Superman #36 came out this week beginning Prime's run as the main character in the book, part of the Reign of the Superboys event crossing the titles. Somehow there is an 'aw shucks' aspect to this Prime as he gleefully, almost nerdily recounts all the comic knowledge he has to the faces of the heroes. I can't help but smile as he fourth-walls his way through event fatigue and reboots. But even with this sort of fanboy sensibility, there is still this undercurrent of menace that continues to surge now and then. It makes me doubt my own take on the book, wondering if Prime is going to let me down again.
In this book, he is trying to establish himself in the main DCU for the first time in a while. What does he do with his time? Who does he hang out with? What do others think of him? Why are all the women attracted to him? This read like a first issue, sort of laying the groundwork while adding a big mystery and throwing in a great cliffhanger. Kudos to Williamson.
In this book, he is trying to establish himself in the main DCU for the first time in a while. What does he do with his time? Who does he hang out with? What do others think of him? Why are all the women attracted to him? This read like a first issue, sort of laying the groundwork while adding a big mystery and throwing in a great cliffhanger. Kudos to Williamson.
Dan Mora is back on the book and makes the whole thing crackle. From cover homages to the JLI women sort of panting over Prime to an Ed McGuinness-esque villain from the 90s to that cliffhanger, everything just leaps off the page. But my favorite page of his is the one stoking the mystery. More on that later.
A Superboy Prime I am excited to read. Who would think it could happen? On to the book.
We start with Prime walking out on to 'the stage', talking directly to us.
We start with Prime walking out on to 'the stage', talking directly to us.
What I love about this is his simple explanation of where the story is going to go.
It's going to be fun. It's a hero's journey. There'll be life lessons. He'll beat up some super-villains.
That is everything I want in a comic book. Everything I want to read with my heroes. What I wouldn't give for a Supergirl book with that sort of simple game plan.
What do I say Prime? Count me in.
A bunch of the women heroes decide to gaze longingly at him. Love the banter from Zatanna, Katana, and especially the Huntress.
I do wonder if this is because they all have a crush on the unavailable Superman and Prime is sort of close? Or perhaps they all like the Bad Boy (proven by Zatanna's trench coat comment)?
Have to admit, I laughed out loud.
Meanwhile, Mr. Terrific is laying out all the things Lois is should be concerned about after the event.
She has lost her powers.
Superman is missing.
But most importantly, they all have a Prime problem. His greatest power is his knowledge of everyone from his comic book reading. He could use that against them all. Or it could be exploited.
I like that Lois is nonchalant about Superman being gone, talking about Warworld, dimensions, and even death.
And given Prime's history, I can understand Terrific's worries. Somehow Lois rises above it all and decides to take Prime in.
I can't believe that Williamson went into the well and brought back the 'reality punch' power of Prime breaking the walls of reality. I love how Mora portrays it as punches so fast you don't even see the arm.
The reality punch is probably the nuttiest part of Prime's history.
Fun to see this page by Mora. I recognize some of the covers here for sure. I like the 'chibi' variant one.
Prime is a collector!
His quest for normalcy is interrupted by the arrival of Ignition, from the Joe Kelly era of these books in the 90's. There is nothing more 90's than the bulky armored Zod crony. He is the perfect villain for Prime.
But after a beatdown, Prime seems to kill Ignition only to suffer 'deresolution' into pencils. Look close on the page and you see the blue dotted lines of a blank art page that pencilers draw on. This is truly a comic page we are looking at.
What is happening? What a mystery?
Is Williamson inserting himself like Grant Morrison in Animal Man, not allowing Prime to go evil? Meta on meta on meta!
Color (or uncolor?) me intrigued!
Prime decides Lois is right.
He gets a job in a comic book store that looks sort of like New York's Midtown Comics.
What better life could you have than organizing comics and getting paid for it.
It makes sense for Prime's character too.
And he certainly does have a way with the ladies as his downstairs neighbors have already offered to help get him settled.
We haven't seen Black in 3 years, since Action Comics #1050 Lex killed him, using Black's mind to erase Superman's secret identity from the general populace mind. He seems like a wraith here.
Nice cliffhanger.
This whole issue was just pure entertainment. From the fourth wall busting to the Ignition beatdown to the women into Prime to the sketch panel to Black, this thing was what comics should be. It echoed that opening page sentiment all done by Dan Mora.
Fun. Hero's journey. Life lesson. Super-villains being beaten up.
It is a simple recipe!
Overall grade: A+











8 comments:
Great review, this really was a fun comic. I was so surprised by the deconstruction moment, it does seem that if he strays from the path of good he risks ‘going native’, becoming a comic character in the same way he sees everyone on Earth 0.
I like that Vixen is immune to Superboy Prime’s charms - something to do with her connection to the Red? I dunno how that might work. But does he have some kind of ‘one level of multiversal reality’ removed pheromone power? Or is it just that he’s drawn as super-hot… heck, even in that Legion shirt he looks amazing.
Is Prime so quick to murder because he still thinks of them as fictional characters? I never thought of that before. And he's not off the hook until Baby Wildebeest and Pantha are back and that one Titan gets his arm back.
Lois comment on Clark not even wanting excessive wealth rings true as pre-Crisis Clark allowed the Kent family millions (from uncle Kendall) to be inherited by his cousin Jillian Kent who promptly vanished from Clark's life...
Interesting thought. Is it murder if they are just characters?
Love the thought of ‘going native’. Wonder if the fair of being trapped in the comic world will lead him to leave it.
Clark-Prime wouldn't let me down but DC would. They gave Clark his redemption then decided to retcon it enough so that he's now a dark Ambush Bug. Just another reason for me to drop comics for good.
Still don't know how to feel about fact that Joshua Williamson basically made Prime into DC's Gwenpool
I guess you not capable of comprehending information right. like how he's redemption was exactly? he still redeemed an act as a good guy what part of that is a retcon character showing up in a book it's not retcon
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