Friday, September 22, 2017

New 52 Legion of Super-Heroes #2

Welcome to the retro-review of the New 52 Legion of Super-Heroes #2. For those not here last week, this review was originally posted on my Supergirl site the week it was released back in 2011. I am reposting here, exactly as it was then. But I am adding some added comments in blue. 

I think I was happy that the Legion survived the universe clearing of the New 52 and continued on its current course. But it is clear that, looking back at this, some of the warts that happen in this run were obvious even from the beginning. I wonder if writer Paul Levitz was caught betwixt and between. He needed this book to hit the ground running (remember how well all the New 52 #1s sold??) but he also was picking up on decades of history. It is the universal conundrum of the Legion. Blow it up and restart, irking long time fans (are there many of us left?). Or keep right on plodding along hoping to pick up new readers.

I'll comment on my specific issues now at the end of this review. For now, here is 2011 Anj's thoughts.


Legion of Super-Heroes #2 was released last week and continued the story of the attack on Panoptes, a UK watchworld. Remember, the DCnU is not a relaunch but instead a reboot. In the case of the Legion, it is more of a renumbering as the title picks up exactly where the last one left off. So without some inherent 'newness', it is up to writer Paul Levitz to reinvigorate the book, to bring in new readers and keep them.

One way of doing that is to bring in new members. And while we have learned a lot about DragonWing, Chemical Kid, Glorith, and Comet Queen from their Adventure Comics arc, they haven't had much time to shine here. One thing that I think will provide some grist for the mill will be the reaction of the older Legionnaires to these rookies and their inexperience.

Artist Francis Portela is the new artist on the book and his work suits the title well. His style is a clean, energized look, with maybe just a hint of anime, which works well on the book.

But the story itself is pretty standard fare so far with a probable Dominator plot to undermine the United Planets. There might be too much politics, too much back story to grab a truly new reader who might not know what a Dominator is.



The main bulk of the issue takes place on the UP watchworld Panoptes (very nice name). The semi-Espionage squad went to investigate why the outpost went off the grid. There the Legion discovers the planet is doing the opposite of its intended purpose, sending info on the UP to the Dominators.

Worse than that, the Dominators operative on the planet is a Daxamite who quickly dispatches the team except for Phantom Girl who is able to ghost away.

It makes sense for the team to be taken down so efficiently. Outside of Ultra Boy, this is more a stealth team than a power one. Add to that 2 rookies barely out of the academy, and it is no surprise that the Daxamite Res-vir is able to defeat them so easily. The Daxamite talks of freeing his people from their 'prison world'. I did like the comment about the difficult environment Daxam is. Small comments like that can build the tapestry that the Legion is best known for.


Meanwhile, back on Earth, Brainy, Glorith, Dream Girl, and Harmonia Li continue to try to unravel the puzzle of time travel. One thing driven home here is that the Flashpoint event has sealed off the time stream. At least for now, there will be no time traveling in the DCnU. To be honest, I am fine with that. This universe needs to breathe a bit and get settled before time paradoxes are created.

The standard explosion in Brainy's lab is easily controlled by a shield spell of Glorith's which intrigues Brainy. Maybe this inertial shield is what can break the timestream? Is there any doubt that Glorith ends up being the hooded woman from Flashpoint? The name alone makes it inevitable ... Glorith was the new Time Trapper a couple of reboots ago. It would be nice to have the Legion be a centerpiece in some DC mega-event.


Of course, Res-Vir doesn't simply kill the Legionnaires he has defeated, instead putting them in negation pods. You would think that he would simply off them to remove the threat they represent. I suppose the title wouldn't last very long that way.

It is clear that Res-Vir has some help with this plot of his. The tech he is utilizing, even his ability to be on the planet despite its lead content means he is getting help from some very bright people. Who could be supplying him with Brainy's anti-lead formula?


Phantom Girl has got a fair share of the spotlight in recent years being part of every big recent Legion story arc despite the enormous roster of the book. So I was thinking that Levitz might be nudging her into a stronger role in the book. That idea took a bit of a hit when she is seen cowering underground, hiding from Res-Vir, sending a distress signal, and hoping Jo is okay.

While I don't expect her to go toe-to-toe with a Daxamite, I expected a bit more out of her. There must be some way she can help her friends other than awaiting the cavalry to arrive. The signal gets through though, and while the main Legion is making a squad to go out, Mon-El takes off on his own.

Again, Levitz injects a tiny little piece of history into the scene when Li tells Glorith about the devastation the last Daxamite army did to the galaxy. Of course that references the Great Darkness Saga from about 25 years ago. But it is true.


As much as Phantom Girl's hiding seemed a little off, this scene did as well. We see Shadow Lass beside herself at Earth Man's grave. I would expect Shady to be a bit more cold, or even angry, rather than this distraught mess openly weeping at the tomb. I did like how Portela had the end of her cape be wisps of shadow rather than whole cloth. Nice effect.

I also enjoyed seeing Polar Boy's ineffective pass at Comet Queen. Who hasn't identified with Polar Boy at one point or another. Initially rejected by the cool kids, then allowed to sit at their lunch table but still as the dorky member 'allowed' in the in crowd, and now trying to woo someone at the most awkward time.


This overthrow of Panoptes seems to be better organized than just the rogue Daxamite. He boasts of his hand-picked elite troops who will unleash all of Daxam as soon as his 'friends' deliver more of the anti-lead serum.

Hmmm ... who are his friends?

Luckily, Mon-El shows up and a good old-fashioned super-powered throwdown happens. And when Phantom Girl shows up to free the other Legionnaires, Ultra Boy joins the fray.

I do wonder if Res-Vir has a point. While Mon-El talks of Daxam being quarantined for their own good (their weakness to lead), Res-Vir wonders why the UP hasn't made serum enough for everyone. The cure exists. Could the UP like having a race of potential super-beings confined and helpless on their own planet?

Just when it looks like Res-Vir is going to be captured and his plot ended, his 'friends' arrive in the form of a starfleet. Nice cliffhanger.

So much like last issue, this was a pretty good issue. Some nice small flourishes and some plot progression and some character missteps. Still, this felt like a Legion book and that is good. Levitz always has been able to manage a huge roster and this was no different. The Polar Boy moment while not 'necessary' was perfect characterization and adds depth.

Overall grade: B

So in retrospect, I wonder if Res-Vir maybe defeated this Legion crew a little too easily. I thought it made sense then. But veterans like Jo and Tinya have faced off against super-beings before. Maybe this was too easy.

I will tell you that no guess I make about Glorith over this run ever pans out. She wasn't Pandora. She wasn't a villain-in-waiting. She just was a young Legionnaire. In some ways that seems like a wasted opportunity now.

The characterization of Phantom Girl and Shadow Lass really seem off here. And I am a bit more irked by it now than I was then. Poor Tinya. She really gets trashed in this run. And Shadow Lass openly weeping like this? She didn't get this histrionic with Mon-El's death back in the Baxter series and that is still in this continuity.

The art sparkles. The idea of an outside force making the Daxamites an evil army seems like well-trod soil. But I think that the lure of the anti-lead serum being the bait is interesting.

But reading this now, I think it would get a C. The characterization, something crucial for me to enjoy a Legion book, seems too off.

What did you think?

2 comments:

  1. This issue seemed to be indicative of the rest of the series, unfortunately. Shady didn't do too much except except mope over Mon-El later. Tinya being not as effective as she could be. The pairing of Mon and Jo to take care of stuff. Just not a good run. I feel like maybe Jo and Tinya should have been taken to the present instead of some of the other characters.

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  2. Only just realized; the LSV's Darkseid-worshipping Daxamite Kid had the real name of Ol-Vir. Could this Res-Vir be a relative?
    (Apologies to anyone who had this thought previously)

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