Showing posts with label metropolis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label metropolis. Show all posts

Monday, August 15, 2022

Black Lightning #6 (2022 Comic Book and Graphic Novel Reading Challenge)

Jefferson Pierce is on a rampage! Thugs have kidnapped Peter Gambi, the local tailor who has been like a father to Pierce since he was a lad. Behind the abduction are 3 super powered members of the 100. Their mission- to incapacitate and capture the Metropolis super hero known as Black Lightning! 

As the inner city's newest hero conducts his frantic search for his missing friend, Black Lightning reflects over his origin story. An unknown assailant murdered Jefferson's father in cold blood. Shortly afterwards, Peter Gambi moved into the neighborhood and hired Pierce to work in his tailor shop. Over time, Gambi became like a father to Jefferson. Gambi helped the young man through high school and college, earning a scholarship. 

After college, Jefferson would return to Metropolis to work as a school teacher. Noticing a super powered void in the more urban areas of the big city, Pierce would become a hero in his own right with help from Gambi. The tailor created a costume equipped with a special belt that generates a powerful force field and electrical charges. 

Though Peter Gambi might have filled the void in Jefferson's life after the death of his pop, and currently is a trusted ally, right before this issue ends, one of the villains reveals that Gambi is the man who murdered Mr. Jefferson! Could this be true? Or is this yet another mind game devised by the deadly gang lord, Tobias Whale?

This issue of Black Lightning was written by Tony Isabella. Isabella created the character after DC noticed the popularity of Marvel's Luke Cage and desired to cash in on their own black comic character. Originally, editors wanted Isabella to retool a ridiculous character called the Black Bomber. Literally this concept was like a superhero version of the film Watermelon Man in which a white supremacist when under direst changes to an African American and becomes a hero of the black community. Thankfully, Isabella with previous experience having worked on the Luke Cage series, convinced DC to abandon this idea. As a result, in 1977 a more wholesome black character who actively participated in his embattled community as both a 'cape' and a civilian was created in Jefferson Pierce, AKA Black Lightning.

One thing that might surprise fans is that the original version of Black Lightning was NOT a metahuman. Being a star decathlon athlete armed with gadgets and gizmos are what originally give Jefferson Pierce his spark. Before Black Lightning's first series was to become a victim of the DC Implosion, Pierce would eventually gain electrical powers. Retroactively, events from DC's Invasion story line would be revealed as the cause of Black Lightning's powers before eventually the character being retconned to be a metahuman. 

While Black Lightning wasn't DC's first black superhero, the character has evolved to become one of the foundations of not just the DCU's black community but the publisher itself. A popular live action series on the CW seemingly continues the story of the original series. Black Lightning would add a couple of new members to the local community's superhero population: his daughters Anissa and Jennifer; DC's Thunder and Lightning!

Worth Consuming!

Rating: 8 out of 10 stars.

Completing this review completes Task #40 (By an author who shares your first or last name- in this case my first!) of the 2022 Comic Book and Graphic Novel Reading Challenge. 

Sunday, February 21, 2016

The Superman Story


   The Man of Steel takes the people of Metropolis on a tour of the newest Superman Exhibit. From his earliest days of Krypton to becoming Superboy in Smallville and rising to become the Man of Tomorrow around the world, almost every secret of Superman's is revealed. Unbeknownst to the Last Son Of Krypton, the exhibit is secretly a trap designed by one of his most deadliest foes and should one single member of the tour escape, the entire building will come crashing down taking all of the city with it.

   Originally published in 1978, this pocket-sized paperback graphic novel was intended as a primer for folks to use before going to see the Superman movie directed by Richard Donner. As much as I love the Christopher Reeve Superman and the pre-Crisis Man of Steel, I forgot how much of a bummer the 1970s Superman had become.

   Prior to the movie, both sets of parents to Superman were dead, he was no longer working as a reporter for the Daily Planet, and years of exposure to Kryptonite had started to rob him of not only his powers but his memories as well. In a modern world, the Man of Tomorrow was just too much and DC decided to knock him down a peg or two- and it sucked; the only bright spot being Jack Kirby's brief run on Jimmy Olsen during this period.

   Thankfully, despite giving Superman the ability to go back in time and to give people super-amnesia through his powerful kissing prowess, the Donner films returned the Man of Steel back to some semblance of the Superman I feel in love with through reading my dad's old comics. Oddly enough, the New-52 Superman is more exciting than the 70s comics version.  This isn't the Man of Steel- more like the Man of Aluminum Foil! 

    This was an okay read but it's not Untold Story of the Dark Knight (the Batman companion piece to this book.) Usually, I muddle through and put even a poor Superman book into my collection for permanent keeping. Not this time! The Superman Story is going right back where I found it- the used bookstore in Greensboro.

   Rating: 6 out of 10 stars.