Friday, October 7, 2016

Superman #186 (1966)


Superman #186 (May, 1966)
"The Two Ghosts of Superman!"
"Clark Kent, Gangster!"
Writers - Otto Binder & Leo Dorfman
Artists - Curt Swan & Al Plastino
Editor - Mort Weisinger
Cover Price: $0.12

For today's spooky spectacular we've got ourselves a double feature.  Only one of which features g-g-g-ghosts, but we'll cover'em both anyway.

Before we get down to it just wanna say, this is my first issue of a DC Comics with dem boffo Go-Go Checks... which makes me a lot happier than I think it ought to.

--


Our first tale opens on a splash page featuring Lois, Lana, and Superman attending a seance wherein Jor-El is warning his son (from beyond the grave) that he will perish if he goes through with a particular experiment... but we're getting ahead of ourselves.  The story actually begins some time earlier, as Clark Kent is approached by a reformed crook called "Flashy" Fisher.  The Flash-man wants Clark to get a hold of Superman to help find Captain Kidd's undersea treasure.  He claims to have been told its location from the good Captain's ghost... and what's more, tells Clark he'll cut Superman in for ten-percent.


Clark uses his x-ray vision to read through Superman's fan-mail... which is great.  Two great big sacks full of letters marked "Superman Mail".  Anyhoo, he finds a map with the location of Captain Kidd's lost treasure... and so, he heads to the Ocean floor... where he punches a shark and finds a chest full'a doubloons!  Well, hot damn, Superman's gonna use his 10% to buy the neighborhood kids an astrodome!


As Flashy leaves with his "earnings", he luckily drops a business card with the name of a Seer... Sir Seer, in fact.  With a name like that, I guess his career options were somewhat limited, eh?


That evening, Superman does a bit of a stakeout at Mr. Seer's creepy looking abode.  He watches as a group of men gather around a table... with a crystal ball on it, naturally.  A Duke Cooper asks to speak with the ghost of the outlaw Jesse James... and wouldn'tcha know it, Jesse shows up and reveals the location of some of his own gold.  Superman is surprised that he can't seem to figure out how Seer made an actual ghost appear, as he cannot see any "strings".  


Superman heads out to the small deserted island... which, ya know... is totally where a wild west outlaw would stash his gold, right?  Anyhoo, he fights off a pair of mountain lions, and uncovers a whole lotta gold dust.


The next day, Clark is waiting for Duke Cooper to arrive... and already has a check in hand for the amount of the findings... minus 10%.  He decides it's time for him to see the Seer, and find out first hand what his scheme is.  The following day, he takes his best gals and takes in a seance.  Lois chooses the object of the conjuring, and it is Queen Isabella of Spain.


Initially, Sir Seer is unable to make contact... he mutters some spoo about the psychic vibrations being outta whack.  Suddenly, the form of Queen Isabella incorporates above the crystal ball.  She says that her lost treasures were buried in a cave of some... oh, screw it... it's in the Batcave.


Now this is awesome and ridiculous.  Clark's all, hey I'm pals with Superman... and he's tight with Batman, let's all go to the Batcave!  And they friggin' do!  Batman allows these goofballs, plus Lois a newspaper reporter and Lana a television news reporter, to just sashay into the Batcave... where, despite his insistence otherwise, Superman is able to locate Isabella's stolen treasure.


The next night, Clark Kent skips the seance... instead Superman accompanies Lois and Lana.  He asks Sir Seer if he can call forth his Kryptonian father, Jor-El.  Shortly, Jor's image appears... he warns his son not to conduct a certain weapons experiment the following day, otherwise the Fortress of Solitude will not only explode, but it will turn to Kryptonite.


Superman's all "screw that noise", and insists he will conduct the experiment anyway... not only that, he's going to take Clark Kent with him to watch!  The next day, Lois and Lana decide to hang out just around the time of Superman's proposed experiment.  Right on time, the Earth starts shaking like mad... over the radio comes the report that this was the worst violent tremor in recorded history... and it originated in the Arctic... uh oh!

LL Dance Party!

Days go by, and both Superman and Clark Kent are nowhere to be found.  Lois and Lana are approached by Sir Seer, who wants to try and make contact with either Clark or Superman.  They both agree, and the seance is on.  They are shocked to learn that Superman and Clark Kent are one in the same!  This really begs the question of why was this revealed here?  It really has nothing to do with anything... Anyhoo, Superclark spills the beans about his secret identity and laments the fact that without his presence on Earth, "crime would have a holiday".


Well, that's all Sir Seer needed to hear!  He is, in actuality, the leader of the... ahem... Spirit Gang... *snort*.  He tells all the goofballs in his gang that Superman is outta the picture, and to go run amok!  It's great, they all gather around Superman, Supergirl, and the Supermen of Kandor's gravesite... like, really?  One of the thugs lets out a raucous "Yippeeee!" at the news.


The crime holiday doesn't last all that long, as Superman makes his triumphant return... like, right away.  He confronts Seer, and reveals how he figured it all out.  It has a lot to do with satellites, and whoziwhatsits... stuff that's way over my head.  He continues, saying that he used his Super-Ventriloquism and Super-Projector-Vision with the Queen Isabella coin to make that magic happen... which, let's get this straight... he was Clark Kent that night... is he really telling Sir Seer all this?  Anyhoo... he talks about getting Batman in on the act, and then projecting Jor-El's visage by projecting a tiny painting he had of his father done on his fingernail... Ay yai yai.  The Earthquake, if you were wondering, was caused by Superman and Supergirl going underground and flying toward one another at great speeds... and knockin' noggins!


We wrap up our ghostly tale with Sir Seer in prison.  The kindly guards allow the poor fool to have his crystal ball with him in his cell... dunno if ya wanna do all that.  Back at the Planet, Clark gives a half-assed excuse about him and Superman not being the same guy, and Lois... super investigative reporter that she is, buys it hook, line, and sinker... wonk wonk wonkkkkk.


Our second titanic tale... don't worry, y'all... this one doesn't have any g-g-g-ghosts... opens with the newspaper deliverymen going on strike.  Perry White calls a meeting... shutting down the Daily Planet until further notice... wow, that's hardcore.  Our three favorite staff members clean out their desks and decide what to do with their lives while the strike is on.  Lois says she'll finally write that novel... Jimmy's going to... waitasec... tour his "fan clubs" around the country and give anti-crime lectures... the hell?  And Clark can't decide if he should become a policeman, a cowboy, or a bum!  Seriously.


As Clark ponders, a car goes careening past him, and continues until it plunges into the drink.  Superman is there in record time and rescues the driver.  We learn that the driver is Pete the Pen Man, the greatest counterfeiter goin'.  Superman is shocked at just how much this hood looks like him... he's only a scar and mustache away from Pen-ville.  The thug will be in a coma "for weeks", and Superman asks the officers to keep it all hush-hush.


Superman has decided to go all Matches Malone on us... he's gonna go undercover in the organized crime world.  That night he dons his fake mustache and scar and "prowls the waterfront".  Here he meets Kid Spade, a crooked gambler.  He's able to talk him into meeting the man in charge, "Pills" Paley... who is poppin' pills as he gets a massage from a swarthy looking chap.  Clark introduces himself as Pete the Pen Man, and is given a copy of the Gettysburg Address to copy to prove it.  Here we learn that Superman can forge any handwriting he'd like.


His next gig is counterfeiting hundred-dollar bills... and, whattayaknow, he's able to do that too!  Only problem here is, they don't have the right kind of paper to make bills.  Here we meet Nitro Nick, a vault-cracker... who's going to crack a vault with the precious papers inside... hey, Nick, Why don't you just blow up a bank vault?  Anyhoo... he blows the vault, only to find Superman inside... poor Nick does not pass go or collect $200.  I love that Superman actually escorts these thugs to the police station, and watches them get arrested.  So weird.


Next job is crafting a phony police badge... ya know, like all "pen men" do.  Clark overhears that the baddies, who if I haven't mentioned it yet, call themselves Larceny Incorporated... are going to pull the ol' Human Fly trick to steal some jewels from on board the S.S. Columbus.  Unfortunately for these geeks, Superman is there to put a stop to it.


Clark's next job... and this one's a doozy... is to copy the Declaration of Independence.  Really, now?  The main event has "Pills" sending one of his goons in to swap the phony document with the real-deal, which just so happens to be on display at Metropolis City Hall... ya see, they're celebrating their bicentennial... which tells me that Metropolis was founded in 1766.  Learn something new every day!


Now, none of the goons have the guts to go through with it.  Superman just seems to have their number, and none wanna risk it... none, that is... except for... I wanna call him Paste-Pot Pete... but that's not his name... Pete the Pen Man... yeah, him!  Later, "Pete" hands over the Declaration... which leads to "Pills" and company invading the television station threatening to set the United States' "most precious document" ablaze if he doesn't receive one-million smackers... delivered to him by Superman himself!


Well, Superman is on the scene toot-sweet... but he don't got the dough.  That's fine, Pills triggers a mechanism and burns the Declaration to ashes... kinda giving up his one bargaining chip there, right?  Not that it matters, it wasn't the real one anyway... anyone see that coming?  Pete the Paste Pot Pen Man reveals that he and Superman were one in the same!  The entirety of, heh, Larceny Incorporated goes to jail.  News of these exploits take the cover of the first edition of the Daily Planet to be released following resolution of the strike.


--

Man, the Silver Age was weird.  I mean, today we've got some weird comics... but they're usually written as expressly so.  Back then?  Shoot, every-damn-thing was weird.  Just so goofy and fun... but sorta kinda maddening at the same time.  This stuff really feels like stories I would have written when I was in elementary school.

Hey, let's reveal Superman's secret identity!  What, again?  Yeah, sure... we've got some half-assed excuses to get out of it.  It's all a trick... all an illusion!  Yup, ten-year old Chris would've been all over that!

I love how all Silver-Age villains seem to have team names... the Spirit Gang... Larceny Incorporated.... just wild stuff here.  So silly, but... and this is the magic part... it's all played straight!  If something like that were to occur today (or hell, anytime after 1980), it would be in an ironic sorta way... just a writer telling the reader how silly comics used to be... and just how clever they are now.

There was a lot of really convenient stuff happening here... in both stories.  It's really kind of hard to get into the gestalt of when these were written.  I mean, this is all about 15-years before I was even a thought.  The goings-on in here would be something a writer today would be taken to task for... but, I really can't hold that against it.  I had fun reading it, and really can't ask for much more.  I'm sure if I were a kid in 1966, I'd feel like my 12-cents was well spent after reading this.

I learned a few things from this issue.  Metropolis was founded in 1766.  Jimmy Olsen has a nationwide fan club?!?!  Superman and Supergirl can cause Earthquakes by headbutting one another... 

Actually... let's stay there for a bit.  Now, this was the highest magnitude Earthquake in the recorded history of the Earth, right?  It happened in the Arctic... and was felt in Metropolis.  This all begs the question... how many poor folks died, were injured, lost family members or their homes because of this stunt?  The death toll should be in the thousands from just a catastrophic event, right?   Gotta figure... and all to catch some old geek called Sir Seer?  Really, Superman?  Why didn't you just toss the old man into the Sun and be done with it?  Instead you risk destroying the entire planet... c'mon...

Overall... I guess I can give my cop-out response.  This was fun... in a Silver-Age kinda way.  Not gonna rock your socks, but you could definitely do worse.

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Letters Page:


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Thursday, October 6, 2016

Blackest Night: Titans #3 (2009)


Blackest Night: Titans #3 (December, 2009)
"When Doves Cry"
Writer - J.T. Krul
Artist - Ed Benes
Colors - Hi-Fi Design
Letterer - Rob Clark Jr.
Assistant Editor - Rex Ogle
Associate Editor - Adam Schlagman
Editors - Brian Cunningham & Eddie Berganza
Cover Price: $2.99

Arright, let's wrap this Titan's tale up...

--


We open in flashback mode.  Donna and Terry Long are having a picnic under a tree with their son, Robert laying between them.  This probably falls somewhere around when Team Titans was a thing... as I believe that was post-pregnancy, but before the divorce.  I may be off by a couple of years though.  Anyhoo, Donna and Terry take turns playing with the baby, when suddenly it sinks its teeth into T-Long's neck.  Terry and Robert take their Black Lantern forms and Donna is shaken from her late-night day dream.


The next several pages consist of a great big fight scene.  We see various Titans trading blows with their fallen teammates.  I'm still a bit annoyed that Pantha's head is connected to her body... but whattayagonnado?  We observe Gar and Terra having their back and forth.  We settle on Donna fighting Terry Long... when she does what I was hoping she'd have done 30 years ago... punches him straight through the chest!


The next page is a toughie... like seriously.  Donna picks up her baby, Robert... and grips him around the head.  With tears in her eyes, she repeatedly reassures herself that this creature is not really her son.  She cries... and apologizes... before snapping the child's... her child's neck... as it continually gurgles "Mommy".  Damn.


Back with Terra and Gar, things are coming to a head.  At this point, our buddy Beast Boy is just exhausted... physically, emotionally, spiritually... you name it.  He takes the form of several large cats and begins tearing into Terra's rotting flesh.  She pleads with him... the jokes are over... she is really Tara, the girl he loved... loves, even.  Gar ain't hearing it.  Standing over her shredded body, he transforms into a bear.  Terra knows what he's about to do, and reminds him that he will always love her.  Gar agrees... and proceeds to tear her body in half.


We shift to Wonder Girl being pulled between Black Lantern Pantha and Black Lantern Baby Wildebeest.  Through Omen's machinations, she sees them as Superboy and Robin having a tug of war over her affections.  Donna creeps up on Lilith and goes to snap her neck... when Terry and Robert resurface and mock her.


Hawk and Dove fight their way into the scene.  Dawn is knocked to the ground, and Holly proceeds to attempt to tear her sister's heart out.  When she makes contact, her connection to the Black Lantern energy is severed.  The Titans look on in awe... the Black Lantern Titans, seeing Dove as the truest threat present begin to swarm.


Dove lays prone, inviting the Black Lanterns to give it their best shot.


This causes the Black Lantern Titans' connections to be severed.  Suddenly, Dove is bathed in light... standing behind her is Don Hall, her Dovey predecessor.  He asks that she not give up on his brother.


When the dust settles, Dove wakes up.  Only the living Titans remain.  Kid Flash takes a quick trip around the world to find that this zombie epidemic is not Titans exclusive... the entire superhero world is being visited by "ghosts of Christmas past".  Donna decides the heroes of the world need the Titans on the front line... and so, they head out.  She decides to keep Dove close by, for in the event she goes full "Black Lantern", she'll need her to "take her out".  This ain't the end of the story... but it's the end of this series.


--

Yeah, this was pretty good.  I guess it was a bit of a let-down that this entire series was simply to show how the Titans joined up in the Blackest Night schmazz... but, in a vacuum, this was a neat story.  Looking back on it now, it even drops a hint or two about Brightest Day, as it pertains to Dove.

This was mostly a fight scene, but character elements and personal moments found their way in.  Seeing both Wonder Girls having to deal with some of their personal baggage... both literal and figurative, was intriguing.  Cassie feeling pulled between Superboy and Robin was cool... and Donna having to, er, dispose of her former family was quite the scene as well.  Heartbreaking too... regardless as to whether or not "Terry" and "Robert" were in those skin-husks... imagine having to snap the neck of... shoot, any baby... much less one in the body of your own.  It's maddening.

When it comes to Terra-removal... it rightly comes down to Gar having to "pull the trigger"... in this case, brutally rending her to shreds before tearing her in half... this is, of course Didio's DC, after all.

The Dove ex machina was a clever way to close this one out.  I suppose it makes a measure of sense for an agent of peace to be the one to counteract an army of raging zombies.  Donna's giving her the authorization to "take her out" should she go full Black Lantern was a pretty powerful bit as well.

Overall... this was a fine miniseries.  Of course, there isn't really a whole lot of closure given that this is a prelude to the mega-event it's tied into... but, taken on its own, there is plenty to enjoy, and enough to leave a Titans fan satisfied.  Art is still really good, though, perhaps a half-step behind what was offered in the first two chapters.  Recommended.

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Wednesday, October 5, 2016

Blackest Night: Titans #2 (2009)


Blackest Night: Titans #2 (November, 2009)
"Bite the Hand that Feeds"
Writer - J.T. Krul
Penciller - Ed Benes
Inkers - Scott Williams & Ed Benes
Colors - Hi-Fi Design
Letterer - Rob Clark Jr.
Associate Editor - Adam Schlagman
Assistant Editor - Rex Ogle
Editors - Eddie Berganza & Brian Cunningham
Cover Price: $2.99

Okay... here we go... possibly the most terrifying installment of Boo, Haunted Blog... the introduction of Black Lantern... ugh... Terry Long!

--


We pick up where we left off with Donna Troy last chapter.  There is a baby carriage in her bedroom, which she approaches.  She finds that it is empty... or at least without baby.  Instead, she finds a rattle with the Black Lantern symbol etched on it.  Well, here's where it all goes down... ladies and gentlemen, Black Lantern Terry Long.  He's clad in a hilariously awful ruffly tuxedo... which, wait a second... well I'll be damned... it's the tuxedo he wore in Tales of the Teen Titans #50 from 1985, when he and Donna got married.  That is amazing detail!  Love it!


Donna's is so taken aback, that she doesn't immediately seem creeped out that her ex-husband is very much undead... and her baby son, Robert has floated into her arms.  She holds the baby tight in her arms, thinking this has to be a dream.  Ya know that thing, where you ask somebody to pinch you to make sure you're not dreaming?  Well, poor Donna got a big chunk of her neck and shoulder bitten by the demonic child... who, despite last issue's revelation, definitely has more than two teeth in his head.


Outside, the battle rages on between Gar, Kory and Vic and the Black Lanterns Terra and Omen.  Starfire has some reservations over hurting their former friends and teammates, but Cyborg assures her that these are just their bodies... because, as he puts it... he don't believe in no ghosts.  Boy do I have an issue for you to read, pal.  While we're here though, I'm always tickled as to what a comic book character considers their bridge too far.  I mean, Vic lives in the DC Universe... where Gods have walked the Earth and whatnot... and he doesn't believe in Ghosts?  I don't feel like diggin', but I gotta figure he's shared a panel or two with a ghost over his three-decades.


Terra gains an advantage over Gar, and pins him down.  She places her left hand into his chest... perhaps to tear out his heart, like we saw Hawk do to... Hawk, last issue.  Luckily, Starfire is nearby, and nails Terra with a starbolt.  Of particular interest, Beast Boy's first instinct is to worry about Terra's safety.  Once he gathers his druthers, he admits that Kory did the right thing.


We shift scenes to Georgetown, and see Black Lantern Hawk pluck the heart outta the newly dead Hawk.  Well, as you might imagine, this ticks Dove off a smidge.  She pounces into action and starts beating on her former partner.  Just when it seems that she might have the upper hand... the Black Lantern voice of doom calls for Holly "Hawk" Granger to RISE... and boy does she...


Back inside Titan's Tower, Donna tries to wrap her head around the goings on.  She has a very visible... and bloody mark on her neck from the li'l one's love-bite.  Terry and Robert approach her, with deadly intentions in mind.  Luckily, Kid Flash is in the house, and runs her to safety.  As Donna, Bart, and Cassie reconnoiter, we can see that Donna's wound has turned black...


Outside, Lilith is screwing with the Titans... making them see their happiest dream.  Cyborg is whole again, and Starfire is marrying Dick Grayson... hopefully without a visit from Victoria's Secret model Raven like in New Titans #100.  This gives Terra the time she needed to pull herself together after suffering the starbolt blast... and now, boy is she mad.  She uses her powers to cause Titan's Tower to crumble to the ground!


Bart, Cassie and Donna were able to escape before the walls came tumblin' down... however, all is not well.  Donna appears to go catatonic... and in her eyes, we can see the Black Lantern symbol.


Gar Logan attempts to stir his teammates from Lilith's sweet illusions while Terra celebrates the fact that after such a long wait... she's finally going to get to kill the Titans.  Bad goes to worse when several more fallen Titans appear on the scene... and we are [to be concluded...]


--

Another solid, if not grim, offering from this Blackest Night flavored miniseries.  We've seen the Titans get beaten down by supervillains, regular foes, and even by trusted teammates... but, this threat is almost downright cruel.  The Titans are being haunted by their fallen friends... and even family, in the case of Donna.  This really is comics as horror movie... and it's a lot of fun.

I gotta admit, I chuckled when I saw ol' curly-headed Terry.  I was half-kidding when I first suggested he'd show his face here.  Now that he has, I'm glad he did.  Though I may consider him the worst kind of evil... for reasons I can't seem to articulate, I kinda get that he's a necessary evil... at least for me.  He brings me back to a great time in Titans history... and the fact that they (literally) dug him up for a story well over a decade after his death, is something I can't help but to like.

Donna's not the only Titan being put through the wringer... we've still got Gar's unresolved feelings toward Terra.  I really liked how he seemed to be collecting his thoughts on the fly... trying to reconcile head with heart.  Here he is nearly being "killed to death" by Terra... and when Starfire blasts her real good... his immediate reaction is to worry about Terra's well-being.  Such a broken, human way to be... and I really dug it!

The Hawks and Dove scenes are... well, not bad... but I never really associate them with the Titans.  I often have to remind myself that they were part of the team for a cuppa.  For what it's worth... while I don't have any kind of emotional attachment to them, I still thought it was pretty cool when the newly-dead Hawk almost instantaneously accepted her Black Lantern ring.  Things going from bad to worse for Dove was an awesome way to leave them.

My only misgiving about this issue, and lemme tell ya... it's a hyoooge deal (not really).  On the last page... Pantha's head is still attached to her body.  Now, c'mon... we saw Superboy-Prime punch her head clean off her body during Infinite Crisis.  I would have loved it if she was there holding her head... or if Baby Wildebeest was wearing it around his neck or something.  Okay, okay... that's not that big a deal.  Still digging this story, still recommended.

Oh, and I neglected to mention it last issue... but the Ed Benes art in this miniseries is absolutely amazing!  The scans don't do it the proper justice.  Just awesome stuff.

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Tuesday, October 4, 2016

Blackest Night: Titans #1 (2009)


Blackest Night: Titans #1 (October, 2009)
"When Death Comics Knocking"
Writer - J.T. Krul
Penciller - Ed Benes
Inkers - Rob Hunter, Jon Sibal & JP Mayer
Colors - Hi-Fi Design
Letterer - Rob Clark Jr.
Associate Editor - Adam Schlagman
Assistant Editor - Rex Ogle
Editors - Eddie Berganza & Brian Cunningham
Cover Price: $2.99

Heyyy... welcome to the next chapter of The Life... er, The Death and Times of Tara Markov!  Nah, this is just the next part of Boo, Haunted Blog... which for the next few days will be taking a look into the 2009-2010 mega-event Blackest Night.  Zombie superheroes are scary, right?

--


It's Heroes Day at Titans Tower, the day in which the Titans past and present gather to honor those who have fallen.  There is a hall in the Tower with statues commemorating the dead.  This year in particular necessitated the removal of two statues... for Kid Flash and Superboy returned from the dead!  Bart Allen is standing uncomfortably in the hall, muttering about how his statue didn't even look like him.  Wonder Girl and Donna Troy are nearby, and Donna mentions how all Titan-family losses didn't come via supervillain shenanigans... her ex-husband Terry Long and their son Robert died in a car wreck.


We move down the hall and join Beast Boy, Starfire and Cyborg as they stand in front of the statue of one Terra.  We see Brion Markov Geo-Force walking away as they approach.  Kory thinks it's improper for Terra to even have a statue... Gar disagrees, and reminds her that Terra was a Titan, and if she'd been given the chance would have been a great Titan!  Vic agrees, but in like a "whatever you say" kinda way.


We move a bit further down the hall, in front of the Hawk and Dove statues, stand... Hawk and Dove.  The new Hawk, Holly Granger is talking about what a jerk the Hank Hall version was.  Dawn "Dove" Granger is a bit defensive, and gives the whole "you didn't know him like I did" type of reply as she looks at her predecessor's statue.


Suddenly, the Black Lantern voice of doom calls for Don (Dove) Hall to RISE... but, and this is a really cool moment... he, being the living embodiment of peace... is resting in peace.  He chooses not to rise and join the Black Lantern Army.  The "camera" zooms back from Don's grave-site... revealing his brother Hank's... which has been dug out!


We shift to later that night where the Granger sisters are leaving a nightclub outside Georgetown University.  Holly's being... difficult, as she's wont to do, and complaining about having had to hang out at a "College Hangout".  As the ladies walk off, they come across a pair of dead birds on the ground... any guesses as to the types of birds?


The gals Hawk and Dove up, and follow the trail of dead birds... all the way to one of the University's buildings.  They are fully aware they are likely walking into a trap, but that doesn't deter them.  This new Hawk is as hard-headed as her predecessor.  Speaking of which, we learn the trail of birds was left by... Black Lantern, Hank Hall!


Back at the Tower, Bart and Cassie finally leave the hall... Donna is gazing into a family photo... and Starfire and Cyborg are on monitor duty, where they happen to see Gar (who they were just chatting about) somberly walking the grounds... until...


Gar and Tara pick up where they left off... if the Judas Contract never happened, that is.  She claims that she cheated death, however remained "dead" because she was ashamed of what she'd done.  The two get all huggy and ultimately kissy... which is gross for reasons that will soon become apparent.  Cyborg and Starfire spring into action, revealing that this alive and well version of Terra is the result of mind-manipulation by Black Lantern, Lilith Clay!  Now that the gig is up, we meet Black Lantern, Tara Markov.  Hey Gar, need a toothbrush?


Meanwhile, Donna Troy is awakened by the sound of a baby calling for her.  She sits up and sees a baby stroller at the edge of her bed.  Uh oh, I fear that where there's baby... there's Terry.  We'll have to stay tuned for, ugh... Black Lantern, Terry Long!


Back with Hawk, Hawk, and Dove a battle rages.  Hank is ruthlessly taking the new crew apart... relentlessly beating them down.  His attack seems to be particularly focused on the new Hawk, and he just wrecks her... it looks like he breaks her back, then he lifts her by the throat... and, well... tears her heart out.  Obviously, we are... [to be continued...]


--

Not bad, not bad at all.  This was one of those miniseries events that I kinda kept buying, but just set aside for "future reading".  2009 was a rather awful time for the Titans (Teen and otherwise)... seemed like not an issue would go by without (at least) one team member being brutally and horrifically killed.  Sad to say, but looking back, even those issues were so much better than anything the New-52 gave us, Titans-wise.

The late-2000's Titans book, that is... not the Teen Titans book, was... interesting for fans of the Wolfman/Perez era.  Here we were reading about, for lack of a better way to explain it... grown-up Titans.  They are at a different stage in their lives, however, still have ties that bind them.  This was around the time where some of them were being "promoted" into the Justice League.  The tail-end of the pre-Flashpoint JLA was like a who's who of the New Teen Titans.  Donna Troy, Cyborg, Starfire, and Dick Grayson as Batman loomed large in the League.  I loved that there was a feeling of progression... and not just "Let's throw Cyborg into the League because... well, ya know..."  Back in 2009, Cyborg earned his way onto the team... he graduated from the varsity team into the majors.

I suppose I said all of that, so that I could say this... this is a more mature version of the Titans.  Mature as in "showing maturity"... These characters have such a rich history by this point, and the Blackest Night storyline was a great way to showcase that.  The very existence of "Heroes Day" is a testament to that.  The Titans, past and present, gather once a year to commemorate their fallen.  This allows us, the readers, to observe their thoughts on past members... like Terra... like Hawk... like Wendy and Marvin, even.

The story is kind of split up between Hawk and Dove's night out and Garfield Logan's unrequited feelings for his first major crush.  Both storylines are handled quite well.  Gar has never really let go of Tara.  Even to her dying breath, he believed there would still be a way to reform her... to make her see the light.  It's heartbreaking that, although he is several years older, he is still very much in the same place.

The Hawk v Hawk scene was something that actually surprised me.  Not for the result, that was telegraphed from the start... but for just how gory the scene was.  Then I remembered how ultra-violent and "bloody" DC Comics had gotten in the years since Dan Didio took over.  This is a totally different world... and 2008-2010 was perhaps, if I'm not conveniently forgetting anything, the peak of DC's uber-violent streak.  I feel that nowadays it's been toned down a fair bit from 5-10 years back.  Though, I must admit... I'm about 50 issues behind on my Rebirth reading... there can be some heinous gore somewhere in there for all I know!

I'd be remiss not to mention the other story that was running throughout this issue... though not really the centerpiece that was Gar's or Hawk and Dove's... Donna Troy was awakened by the sound of a baby crying.  Earlier in the issue, she was lamenting the loss of her son, Robert... and... her ex-husband... ugh, Terry Long.  I've a sneaking suspicion we're about to meet the most terrifying Black Lantern of all... T-Long of Sector 666!

Overall, really enjoyed this issue.  This looks like it's going to be a great little miniseries, and in reading Krul's take on the Titans here, it's no surprise how he got the (criminally short-lived) gig on the pre-Flashpoint Teen Titans title.

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