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Splitting Atoms

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Splitting Atoms

Tag Archives: Superman

Audio

The Fall and Rise of Captain Atom #1 (March 2017)

11 Wednesday Jan 2017

Posted by FKAjason in Captain Atom Versus Super-Heroes, New 52, Rebirth

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Captain Atom, Cary Bates, Cyborg, Dr. Megala, Gabriel Hardman, General Eiling, Green Lantern (Hal Jordan), Greg Weisman, Ivan Nunes, Jason Badower, Jim Chadwick, Jordan Boyd, Kristy Quinn, New 52 Captain Atom, Saida Temofonte, Superman, Will Conrad

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“Blowback”

  • Writer: Cary Bates
  • Co-Plotter: Greg Weisman
  • Pencils/Inks: Will Conrad
  • Colors: Ivan Nunes
  • Letters: Saida Temofonte
  • Cover Artist: Jason Badower
  • Variant Cover Artists: Gabriel Hardman & Jordan Boyd
  • Editor: Kristy Quinn
  • Group Editor: Jim Chadwick

This issue opens at the Continuum, beneath Kansas City, on December 19, 2012 at 8:38 central time. The New 52 Captain Atom is seated on a chair inside a dome, demanding that Dr. Megala tell him how many people he killed today. Megala, speaking via intercom from a control room, tells Nathaniel that they don’t yet know how many casualties there were. The destructive power of Atom’s quantum flare-ups exceeded Megala’s projections. Even the intervention of the Justice League couldn’t control the damage. General Eiling, standing in the control room with Megala, says that he can spin the story so the Justice League takes part of the blame.

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Captain Atom is being held in what Eiling refers to as a subterranean suppression dome, which Megala says should be equipped to handle whatever comes next. Nate worries what will happen to the world around him when he can no longer control the power him. Eiling tells Cap to stow the stinkin-thinkin and pull himself together. Atom doesn’t pay Eiling any mind as he goes on to say that he knows he cannot hold on to his last shreds of humanity. He says his good-byes to Megala, saying he’ll miss the doctor. But Eiling? Not so much.

Captain Atom begins to surge with energy. He tells Megala he’ll see him on the other side, and he explodes with energy.

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Wow. Right out of the gate some powerful stuff. Something has obviously gone down and Nathaniel Adam has lost all hope. He has basically committed suicide in front of Megala and Eiling. And although this is clearly the New 52 Captain Atom, these aren’t the New 52 Megala and Eiling. Megala is in a wheelchair, but his body isn’t bent and he doesn’t have the Popeye look. It is unclear if this is supposed to be the Megala who went crazy and took over Firestorm’s body but he doesn’t look like him. Nor does he look like the post-Crisis Megala either. That Megala could not use his arms or legs and his chair served as a life-support system, kind of like Davros from Doctor Who.

This could possibly be the New 52 Eiling, though. He is an African-American again, but seems much younger. And slightly less douchey. The post-Crisis Eiling raised Nate’s kids as his own, but it seems as if this Cap has no kids. If he did, he probably wouldn’t have killed himself.

Twenty three minutes prior to Nate’s meltdown, Captain Atom is flying over the Pacific Ocean, heading back to the Continuum. He is speaking to Megala via an internal nano-com array that has been injected into Nate’s body. Megala tells him he’s detected a minor glitch in the last nano-diagnostic. The rate at which Cap’s atoms are splitting and reforming has elevated slightly. Megala tells him to hurry back so they can assess this new development, but Atom refuses. He’s spotted a cruise ship that’s about to be capsized by a mega wave. Megala sends for Eiling as Cap attempts to change the water around the ship into a jello-like mass. However, Captain Atom’s powers appear to be fizzling out. Cap compensates by pouring on more power.

His efforts pay off and as soon as the gelatinous mass steadies the ship Atom flies away quickly. As Eiling bitches about Nate’s inability to follow orders, there is a spike in Cap’s “quantum fever.” There is a flare-up, similar to the one he killed himself with a few pages back, and Eiling tells Nate to get back to the Continuum as quickly as possible. He wants Captain Atom contained in the suppression dome. Nate tries to make it back, but the increasing flare-ups slow him down.

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Just then, three Justice Leaguers show up on the scene, drawn to Cap’s flare-ups that they detected from their Watchtower. Cap explains to Superman, Green Lantern Hal Jordan, and Cyborg that he urgently needs to get to Kansas, but the Leaguers won’t let him fly over populated areas. Megala taps into Cyborg’s tech and transmits a hologram of himself explaining the situation.

Captain Atom tells Superman he can get him to the Continuum quickly and Green Lantern and Cyborg say they can help contain Cap in the meantime. Just as Nate begins to flare up again, Superman grabs him and heads for Kansas. Green Lantern encloses Atom in a protective bubble while Cyborg just says encouraging things like, “Your ring’s kicking quantum ass!”

Just as they are over Kansas, Hal apologizes as he loses control of his construct. Captain Atom flares again, and the Leaguers do what they can to protect the innocent lives down below. However, as we see the scale of the destruction, it seems unlikely that many lives were saved.

Captain Atom staggers into the dome, crawls to the chair, and demands that Megala tell him how many people he killed. This is where we came in.

Nate appears to be dead. His chair was melted and there is no sign of him. Megala says that even though he isn’t a religious man, he hopes Nathaniel Adam will find peace in the afterlife. Eiling can’t get past the loss of a military asset long enough to consider the passing of the human inside. But, as we see up on the surface in the ruins of Kansas City, our hero may not be dead after all.

A naked man lies in the rubble with no blue skin. A newspaper nearby indicates the current year is 1994. To be continued…

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This was awesome. Will Conrad’s art is beautiful. Of course I’m going to love Bates and Weisman, and I’m super excited about what comes next. If it goes the way I think it is going to go, I’m going to be a very happy Nathaniel Adam fan. This is the best Captain Atom I’ve seen in recent memory. A for story and A for art. I’m hoping this is the beginning of something big and long-lasting for Captain Atom.

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Audio

Silver and Gold Episode 14: The Man of Gold vs the Man of Steel!

07 Thursday Jul 2016

Posted by FKAjason in Captain Atom Versus Super-Villains, Espionage, Podcast, Silver and Gold

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Alan Gold, Augustin Mas, Bob Smith, Booster Gold, Captain Atom, Carl Gafford, Cary Bates, Dan Jurgens, Dennis O'Neill, Dirk Davis, Duncan Andrews, Gene D'Angelo, General Eiling, Martin Allard, Mike DeCarlo, Modern Age Captain Atom, Pat Broderick, Plastique, Superman, The Cambodian, The Mongolian, Trixie Collins

Superman teaches Booster Gold a harsh lesson with his fists in Booster Gold (vol 1) #7 by Dan Jurgens, Mike DeCarlo, Gene D’Angelo, Augustin Mas, and Alan Gold. Captain Atom gets sucker-stabbed by the Cambodian while he’s chatting up Plastique in Captain Atom (DC, vol 1) #7 by Cary Bates, Pat Broderick, Bob Smith, Carl Gafford, Duncan Andrews, and Dennis O’Neil. And Roy and Jay are there to talk about it!

Music
Heart of Gold – The Roy Clark Method

Battle Without Honor or Humanity – Tomoyasu Hotei

Direct Link.

Also available on iTunes and Stitcher.

Check out our tumblr for images from these issues.

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Silver and Gold Episode 12: At Last! The Origin of Booster Gold

06 Monday Jun 2016

Posted by FKAjason in "The Lie", Captain Atom Versus Super-Villains, Podcast, Silver and Gold

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Alan Gold, Augustin Mas, Bob Smith, Booster Gold, Captain Atom, Carl Gafford, Cary Bates, Dan Jurgens, Dennis O'Neill, Doctor Spectro, Duncan Andrews, Mike DeCarlo, Modern Age Captain Atom, Nansi Hoolahan, Pat Broderick, Skeets, Superman

Like Julius Caesar in 49 BC, FKAjason and Roy “Charlemagne” Cleary cross the Rubicon with Booster Gold, Skeets, Superman, and their new pal Z. Finally, the origin of Booster Gold is revealed by Dan Jurgens, Mike DeCarlo, Nansi Hoolahan, Augustin Mas, and Alan Gold. We then turn our sights on the new Doctor Spectro trying to get a piece of Captain Atom’s lie with Cary Bates, Pat Broderick, Bob Smith, Carl Gafford, Duncan Andrews, and Dennis O’Neil. All of this and more are found in today’s reviews of Booster Gold (vol 1) #6, and Captain Atom (DC, vol 1) #6. Plus, your listener feedback!

Music
Heart of Gold – The Roy Clark Method
Channel Z – The B-52’s
Kiss – Prince
With or Without You – U2

Direct Link.

Also available on iTunes and Stitcher.

Check out our Tumblr for images from this issue.

 

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Superman (Vol 3) #50 (May 2016)

21 Monday Mar 2016

Posted by FKAjason in Cameo, Captain Atom Versus Aliens

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Aquaman, Ardian Syaf, Black Adam, Captain Atom, Captain Marvel (Shazam), Elasti-Girl, Gene Luen Yang, Gorilla Grodd, Hi-Fi Design, Howard Porter, Jon Bogdanove, Killer Croc, New 52 Captain Atom, Patrick Zircher, Rob Leigh, Superman, Vandal Savage

“What Could Have Been, What Still Can Be, and What Is”

  • Writer: Gene Luen Yang
  • Pencils & Inks: Howard Porter, Ardian Syaf, Patrick Zircher, Jon Bogdanove
  • Colors: Hi-Fi Design
  • Cover Artists: Dave Johnson, Dave McCaig, Kaare Andrews, Danny Miki, Arif Prianto, and John Romita, Jr.
  • Letters: Rob Leigh
  • Editors: Andrew Marino & Eddie Berganza
  • Executive Editor: Bobbie Chase

The New 52 Captain Atom (sporting pants) has a brief cameo in this issue of Superman. Vandal Savage and Superman are visiting a simulated possible future in which Earth is under Savage’s rule, with Superman as his general. Earth is under attack by the Dominators, but a group of heroes and villains led by Superman quickly ends the invasion.

It is fine as far as cameos go, but I have to wonder why they gave him pants. He never needed pants before. Also, I’m sad to say I don’t know who some of these characters are. Is that Killer Croc and Gorilla Grodd? And Rita Farr, the Elasti-Girl of the Doom Patrol?

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superman.v3.50.04It has been one year since the New 52 Captain Atom was last seen.

(All characters and images belong to DC Comics and I am not making any profit off this blog.)

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Silver and Gold Episode 03: Captain Atom… A True American Hero?

28 Thursday Jan 2016

Posted by FKAjason in Espionage, Podcast

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Batman, Blue Beetle, Bob Smith, Brian Mulroney, Captain Atom, Cary Bates, Dr. Megala, Firestorm, General Eiling, Jeffrey "Goz" Goslin, John Costanza, Martin Allard, Modern Age Captain Atom, Pat Broderick, Plastique, Ronald Reagan, Superman

In this episode of Silver & Gold, we discuss what I like to call “Captain Atom versus the French Canadian Separatists.” After a brief discussion about Captain Atom’s junk, we review Captain Atom (vol 1, DC) #2 by Cary Bates, Pat Broderick, Bob Smith, Carl Gafford, and John Costanza.

Remember to use the hashtag #SNGPOD when commenting on social media!

Music

Heart of Gold – The Roy Clark Method
Silver Threads and Golden Needles – The Springfields

Download this episode now on iTunes!

Direct Link.

Check out our tumblr page for images from this episode.

 

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The L.A.W. (Living Assault Weapons) (September 1999 – February 2000)

21 Thursday Jan 2016

Posted by FKAjason in Justice League, L.A.W., Sentinels of Justice, Team-Ups

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Aquaman, Avatar, Batman, Big Barda, Bill Clinton, Blue Beetle, Captain Atom, Fate, Golden Age Blue Beetle, Green Lantern (Kyle Rayner), Judomaster, L.A.W. Captain Atom, Martian Manhunter, Nightshade, Orion, Peacemaker, Plastic Man, Rama Kushna, Sarge Steel, Steel, Superman, The Flash, The Question, Wonder Woman, Yves Fortè

Writer: Bob Layton
Pencils: Dick Giordano
Inks: Bob Layton
Colors: Tom Ziuko
Letters: John Workman

The L.A.W. (Living Assault Weapons) was a six-issue mini series published by DC Comics starting in September 1999 and running to February 2000. The series logo on each of the six covers spotlighted one specific member of The L.A.W., with the first issue featuring Blue Beetle. The following five issue covers featured old Charlton characters the Question, the Peacemaker, Nightshade, Judomaster and Captain Atom. The six covers, when lined up, formed one complete picture. And everybody got a new costume!

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So what was the world like in September 1999? Bill Clinton was in the White House with Tony Blair at 10 Downing Street. Rescuers were still searching for survivors of the İzmit earthquake (there were just over 17,000 dead from the 7.6 magnitude quake in Turkey). Greece was hit by an earthquake and multiple aftershocks. If you had a time machine and a hankering to go to the movies, you might catch American Beauty, The Sixth Sense, or The Iron Giant. Of course, you might also see Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace, or Wild Wild West, so it’s sort of a crapshoot.

The basic story of L.A.W. (Living Assault Weapons): the team was formed in response to the disappearance of the JLA after they were attacked by the Avatar (who used to be Judomaster’s sidekick “Tiger”).

After causing the Justice Leauge  to disappear along with their Watchtower, Avatar then attacks a European Space Agency launch facility. During the attack, Captain Atom shows up to stop him, but he is quickly defeated and captured by the Avatar (way to fail, Cap). The Avatar keeps Captain Atom trapped within a large crystal that contains his powers, which he needs to carry out his plan.

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Nate references his wife Plastique, which I love, even if it is something of a continuity headache.

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Senior Advisor of Metahuman Affairs, Sarge Steel, is asked by President Clinton to go to the Swiss Alps (where the Peacemaker Project is located). The Peacemaker Project has a wide variety of information; specifically, information regarding the Avatar and the disappearance of the JLA. As Sarge Steel is arriving, the Avatar’s Ravanans are attacking the Peacemaker Project. With the help of the new Peacemaker, Mitchell Black, they are able to defeat Avatar’s henchmen before too much of the base is destroyed.

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During the fight at the Peacemaker Project, the Blue Beetle and the Question are investigating a group of Avatar’s followers. They meet up with Judomaster who was going out on his own to correct a wrong that he had committed (although the particular “wrong” is not revealed, we do learn Judomaster was sent away from Nanda Parbat by Rama Kushna). The three heroes are attacked by Avatar’s group of followers and they flee in Blue Beetle’s Bug. While fleeing, they are contacted by Sergeant Steel to come and meet him in the Swiss Alps.

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When they arrive at the Peacemaker Project’s base, they discover that Nightshade is also there, recovering from a procedure that Fate had performed to remove a succubus that was inhabiting her body. She has developed new powers as a result of the procedure. She can now easily travel through shadows and use them to form a shadow cyclone as a weapon against the Avatar’s Ravanans. She is able to prevent the Ravanans from capturing French Ambassador Yves Fortè.

During a battle with Avatar and his Ravanans, Peacemaker, Blue Beetle, The Question, and Judomaster are defeated and Judomaster is taken back to Avatar’s base. While they are detained, Judomaster reveals to the group that the Avatar is actually his former sidekick, Tiger.

Nightshade is able to locate the missing JLA and the Watchtower by utilizing her new powers. She is able to free them from the stasis that the Avatar had placed them in and the JLA help her repel the attacking Ravanans. The JLA return to Earth to battle the remaining Ravanans while Peacemaker, Blue Beetle, and The Question travel into outer space to destroy the targeting system that the Avatar has in place to destroy all of the military outlets in the world. Blue Beetle successfully shuts down the system and averts a major catastrophe. Judomaster then meets with the Avatar and, knowing that he is beaten, the Avatar gives up his mission.

The L.A.W. are able to free Captain Atom and all of the members go their separate ways. (When Cap emerges from the crystal, he is wearing his “Kingdome Come” costume.) The Blue Beetle decides that he is going to take some time off from being a super-hero for a while so that he can better understand who he truly is.

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The reason for the wikipediaish entry for this series and lumping it all into one entry is simple: this is a Captain Atom blog, not a Charlton Comics blog. Don’t get me wrong, I love the old Charlton books. But Captain Atom hardly figured into this series at all. There is lots of Blue Beetle action though, including a dream sequence that features the Golden Age Dan Garrett Blue Beetle.

Dick Giordano and Bob Layton’s art is superb and Bob’s story is pretty good. If this had turned into an ongoing series, I certainly would have picked it up. I give The L.A.W. (Living Assault Weapons an A.

Captain Atom next appears in JLA Showcase 80-Page Giant #1.

(All characters and images belong to DC Comics and I am not making any profit off this blog.)

 

 

 

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Original Captain Atom Artwork by Adamantis

06 Friday Nov 2015

Posted by FKAjason in Justice League, Sketches & Portraits

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Adamantis, Batman, Blue Beetle, Bombshell, Booster Gold, Captain Atom, Elongated Man, Hawkgirl, Hawkman, Ice, Ironfire, Lobo, Major Force, Maxima, Modern Age Captain Atom, New 52 Captain Atom, Oberon, Power Girl, Rocket Red, Silver Shield, Supergirl, Superman, The Ghost, Waverider, Wonder Woman

I recently posted one of adamantis’ pieces here on this blog.  It was a Captain Aom/Captain Marvel team-up of sorts.  Upon exploring his deviantart page, I found a whole slew of great Captain Atom pieces.  This guy really has a great eye and imagination.  Honestly, I’d be pleased if he was tapped to be the artist on a new Captain Atom series (if that were ever a thing).  If you haven’t already, you should really check out his art.

Convergence – Power Couples

Filling In – Power Girl and Captain Atom (as Wonder Woman and Superman)

Power Girl and Captain Atom – Another Time

Threes a Crowd – Power Girl, Captain Atom, and Maxima

Power Girl and some other people…

Captain Atom and Power Girl – Don’t I Know You?

Justice League International – Celebration

Clearly, Adamantis loves the Captain Atom/Power Girl couple.  There’s so much more than this on his page. You’ve got to see it!

This last one is my absolute favorite:

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Convergence #8 (July 2015)

28 Thursday May 2015

Posted by FKAjason in Cameo, Convergence

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Andy Kubert, Barbara Gordon, Batman, Blue Beetle, Brad Anderson, Bronze Age Captain Atom, Captain Atom, Carlo Pagulayan, Dick Grayson, Dr. Fate, Eduardo Pansica, Ethan Van Sciver, Green Lantern (Alan Scott), Green Lantern (Guy Gardner), Green Lantern (John Stewart), Jason Paz, Jeff King, Jill Thompson, John Romita Jr., John Starr, Judomaster, Nightshade, Peacemaker, Peter Steigerwald, Scott Hanna, Scott Lobdell, Stephen Segovia, Supergirl, Superman, The Flash, The Question, Tomeu Morey, Tony S. Daniel, Travis Lanham

“Last Stand”

  • Writers:  Jeff King, Scott Lobdell
  • Pencils:  Stephen Segovia, Carlo Pagulayan,Eduardo Pansica, Ethan Van Sciver
  • Inks:  Jason Paz, Scott Hanna, Trevor Scott,Stephen Segovia, Ethan Van Sciver
  • Colors:  John Starr, Peter Steigerwald
  • Letters:  Travis Lanham
  • Cover Artists:  Andy Kubert, Brad Anderson, Tony S. Daniel, Tomeu Morey, Jill Thompson, John Romita, Jr.

Going into Convergence, I said I was going to wait until it was over to review it.  As Captain Atom’s role in the actual mini-series was limited, I decided not to.  Besides, as a kid I was always told if I couldn’t say something nice, don’t say anything at all.  And I’ve found very little “nice” to say about this series.  I understand what DC Comics was doing here but I didn’t like it.  From 1935 – 1985, the DC Universe was never “rebooted.”  Since 1985’s Crisis on Infinite Earths, we’ve had Zero Hour, Final Crisis, Flashpoint, and now Convergence.  Why are they so trigger-happy with that reset button?  I’ve decided I’m done with DC for a while.  If they bring back Captain Atom or Firestorm, I’ll buy them.  But that might not ever happen (however, if the Legends of Tomorrow TV series is a success, Firestorm may be back in a big way, and the door was left open on The Flash for a season 2 Captain Atom appearance).

The Bronze Age Captain Atom appears in the background four times in this issue, although his costume coloring is slightly wrong.

That last panel seems to indicate that the original Charlton heroes do indeed “evolve” into their Multiversity counterparts.  This means we already know their fates and Captain Atom is dead once again.

(All characters and images belong to DC Comics and I am not making any profit off this blog.)

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The Weird (April 1988 – July 1988)

16 Friday May 2014

Posted by FKAjason in Captain Atom Versus Aliens, Captain Atom Versus Super-Heroes, Captain Atom Versus Super-Villains, Justice League

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Batman, Bernie Wrightson, Black Canary, Blue Beetle, Captain Atom, Dan Green, Dr. Fate, Green Lantern (Guy Gardner), Jim Starlin, Michelle Wrightson, Modern Age Captain Atom, Nuklon, Obsidian, Superman, The Weird, Todd Klein

“Conception”

  • Writer:  Jim Starlin
  • Pencils & Inks:  Bernie Wrightson & Dan Green
  • Colors:  Michelle Wrightson
  • Letters:  Todd Klein

The Weird was a four-issue mini-series featuring the Justice League.  Although text within issue #1 indicated that the series took place prior to Justice League International #7, Captain Atom is on the team (he was added to the team at the end of Justice League International #7).

The mini-series opens with Superman on a Metropolis rooftop, surveying the city.  At street level, an overcoated man walks to his dreary apartment building in the rain.  The name on his door reads “Jason Morgan.”  Inside, he removes his coat and sits on the bathroom floor.  He has strange green crystalline growths all over his body.  Yellow energy rings appear before him as he says, “Soon the bridge will be completed, my friends.”  He conjures up a red crystal, out of which a white orb flies as it crumbles apart.  The orb shoot out of the apartment, creating a massive explosion in the sky.

Superman notes that no damage was done and he flies in the investigate further.  He finds the white orb, which he calls a star.  It changes shape into a ribbon and Superman touches it.  With another explosion, Superman is thrown back three miles.  When he returns to the ribbon, Captain Atom and Martian Manhunter are on the scene.

Thirty minutes later, the military arrives.  By now most of the Justice League is on the scene (Green Lantern Guy Gardner, Dr. Fate, Blue Beetle, Black Canary, and Batman).

Onboard Blue Beetle’s Bug, Batman and a Dr. Yamada are collecting data on the ribbon, which the doctor says will take months to collate.  Outside, Cap says the thing shouldn’t even exist (as it is pure energy it should have dispersed with no form to hold it together).  Dr. Fate says it does have a mystical quality, and Guy Gardner uses his ring as a “deep probe” to try and get more info.  Guy overdoes it with the green juice, which causes the ribbon to let out an explosion of energy and black out the city.  Martian Manhunter and Captain Atom quickly catch the crashing Bug.

From a nearby rooftop, the heroes watch the ribbon split into two parts and rush off into different directions.  Superman follows one and Martian Manhunter follows the other.  Superman fails at catching the thing as it flies into a genetic research lab.  It passes through “genetic fluids” before entering a computer, where it seems to be gathering data.  It launches out of the computer and flies off with Superman on it’s tail.

Meanwhile, at a funeral home across town, Martian Manhunter has followed the other energy ball into a funeral service.  The energy goes into the casket, making the dead man inside vanish.

The two energy balls return to the site of the original ribbon and combine.  The resulting explosion causes a nearby building to crumble.  When Guy goes to stop the falling debris, he is beaten to the punch by the ribbon.  In an effort to contain anymore explosions, Guy surrounds the ribbon with an energy bubble.  The heroes watch as inside a human creature is created.  It emerges onto a nearby rooftop, dressed like some sort of a ninja, and collapses.

An hour later at S.T.A.R. Labs, Dr. Yamada discovers that the creature’s body is filled with clear fluid rather than blood.  Using his x-ray vision, Superman learns that none of the creature’s organs are fully formed, but are “sculpting” themselves while it sleeps.  Also it has an unstable, alien molecular structure.  Superman thinks it is a living, possibly Earth-threatening atomic bomb.  Blue Beetle dubs the creature “the Weird,” and Guy Gardner offers to take it off the planet.  Superman rushes off to save the passengers of a crashing plane.  As soon as he is gone, the Weird wakes up.

When Martian Manhunter offers his arm and suggests the Weird get more rest, the creature shoves him back into a wall.  Batman orders Guy to contain the Weird with his ring, but the creature simply walks out of the green energy bubble.  Blue Beetle and Captain Atom throw themselves at the Weird, but he becomes intangible and they crash into each other.  Guy encases it in a denser energy cube, but it breaks free in an explosion that takes out most of the lab.

Captain Atom, Dr. Fate, Martian Manhunter, and Batman take the fight to the rooftops in an attempt to contain the Weird.  Seeing that physical attacks clearly do not affect the Weird’s molecular instability, Martian Manhunter lays on an ultimately ineffectual smackdown.  Even Dr. Fate’s mystic powers have no effect on the creature.  Their efforts are in vain, and the Weird explains that his kind are excellent manipulators of energy.  Cap decides to fire quantum blasts at the thing anyway.

The Weird knocks Captain Atom out cold and escapes by passing through the walls of the building.  He finds himself at the apartment of Jason Morgan the fellow from the opening of this issue.  The apartment is vacant, leaving the Weird time for another task, in the Metropolis suburb of Inglewood.  He returns to the home of “Walt,” the man whose body he has reanimated.  In the back yard or the house, he approaches Walt’s son Billy, who instantly recognizes the disfigured face as his father’s.

And this ends the first issue.  Lots of questions and few answers.

“Questions!”

  • Writer:  Jim Starlin
  • Pencils & Inks:  Bernie Wrightson & Dan Green
  • Colors:  Michelle Wrightson
  • Letters:  Todd Klein

 

The second issue opens back at S.T.A.R. Labs, where TV reporter Lance Armstrong (I know, right?) is attempting to interview Superman in the Weird’s aftermath.  Superman gives a summary of the previous issue, but Lance turns his words around on him, saying Supes thinks he can succeed where the Justice League failed.  Guy Gardner insults Superman, but the man of steel turns that into an opportunity to insult Guy before flying away.

Back at Walter Langley’s house, his wife wonders what the Weird’s connection to her dead husband is – if any.  Checking on her son Billy, she sees he has wandered away from the backyard of their home.

Billy, meanwhile, is riding on the Weird’s back as they fly to the beach.  The Weird explains to Billy that, while he has all of Walter Langley’s memories, he is not actually the boy’s dead father.  He displays his powers for Billy (flight, super-strength, the ability to become intangible, and the ability to affect any source of energy he’s in direct contact with).  In an effort to explain what he truly is, the Weird taps directly into Billy’s brain.  The two find themselves in an alternative dimensional reality, which the Weird explains is his home.  He identifies a glowing red orb as a Macrolatt, the dominant life form of this reality (although he himself is not one).  They are immensely powerful and ruthless beings.

The Weird explains he is a Zarolatt, white orb beings which possess great stores of energy but not the ability to use it.  The Macrolatts are tapping the energy of the Zarolatts, killing the peaceful creatures.  The Weird himself was being used by a Macrolatt that was attempting to cross over into Billy’s reality (the DC Universe).  The Macrolatts found a man they called “the Jason” (Jason Morgan from the first issue) and convinced him to betray his people and allow the Macrolatts to cross over.

Jason’s physical form was slightly altered to that of a half-man, half-crystal entity.  He created the crystalline anchor that would stabilize the bridge between worlds.  Hungering for the “freedom” that Billy’s world would offer him, the Weird crossed the bridge before any of the Macrolatts could make it across.  He came face-to-face with the Jason and fled.  The Weird chose Walter’s body as a containment vessel because he would have killed any living creature he tried to possess.  He found he could utilize all the dormant abilities that were denied to him as a Zarolatt.  He explains he must face the Jason again and stop him from reopening the bridge.  The Macrolatts, if they manage to cross over, will destroy Billy’s world.

Back in Metropolis, Jason Morgan returns home singing “Waltzing Matilda” to himself.  He begins to talk to himself (perfectly normal behavior in a comic book), and reveals he has killed a woman named Matilda Gatsby.  He sets out to reopen the bridge.

Superman, still searching for the Weird, gives up in the city and heads north to check the suburbs.  Meanwhile, in the suburbs, the Weird is dropping Billy off at home.  The Weird explains it would be best if Billy didn’t tell his mother who/what he was with.  Flying away, the Weird admits to himself that his molecular structure is unstable, just as Batman warned him in the last issue.  He knows he is a dangerous ticking time-bomb.  He bumps into Superman, and the two land on a nearby rooftop to have a chat.

The Weird says he can’t leave Earth like Superman wants.  He doesn’t explain why.  Superman punches him, which doesn’t even stagger the Weird.  The Weird punches back, surprising Superman with his strength.  The Weird takes off and Superman gives chase.  They stop the chase briefly to beat each other, but the two are evenly matched.  The Weird takes off again and Supes chases.  In the basement of an abandoned apartment building, the Weird pushes some supporting beams aside and brings the whole building down on the man of steel.  In the confusion, the Weird slips away.

Lance Armstrong shows up at the scene (via his news van – not a bicycle) and attempts to get a comment from Superman.  Superman does not indulge Lance and flies away.  Then the Weird emerges from the ground below, explaining that he had been directly under Superman the whole time.  He tells Lance that Superman and his friends think he is so unstable he will destroy the world.  He flies away, but Batman is nearby and watches him.

Back at Jason Morgan’s apartment, just as he is conjuring up the bridge, the Weird appears in his bathroom with him.  So ends the second issue.  Captain Atom was only in this issue for one panel.

“Confrontation”

  • Writer:  Jim Starlin
  • Pencils & Inks:  Bernie Wrightson & Dan Green
  • Colors:  Michelle Wrightson
  • Letters:  Todd Klein

The third issue opens with Billy Langley summing up the previous two issues to his dog (cleverly – or weirdly – named “Ptang”).  Meanwhile, in Jason Morgan’s apartment bathroom, the Weird and the Jason are facing off.  For a Justice League story, this mini-series sure hasn’t featured the Justice League much.

Back in Jason Morgan’s place, he and the Weird are throwing down, smashing the place to hell.  The Jason flings energy blasts which the Weird easily deflects.  From a neighboring apartment rooftop, the Justice League watches the battle.  Batman followed the Weird here and summoned his team-mates.  Guy Gardner wants to go down for a closer look, but Dr. Fate stops him.  Guy, hot-head that he is, ignores Dr. Fate and Batman’s warning and dives in.

Jason conjures a cube-shaped shield around his apartment which prevents Guy from entering and also destroys to top half of the building.  Batman sends Dr. Fate, Captain Atom, and Martian Manhunter to protect the “civilians” while he catches the unconscious Guy.

While Batman ponders a way to get into the cube, the Jason and the Weird continue their confrontation within.  The Weird tells Jason he doesn’t want to use force against him because he knows Jason was duped by the Macrolatts, but he will resort to force if he has to.  He takes Jason by the neck.  Borrowing a page from Barry Allen’s book, Jason vibrates the molecules of air around the Weird, stunning him.  He encases the Weird in a “particle beam encasement” bubble.

Jason begins to reopen the portal while the Weird, helpless in the bubble, pleads with him to stop.  He tries to play to Jason’s humanity, but Jason says that will do no good.  He says he is turning on his own species because “life sucks.”

Outside, Dr. Fate, Batman, Black Canary, and Blue Beetle discuss the cube and their inability to penetrate it (Guy is down for the count with a bandage on his head).  Batman fears what is going on within, saying they really don’t have enough infor on the Weird to understand his motives.

Within the cube, Jason tells the Weird his tale of woe.  Named after the Jason of Greek mythology, he witnessed his father’s suicide by hanging at the age of four.  His mother became an abusive alcoholic and was murdered by a boyfriend with a razor.  He was sent to a Dickensian orphanage where he had to fight the other children and did poorly in school.  He was kicked out of the orphanage at the age of fifteen because of “a little trouble [he] got into with a girl.”  He drifted through a series of menial jobs that he always got fired from and ended up a dirty homeless beggar.  Trying to clean up his act to attract women, he got a job with the city of Metropolis as a sanitation worker (or “garbage man,” as we used to call them when we were kids”.  He didn’t mind the labor, but hated dealing with all the city’s trash.  Still unlucky with the ladies, he assaulted a woman and was thrown in prison.  Upon his release, he went back to work on the garbage truck and spiraled into alcoholism like his mother.  Then he began to have strange dreams.  It was the Macrolatts contacting his subconscious, preparing him for their coming.  They altered his physiology and promised him that when they took Earth, he would become the king of humanity.

The Weird warns Jason that he has been misled.  The Macrolatts will kill him as soon as they cross over.  Jason doesn’t believe him and lashes out.  The Weird continues to try and convince Jason the Macrolatts are bad.  The Justice League continues to try and breach the cube.  Jason continues to build the bridge.

Believing that it is the only way, the Weird determines to force his unstable body to go critical.  It will kill him and Jason, and the entire city of Metropolis to boot.  Two Macrolatts emerge from the portal just as the Weird explodes.  Somehow, the cube contains the blast, the Weird and Jason both survive (the explosion must not have been created by the Weird reaching critical mass), and the Justice League witnesses the two Macrolatts fleeing the scene.

The Macrolatts speed off at twice the speed of light, making it impossible for the Justice League to give chase.  The Weird crushes the crystal Jason used to build the bridge.  Realizing Jason was a twisted, misunderstood pawn of creatures he didn’t understand, the Weird give him a low-grade disruptive charge through his cerebral cortex, putting Jason’s mind at ease before snapping his neck.  Upon his death, the cube vanishes and the Justice League converges on the remains of the apartment.  They find the Weird standing over Jason’s dead body.

The two Macrolatts, rejuvenated by lightning over the ocean, return to Metropolis to seek host bodies.  One of them finds Superman and merges with him.  The other flies to Los Angeles, California. Finding the headquarters of Infinity, Inc., it merges with Nuklon.  Back at Jason’s apartment, the Weird tries to explain he did not murder Jason Morgan.

The Weird realizes the Justice League won’t listen to him; they’ve made up their minds.  As he tries to leave, he is knocked out cold by Martian Manhunter (J’onn J’onzz was invisible the whole time).  When Batman orders Guy to take the Weird off-world, the two Macrolatts appear (in the bodies of Nuklon and Superman) and say they’ll deal with him.

“Armageddon”

  • Writer:  Jim Starlin
  • Pencils:  Bernie Wrightson
  • Inks:  Dan Green
  • Colors:  Michelle Wrightson
  • Letters:  Todd Klein

At last, the climactic conclusion.  Batman slaps the Weird awake and demands an explanation.  The Justice League have found themselves in combat against Superman and Nuklon’s Macrolatt-possessed bodies.

The Weird gives Batman the four-panel summation of the past three issues.  Things look grim for the world, as Superman and Nuklon have not only all their original powers, but the powers of the Macrolatts as well.  Black Canary is knocked out and Batman carries her to safety as the Weird explains to him how the Macrolatts made it to this world.  The Justice League suddenly learns they are powerless against this duo.

The Weird tells Batman that fighting the Macrolatts is pointless and he won’t take any part in it.  Batman insults him and jumps into the battle.  In an attempt to “short out” a Macrolatt, he pokes Superman with an exposed live electrical cable.  Superman seems injured, but not stopped.  He breaks Batman’s arm.  Apparently thinking Batman isn’t worth his time and effort, Superman flies to Nuklon’s aid as he struggles to take down Captain Atom, the last Justice League member still standing.  They dispatch Nate with ease.

With the Justice League utterly defeated, the Weird bows down to the Macrolatts.  They two evil beings begin to burn Metropolis, feeding off the life energy of the matter (and people) they destroy.  At the scene, Lance Armstrong reports that it appears the world is coming to an end.

The Weird begs the two to stop.  He says he can help their efforts. Batman tries to stop him, but he bitch slaps the dark knight.  The Weird tells the Macrolatts they need to utilize the intellect of their host bodies as well as the power.  Nuklon blasts at the Weird for his “insolence.”  Superman takes a piece of nearby building and throws it at the Weird.  The Zarolatt becomes intangible and the debris coasts harmlessly through him.  Nuklon is taken aback by this but Superman isn’t.  The Weird warns them that heir host bodies are susceptible to illness.  He tells them they need to reach out and merge with them, as Zarolatts are meant to serve Macrolatts.  The two buy it, and fly towards the Weird.

Reaching into Nuklon and Superman, the Weird pulls the Macrolatts out.  The two previously-possessed heroes drop to the ground as the Weird tells his captives he would never allow them to harm this world.  Holding one in each hand, he appears to squash the life out of the Macrolatts.

The next morning, back at S.T.A.R. Labs, Superman indicates that the Weird is still unstable and will still reach critical mass.  He will expire in less than two days.  The Justice League have been unable to d anything to reverse the process.  He says he will leave Earth before that time comes, but asks the Justice League to help him with two things first.

Superman and Guy fly over the ocean with the Weird.  As the Weird begins to build something, the heroes leave him, vowing to return the next morning with Walter’s wife and son.  The Justice League returns the next day with Billy, finding what appears to be a pirate ship constructed of Earth.  Superman explains that Walter’s wife wouldn’t come – that she felt she couldn’t handle it.  Billy finds the whole thing extremely awesome.

The Weird has a heart-to-heart discussion with Billy, explaining that he will have to leave again and he will die.  Billy is saddened by this, begging his father to stay.  The Weird says he can not stay, but will leave this odd island for Billy to visit and remember him.  Martian Manhunter takes Billy home.

Superman and Guy take the Weird to a distant part of space, a light year away from any inhabited world.  They say their good-byes and leave Walter to his fate.  Guy and Superman watch the massive explosion from a safe distance, tearing up as they do so.  The two fly back to Earth.  Thus ends The Weird mini-series.

I didn’t like The Weird when it was first published.  From the first page, I took issue with the continuity error.  Captain Atom was not a member of the Justice League when this was supposed to have taken place.  And if it took place at the time it was published, Guy Gardner’s personality was wrong.  It still gives me a headache to think about it.  I can be such a nerd about continuity.  Plus, I never liked the name of the hero, “the Weird.”  Frankly, I thought it was stupid (the name).  And the Justice League were completely superfluous to the story. This is a C story at best.  The art, on the other hand, was definitely “A” material.  I really like the way Wrightson and Green drew Captain Atom in particular, even if he didn’t grace the pages much.  I’d say The Weird is worth checking out for the art alone.  Just don’t expect the story to blow your mind.

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DC: The New Frontier #5 (September 2004)

25 Tuesday Mar 2014

Posted by FKAjason in Cameo

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Ace Morgan, Captain Atom, Darwyn Cooke, Dave Stewart, Earth-21 Captain Atom, Flash, Green Arrow, Jared K. Fletcher, Martian Manhunter, New Frontier, Superman, Wonder Woman

This 2004 series, created by Darwyn Cooke, was supposedly influenced by other DC series such as Kingdom Come, The Golden Age, Watchmen, and The Dark Knight Returns.  Like The Golden Age, New Frontier takes place primarily in the 1950s, and depicts the Golden Age superheroes (Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman) meeting Silver Age characters (Flash, Green Lantern, Martian Manhunter). It was intended to bridge the gap from the end of the Golden Age to the beginning of the Silver Age in the DC Universe.

The mini-series takes place on Earth-21 in DC’s multiverse.  Captain Atom does not appear in this series and doesn’t appear to exist in this continuity.  However, in Book 5 we are introduced to Nathaniel Adam, an Air Force Captain working out of Cape Canaveral, Florida.

It seems that on Earth-21, Nate is just an Air Force career man with no super powers.

He butts heads with Green Arrow, who seems incapable of getting along with other heroes no matter what continuity he exists in.

Just when it looks like Green Arrow and Captain Adam are about to come to blows, Superman intervenes and nips that crap in the bud.

Superman gives a rousing speech about destiny and fighting oppression and persecution.

Martian Manhunter shows up, and everyone’s attitude shifts almost instantly.  Guess old John Jones has been mucking about in peoples’ heads again.

The good cheer only lasts as long as Superman is fighting.  When the monster burns him and dumps him in the sea, everyone seems to be in despair.  Could be that in his own grief, Jones let go of his grip on their minds.

Captain Adam shows up in the pages if the next and final issue, but is more of a background character.  This particular issue contained his meatiest role.  He never does gain any super powers, but fights alongside the superheroes anyway.  Of course, Superman is not dead and in the next issue the heroes win and everyone lives (more or less) happily ever after.

DC: The New Frontier #5 was written, pencilled, and inked by Darwyn Cooke.  Colors were by Dave Stewart with letters by Jared K. Fletcher.

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