Most Helpful Customer Reviews
|
|
17 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Once And Future Brainiac, March 14, 2009
When I was a kid I always loved the issues of Superman where the Man of Steel faced Lex Luthor and Brainiac. Each of those villains seemed powerful enough to take Superman down, but together they seemed unstoppable. One of my favorite issues was when they shrank Superman small enough to put into a bird cage. I just really liked the image and the threat of Superman being too tiny to handle the struggle.
I've been a fan of Geoff Johns's work for years. I love how he brings heroic action and a feeling of wonder back to strips that rival what I remember as a child when I first encountered those heroes. This time Johns creates a Brainiac the like of which I have never before seen.
Over the last few years we've had a few incarnations of Brainiac, but somehow they really missed the overall feeling of awesome evil and impending doom that I remembered from the stories I read as a kid. Granted, a lot of things were more terrifying to me when I was younger, but an emotionless, cold machine should be truly creepy. (Terminator really did it for me!) I remember those early stories of Brainiac showing him acting more or less human, laughing and mad and scared. But he had green skin long before Harvey Dent did.
The version of Brainiac that Johns treats the readers to made me feel uneasy at first, then tipped the scales over to a genuine worried state before the book ends. This Brainiac is loathsome and vile, a true villain with its own agenda. I like the fact that Brainiac is actually a giant ship that has various automatons it can send out as probes, sentries, and offensive units. This Brainiac is actually a rolling army when it wishes to be.
The early pages depicting Krypton and Kandor are really good, and the fear those people have of Brainiac is palpable. When I first saw Brainiac do the skull-injection bit, I knew Johns was going to deliver a rough ride for his readers. This wasn't going to be your daddy's Brainiac.
Not only did Johns succeed in breathing new life and fear into Brainiac, but he also pulls off the whole Kandor-in-a-bottle thing. When I was younger, I loved the idea of a bottle city, but as I grew older I became aware that it was impossible to put an alien city in basically what was a terrarium. But I still like the image. I'm glad that Johns was able to save that.
He also reintroduces Cat Grant to the Superman mythos. She has never looked better. Gary Frank's pencils took me a little while to get used to in earlier graphic novels, but I love what he does these days. Superman looks a little different to me, a little less bulky, but that's okay. I love what Frank does with the supporting characters, the panel layouts, and the world. His art is truly fantastic to look at.
Cat Grant is going to be a real problem for Supergirl, as she already has been in that strip's story line. Cat not only has a razor sharp wit loaded with plenty of sarcasm, but Frank draws her as pure eye candy.
Johns also loads the book with extra features as well. We get more of Supergirl's backstory, more Kryptonian history, several Lois Lane pieces, and an ending that is totally unexpected. When I reached the end of the book, I had to sit down and re-read it a couple of times. This story is just that powerful. And it leaves you wanting more, which is always a sign of a successful tale.
If you think you know Brainiac, think again. Now Geoff Johns, he knows Brainiac.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you?
|
|
|
|
|
|
7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
When Did Superman have a Reboot?, March 30, 2009
Wow. I must really be behind the times in the Superman continuity. Supergirl is alive again along with Ma and Pa Kent. Kandor remains in the hands of Brainiac whose entire history has been shuffled around. I take it this is a full reboot; I'm just not sure when the reboot happened. I was glad to see Brainiac back to his classic green form with electrodes in his bald head. It looks like artist Gary Frank may have been inspired by Alex Ross's version of Brainiac from Justice although he's dropped the surgical scrubs and added about 150 pounds of solid muscle. Superman's look most resembles Christopher Reeve and Brainiac's probes (his robot army) look like a cross between the Terminator and H.R. Giger's Alien.
The Brainiac arc has received a lot of positive reviews but I cannot in good conscience rate it anything higher than above average. My issue is the way that Brainiac is presented. Brainiac is described as a 12th level intellect meaning that his thinking is vastly superior to a humans and even well above Superman's. You might expect a 12th level intellect to possess some kind of high level planning and sophisticated dialogue. In fact I would think that Brainiac would be on a whole separate plane of thinking. Unfortunately most writers are unable to even approach creating a character with super high level intellect so they fall back on having them crank out powerful weapons. Brainiac's blathering and bragging feels like anything but the product of a superior mind as he drones on about his desire for universal conquest. Rather than create a battle of wits Geoff Johns just has Superman and Brainiac duke it out across several issues. Brainiac says to Superman, "It is incomprehensible you thought you could outthink me" and I had to reread the book to try and find any instance where Superman tried to outthink Brainiac. There are none. Oh, and did I mention that this iteration of Brainiac seems to be as physically strong if not stronger than Superman?
Geoff Johns writes big event stories but they don't have the depth of a writer like Alan Moore or Grant Morrison. Morrison's All-Star Superman showed a Superman who used his brains more than is brawn and this was one of the things that elevated All-Star above other Superman stories. I was a big fan of Infinite Crisis by Geoff Johns but I have to confess that he is a more limited writer than Moore or Morrison. I think of Geoff Johns stories as being sort of like summer blockbusters with a big bag of popcorn. The Sinestro Corps War struck a real cord with comic fans and Johns knows how to give the audience what it wants. I enjoyed the Sinestro Corps War but I prefer a more subtle touch like Morrison's Batman R.I.P.
Superman/Brainiac can actually be read though entirely in probably around an hour in other words Johns is not big into heavy dialogue. There are pages in a row without any dialogue at all and that's not necessarily a complaint. Done correctly, a minimum of dialogue can be very effective. The story is good and the art is well done it's just that I felt it could have been even more and this may be a case where I was let down by some high expectations.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you?
|
|
|
|
|
|
11 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Superman meets Wachowski Brother's Galactus, March 10, 2009
Geoff Johns is consistently wonderful. The art is equally brilliant.. Superman Braniac is one of my fav superman tales. It is a bit short.. but filled with story.. Superman is drawn in the likeness of Christopher Reeves, and the parts taking place in the Daily Planet are funny.. with a tad of folk-lore.. all of which i like. Braniac.. reminds reminds me of Galactus meets the Matrix.. he's pretty creepy..
here's the plot if you want.. SPOILER SPOILER SPOILER
A robot probe arrives on Earth and battles Superman. Before being defeated, the probe sends information about Superman's blood to the original Brainiac. Supergirl then reveals to Superman that Brainiac is suspected to have shrunk the Kryptonian city of Kandor and placed it in a bottle, that Milton Fine was infected by nanite probes, (which later migrated into Doomsday, the Brainiac 2.5 android, and finally into Lena Luthor), sent by the "original" Brainiac to look for Superman and that, in current continuity, no-one has ever actually met the "real" Brainiac. Superman is captured by Brainiac when Superman finds him attacking an alien planet and preparing to steal a another city for his collection.
Superman escapes, just in time to see Brainiac emerging from his "bio-shell". This new version of Brainiac resembles a much larger and more muscular version of the original, pre-Crisis Brainiac, and has motives similar to the Animated Braniac on TV.. traveling the universe and stealing the knowledge of various alien cultures, abducting and shrinking cities from each planet as samples, and then destroying the planet so that the value of the destroyed civilization's knowledge becomes priceless. Brainiac travels to Earth and prepares to abduct the city of Metropolis.
Brainiac steals Metropolis, and prepares to fire a missile that will destroy the sun, and the Earth itself. Supergirl deals with the missile, while Superman battles Brainiac. Superman knocks Brainiac out of his ship, and into a swamp, where Brainiac is overwhelmed by the filthy microscopic organisms covering his body. Superman uses this distraction to defeat Brainiac. While Superman frees the cities of Metropolis and Kandor, the Braniac sends a missile to the Kent farm. The farm is destroyed, and Jonathan Kent suffers a fatal heart attack because of it.
It is not revealed whether this version of Brainiac is an artificial intelligence or organic creature, only that he claims to have a "Coluan brain".
You know you want it..
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you?
|
|
|
|
|
|
Most Recent Customer Reviews
|