Gary Erskine
Auteur de War Stories, Vol. 2
Œuvres de Gary Erskine
Macbeth The Graphic Novel - Plain Text 1 exemplaire
Terminator 2: Nuclear Twilight 1 exemplaire
The Massive #10 1 exemplaire
Oeuvres associées
The Big Lie # 1 — Inker — 1 exemplaire
Transformers 251: The Void! / Skin Deep (part three) (1990) — Artiste de la couverture — 1 exemplaire
Transformers 252: Edge of Impact / Yesterday's Heroes! (part one) (1990) — Contributeur — 1 exemplaire
Étiqueté
Partage des connaissances
- Date de naissance
- 1968-10-23
- Sexe
- male
- Nationalité
- United Kingdom
- Pays (pour la carte)
- Scotland
- Lieu de naissance
- Paisley, Scotland, UK
Membres
Critiques
Listes
Vous aimerez peut-être aussi
Auteurs associés
Statistiques
- Œuvres
- 9
- Aussi par
- 22
- Membres
- 248
- Popularité
- #92,014
- Évaluation
- 4.0
- Critiques
- 9
- ISBN
- 14
- Langues
- 2
Like Superman vs. Wonder Woman, Steel, the Indestructible Man, All-Star Squadron, The Young All-Stars, The Crimson Avenger, The Demise of Justice, The Justice Society Returns!, and All-Star Comics 80-Page Giant, this is entirely set during World War II, fleshing out the Golden Age in a modern style—which to me has become one of my favorite types of JSA story.
Unfortunately it is not very good. It is a a long miniseries, at six 30-page issues, but less seems to happen in it than in many minis of four 20-page issues. Before I picked this up, I was reading Don McGregor's Jungle Action run, and it took me longer to read a 17-page issue of Jungle Action than a 30-page issue of this. Like, there are lots of boring fights and boring meetings; the characters have long conversations about things that aren't interesting and don't matter.
The characters themselves are fairly generic. In "continuity insert" stories like The Demise of Justice and The Justice Society Returns!, the writers and artists were able to express the depths and personality of these Golden Age characters, but there's barely any of that here. It wants to be a Johnny Thunder story, about his desire to be a writer, but this doesn't go anywhere interesting. Johnny befriends the real Golden Age science fiction writer Jack Williamson, and this could be fun and meta, but unfortunately, it makes for long boring scenes. I don't rate Kevin J. Anderson very much as a writer, so I was not surprised by any of this... I was however disappointed, because I was hopeful anyway. I did kind of think the usually excellent Barry Kitson might be able to save it, but if there's nothing interesting to draw, it doesn't matter how well you draw it.
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