Monday, February 5, 2024

Action Comics Presents: Doomsday Special #1 (October, 2023)

There's a bunch of equivocating mumbo-jumbo about how in the multiverse, the collective subconscious, through the power of belief, can create a metaphysical simulacrum of yadda-yadda... but the simple truth is that the Biblical Hell exists in DC Comics, and thanks to the breakdown of the Vertigo partition, The First of Fallen from mature readers Hellblazer comics still runs it.

At the end of Dark Crisis, Doomsday was physically destroyed. In Lazarus Planet: We Once Were Gods (March, 2023), it was able to manifest from the collective memory of the city of Metropolis mumbo-jumbo yadda-yadda. Martian Manhunter confronted Doomsday, but it ultimately took the mortal sacrifice of a young man named Raphael Arce to stop the revival. However, Doomsday continued to exist in Hell, where it was building back the power necessary to break down a door to return to physical reality. This power was partly derived from the belief of the denizens of Hell that Doomsday was capable of the feat, and this faith challenged the reign of The First. So, a vision of Doomsday in Hell was sent to Martian Manhunter based on their recent interaction, J'Onn sent the vision to Supergirl so that she could interpret Kryptonian elements, and they were both suck(er)ed into Hell to serve The Fallen. With reservations, Supergirl ultimately suited up in a special armor that recalled her old foe Satan Girl, while the Sleuth from Outer Space (sorta) rallied the denizens of Hell to strengthen the barrier from Hell with their own distorted and traumatized bodies. This was all done to spare their mutual loved one Superman from having to deal with Doomsday yet again, but back in Hell, it just kept pounding away at that barrier.

"Doomsday in Hell" was by Dan Watters, Eddy Barrows, & Eber Ferreira. While Barrows had worked on the 2015 volume of the Alien Atlas' solo (maxi?) series, this version was much gawkier and vulnerable looking, suiting the Gene Colan/Tom Mandrake-inspired sketchy linework of this Halloween tale. It was nice to see J'Onn connected to Kara Zor-El again, as I tend to like their pairing more than either's with Superman (especially now that it means Supergirl has to wear a lame "team book" uniform with pants.) It still bothers me to mingle DC and Vertigo material though, especially on a darned Super-book. Feels too much like spiking the Kool-Aid at a children's birthday party. But hey, these weren't the only characters with a tale spinning out of that Lazarus Planet one-shot...

The spirit of Raphael Arce wandered the Fifth Circle of Hell, wrath, when he was discovered by a demon and attacked. Punishment was sought for the one who had brought Doomsday to Hell, and made it even worse than before. However, the demon didn't know that Arce had brought pieces of other beings to Hell with him, namely the Martian Manhunter and... Bloodwynd! Arce knew that he didn't belong in Hell, but also he felt that no one else did, either. So he had been moving from one circle of Hell to another and liberating the lost souls there with his new Bloodwynd powers. Even with them, he still needed to trick a demon in each circle to allow him passage to the next, as he Bloodwynd couldn't make the trip unescorted. See, besides the freedom trail, Bloodwynd also sought to have a word with the devil himself...

"Bloodwynd: A Superman for Hell" was by Dan Watters & Max Raynor. While implied in the first story, it's even more clear here that we now have a second confirmed member of a Bloodwynd legacy. Actually, that was even hinted at in the '90s origin story, and given that the premise is barely over thirty years old, I do find it a bit odd that a relatively new and underdeveloped property had to be put out to pasture for a new model who still bears the misfortune of being called "Bloodwynd." Heck, it would have been worth it if it meant that he would be called "Blood Gem" instead. Anyway, along with the strength and flight of O.G. Bloodwynd, the new model has chains wrapped around his wrists that he can animate Spawn-style, and he manages to take control of some Doomsday-infused giant hellhound besides. Also, all his teeth are canines? I'm not sure any of this adds to the design, and if there was one thing Bloodwynd had in his favor, it was that Space Ghost fashion.

3 comments:

Kevin from New Orleans said...

Do you think M.M. will be in the lineup for the Justice League book whenever it comes back?

The Deadend Kid said...

re: j'onn

i hear everything you're saying, and i still counsel you to give it a spin. i can't guarantee i'd draw it, but if you (at some random undetermined date) threw a 22-page script with j'onn j'onzz as the title into the inbox of deadendkid76@gmail, i'd read it with all due reverence.

is there a style / era or fashion you're most inclined toward?

it's a shame this story sounds like so much bunk and DCU continuity fapfodder. the art looks quite servicable, and i'm particular about who handles my sweet alec holland, rest his worldweary soul. this is why i keep thinking about doing a dr. fate piece. nabu is too much of a bastard to be served so poorly by dc. an operator of his tenure, on his level, he deserves respect. he could be a damned fine Big Wheel villain if dc were inclined... but no :| he just gets fed into the movie i.p. machine headfirst like steve buscemi into a wood chipper

Diabolu Frank said...

Kevin, I have no ideas and fewer cares about what DC has planned for the Justice League. They shook me off that title with Infinite Crisis after ten years of loyal monthly purchases, almost half as long as I've stayed away.* I also doubt they'll do anything interesting with J'Onn if they do. Last time, they made him... Lex Luthor's childhood friend? JFC.

D.K., one other issue with Outlaw Manhunter is that I don't feel that I have a story worthy of that effort. Even after all these years, I have nothing in mind that transcends the bounds of corporate comics. He's a toy line I want to play with for as long as I could, knowing full well a series would be cancelled inside a dozen issues. It would just me me trying to cram in the same type of deep nerd retcons and spotlight obscurities that I've done in the fan fiction stuff here on the blog. So basically, single issue stories from all over the character's history with varied tones trying to give weight and context to Manhunter's solo existence and expanded concepts within the context of the greater DCU.

I love the look of Dr. Fate, and the notion it gives me about a sorcerer-knight, but my reading is shallow and I have no aspirations for expanding the Nabu canon.

*This is a lie. I bought every issue of the Johns/Finch-launched J.L.A. new, and most of United used.