These characters, created largely under the aegis of editor Dick Giordano were a brief but brilliant attempt to mine the superhero market which blossomed briefly during the Silver Age. Captain Atom and Blue Beetle were dusted off and revamped with new heroes such as Peacemaker, Nightshade, The Question and Judomaster brought along to fill in the ranks.
These characters of course these days are mostly remembered as the inspirations for Alan Moore's iconic Watchmen series and many dismiss them beyond that point. Alas, in this story Grant Morrison, a storyteller with stones, tries to revisit these heroes but clearly through the goggles of the Watchmen variations.
We are invited into a complex story, told by Morrison and artist Frank Quitely, which travels back and forth through time and space with all sorts of visual hijinks, all serving to create some larger mystery and make some larger point. The heroes are not as developed as individuals but merely used as elements of the one-shot story which explores the nature of heroes and justice and how the society can best make use of them.
We get good looks at Captain Atom, a man removed from his fellows by the dint of awesome power and who seems lost inside himself and the universe he sees differently from everyone else. The lovely Nightshade is a very young government agent who seeks to find the right way, but seems out of her depth most of the time. Peacemaker is a man on a mission which makes little sense for most of the story. The Question as always seeks answers regardless, while the Blue Beetle is a loyal government man.
We get glimpses of Sarge Steel and while Rip Jagger the Judomaster doesn't make the cut, his sidekick Tiger is around for a few pages as a member of a superhero unit which has a lot of vintage fun picking out a sobriquet.
The story even has a reference to Charlton's first superhero, the Golden Age Yellowjacket.
(Frank Quitely)
At five bucks for a copy, I guess I should thank Morrison and Quitely for giving me a comic which demands to be read more than once, since the density makes the entertainment value rise.
I missed this series but it looks interesting, especially as I like Frank Quitey's art . Despite that those Charlton Ditko covers really look amazing ( I have that issue of Blue Beetle) . Charltons Yellowjacket character is new to me.
ReplyDeleteYellowjacket was Charlton's first superhero I think, a Golden Age effort when the company was in its larcenous infancy.
DeleteI had not heard of this but will check it out. Since often Morrison has attempted to distance himself from Alan Moore, I would think he would try to chart a course opposite to that of Watchmen, but we shall see.
ReplyDeleteThis work is more in the style of the Watchmen storytelling, a joke using the Charlton heroes who inspired the Watchmen.
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