BATMAN/SUPERMAN No. 4, January 2020 |
For starters, just as it looks likel the ‘dynamic duo’ might be about to outmanoeuvre the Blue Beetle’s stunning subjugation of the Fortress of Solitude in the Bermuda Triangle, the pair are shockingly hamstrung by the unforeseen arrival of a heavily-poisoned Donna Troy and Hawkman. This surprising revelation not only must have caught many a bibliophile off-guard, but also leads to some great dialogue where the likes of Jim Gordon, the original Wonder Girl and Carter Hall rebuke “Blue Boy” and the Dark Knight for a plethora of perceived injustices, such as the American archaeologist emphatically stating just “how sick Carter is of hearing about how you plan for everything, Batman”.
Similarly as stunning is the pulse-pounding entrance of Supergirl, and the almost nonchalant side-punch she subsequently smacks Troy into tomorrow with. The idea of Superman, Kara Zor-El and Bruce Wayne’s alter-ego knuckling down to a no-holds barred bout of fisticuffs against a party of poisoned heroes who have been turned “into the Dark Multiverse versions of themselves” is mouth-watering, until it quickly transpires that intercepting a toxin-laced bat-a-rang hurled by the Blue Beetle probably wasn’t the greatest idea of the Kryptonian’s cousin; “Is someone going to explain to me why all our friends have a metal fetish now?”
Nobly injecting all these non-stop shenanigans with plenty of pace are David Marquez’s scintillating storyboards. Moodily coloured by Alejandro Sanchez, the American artist really manages to imbue this comic’s punch-ups with some palpable impacts. In fact, it’s arguably hard to watch either Troy smacking the seven bells out of Superman or Kara cracking Hawkman squarely on his chiselled jaw, without involuntarily winching at the formidable force such blows would surely create.
Writer: Joshua Williamson, Artist: David Maequez, and Colorist: Alejandro Sanchez |
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