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Chargement... Captain Atom: Armageddonpar Will Pfeifer, Giuseppe Camuncoli (Illustrateur), Sandra Hope (Illustrateur)
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Inscrivez-vous à LibraryThing pour découvrir si vous aimerez ce livre Actuellement, il n'y a pas de discussions au sujet de ce livre. I've been a fan of Captain Atom from way back. When I first heard he was going to be spending some time in the Wildstorm Universe, I wasn't too sure what to make of it. When I heard the word "Armageddon" I suddenly had images of Monarch and shook my head. I decided to wait for the inevitable trade paperback and I'm glad I did. Lots of things happen in this mini series that starts off with Cap's sacrifice (from a storyline in Batman/ Superman) and begins in the Wildstorm Universe shortly thereafter. Atom meets up with Majestic, the Wildcats, and eventually The Authority in a storyline that's really... not bad. Come on, what did you expect me to think? We're talking a crossover here. Of course the first time two heroes meet, they fight. Typical. Okay, but even Captain Atom realizes this and at least he tries to get home. His interactions with this other universe is interesting in its extreme differences to the DCU but I will admit to really having enjoyed the issues with the Authority in them. Ultimately, it is the piece of Void that was stuck in him that was the catalyst for the reboot/ relaunch of the Wildstorm Universe and supposedly throws Cap back to his own world. I could have done without the graphic violence in the last issue, though. For a book set at $27 Canadian, there's a lot to live up to. That's a lot of money to dish out, even with my discount. Did I enjoy it? Yes. Did it take me "away" for a couple of hours? Truthfully... yes. Was it worth the money? That's a bit more of a tough call and the answer will depend on who you are and how much you like these characters. I personally would have liked a bit more of a wrap-up to Captain Atom, if not a return to a bit more "greatness" from him. But, it is a start and hopefully something more will come of it. In the end... yes, it was worth it for me. aucune critique | ajouter une critique
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Written by Will Pfeifer Art by Giuseppe Camuncoli and Sandra Hope Cover by Camuncoli & Gabriele Dell'Otto One of DC's mightiest champions explodes into the WildStorm Universe in this collection of the 9-issue miniseries! A stranger's odyssey through a world close to his own, but different in so many ways is chronicled in this epic tale. Will the WildStorm Universe ever be the same? Advance-solicited; on sale November 8 - 224 pg, FC, $19.99 US Aucune description trouvée dans une bibliothèque |
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Wildstorm was an independent comics publisher founded in 1993; in 1999, it was purchased by DC Comics, and in 2011's Flashpoint event, DC merged the two continuities into one. That means that from 1999 to 2011, DC was publishing stories set in two separate superhero universes, and they occasionally took advantage of that by having characters cross from one to the other. In this case, that character was Captain Atom; Armageddon reveals that though he was apparently killed in an explosion at the end of Superman Batman: Public Enemies, he actually crossed over in the Wildstorm universe. But his atomic structure is incompatible with this universe, and he's going to explode and destroy it if something can't be done to stop it.
I don't know what the Wildstorm universe was originally like, but by 2005 it was a dark place, thanks to books like The Authority, where a group of superheroes decide to use murder to remake Earth as a better place. Will Pfeifer does a good job of contrasting this with the main DC universe: while in DC, Captain Atom is a bit of an also-ran, in Wildstorm he's the most standup guy there is, surrounded by antiheroes like the Authority, the WildC.A.T.s (including freakin' Grifter), and Mister Majestic, none of whom exactly aspire to virtuous altruism. They'll do whatever it takes, but Captain Atom has lines he won't cross.
In some ways, Armageddon is a tour of the Wildstorm universe, I suspect designed to hook DC readers who followed Captain Atom into the crossover, hence Atom's encounters with all the heavy hitters of this reality (minus, I suppose, Gen¹³). I don't know much a new-to-Wildstorm reader really gets out of it, though; I'd already read The Authority so I followed those bits fine, but part of the book seems to assume you know more about WildC.A.T.s than I did-- who or what is the Void? And who cares about Grifter anyway?
At nine issues, it's probably about three too long, as the fights Atom always manages to get into feel repetitive. The fact that the Authority matter-of-factly take him him through a series of universes, including one where they casually murder Hitler, was probably my favorite part. I also liked that Captain Atom's corrupted by the universe almost at a moral level, as he begins murdering his opponents in the final battle, something he wouldn't have countenanced at the book's start. (It ties in well with the ideas of a cosmological morality advanced by Marv Wolfman in the Crisis on Infinite Earths novelization.) This reality is an intrinsically terrible place, and there's nothing Captain Atom can do about it.
The book actually hooks up with Infinite Crisis at the end, with Captain Atom materializing in a devastated city; The Battle for Blüdhaven would inform us that this was Blüdhaven post-Chemo, and Atom ends up irradiating the city and if I remember right also captured by bad guys. It's a tough few weeks for him from Public Enemies to Armageddon to Battle for Bludhaven.
I didn't really care for Giuseppe Camuncoli's art, which seemed like the most generic sub-Jim Lee Image-style stuff... but I guess in the context of this book, that's not a bug but a feature.