by Jason Inman, Oct 13 2011 // 10:30 AM
There was a time when anything Geoff Johns wrote was gold especially if it had Green Lantern in the title. This was the man that gave us an amazing 100 issue run on JSA, redeemed and redefined Hal Jordan as a character in Green Lantern: Rebirth, and was one of the architects of the brilliant weekly series 52.
Somewhere around the time of Blackest Night, Geoff Johns became stale for me. Whereas once his plots were epic and revolutionary, now the plots are stale, and do little but set up his next event. Green Lantern #2 does little to change my opinion.
Hal Jordan is no longer Green Lantern following the events of the War of the Green Lanterns. Sinestro has been granted Hal’s ring, and he shows up on Hal’s doorstep offering to give it back to him. Like any deal with the devil, there is price.
Most of the issue is a simple conversation between Hal and Sinestro. Sinestro plays the role of over-bearing arrogant mother by spending the issue insulting Hal by saying he never really changed the Earth, he just used the ring to show-off. Hal spends most of the issue filling his role as petty brat constantly yelling at Sinestro, and saying, “Gimmie my ring back!”
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Posted in: Comic Reviews · Comics · DC · DC Entertainment · Editorial and Opinion · Sci-Fi
Tagged: dc comics, DC Universe, Doug Mahnke, Geoff Johns, Green Lantern, Green Lantern #2, Hal Jordan, New 52, Sinestro
by Sal Loria, Jan 28 2010 // 12:00 PM
The siege of Asgard continues, Indigo becomes the new choice of color and Captain America “officially” returns in this latest edition of The Pull List Comic Reviews! Due to time constraints and unforeseen delays, this week’s column is abbreviated. As always, WARNING: SPOILERS AHEAD.
PULL OF THE WEEK:
Atom & Hawkman #46
DC Comics – $2.99 US
Writer: Geoff Johns
Artist: Ryan Sook
Score: 9/10
Ray Palmer, known better as the Atom, has been knocked down more than most during his career as a costumed crime-fighter, but he always manages to pick himself up. Not surprisingly, that compassion of his has earned him an Indigo ring, and with the dead seemingly winning the war, Ray has figured out a way to swing the battle to the good guys; even if the good guys aren’t all necessarily “good” to begin with.
I would never have thought that, of all the Blackest Night-themed “continuation” issues, this would be the best of the bunch (so far), but with Geoff Johns at the helm, I should have known better. Johns uses a This Is Your Life presentation of Ray Palmer’s history as a canvas to show just how much the character brings to the table, and in doing so, the writer sets the stage for what could be the turning point in war against Nekron.
Artist Ryan Sook simply crushed this issue. Everything in this issue was pitch-perfect, from Ray’s past to the horrific present – every panel led to the next without skipping a beat. Instead, the body of work in this issue touched on varying types of visual storytelling that not only worked incredibly well, but also showed the artist’s vast range of skills.
Wrap all this up and throw in the aforementioned revelation of the Indigo rings, and you’re left with a can’t-miss issue that’s also the Pull of the Week.
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Posted in: Comic Reviews · Comics · DC · Marvel · News · Pull List
Tagged: Atom & Hawkman, Avengers: The Initiative, batman and robin, Blackest Night, Bryan Hitch, Butch Guice, Cameron Stewart, Captain America Reborn, Carlos Rodriguez, Christos N Gage, Dale Eaglesham, Doug Mahnke, Ed Brubaker, Fall of the Hulks, Fall of the Hulks: Red Hulk, Fantastic Four, Geoff Johns, grant morrison, Green Lantern, Incredible Hulk, Jeff Parker, Jonathan Hickman, Mahmud Asrar, Ryan Sook, Siege
by Sal Loria, Nov 26 2009 // 3:30 PM
Welcome to another edition of The Pull List Comic Reviews! This week, the Blackest Night event takes center stage, Bendis and Oeming make a triumphant comeback and Archie gets married (again). As always, WARNING: SPOILERS AHEAD.
PULL OF THE WEEK:
Blackest Night #5 [of 8]
DC Comics – $3.99 US
Writer: Geoff Johns
Artist: Ivan Reis
Score: 9.0
The mastermind behind the dead rising stands revealed as the Blackest Night prophecy inches towards becoming true, but will the unified heroes of the world have enough to stop it? Not if a late dinner guest bearing gifts has anything to say about it.
Geoff Johns welcomes you all to hell. How could he not? In the thirty plus years that I’ve been reading comics, I can’t remember a time when things looked so grim in a story thanks to this issue. The big guns of the Justice League arrive in time to assist the Flashes – Barry Allen and Wally West – in confronting Nekron as the Black Lanterns’ power battery reaches full charge. Fast forward to the end of the issue and only two heroes remain standing while the rest are chomping at the bit, dying to feast on some good, old fashioned heart muscle. And this is only the fifth issue in an eight-issue series?!? Wow.
Johns, along with artist Ivan Reis, are obviously toying with us and giggling madly along the way. The re-emergence of “Bruce Wayne” – his name was in quotations in the issue as well – signaled that the next phase was about to begin, but what he did to heroes like Superman, Wonder Woman, Green Arrow, etc I don’t think anyone saw coming, characters and readers alike. The sixth issue cannot get here fast enough, if you ask me.
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Posted in: Comic Reviews · Comics · Dark Horse Comics · DC · Image Comics · Marvel · Pull List
Tagged: Angelo Torres, Archie, Blackest Night, Blackest Night: Superman, Brian Michael Bendis, Brian Reed, Buffy: The Vampire Slayer, Creepy, Dan Braun, Darker Image, Dave Sims, Derec Donovan, Doug Mahnke, Erik Larsen, Geoff Johns, Green Lantern, Greg Ruth, Image United, invincible iron man, Ivan Reis, James Robinson, Jason Shawn Alexander, Jim Valentino, Joe Bennett, Joe Harris, Joe R Lansdale, Joss Whedon, JT Krul, Justice League of America, Marc Silvestri, Mark Bagley, Matt Fraction, Michael Uslan, Mike Avon Oeming, Mike Baron, Mike McKone, Ms. Marvel, Nathan Fox, Powers, Rahsan Ekedal, Rob DiSalvo, Rob Liefeld, Robert Kirkman, Russ Heath, Salvador Larocca, Stan Goldberg, Teen Titans, The Blair Witch Project, Todd McFarlane, Whilce Portacio