February 1983
"What Do You Do on the Day After Doomsday?"
Written by Paul Levitz
Pencilled by Keith Giffen
Inked by Larry Mahlstedt
Colored by Carl GaffordKaren Berger Editor
Roll Call:
Blok, Brainiac 5, Chameleon Boy, Colossal Boy, Cosmic Boy, Dawnstar, Dream Girl, Duplicate Boy, Element Lad, Evolvo Lad, Invisible Kid, Karate Kid, Lightning Lad, Lightning Lass, Magnetic Lad, Matter-Eater Lad, Mon-El, Night Girl, Phantom Girl, Princess Projectra, Saturn Girl, Shadow Lass, Shvaughn Erin, Star Boy, Sun Boy, Ultra Boy, White Witch, Wildfire.
The Great Darkness Saga has ended, and the Legion has won! So just what does a team of super-powered teenagers do the day after doomsday? Let's dive in and find out!
Synopsis:

day intended for rest and relaxation, as the team attempts to recover and decompress from their final battle with Darkseid from
Of course there are no slow days when you're the Legion of Super-Heroes, and their party is interrupted by a trouble alert before it ever really gets started. It seems someone has set off a nuclear blast in Metropolis, so the Legionnaires join the Science Police in the clean-up and rescue mission. Element Lad reconfigures a good portion of the nuclear fallout into helium, which is then dispersed into the atmosphere with a blast of super-breath from Ultra Boy. Star Boy uses his gravity manipulation powers to condense the remaining nuclear fallout, so that the Legionnaires can begin the search for survivors. That's when Sun Boy realizes where they are, in the neighborhood where Cosmic Boy's family lives. That's when Cosmic Boy's little brother Pol stumbles from the wreckage, with his face mutilated from the blast and radiation.
Back at Legion Headquarters, Lightning Lass says her final goodbyes to the team as she prepares to depart, include a tearful farewell to her sister-in-law Saturn Girl. Lightning Lass & Timber Wolf may be through, but there's a new budding romance between teammates, as Colossal Boy & Shrinking Violet continue to fall for each other, much to the dismay of Duplicate Boy of Lallor, who spies them half a galaxy away with his super-vision.

Meanwhile Brainiac 5 begins his latest attempt at restoring Matter-Eater Lad's mind, while Blok, Dawnstar, Invisbile Kid, White Witch, and Wildfire depart for a secret mission in space.

Back on earth, the Legionnaires lead pans out, they storm the warehouse, decimating the bombers' forces with ease. The criminals confess to the crime and plead for the Police Scientists to take them away and lock them up, far from the reach of the Legionnaires' vengeance.
What do you do on the day after doomsday? If you're Cosmic Boy, you head home after the post-Great Darkness Saga clean-up off world, completely unsuspecting of the disaster that awaits...
Thoughts:
started our coverage of the Great Darkness Saga back with Legion of Super-Heroes #284. We've seen romances rise like Colossal Boy & Shrinking Violet, fall like Lightning Lass & Timber Wolf, and weather the storm like Lightning Lad & Saturn Girl. We've seen Chameleon Boy go from an emotional train wreck at the revelation that RJ Brande is his father, leading to rash actions that endangered his team & galactic piece, landing himself in prison, and then being released early with a full pardon. But obviously with his shape-changing powers on the fritz, it looks like his story has more twists and turns awaiting ahead.

This issue, like most we've covered so far, was well paced by Levitz, who masterfully blends emotional character moments with moments of combat and super-heroic action. Giffen & Mahlstedt's art is fantastic, the figure work looks amazing; each issue they continue to excel at capturing the emotion and gravity of each situation, and their story telling and panel flow continues to be some of the best ever seen.
Like I said earlier, this is pretty much the perfect little end to the Great Darkness Saga deluxe collection; it neatly wraps-up the remaining dangling plot threads, while introducing a whole new batch of sub-plots and story threads to be explored in the next arc. It's been a blast re-visiting this emotional roller coaster and looking back at the most famous Legion of Super-Heroes story arc ever. I hope you folks following along have enjoyed it as much as I have!
How is this issue overlooked whenever someone posts those Crisis #7 inspirations/homages?
ReplyDeleteMy Legion collection as a kid was spotty as a kid, due to newsstand distribution, and sheer thriftiness, but I know I had this one. I always remember Pol's jacked-up face.
Chris
This Levitz / Giffen run is really one of the best in comics !
ReplyDeleteGiffen's art was fantastic ( but really changed around issue #209)
His artwork rivaled Cockrum's putting him number three in my top ten legion artist with Curt Swan at #1 and Mike Grell at #4 !
Levitz writing ranked right up with Chris Claremont's in my opinion !
Classic stuff you just can get in the new comics !
Never thought about it before today, but that cover looks an awful lot like Crisis #7.
ReplyDeleteOne person who doesn't get the credit they deserve for this run is colorist Carl Gafford. Sure it looks dated and hokey in this age of computerized color art, but this was a decade before it became the standard, and DC was just beginning to up their game when it came to printing and reproduction.
ReplyDelete