COMICS: Review Round-Up For Justice League #1; What Did YOU Think?

COMICS: Review Round-Up For Justice League #1; What Did YOU Think?

The first lot of reviews are in for Justice League #1, and you can hit the jump to find out whether or not the relaunch is off to an amazing or awful start! PLUS: Your chance to vote on what you thought of the comic...

By JoshWilding - Aug 31, 2011 06:08 AM EST
Filed Under: DC Comics

The first batch of reviews for Justice League #1 have arrived, and are so far mostly positive. While there are complaints about the fact less than half the team are featured in the first issue, it seems to have been very well received so far, but be warned of possible SPOILERS AHEAD.

Justice League #1 is a great jumping on point for those of you that have stayed away because of the intimidation of years of continuity. Guess what? This is a brand new beginning, this is the DC Universe from the beginning. You can tell a lot of love and care has been put into this book, and it should! This is Justice League! It’s supposed to be the flagship book of the entire DC line and for too long has been a mediocre to awful book. Geoff Johns and Jim Lee have breathed new life into the Justice League and it’s already got me begging for more. For those of you that were on the fence I’d definitely say this is worth getting. And if the rest of the books in the "New 52" have the same energy and excitement as this, then I think DC has grand slam on their hands!


Source: Big Shiny Robot




Ultimately, this is an average comic that is undone by being the first issue of "Justice League." It's hard to keep from thinking that placing the origin story first was a big mistake, that this should have been the second story. Instead, open "Justice League" #1 with the new team already in place, and introduce the characters quickly and efficiently to the reader as we see what it's like to have them all working together and fighting bad guys. In other words, give the new audience that you're so desperately trying to entice a glimpse of what this book is about. Because instead, what we're getting isn't really a story about the Justice League, it's a story about Batman and Green Lantern's first meeting, plus a non-cyborg look at Cyborg's pre-hero life. It's not a bad script, but it's not enticing, and it's probably not what "Justice League" will be like on most months. I like Lee's art (and looking at "Justice League" is a reminder that while some of Lee's redesigns don't look so good when drawn by other artists, they're strong under his pencil), and John's script is just average. As the big launch title for the new DC Comics, though? "Justice League" should have been much better than average. There's a lot of interest and potential goodwill around this title, and I fear that DC may have just given some of that away in the very first issue.


Source: Comic Book Resources




Johns’ writing, which is capable of a high degree of complexity in both comics history and emotion, is kept at an intentionally straightforward, almost hard-boiled terseness here. He’s grounding us in the new DC universe in a way that a pre-teen who’s never picked up a comic book (or viewed one on-line – every “New 52” title can also be obtained digitally on the same date-of-sale) will be able to follow. Jim Lee’s art work is characterized by his trademark brawny musculature that in his best panels also achieves a striking degree of fluidity: Few artists make muscle-bound men move so sleekly. Combine this with an overall tone that mixes sincerity with wisecracks, and this is a very inviting way to reinvest in some of the most familiar superheroes ever created.


Source: Entertainment Weekly




If you're a new reader, curious whether DC is holding their promise of accessibility, worry not. Justice League #1 is entirely competent as an introduction to the DCU, albeit a very small step towards a landscape that will only continue to reveal itself as the New 52 press on. Justice League #1 is fun, no doubt about it. There is a certain sense of feeling underwhelmed after reading it, simply because it's been hammered into our brains that this book represents the ushering of the single biggest comic book industry initiative in years. It's gained a whole lot of external weight. But when you strip all that excess media hype away, you're left with a perfectly entertaining – if somewhat safe – glimpse into a universe we're only just beginning to understand.


Source: IGN Comics

BLACK CANARY: BEST OF THE BEST Interview: Tom King & Ryan Sook Discuss Their WWE-Inspired Comic (Exclusive)
Related:

BLACK CANARY: BEST OF THE BEST Interview: Tom King & Ryan Sook Discuss Their WWE-Inspired Comic (Exclusive)

ZATANNA: DC Comics' Mistress Of Magic Returns In New Series From Writer/Artist Jamal Campbell
Recommended For You:

ZATANNA: DC Comics' Mistress Of Magic Returns In New Series From Writer/Artist Jamal Campbell

DISCLAIMER: As a user generated site and platform, ComicBookMovie.com is protected under the DMCA (Digital Millenium Copyright Act) and "Safe Harbor" provisions.

This post was submitted by a user who has agreed to our Terms of Service and Community Guidelines. ComicBookMovie.com will disable users who knowingly commit plagiarism, piracy, trademark or copyright infringement. Please CONTACT US for expeditious removal of copyrighted/trademarked content. CLICK HERE to learn more about our copyright and trademark policies.

Note that ComicBookMovie.com, and/or the user who contributed this post, may earn commissions or revenue through clicks or purchases made through any third-party links contained within the content above.

1 2
desigeek
desigeek - 8/31/2011, 7:02 AM
This was crap
Here's my review
http://www.comicaddicts.com/2011/08/marvelite-reviews-dcs-justice-league-1.html
braveone
braveone - 8/31/2011, 7:07 AM
Meh...
VictorHugo
VictorHugo - 8/31/2011, 7:17 AM
I miss Grant Morrison and Howard Porter´s Justice League, THAT was a jumping point, along with the Justice League cartoon that were inspired by it.
rbfn04
rbfn04 - 8/31/2011, 7:50 AM
This was some bad writing. Also, couple of words from Superman and it seems they are making him into a cocky bastard... Not my cup of tea.

Also also, Batman vs Superman. Again? Bet they'll make Superman forget the powers he have and Batman will beat him. Just like in Dark Knight Returns..

P.S. public fear and hate heroes? How Marvel of them...
skidz
skidz - 8/31/2011, 7:53 AM
I agree with CBR: I like origin stories as flashbacks instead of right out of the gate.
skidz
skidz - 8/31/2011, 7:56 AM
rbfn04: the only time I ever remember Batman having a chance at beating Superman was after he got the Kryptonite ring. In the 'Hush' storyline, Batman still nearly fractured the fingers in that hand.
JohnTom88
JohnTom88 - 8/31/2011, 8:24 AM
Hal Jordan is a dumb ass, Ryan Reynolds himself would chuckle.

If the rest of the JLA are like Hal Jordan, then Batman does have power.

THEDARKKNIGHT1939
THEDARKKNIGHT1939 - 8/31/2011, 8:26 AM
I didn't even know this came out o_O
SoItGoes
SoItGoes - 8/31/2011, 8:45 AM
The book was decent at best.
CBMfan001
CBMfan001 - 8/31/2011, 9:00 AM
it was great,it had a great mix of fun & action.loved the banter between bats and GL,chuckled at the point where batman took the ring right from Hal :D

loved the end too,Hal been too cocky and got hammered by supes :)

overall great start,simple,yet entertaining :)
Jordanstine
Jordanstine - 8/31/2011, 9:13 AM
Yeah, so far it's been getting MIXED reviews from all over the comic book sites.

A little disappointed.
Jordanstine
Jordanstine - 8/31/2011, 9:16 AM
@ProjectGotham

Superman always does, but Batman always survives a superhuman attack from Superman.

http://www.comicvine.com/superman-batman/65-40474/how-the-did-batman-survive-this-attack-by-superman-serious/92-541944/





blazin201
blazin201 - 8/31/2011, 9:17 AM
d.c is pure garbage!
ArtisticErotic
ArtisticErotic - 8/31/2011, 9:18 AM
The last page with Superman really impressed me. Lets hope this get better and better and not worse as time goes on.
SigmaCenturion
SigmaCenturion - 8/31/2011, 9:20 AM
I keep hearing that Batman took Hal's ring shouldn't that be impossible? Willpower keeping it on and such and such just like his mask.
CplAmerica
CplAmerica - 8/31/2011, 9:23 AM
This first issue felt condescending and silly. Even if your not a fan of DC or unfamiliar with comics, lines like "Batman... so your real?" and "Have you heard about this Superman guy in Metropolis" feel like a 10 year old wrote them. Each character seems to be his own unique brand of "arrogant douche", and come off as juvenile. Those who felt DC was a company for kids is now officially correct. Sorry Johns, I love your work but this book was a fail in all aspects. As for Jim Lee's work in this, it's okay but doesn't seen to have the detail, quality or cleanliness as his other books, like Hush or All-Star Batman. It scream assistant artist or bad inker. On the bright side with an assistant doing the finishing touches on his work, you can expect the book to come out on time. Glad some of you enjoyed it. Welocome to DC.
Jordanstine
Jordanstine - 8/31/2011, 9:42 AM
@CplAmerica

I somewhat agree.

Aside from being pick-pocketed, the exchange between Batman and Green Lantern which was also meant to be funny, came across so silly and kiddy.

GL: Do you have flight?
Bats: Nope.
GL: Do you have superhuman strenght?
Bats: Nope.
GL: Hold a sec. You are not just some guy in a bat costume are you?
Jordanstine
Jordanstine - 8/31/2011, 9:45 AM
@SigmaCenturion

Yes Batman was able to remove the Ring from Hal's finger. And he basically can do it, and I quote, anytime "Batman wants to".
braveone
braveone - 8/31/2011, 10:00 AM
See, I always knew Hal was a punk-ass.
SigmaCenturion
SigmaCenturion - 8/31/2011, 10:19 AM
@jordanstine this sounds lame.
Jordanstine
Jordanstine - 8/31/2011, 10:20 AM
@NoRegrets

I agree but I wish Geff Johns would use this opportunity to have Hal Jordan grow up, even if just a little.

@SigmaCenturion

Yes, Batman "pick pocketed" the ring from Hal Jordan himself:

Batman was able to remove the ring from Hal's fingers:

========

GL: Hey you won't do that again.

Bats: Not unless I want to.

GL: Do you want to pick a fight with someone who can create anything he could think of?

Bats: I'm worried if you could think.

========
SigmaCenturion
SigmaCenturion - 8/31/2011, 10:29 AM
@jordanstine wow just wow.
cosmicstranger
cosmicstranger - 8/31/2011, 10:41 AM
From reading all these spoilers, the decision has been made. I will not read the new Justice League. From what can be gathered here, the characters seem more like stereotypical middle school bullies than heroes...or adults for that matter.
SigmaCenturion
SigmaCenturion - 8/31/2011, 10:43 AM
@comicstranger agreed. sounds pitiful.
Shaman
Shaman - 8/31/2011, 10:44 AM
That dialog has got to be the lamest shit i've ever read. I know they want new teens reading this but goddamn, don't piss on all the faithful oldies doing it.
chopfer15
chopfer15 - 8/31/2011, 11:06 AM
Reading a few lines of dialogue on a comment section of a website filled with DC haters shouldn't make up your small minds to never read a book. Heaven forbid you spend the whole 10 minutes to read it and form your own opinions with a touch of context. You people crack me up.
Oh, and how would you like Batman to talk to Green Lantern? Or vice versa? Batman is a cocky ass that believes Hal Jordan is an idiot with a nuke on his finger. And Hal is a cocky immature idiot who thinks Batman is an emo douche with no real power. That is how they would feel about each other at first glance. Think about it.
As for Superman, he could totally knock out Hal with a punch. Superbly prime killed Lanterns with his bare hands.
Sounds like a fun start. And quit bitching about dialogue when 99% of you couldn't write 3 panels without being cliche or going all m. Night shamalong "what a twist" on it.
MaddMonkk
MaddMonkk - 8/31/2011, 11:14 AM
The 2nd panel, 1st caption: 5 years ago. If I'm reading this correctly, this is 5 years ago from present day in DCU. Why does Supes look like an extra in the orginal 90210? Why is GL talking like he is the Cat's Pajamas? Why doesn't Batman have any transportation? 5 years ISN'T that long ago.even in the dc continuity. Our Justice League mainliners are probably hovering at 32-38 age bracket. If it said (time caption mentioned earlier) 15 years ago, I would be writing a different comment.
CaptainAmerica1945
CaptainAmerica1945 - 8/31/2011, 11:16 AM
I wish there had been a 4 selection on the voting, something like:

-Not planning on purchasing any of the "New 52".

I would have picked that instead of Meh.

I stopped reading DC 2 months ago for the first time in 31 years, but this was a great jumping off point to stop. I had not interest in another rehash/reboot/restart.
MaddMonkk
MaddMonkk - 8/31/2011, 11:17 AM
Wait a minute, Hold the phone! Is this DCnU a "Ultimate" version DC??????? I missed something since I got out of jail????
Shaman
Shaman - 8/31/2011, 11:20 AM
chopfer15- Yeah, but we aren't talking about a novel here. It's what... 24 pages? Double sised for the 1st issue maybe? Even then, that dialog gives a perfect "vibe" of what the book will consist of. And here's a question for you, do you like "everything" you read? You can't be that thoughtless, are you? I'm sure you have opinions on everything just like everyone here. And i'm pretty sure Batman should have enough maturity and intelligence to not go into a battle of wise cracks with "an idiot with a nuke on his finger" the second he meets him for the first time. He's the most analitical person in the DCU after all. But i guess that's just how "I" would write him. You know, not "just" to make it hip and cool and funny for the newbies.
1 2
View Recorder