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JLA JSA Virtue and Vice – Comic Book

¥165.00

JLA JSA Virtue and Vice - Comic Book

Superman and Sentinel float outside the moon looking at Earth. They reflect on the reverence they have for each other's groups and look forward to a new tradition of spending each Thanksgiving together. Superman suddenly picks up on a disturbance in Tanzania, and Martian Manhunter informs them of another disturbance as well. On Earth, they find Vixen defending President Lex Luthor and fighting off Doctor Bedlam. The JSA and JLA show up and fight off his animates. J'onn is disturbed that something in Africa was disturbing his telepathy and it took him a long time to understand what was going on. The JLA and JSA suddenly turn on each other. Bickering over small items and showing off their strength, their anger seems to come out of no where as J'onn once again realizes his telepathy is being messed with. Doctor Fate transports several JLA members to his Tower of Fate and Batman transports several JSA and JLA members to the JLA Watchtower. As Batman, Shazam, Plastic Man, Green Lantern, Mr. Terrific, Doctor Fate, and Power Girl walk away from an exploding building, the faces of the seven deadly sins of man can be seen behind them in the flames.

JSA The Golden Age Comic Book

¥165.00

JSA The Golden Age Comic Book

Clearly influenced by Alan Moore's Watchmen , this reissue depicts DC's superheroes from the 1940s hanging up their capes following the end of WWII. Whereas Moore's superheroes were forced into retirement, here the heroes succumb to disillusionment, personality flaws and even madness. Robinson unpersuasively projects the dark pessimism of 1990s superhero comics onto the idealistic, committed heroes of half a century before. One of these "mystery men," Tex Thompson, alias the Americommando, enters politics and initiates a government project that uses atomic power to create Dynaman, a "superman" who becomes a living weapon against the Soviets. Beneath their patriotic rhetoric, Thompson and Dynaman conspire to become dictators. But Robinson never explains why the "greatest generation" that just defeated fascism abroad would embrace a homegrown version. By revealing that Thompson's and Dynaman's identities have been usurped by impostors, Robinson shies away from demonstrating how an American superhero could morph into a neo-Nazi übermensch . Smith's realistic artwork and mastery of gesture and facial expression bring out all the dramatic potential in Robinson's scenario. But Darwyn Cooke's recent The New Frontier paints a more convincing postwar portrait of DC's superheroes. (June)