I've been playing catch-up all day, after being most offline yesterday, but as I'm sure everyone else knows by now, DC is rebooting its universe once Flashpoint ends, starting with the long-rumored Geoff Johns-Jim Lee JLA #1 at the end of August, followed in September by another 51 new and old titles with their odometers cranked back to #1. (1+51=52, get it? Groan…) The relaunched titles will feature changed (and generally younger) versions of our heroes, in a gambit to attract the elusive new reader.
During the last few weeks of speculation, I refused to believe DC would do this after all the recent line development, especially with Brightest Day. But they did. In an effort to attract a marginal number of new fans, they're (potentially) throwing out decades of established and much-beloved continuity. I've been a DC fan since the late 1970s, took a break through the late 80s and the 90s, and came back in the early part of this century (along with Hal Jordan as Green Lantern), quickly catching up on what I missed, and buying most of the new releases.
But after the initial elation upon coming back to comics, especially the flurry of genuinely creative things that happened around Infinite Crisis, I haven't been a fan of much of the broader movements in the DCU for the laast several years–Final Crisis was dreadful, but I got excited during Blackest Night. I appreciated the return of Aquaman, but the dual Batmen are not my taste, and the Green Lantern books seem to have been adrift (through "The War of the Green Lanterns" has been surprisingly good). Due to Chris Roberson and Paul Cornell, Superman and Action Comics have been consistently good reads, but they still don't feel like traditional Superman books for obvious reasons. And the less said about Wonder Woman the better (though Phil Hester has done amazing work revitalizing what JMS tore asunder).
Even imagining that the brass at DC feels the same way, rebooting the whole DCU is throwing the baby away with the bathwater. Just because the line is adrift doesn't mean you throw away decades of history. Though I find the Marvel Universe more attractive now in many ways (especially given DC's missteps), the DCU will always be my home, and I feel like my home is being demolished. If DC wants fresh versions of its characters, bring back the All-Star line, or expand the Earth One line that started so successfully. But don't flush the rich continuity of the DCU down the toilet–the longtime fans deserve better, as do themany creators that crafted the legacies of the wonderful heroes in the DCU for the last 70-plus years.
Leave a reply to Samantha_1535 Cancel reply