Upon buying my digital copy of Geoff Johns' newest Justice League title, JLA, and after reading it, I've decided to devote this WoW to its greatest image released so far. The book has much promise and looks to be another JL thriller featuring characters we are relatively unfamiliar with. How Johns plans to bring these unlikely heroes together, explore the new Secret Society and eventually have them confront the original Justice League is beyond me, but based on his track record of titles, I have high hopes for this new Justice League of America! Enjoy!
Thursday, February 28, 2013
Thursday, February 21, 2013
Wallpaper of The Week: The JLA of Yesteryear
Just a couple days ago, Geoff Johns and David Finch's Justice League of America hit the stands, debuting the second New 52 JL series, and the third JLA series of all time. Unfortunately, Johns was forced to end his 7 year run on Green Lantern to pursue this new series, ending arguably the greatest comic run in history, but i have no doubt that he will bring his natural storytelling elements to this title. I look back on the JLA series that was inevitably cancelled due to the launch of the New 52, and display, what is in my opinion, three of the best wallpapers from the JLA series that began in 2006, written by Brad Meltzer and illustrated by Ed Benes. Enjoy!
Thursday, February 14, 2013
It All Comes Down To This: The Greatest Showdowns In DC Animation
Batman: The Animated Series (Batman vs. Joker)
After viewing this episode, I concluded that the whole thing
represents one of those classic Batman versus Joker moments, but it isn’t until
the final, climatic scene, where they square off. The episode, titled “The
Laughing Fish” follows Joker on a long list of evil schemes, all involving his
infamous “joker” toxins, with Batman and Gotham’s finest following up on all
their leads. The final clue leads Batman to save the life of Harvey Bullock and
pursue the Joker to the roof of Gotham’s aquarium. What makes this duel so epic
is not just the build up from the cat and mouse theme of the episode, not just
the action, but also the setting and the dark storm happening around them. The best moment is when Joker swings a crowbar at Batman as
Batman grabs the crowbar. The battle ends
with the Joker falling to his apparent death in the shark-filled waters below.
Unfortunately, this was the fifth episode of the second season, and the Joker
would be seen many more times after that, but a part of me realizes this would
have made a great series finale.
Monday, February 11, 2013
DC Cancels Six Titles: Who Should Be Their Replacements?
Justice League of America (Vol.3) #1 |
DC Comics recently announced the cancellations of six of
their titles, three of them featuring fairly well known characters. The Savage
Hawkman, Firestorm, Deathstroke, The Ravagers, Team 7 and Sword of Sorcery all
got the boot, making way for new titles to take their place come spring/summer
of this year. When I first saw the lineup of New 52 titles I was skeptical of
the lesser known titles, worried that they wouldn’t be anywhere as successful
as mainstream heroes like Batman or Superman, which would lead to their
cancellation. This has happened to a lot of those ‘underdog’ series. The
biggest problem with trying to make these series successful is that their
popularity will never match the already established series, which still begs
the question as to why Hawkman or Deathstroke were cancelled, but then again,
maybe upper management wasn’t happy with their recent profits, or maybe the
creative teams weren’t happy with where the stories were going, I’m not sure.
What I am sure of is the replacement titles coming later
this year, which include: Threshold, Constantine, Katana, JLA’s Vibe, Justice
League of America, and Superman: Man of Steel. The two that strike the most
intrigue would be Geoff Johns and David Finch’s JLA, which will focus on a new
team of heroes, separate from the original Justice League, featuring Martian
Manhunter, Green Arrow and the return of Hawkman, right after his cancellation,
and Scott Snyder and Jim Lee’s new Superman series, which will again examine
his outsider role in Metropolis. As excited as I am for these new series, the
same old problem still remains with half of them. Will they be able to sell as
much as the “regulars” or be as popular? Maybe not, which is why I’ve compiled
a short list of ‘could-be’ titles that DC could use come the next
cancellations.
Saturday, February 9, 2013
Wallpaper Of The Week: A "Shockingly Destructive" Combo
The Amazing Spider-man sequel is well underway, with production recently starting. News has revealed we will see familiar faces along with new additions like Mary Jane Watson and Harry Osborn, along with two, pretty major ones. Check'em out, and enjoy!
The "Shockingly" |
The "Destructive" |
Thursday, February 7, 2013
The Future of DC Animated Films
A total of 16 DC Animated Movies have been released,
beginning in 2007 with Superman: Doomsday. Compared to some of the DC animated
series currently or recently airing, I would take any one of these movies over
those shows, aside from GL and Young Justice. In saying that, creating feature
length animated films based on famous comic book titles was a great corporate
decision. The only thing I would argue is some of the stories chosen for the
films. Why Public Enemies and not Knightfall? Why Superman versus The Elite and
not Batman Hush? I’d like to examine the upcoming DC movies, why their chosen
stories are perfect for animated recreation and which stories DC should
recreate next.
Up until DC’s latest film release, I had two favorites from
the earlier films: Superman: Doomsday and Justice League: The New Frontier. The
Dark Knight Returns Part 1 surpassed the greatness of those earlier films, in
both animation and story. The film’s creators stayed truest to the source
material and ended up with a great result, which was again surpassed by its
sequel, The Dark Knight Returns Part 2. Any fan of these movies has been
wishing for an animated interpretation of Frank Millar’s original book since
Doomsday’s release, and with the story being split into two parts, the writers
and directors were able to fully capture all the details, and even exact
frames, from the original books. Whether it was the dramatic scene of Batman,
sitting next to the dying Joker, or the climatic battle between the world’s
finest superheroes, the movie was truly a comic book come to life.
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