this was really great. loved the story and the artwork fit. gonna have to read it a second time, which is something i usually don't do with recent comics.
I still don't know what, Darksied Is.... The Devil!?
I liked Orion under Azzarello's pen, I know he can be a dick, I didn't care for his tactics here...
I've grown fond of this creative team, at this point I'll buy whatever their names attached to, but honestly, I'm not sure how I feel about this issue yet. I love when Scott & Barda are on panel together, and the art is on point, but I'm not sure what Tom is trying to say here. It's still early, we got eleven more to go, but I need to re-read it a couple more times...
#MagnetoWasRight
Man, that was completely brilliant. More convinced than ever that DC should just toss everything Rucka did during "Rebirth", and just let King start Wonder Woman from scratch.
"Never assign to malice what is adequately explained by stupidity or ignorance."
"Great stories will always return to their original forms"
"Nobody is more dangerous than he who imagines himself pure in heart; for his purity, by definition, is unassailable." James Baldwin
Darkseid is.
That is all. That is all that need be said. Darkseid is...and thus freedom is not.
Excellent first issue.
I loved this!
I can't believe I'm reading a superhero comic where the thing that sets the plot in motion is the superhero attempting suicide.
Ballsy stuff but tastefully done.
I hope this gives me as many feels as King's Vision.
. My Little Pony . ASM: Renew your Vows . Ms Marvel . Generation X . Doom Patrol . Super Man . The Flash . Hal Jordan and the Green Lantern Corps . Trinity . Teen Titans . Super Sons . Mister Miracle . Saga . Paper Girls .
With him being my favorite character I am thrilled to see Scott in a book that is getting great reviews and has good word of mouth. Overall the first issue was an excellent comic and as he pretty consistently does King did a great job of setting up the story and really creating a feeling of anticipation for what will happen next. With that being said I will admit that of all the directions I would have imagined for a Mr. Miracle book this is not really one of them. Having the first solo book for your favorite character in long time start with a suicide attempt was a little jarring to be honest. However I can't really complain because the issue was excellent, and the creative team behind the book is great so I trust they will deliver a great story but this is most certainly a different direction to go with for scott as a character.
"You know, there are some words I've known since I was a schoolboy: "With the first link, the chain is forged. The first speech censured, the first thought forbidden, the first freedom denied, chains us all irrevocably.. The first time any man's freedom is trodden on, we're all damaged"- CAPT. Picard
A brilliant first issue. The feeling of despair and depression where palpable on every page. Which went along perfectly with Darkseid's looming presents. I've always felt that Scott was the true antithesis to Darkseid. The god of freedom, life, willpower, and love while Darkseid is the god of oppression, despair, and hate. Darkseid craves the Anti-Life Equation while Mister Miracle is the god of Life.
I'm thinking that it's no coincidence that Mister Miracle is trapped in this depression spiral where nothing seems right at the same time that Darkseid gets the Anti-Life Equation. Reminds me of Morrison's Seven Soldiers where Shilo is trapped in the Omega Sanction. The life that is death.
It's a bit more than this. The full quote is in JLA #14 from back in Morrison's run, and is part of Glorious Godrey's propagandistic speeches. Godfrey asks the crowd several questions, culminating in "WHO IS YOUR NEW GOD?!". Darkseid is, is of course, the answer to all of them. To his followers and subjects, Darkseid is the sum total of everything, the only meaning there is. I'm sure there is some biblical intent- the aforementioend JLA issue incorporated some quotes alluding to Islamic folklore, so religion was on Morrison's mind- but it's not just that.
Another thought: King has said this mini is going to deal with what it means to be a New God. The first issue thus raises a question: What does death mean to a God?
I really loved this.
First: heavy stuff!
Second: The balance between humanizing the Fourth World characters and still presenting them as archetypes of our time is a hard one. If I go for this issue alone, I'd say King managed better than anyone since Kirby. (I love Morrison's work with these guys, but he did go heavy in the "archetype" portion. As he does with almost everything, anyway).
Orion and Barda confrontation seems particularly adequate, here; Orion being this guy who believes he has the weight of the world on his shoulders, and complaining about everyone else being soft, but is actually a child of privilege. He's the unknowing internet troll, the guy that believes depression can be overcome but toughening up. But he doesn't really has the feeling of inadequacy that everyone who really had it rough has; he's incapable of understanding because his issues are self-created.
Scott's apathy toward Orion and Highfather, his trust in Barda, and his despair toward Oberon were 3 things that stroke me hard: so little dialog, yet so powerful.
Damn, this was a good comic!
ConnEr Kent flies. ConnOr Hawke has a bow. Batman's kid is named DamiAn.
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