Friday, March 1, 2019

Review: Action Comics #1008


Action Comics #1008 came out this week, the second part of the Leviathan Rising arc which, I suppose, will be finished in May with the release of the Leviathan prestige format one shot.

Since Brian Michael Bendis took over the Superman family books, Action Comics has been his home for the supporting cast. This is where we have interacted the most with the Daily Planet staff. This is where we have seen Firefighter Moore and Mayor.

This has also been Bendis' home for more street level crime and old fashioned mysteries. Those topics blend well with the foundation of this book being the investigative journalists in the cast. So as readers we have had to unravel the mystery of the Red Cloud, the leader of the Invisible Mafia, and the motive for arsonists around Metropolis. As a reader, giving me a mystery to solve is always engaging. I have been pretty gripped by these stories, trying to figure out the answers along side our heroes.

Leviathan Rising is no different. Who is Leviathan? Why are they eliminating other organizations? What is the source of the Manhattan-esque energy powers? Is this an existing character (like Talia Al Ghul or my current guess ... see below) trying to grab power? Or is it someone brand new? This issue gives us some clues ... but not many.

The art is by Steve Epting and he brings a grounded approach to the proceedings. His Superman is not some ultra-handsome Adonis. In some places, Superman looks more like a pugilist sporting an old broken nose. But for a Superman book dealing in more military/espionage trappings, Epting's more realistic style works very well.

On to the book.



Each issue of Action Comics has started with a splash page of someone's desk or table or camera bag, a peek into the personality of the character while possible dropping hints/Easter Eggs/jokes. I like this motif a lot, bringing information to the table visually and being more entertaining than a recap and credits page.

Here we have the corkboard of Leviathan. Kobra has been eliminated. Spyral has been eliminated. There are notes for the DEO. We see Sam Lane for ARGUS. There is a Checkmate paper. And then all the notes with hints or feints. Sugar and Spike Inc being on the level of SHADE? Dr. Fate and James Gordon being targets? Does that inform us more of who this person is?


We turn to the DEO where Adam Strange has just arrived to talk to Director Bones.

Strange has news about General Zod (who we last saw getting the snot kicked out of him by Rogol Zaar in the Phantom Zone). Bones wants to hire Strange as an agent.

Before the talk can go any further, an almost robotic/spiky silhouette appears and unleashes the blue, Kirby-krackle infused energy we saw destroy Kobra and Task Force X last issue. It is only the heroic actions of Strange which saves Bones and his crew.

With the DEO demolished, we see Director Bones curse the heavens, a rare emotional outburst from our ex-villain.

Hmmmm ... so, more bright blue energy which simply erases things ... as if the light is taking the place to pieces? Hmmm.


 Meanwhile, Amanda Waller, who barely escaped the destruction of Task Force X meets up with General Lane in a movie theater.

She informs him that someone is taking out big organizations. And it looks bad. Kobra, Task Force X, the DEO. Argus has to be a target.

I like the idea that these heads of these organizations, often at odds with each other despite similar missions, would be on a first name basis with each other.

What I don't like is seeing General Lane taking a couple of pulls off an old school flask. Seems a little odd for a man of such rigid discipline.

 It is implied that perhaps his hitting the sauce is because he is still reeling from the news Lois gave him last issue. Superman is Jon's father. (As was pointed out to me by some astute commenters and friends, she never says Clark is Superman. She only said Superman is the father. I don't know if I like that any more than her revealing Clark. In fact, given how that portrays Clark, I might like it less.)

Waller can't believe that Lane might be softening his stance about Superman.

While I don't like decompression when done wrong. The middle panel of a silent Lane was a nice touch. This can't be easy for him to deal with. He probably can't enunciate how he feels because he is still figuring it out himself.


 Hey ... remember that Superman is the star of this book!

I'm kidding. I actually love the world building.

But the time has come for Lois to return to the Planet. This Leviathan story - the destruction of Task Force X - is too big a story for her not to cover.

Check out that Superman by Epting. Kind of a rugged look for the Man of Steel.

 There is a great splash page of Lois walking through the pit. (You know how much I love those shots of the Planet's reporters' room. It is like the return of the Queen. Everyone is gawking. It is worth seeking out.

 She walks up to Robinson Goode and reminds the young reporter that she is sitting at Lane's old cubicle.

That seems to spur Goode a bit. Instead of kowtowing a bit to the Mayor's aide on the phone, she seems to channel hard-hitting Lois Lane, demanding a quote and then being satisfied with herself.

I suppose that is the power of Lois. Her presence alone inspires people.


 In one of the offices, Lois and Clark discover a disheveled and overtired Jimmy hiding under a desk.

After witnessing the erasure of the Kobra Clan, he has gone into hiding.

He reveals that the group was erased by blue energy which snaked out like a jellyfish, the same energy Clark saw take out Task Force X. The team now knows these are organized attacks.

Hmmm ... jellyfish ... a tentacled sea creature ... like a squid? Hmmm.


 Lane and Waller each thought the other had set up this tete-a-tete. When they realize they have been set up, they do their best to evacuate the cinema. But too late, the blue energy arrives and destroys the place. It is only Lane and Waller's personal force field tech which spares them initially.

But with death staring them in the face, Waller shoots at Lane to slow him down. She runs off, leaving a winded Lane to face the presumed same silhouette from the DEO. This looks like Sam Lane has died yet again! At least his last word was for his daughter Lois.

I just mentioned above how I liked that Amanda and Sam knew each other enough to meet and talk. I love that she used him to improve her odds of escaping. They aren't that friendly! It reminds me of that old joke about two guys running away from a bear. One guy says that he doesn't need to be faster than the bear, just faster than the other guy.


Lois and Clark head back to his apartment (remember they aren't together these days).

But before too much can happen, Waller shows up. She knows Clark is Superman (is this a big reveal?) and needs his help.

Now that is a good cliffhanger.

But what about Leviathan? Ready for my off the wall guess? I formulated my guess 35 minutes ago.


While we have seen the Watchmen characters run all over their world and even peek into the main DC world in Doomsday Clock, one thing we haven't seen are their Earth-0 doppelgangers.

Is there a Jon Osterman in the main DC world? Is their a Dan Dreiberg? Is their an Adrian Veidt?

And if there is, do they have similar personalities?


I mean blue energy that is extremely destructive that resembles a tentacled sea creature?

Doesn't that scream Watchmen?

And wouldn't someone like Veidt, who wanted to control the world in Watchmen, go about it differently in a world flooded with super-beings?

So my guess is Leviathan is an Earth-0 Adrian Veidt! (I suppose an Earth-0 Jon Osterman (who isn't Dr. Manhattan) would also work.

Nice mystery unfolding here. And Lois returning to the Planet was a great scene showing hpw revered she is by everyone.

Overall grade: B+

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

Lois didn't just say Superman is Jon's father, but also that she is in love with Superman. (So she was telling her father it wasn't just a meaningless affair. It's pretty close to telling him Clark is Superman; or it's telling him she's been living a clandestine love life for a decade, or that Clark/Lois/Superman have an open polyamorous relationship...? I think the easiest explanation is that she was telling him who Clark is - but it's something she should have talked to Clark about first. Weird!)

Bendis hasn't given us any conversations between Lois and Clark that spell out what's going on between them (or not that made sense to me), but consider: it can't be just an accident Superman and Lois were seen kissing in public. Or that somehow photographers captured Lex entering Lois's apartment (both of them are capable of better precautions, so one of them must have set that up). It seems that, for some reason, there is an agreement to, at least to the pubic, break up Lois and Clark and replace it with Lois and Superman?

Why haven't we heard a discussion between Lois and Clark explaining any of this? Is it Bendis's style to not explain stuff - maybe under the cover of the notion that "Hey, things happen in life that can't be put into words, just roll with it."?

Meanwhile, will Leviathan tie into the Invisible Mafia?

Has Red Cloud decided to follow Superman's advice and go straight from now on?

Connective tissue - the head of the Mafia now owns the Planet; and, though The Question showed up so long ago (#1005) that I completely forgot about him, he will apparently reappear next issue (along with an "answer" apparently). The Question was asking who is Red Cloud - if Question is working with Leviathan, they aren't allies of the Mafia.

So, maybe this is all going to be connected, or maybe plot after plot over the coming years will only be vaguely connected through a few intersecting points as one plot gets dropped in favor of the next one? I hope not.

How is Bones still in charge at the DEO after the way things ended with him in Supergirl #20? He was exposed publicly. Maybe he was being deceived by Mokkari, but that's still bad enough for him to lose his job. It is odd how nonchalantly Bones drafts Adam Strange because Supergirl is off-world - as if, other than that, she would simply be working for him at the DEO again?!

At least I won't question Steve Epting's work. He's been great.

T.N.

Anonymous said...

It looks like Lois' preemptive maneuver to prevent "New Krypton" from coming to pass may have worked. It was a risky gambit but it worked, I'll give her that.

However it may have lead to Waller learning about Superman's identity, which is not a good thing.

Leviathan's identity is being an entertaining mystery. Your guess is an interesting one. We'll see.

I'm wondering, though why Bones is still allowed to run the DEO after the events of SG #20. Is Bendis ignoring Orlando's run?

Off-topic: Another trailer featuring DCSHG Supergirl has been released. I'm sure you'll have thoughts on it soon:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bdKPkD9-6Ig

Martin Gray said...

Top review as ever. I had a few problems with this one, but generally liked it.

Clever theory but I hope it’s wrong, this Watchmen business is so muddy already!

Anj said...

Forgot about Bones and the DEO in Supergirl. I suppose he might have been rehired.

Interesting.

The Wandering mind said...

Great review. Call me crazy but isn't levaithan Taila al ghul's organization from Batman inc. It fits the M.O. Also currently in Silencer,Levaithan is taken out dc comics such as underlife.

The Wandering mind said...

Sorry I mean to say dc comics group such as underlife