[ WARRING PRICE CRASH ] |
To QUOTE me having some fun with an overweight Caucasian friend of mine: 'Are you Chinese? Coz you sure have a lot of chins!'
THE REVIEW:
Just like the
previous three episodes of the Darkseid
War, this fourth episode, entitled
'The Death of Darkseid', also plays out on three distinct battlefronts. In one of
these battlefronts, set on Apocalypse, we are presented with an evil looking Superman attempting to
kill Lex Luthor -- Yawn. Whatever. Blah-blah-blah. Then, on
another of these battlefronts, set on Earth, we see the actual war part of the equation taking
place -- such as the in-fights between Darkseid and the Anti-Monitor, Kalibak
and Grail, plus the Justice League and, well, whoever takes they're fancy, really. And
finally, on the third of these battlefronts, and in my opinion, the best one,
we see Green Lantern and Bat-Merton team-up to investigate the Anti-Monitor's origins
over on the Crime Syndicate's Earth (Or Earth 3 for those of you taking
note), as well as the anti-matter universe of Qward.
Well, with all due
respect to Jason Fabok's amazing artwork -- and trust me, it was amazing, especially
in the way in which he managed to draw pain into each of the characters faces,
one panel at a time -- overall I'd say the best part of this issue was how
Bat-God and Hal-Git figured out who Anti-butt-head truly is, with the intention
of taking him down next month (fingers crossed, let's wait and see).
Now the main reason why I liked this component compared to the rest
of the story-line, is because the rest was nothing more than a series of fight-scenes,
where as this segment was more like a basic murder-mystery, one where we got to
see two super-sleuths (one of them in a comfy chair no less) trying to fathom
out the what, the why, and the how of the situation.
Honestly, dear reader. It was a right blast reading what Batman figured out about the Anti-monitor: going to show that sometimes history, even comic book history, does have a certain cylindrical nature where continuity is concerned. Plus, without giving anything away, it was fascinating to see how the Anti-Monitors beginnings, although now revised, does somehow resemble the life of people like Krona or Pariah from Green Lantern / Crisis on Infinite Earths.
Honestly, dear reader. It was a right blast reading what Batman figured out about the Anti-monitor: going to show that sometimes history, even comic book history, does have a certain cylindrical nature where continuity is concerned. Plus, without giving anything away, it was fascinating to see how the Anti-Monitors beginnings, although now revised, does somehow resemble the life of people like Krona or Pariah from Green Lantern / Crisis on Infinite Earths.
That said, however,
there were two singular aspects about this adventure that didn't quite float my
boat. The first one has to do with an amalgamation of two characters -- who
shall remain nameless, for the sake of spoilers -- mainly because at present their
amalgamation does appear too fleeting and too contrived, included for nothing
more than shock value alone. The second flaw, on the other hand, was how
certain scenes appeared deliberately delayed in their execution -- where one
character feels the need to tell another character what he feels about them,
without their exposition giving the overall plot any form of intrinsic value.
But apart from those
two flaws, hey, this issue was a very good issue of the Justice League. Jason's
art was on-point and very expansive, whilst Geoff's story-line evolved in certain
areas, even though it felt delayed in others.
THE MUSIC:
Again, without giving too much away, at the end of this
adventure something terrible happens to Darkseid. Something so bad, so hideous,
so... errr... naughty, I think it best that I musically match-up this book to Mozart's
'Requiem Mass'. Hint-Hint!
THE COMPARISON:
Essentially this tale was about finding out a weakness
someone might possess, and then exploiting that weakness accordingly. And so,
by putting it in those terms, how could I not compare this comic to,
surprise-surprise, the Scarecrow.
Oi! Don't laugh! Who else do you know gets off on other
peoples weaknesses? Apart from politicians of course!
THE CONCLUSION:
As you might have
guessed from reading some of my review -- yes. It was a review -- at the end of this issue something
really bad happens to Darkseid. So, instead of me telling you what that
something is, how about I insinuate what happens by presenting you with the
following eight scenarios. Because does the Anti-Monitor...
- Shag him.
- Kill him.
- Give him a discount code for eBay.
- Twerk at him.
- Play with him.
- Show him his thingy.
- Ignore him.
- Cry with him.
JUSTICE LEAGUE #44
Reviewed by David Andrews
on
October 14, 2015
Rating: