Posted: 22 October 2011 at 10:36pm | IP Logged | 11
|
|
|
I found the series to be a great deal of fun, in the sense that it WAS such an epic exercise in fan-think. So many conundrums, inside jokes, comparisions, etc... It's exactly was many fans would try to do themselves if given such a book to work on. Overall, I found the characterizations to be solid, but the friction between the two continuums grew a bit thick sometimes, as each team perceived the other to be somehow intrinsically opposed to them, almost a take on Morrison's "Earth 2" novel that he did with Quitely. All that being said, I would have preferred the single universe approach. What we got didn't rankle my nerves too much, but it was simply "more of the same" with the cosmic scale, the multiverses, the constant "reboots" altering the timeline... It felt more "DC" because DC's stock-in-trade at the time this was published was again, through constant fan-think, exactly this sort of multiversal rigamorale... Parallel universes, counterparts upon counterparts, constants reboots and restarts rejiggering the timeline and altering everyone's memories and perceptions... Using the parallel dimension trope to explain why the two teams had never met was really the easy way out for the writer. Making this their "first" encounter ever made it easy to play all of his long-held cards without acknowledging any of the other team-ups or having to come up with reasons for why the world's two premiere super-teams interact with one another so rarely. Also, the plot begins to write itself once you show that there are two universes... Obviously, they must be in opposition... Perhaps in danger of colliding... The big gun villains in the two universes, perhaps they have plans dependent upon there being two worlds... With that, the way into the story becomes the whole story. In one of the rejiggered timelines shown in the book, the teams have always co-existed on the same Earth and are shown having a JLA/JSA style get-together aboard the satellite, trading quips and conversation as if they were all long-standing acquaintances rather than wary, hostile strangers bent on defending their home dimensions from odd-seeming alien invaders. Oh, to have had the whole thing take place in that briefly-glimpsed reality...
|