Then you missed some of the best comics since the late 70s/early 80srembrandtqeinstein said:I love almost everything about new 52 and I haven't bought comics since the 90s Image Dark Age.
I'm curious what you mean about that.softclocks said:Snyder's a hack.
Court of Owls played out like a complete and utter rip of the Black Glove. I'm actually amazed that he got away with it.
I now have a sudden urge to go read everything that involves Harley Quinn and Poison Ivy. At least, I think that's who that is *shrug*-Ezio- said:Harley Quinn. for things like this
You make some great points, but even if the connections were intentional they aren't identical. Zur-en-arrh is very different from the Owl's labyrinth. The Black Glove and the Owls had different goals (destroy Batman, control Gotham) and methodologies (character assassination vs actual assassinations). Court of Owls also didn't end with Nightwing becoming Batman, and the Black Glove didn't have an undead army at its disposal (not that I recall anyway).softclocks said:Power and mysterious organization, possible ties to Batman's father, Batman almost being driven insane while fighting them, identical ending, etc. The flow of the story was almost identical as well, the only difference being that Morrison took his time building it up while Snyder's arc was more rushed and made more accessible to readers.
Actually, Morrison's Action Comics was the first thing I read from the New 52. While I thought his take on young Superman was interesting, the arc itself didn't really grab me. Most of what happened was done better by Geoff Johns a few years earlier (Superman: Secret Origin, the "Brainiac" storyline, and the glimpses of Krypton).Overhead said:I think you missed out on Morrison's Action Comics which was a fantastic modern revitalisation of Superman which also took him back to his roots as a defender of the poor against the powerful and corrupt rather than just a puncher of giant robots.
it is. she's popped up in a few Harley quinn issues. if you do decide to get into the series you'll be just in time to see harley team up with an amnesiac Power Girl this month. should be interesting.JaceArveduin said:I now have a sudden urge to go read everything that involves Harley Quinn and Poison Ivy. At least, I think that's who that is *shrug*-Ezio- said:Harley Quinn. for things like this
*Rolls up sleeves*Fanghawk said:Most of what happened was done better by Geoff Johns a few years earlier (Superman: Secret Origin, the "Brainiac" storyline, and the glimpses of Krypton).
The first two volumes are really the weakest of the Nu52 JL books, in fact when I recommend the Nu52 JL to people I say get volume 1 and get the first two volumes of Aquaman instead of the second volume of JL since that's totally skippable and Aquaman is gonna help you more in the long run. Volume 3 is totally worth it and that along with Trinity War is when Johns' League really shines.Kmadden2004 said:Am I literally the only guy who doesn't like Geoff Johns' Justice League books? I mean, they keep getting a lot of praise, but I just don't find anything particularly interesting about them. Admittedly, I've only read the first two volumes, but they both just come across as really rushed and there are moments where it feels like I needed to read the solo books to properly understand what's going on (like the Martian Manhunter bit in volume 2). What's more, those moments just don't feel like they're trying to tempt me to explore the wider DCU, it just feels like they're desperately grabbing me by the lapels, screaming "buy the rest of our books!"
I don't know, does it get better with Volume 3?
What's frustratin is that the Teen Titans started off so good. Or at least it had the makings of being really good. Then somewhere shit went off the rails, then it jumped onto some other rails in the wrong direction, then the whole fuckin thing exploded.LarsInCharge said:Two words why the New 52 is heinous beyond reckoning:
Teen... Titans...
That is all.