain Waller going from a morally grey protagonist who didn't necessarily trust metas to outright villain, or if the retcon will depict her as always hating metahumans and wanting to wipe them out the entire time.
The best case scenario for me, I think, would be something like Lady Cop's issues with superheroes in Danger Street, where because they weren't there when she needed their help she comes to hate them. Waller having this blanket distrust of superhumans is just very hard to square with her running the Suicide Squad for so long, voluntarily working with superheroes and unleashing so many metahumans who've proven themselves untrustworthy on the world. I know people liked the JLU version with similar motives, but there the Squad was Flag and three powerless criminals.
I'm trepidatious on this series, but I am trying to be optimistic. There's no way a miniseries focused on Waller will portray her as flatly as other Dawn of DC books have, even Dream Team has been doing better, and I read the first book of Ridley's Other History of the DCU the other day and thought it was excellent. It also had a family member of the protagonist die to street crime, which I guess just shows how pervasive that trope is with black comics characters (and black characters generally). Still, I hope Ridley gives the same sort of respect to the deaths of Waller's children and husband as he did there.
Probably just the Absolute Power JSA appearance book for me.
I am wondering if Absolute Power will lead to a JLA relaunch. Seems like we're about due.
Last Read: Aquaman & The Flash: Voidsong
Monthly Pull List: Birds of Prey, Daredevil, Geiger, Green Arrow, Justice Ducks, Justice Society of America, Negaduck, Nightwing, Phantom Road, Shazam!, Space Ghost, Suicide Squad: Dream Team, Thundercats, Titans
I was thinking less of that John Ridley, and more of the one that wrote the reasonably-well-regarded Other History of the DCU. You know, the one that did an admirable job of trying to retroactively weld a dramatic arc to Mal Duncan's absolutely absurd published history.