DC
Comics’ Rebirth event, other than a marketing tag, really should be about the
exploration of themes. A look at what makes the character appealing and an
examination of those personal, internal forces while dealing with the colorfully-ludicrous
external. Unfortunately, with the Rebirth collections DC Comics and NetGalley
have graciously sent my way, there has not been a sense of regrouping, of
growth, or internalization. The stories are an onslaught of constant motion opening
with panel one and nary a chance for an asterisked footnote to a Wikipedia
article let alone time for introductions, and no more so than Blue Beetle Vol. 1: The More Things Change.
Blue Beetle
tries, sincerely, and sometimes achieves partial success, to be clever with the
pairing of Jaime Reyes, the Blue Beetle, and his mentor/Alfred Pennyworth surrogate
Ted Kord, the former, and formerly deceased, Blue Beetle. Their relationship is
ripe with all the elements of great buddy-cop entertainment, but man, that
fruit just ain’t ready to pick. Blue Beetle
Vol. 1, again like
other Rebirth titles, are full of these sudden starts, fits of action, with explosions
of rat-a-tat dialogue, that don’t go anywhere and have no signs of resolution,
which is extremely detrimental to, what should be, a contained graphic novel
and an invitation to go further.
Keith Giffen,
who created the Jaime Reyes character following the massive Infinite Crisis storyline, which began
with the surprising murder of Ted Kord, presents dialogue-heavy issues and
truly does wish to make Jaime as likeable and as important as his blue alter
ego. After all, one of main reasons Spider-Man is immensely popular is due to
the relational aspect of Peter Parker, as opposed, for instance, to the Hulk,
where the very-human Banner can indeed come off as, well, puny. Alas, Giffen
never gives that reader, and presumably a first-time reader at that, the chance
to truly enjoy the character because the opportunity is never provided. The
shark-like, always-moving-forward motion does not allow that pause for reflection.
Giffen and
co-plotter/artist Scott Kolins present the Blue Beetle scarab as a threat to
Jaime’s well-being, a plot element that will no doubt continue to grow as the
series continues. Giffen allows Doctor Fate a co-starring gig in the title, and
I, for one, always enjoy Giffen’s Fate. Kolins gives the character an updated
makeover, but even the character’s inclusion is sparse and seemingly
inconsequential as the mystery for his inclusion, and what should be a build up
to this threat, is nearly trivialized away in an is-it-or-is-it-not dream
sequence.
Comic books have
a grand tradition of excelling at the slow burn. How many decades did Superman
and Lois Lane flirt? Even Ted Kord’s own Blue
Beetle title from the post-Crisis
eighties had an over twelve-issue long b-plot that simmered, at varying levels,
every issue. The problem with Blue Beetle
Vol. 1: The More Things Change is there are too many simmering pots and not
enough pasta. The old adage about waiting for that water to boil could very
well result in no one bothering to pay attention when supper is ready.
As Always,
theJOE
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