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Monthly Archives: June 2009

The 52 in 52 – Part VI: The Truth

In this run down of 52 I’ve been concentrating on the subplot behind the number 52 itself. Rip Hunter and Booster Gold have been fighting an evil version of Booster’s sidekick, Skeets, a library/security robot from the 25th century. It knows that time is broken, that something powerful and new has been left behind in the wake of the INFINITE CRISIS, but it doesn’t know what. The answer to that is to be found in the head of damaged android Red Tornado. The Tornado has spent the past year languishing in Australia until retrieved by its creator’s T.O. Morrow. Just as Morrow realises what inside the Tornado’s memory, he’s drafted by Booster Gold and Rip Hunter to fight the Evil Skeets. He’s bait to lure Skeets out into the open.

Mister Mind revealed (Ugly sucker ain't he?)
Mister Mind revealed (Ugly sucker ain't he?)

Booster still assumes that Skeets’s programming has been corrupted, but it only now that the full horror of his transformation is revealed. For the last 50 weeks the Venusian mindworm, Mister Mind, has been gestating inside of Skeets’s robotic body. Doctor Sivana’s experiments on Mister Mind removed the biological blocks that were keeping it at a larval stage. It needed a chrysalis to gestate in. Mind ate the real Skeets from the inside and kept its shell – a shell uniquely capable of surviving the ravages of time travel – as a chrysalis. Now, after 52 weeks its ready to reveal its full adult form. Mister Mind is a Hyperfly, a monstrous moth-like creature that feeds on dimensions and universes – this is how it was able to absorb the Phantom Zone during his last encounter with Hunter and Booster in the Fortress of Solitude.

Mind sensed that the events of the INFINITE CRISIS had created a powerful new power source for him to feed on, but he didn’t know the truth about it or where to find it. Only Hunter knew and that’s why Mister Mind was hunting him. Hunter and Booster grab the Red Tornado’s head from Morrow’s laboratory and dive into Hunter’s Time Sphere, leaving Morrow to escape on his own. Following on in Week #52, Hunter explains that they’ve travelled back one year into the past and that that they are inside the timestream witnessing a birth. Hunter relates the unseen events of INFINITE CRISIS which he witnessed from within the timesteam.

The Secret of 52 is explained (Week #52)
The Secret of 52 is explained (Week #52)

“It was during one of my strange adventures. I was traveling thought time investigating an anomaly when the time stream was ripped open. A survivor from a parallel Earth long dead had returned to ‘save’ ours from a self-perceived corruption. His name was Alexander Luthor. He split our Earth in thousands of divergent worlds, but the planets he manifested were unstable. Trapped in the time stream, I watched worlds live and die — until Conner Kent sacrificed his life to save our reality. ”

“The broken Earths collapsed back together, combining historical remnant to form one New Earth — one far too small to contain the energy within it. In a cosmic act of self-preservation, as you just saw, it began replicating. Unknown to anyone save myself, a new Multiverse was born in the wake of the crisis. 52 identical Earths in 52 identical cosmos.”

The Red Tornado witnessed the same event, but his vibrationally attuned technology was able to map the new Multiverse. Hunter needed his map so that his Time Sphere could vibrationally attune to the different universes and travel between them. The gestating Mister Mind sensed the change in reality, but wasn’t sure of the cause. How that the secret of the 52 is revealed he is free to feast on the energies of the new Multiverse, absorbing it and destroying it before it is fully explored.

Each of the Universes started out identical to the New Earth Universe, but Mister Mind’s feasting alters their history at a deep level. This isn’t unlike the reality ripples that Superboy Prime’s escape into realspace caused, but this time the effects are far more dramatic. Hunter describes the Multiverse as “52 Universes, moving in harmony like gears in some gigantic, celestial machine. He’s prefiguring the Orrery of World, the Monitor’s own conception of the Multiverse. Mister Mind’s rampage is altering the chronology of each world, creating divergent histories and natures. Like the butterfly from chaos theory, the flaps of his wings are having massive effects on each Universe.

With the help of Supernova (now Daniel Carter, Booster’s ancestor) Rip Hunter restores the Phantom Zone when Mister Mind tries using it as a weapon against them. Daniel had been trapped in a loop of 52 seconds – the 52 missing second Clock King had been complaining about. They then align the pieces they need to trap Mister Mind. Hunter steals a sample of suspendium from Doctor Sivana, but accidentally reveals to him that the Multiverse exists. Meanwhile Booster borrows Dan Garret’s Blue Beetle Scarab from the day after the first Crisis and inadvertently meets Ted Kord for the first time.

Hunter uses the suspendium to lure Mister Mind out of the Multiverse before he spawns and into realspace. They then trap Mister Mind back inside Skeets shell and hurl him backwards through the timestream. He devolves back into a worm as he travels backwards in time. Then one year ago, Sivana finds the worm in the wilderness just in time to start his experiments all over again. The perfect closed time loop.

The fate of Mister Mind

There you have it, the secret of 52. When the New Earth Universe reformed at the end of Infinite Crisis 51 other Earths in their own Universes were also formed. These 52 cosmoses were momentarily identical until Mister Mind’s flight altered their causality and chronology at a fundamental level.

Personally I was quite surprised by the compact nature of the new Multiverse. By having a set number of universes DC could either be seen as limiting themselves or as forcing themselves to make every parallel Earth count. There is a throw away line from Rip Hunter about something called the Megaverse so I would not be too surprised to learn that there is a large multiversal structure outside of the 52 itself.

Oh and don’t worry about Skeets. Rip Hunter and Will Magnus were able to salvage a backup of his AI from before Mister Mind starting on him.

Next in this series I want to take a look at how the 52 played out in other comics, but I’m going to reserve COUNTDOWN and FINAL CRISIS itself for a later date.

Longboxes and imaginary articles

I hate longboxes. I love comics, but I really hate the damn boxes we store the things in. I was looking for just a single paragraph in an old magazine, but to hunt for it I’ve had to shift dozens of longboxes to reach the one at the bottom, right at the back of the stack. I’m blooming knackered.

I was looking for an old Amazing Heroes article that I now think I may had imagined – some sort of comment by a writer like Frank Miller or someone of his status in the late-1980s about a follow up to the original Crisis. Sound familiar to anybody?

The 52 in 52 – Part V: The return of the Red Tornado

Jon Warrawa's (badly) rebuild Red Tornado

So far in our coverage of the 52 in 52 (parts 1, 2, 3, 4) there have been several Red Tornado references, but nobody knows where the majority of his body is. It turns up in Week #17 when its discovered by a ground of Aboriginal Australians in the outback. He’s been badly damaged and keeps repeating the number “52.” For the next month the Tornado’s remains are in the possession of Johnny Warrawa, a small town mechanic/artist who found the Tornado whilst he was on a “walkabout.” He’s rebuilt the Tornado’s body with random junk. By week #28 Warrawa has got the Tornado working by remote control and tries to use him to save his home, Tornado Country, from heavy handed uranium miners. The Tornado is still saying “52″ when the miners beat his ramshackle new body to pieces and his parts end up being taken away by Tolson’s Reliable Salvage.

More hints about the true nature of events are dropped in a conversation between the scientists on Oolong island in Week #39. The Clock King is missing 52 seconds of time and Dr Sivana shows him suspendium, “artificial time in particle form.” Morrow, knowing that Sivana had been experimenting on Mister Mind, pretends to absent mindedly ask him about the worm.

“I’d forgotten all about him. We’re talking about an alien mutant caterpillar trapped in a larval stage, denied his full potential. I just wanted to see what would happen if I bombarded the slimy little creep with sunspendium radiation, without his consent. I have no idead where he wound up after they brought me here, but the suspendium’s been active very strangely…”

Something is very wrong with time at a subtle level, that’s become more and more obvious. In the same sequence Will Magnus spots a news report about the wrecked Red Tornado in Australia and Morrow rushes off to investigate.

In week #44 things start to go down hill on Earth as Intergang’s plans to destroy Black Adam and unleash the horrors created on Oolog Island eventually lead to World War III. Most of these events don’t play into the 52 subplot so I’ll ignore them. What is more important to our story is Morrow’s pursuit of the Red Tornado’s remains, which by week #46 are up for sale on an Australian internet auction site as a modern art installation.

T. O. Morrow Wins (Week #46)

Morrow wins the auction by using money from the hacked bank account of the seller. He follows the bidding all through Black Adam’s assault on Oolong Island. Morrow’s convinced that whatever happened to Red Tornado in deep space has left the “secret of the cosmos locked inside that android head”. The heroes eventually invade Oolong Island in Week #49, but out of loyalty to his old teacher Will Magnus helps Morrow escape .

As the smoke clears from Black Adam’s war against the world, Morrow’s escape robot arrives at his lab in the Rocky Mountains (for those paying attention this is the same lab featured in the opening arc of Brad Meltzer’s Justice League run). Morrow starts examining the Red Tornado’s head and hears the repeated number 52. He initially assumes that its just a corrupt language file, but he soon realises that there is something far more fundamental wrong with the Tornado.

Next – what the android saw.

Cartoon Ice

icecubeI was just re-watching the Superman: The Animated Series episode Speed Demons, the first appearance of the animated Flash, ahead of posting a review of it. What caught my attention was a scene where the heroes become encased in a block of ice when the Weather Wizard lowers the temperature around them. I’d also been playing the Mister Freeze level on the Batman Lego game (another review I’m planning). Both use the standard comicbook/cartoon trick – an instantly forming block of ice holds the heroes immobile, it is visually spectacular, and generally only gives the heroes a bad case of chills.

The situation is so badly unscientific its almost impossible to consider seriously, but the question that did occur to me was how much ice can you make from just the water vapour in the air. If you did have a cryogenic gun that froze the air around the Flash, how much ice could you actually create?

The actual answer is surprisingly simple. A ball park figure is that air at a temperature of 15-20K can hold about 15 grams of ice per cubic meter of air. Ice floats because it is only about 90% of the density of normal water. This means that your average ice cube (sides of about 2cm) has a mass of 7 grams. So that cubic meter of 15-20K air contains as much water a two ice cubes. Not even enough for a good cocktail.

Those ice makers you see at the 7-11 and elsewhere are actually connected to a water tap, they just wouldn’t be able to make enough ice otherwise. And neither can our supervillains. To trap the Flash in a 2 cubic meter block of ice – just enough to hold a man – he would need to condense the water vapour out of almost 300 cubic meters of air. That’s larger than the volume of the Hindenberg Zeppelin!

Finally answered – why Superman needs the Justice League

Over at Ecocomics John Perich has finally answered the question of why Superman hangs around with a bunch of heroes that are blatantly less powerful that he is…

Superman’s slower than Flash (only just), but his super-strength and invulnerability make him better at dispatching minions. He’s more capable of dealing with aliens than Green Lantern. And with his X-ray vision and super-hearing, you could make the case that he’s a better detective than Batman.

So why does Superman need the rest of the Justice League?

For that, we turn the pages back to 1817 and the principle of comparative advantage, as publicized (though not first documented) by economist David Ricardo. Comparative advantage dictates that, even if one agent can produce two types of goods more efficiently than another agent, it benefits both parties for the efficient agent to specialize and trade for the other.

Basically, Superman acts as the super all-rounder who fills in where he’s needed most, thus giving the others space to do what each of them does best.

The 52 in 52 – Part IV: Skeet’s Hunt For Rip Hunter

52 was DC’s first modern weekly comic. It bridged the missing year between INFINITE CRISIS and the “One Year Later” relaunches. At heart was the mystery of the 52 – what was the significance of the number? I’ve been following the 52 subplot through the series. First I covered the missing super geniuses from across the DCU and then the death of Booster Bold. Finally, we had the revelation that his robotic sidekick Skeets had turned major league Evil.

In Week #26 Dr Sivana’s kids momentarily see a flash forward of the time traveller Waverider saying “I know who” and then being attacked. We see the actual event in Week #27, Evil Skeets catches up with the terrified Waverider. He had been organizing the time criminals, Chronos, Time Commander, Clock Queen and others into a new group of Time Masters to stand against the threat that Rip Hunter had discovered. However, Evil Skeets was too strong for them and had attacked/murdered each of them in turn.

Evil Skeets confronts Waverider (Week #26)
Evil Skeets confronts Waverider (Week #26)

When Skeets finally comes for Waverider he calls him “The Seer of Hypertime. Keeper of the Divergent Timelines.” This may well be the last in-canon reference to Hypertime – the now defunct model of DC’s cosmology. In INFINITE CRISIS Alexander Luthor splintered the Universe into a infinite number of parallel universes before the heroes managed to collapse it back into a single universe, but something new was left in its wake. Evil Skeets can sense the change, but it doesn’t know exactly what it is. Only Rip Hunter knows and he’s beyond Skeets’ ability to track. By attacking Hunter’s allies, Skeet’s had hoped to find force Hunter out into the open. He kills Waverider while gloating this his own metallic body is actually made from metal taken from Waverider’s corpse.

Meanwhile the enigmatic Supernova is has been on a scavenger hunt through the DC Universe. By week #31 Ralph Dibny has deduced Supernova’s true identity and tells him as much. At the end of Week #36 and into Week #37 it is revealed that Rip Hunter has been hiding in the Bottle City of Kandor in Superman’s Fortress of Solitude. Supernova had been working for him, searching for a suitable power source for his Time Bubble, but nothing they’ve found is compatible. Hunter himself is having trouble saying focused in linear time and proclaims that “Broken! Is Time!”

When Evil Skeets finally tracks them down, Supernova is revealed to be Booster Gold, alive and well, and working with Rip Hunter. They joined forces in during Booster’s first visit to Hunter’s lab in Week #6. A bit of time travel allowed him to appear as Supernova alongside himself and to fake his own death. This part of the plotline sets up the BOOSTER GOLD series that spins-out of 52 and establishes Booster’s new job as Rip Hunter’s agent in the timestream. The powers of the Supernova suit were all based on technology derived from the Phantom Zone Projector. This is how Supernova was able to teleport thousands of people out of the chaos in Metropolis in Week #35 – by shunting them through the Phantom Zone.

Supernova/Booster and Rip Hunter try to imprison Evil Skeet using the original Phantom Zone Projector, but he starts to absorb the entire dimension. Its enough of a diversion to allow Booster and Hunter to teleport away with Hunter counting down “52… 51…”

Next: Whatever happend to the Red Tornado?.

The 52 in 52 – Part III: The Replacement League

I’m running down the events of 52 that eventually led to the revelation of the central mystery of the series. So far I’ve covered the disappearance of the evil geniuses and the death of Booster Gold. A slight interlude this time with a look at the wannabe Justice League from Week #24 – this is after all a JLA themed blog/website.

The real Justice League had fallen apart before the events of INFINITE CRISIS. Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman were without their costumed identities and the Martian Manhunter, the usual heart of the League, was undercover in Washington trying to eliminate the last remnant of Maxwell Lord’s Checkmate. Elsewhere in the political system, Lorraine Reilly, the superheroine Firehawk and the first Firestorm’s sometime partner, is campaigning for election to the US Senate – to the seat formerly held by her late father. She needs a boost in the polls and thinks that organizing a replacement Justice League will give her a suitable PR boost.

Her four recruits are:

Jason Rusch, the second Firestorm. Together they had been part of Donna Troy and Alan Scott’s taskforce during INFINITE CRISIS and Lorraine’s actions had allowed/caused the death of Jason’s best friend. So he’s wasn’t particularly favourable to her, but a chance to join the Justice League was too big a opportunity to pass up.

The Bulleteer is Alix Horrower. She and her scientist husband Lance appeared to be a perfectly normal couple until Lance’s superhero fetish led to a bizarre accident that killed him and cursed Alix with an indestructible metal skin. She never wanted to be a superhero, but couldn’t kill herself and became involved with the sleezer side of the cape set more by accident that designed. She turned out to be the invaluable Seventh Solider, but her brief time with the JLA can only be described as passive.

Saganwohna, the Super-Chief, is an ancestral Iroquois hero who receives his powers from a Sky Stone, a superpower bestowing meteorite that the Super-Chiefs’ believe was sent to them by the great Manitou Spirit. It was passed down from father-to-son for protection and it passed to Jon Standing Bear on the day his father died (52 Week #22). Jon smothered his grandfather in his sleep and then took the Sky Stone for himself. Like many people he wanted to be a superhero and saw the stone as a quick route to the power he needed.

The last member of Firehawk’s Justice League is Ambush Bug. A man who may or may not be called Irwin Schwab. He is either delusion or he has the best grasp of the meta-reality of anybody in the DC Universe.

Firehawk and Firestorm (Week #24)
Firehawk and Firestorm (Week #24)

Their first case is to investigate a seemingly random temporal anomaly that was spewing legions of bloodthursty pirates and cyborgs onto the streets of Metropolis. However, this group of C-list heroes rapidly loses control of the situation when all the D-list wannabe heroes from Lex Luthor’s Everyman project descended on the riot.

The Evil Skeets had been behind the anomaly. Following Booster Gold’s death he had been acting increasingly erratic. He had sealed Booster’s ancestor inside Rip Hunter’s lab to protect his own secrets. The Metropolis anomaly was bait in a trap to draw out Rip Hunter, but his failure to show forces Skeets to up the ante. He unleashes a surprising arsnel against the spectators and decimates the heroes. Among those his kills are the young Super-Chief.

Skeet's unleashed (Week #24)
Skeet's unleashed (Week #24)

Checkmate had just been signed out of existence by the US President – J’onn J’onzz’s final victory against them – but it is immediately resurrected by the United Nations as an international meta-human watchdog in response to the riot in Metropolis.

Firehawk’s JLA was disbanded following Skeet’s attack and never reformed. She and Firehawk would continue working together and he would eventually become a member of the proper JLA when Lex Luthor’s Injustice League included him in their list of heroes to target. Bulleteer has appeared from time-to-time in collation of heroes. Ambush Bug is still waiting for Keith Giffin to finish his mini-series.

Next time – back to the 52, Skeet’s hunt intensifies

JLA writers: JLA #34 preview @ Newsarama & Robinson interview at CBR

The change over from Dwayne McDuffie, through Len Wein, to James Robinson continues apace. Newsarama have a preview of JLA #34 and it appears that the credits confusion continues where both JLA #34 and JLA #35 are listed as the first part of Len Wein’s run. Their description in Newsarama’s preview states that:

Len Wein takes over the pages of Justice League in the first of a two-part story featuring Starbreaker.

JUSTICE LEAGUE OF AMERICAWritten by Len Wein; Art by Jose Luis and JP Mayer; Cover by Ed Benes and Rob Hunter

However, the credits box in the actual preview itself clearly shows:

JLA #34 credits

I really hope this continued misattribution of the credits isn’t some slight towards the departing writer.

Nevertheless, Len Wein takes over from JLA #35 for his three-part Royal Flush Gang story. That was originally a two-parter, but like a tall tale it seems to be getting longer at each telling. CBR has an interview with James Robinson about joining the JLA and they note that Wein’s run will be four-issues.

Unsurprisingly James Robinson’s interview is noncomital on details of his run, but he does comment on the transition from CRY FOR JUSTICE to the main JLA title

“I was very happy to be writing ‘Superman’ and being a part of the Superman team, but when the offer came up and they asked whether I was interested in writing ‘Justice League of America,’ I realized how exciting it would be to fold what happens in ‘Cry for Justice’ into the ‘Justice League’ book and sort of continue on from there,” explained Robinson.

[...]

“What I’m doing is basically picking up where Len Wein left off, getting the team through the traumatic, incredibly exciting but obviously traumatic events of ‘Blackest Night’ and then from that I’m going to build a new team comprising of some big names from the DC Universe and… well, pretty much, a lot of big names from the DC Universe,” Robinson confirmed.

When asked if there would be any holdovers from “Cry for Justice,” Robinson confirmed, “Absolutely. It won’t be the exact same team but half of the team will be going into the new book. I’ll leave it at that.”

I was also interested in a comment towards the end of the interview

But from where I started on ‘Superman,’ I think the book’s got better and better, personally. I’m quite proud of that but with ‘Justice League of America,’ I think I am now more immersed in the lore of the DC Universe. The chains of communication between myself and the Superman writers and Geoff Johns and editors Eddie Berganza and Matt Idelson and Ian Sattler and Dan DiDio are much clearer and we’re moving forward, all of us together, in a very clear direction.

It is arguably that its poor “chains of communication” that led to Dwayne’s furstration with writing JLA and his ultimate removal from the title. Hopefully, James’s comments means that this problem is delibrately being addressed. We’ll find out in October.

The 52 in 52 – Part II: The Death of Booster Gold

Last time in this analysis of the mystery behind 52 we saw the genesis of several subplots – why were the Red Tornado’s last words “52″, why is Intergang kidnapping evil geniuses, and just what has Mister Mind turned into? Now it’s time to look at one of 52′s big players – Booster Gold (Michael Jon Carter) and his robotic companion Skeets. They were originally from the 25th century, but came back in time so Booster could play at being a superhero.

Recently Booster has been trying to use Skeet’s historical database to reestablish his reputation as a hero, but something has been causing problems – events and history does not appear to conform to Skeet’s records.  Will Magnus gave Skeet’s computer AI the all clear in Week #2, so Booster has been trying to find the time traveller Rip Hunter so see if there is a problem with time. The signs were there if Booster was smart enough to spot them – references to the number 52 and numbers that add up to 52 are scattered throughout this entire series.

Booster Gold in Rip Hunter Lab (click to enlarge)
Booster Gold in Rip Hunter Lab (click to enlarge)

Booster eventually finds Hunter’s Arizona Lab in Week #6, but it appears uninhabited. Skeets has to hold the security system off line while Booster goes inside so he doesn’t see what Booster finds. Inside are random notes and keywords about the future. Many of them are hints at future developments in the series. Some of them are ones we’re interested in. These include:

  • “Time is broken” – something is wrong with history. This is Booster’s problem, but its a symptom of something larger.
  • “Someone is monitoring. They see us. They see me.” – a reference to the Monitors. They appear briefly in 52: WORLD WAR III, but play a more central role in COUNTDOWN and FINAL CRISIS.
  • 52 circles each with the number 52 inside – 52 worlds, the key is that Earth is shown as a circle
  • “The Tornado is in pieces” – a direct reference to he Red Tornado’s accident.

Along with the references to 52 there is the message “His fault!” with arrows pointing to photographs of Booster. We’re meant to think something is Booster’s fault, but it isn’t. The arrows are actually pointing at Skeets.

Week #10 features the first appearance of Supernova, the hero that replaced Superman in Metropolis and supplanted Booster Gold in the public’s affection – particularly after Ralph Dibny exposed Booster’s rigged heroics. By Week #15 the failure of Skeet’s database has made Booster desperate to recreate his success at any cost. Booster tries to save the day when the Ballostro sea-monster attacks Metropolis, but Supernova’s more effective intervention enrages Booster. He finally redeems himself by sacrificing his life to fly an exploding submarine clear of the city.

With Booster dead, Skeets is left on his own. Three week’s later at Booster’s funeral Skeets recognizes Daniel Carter, an ancestor of Booster and makes contact with him. In Week #19 Skeet’s explains to Daniel that he hadn’t accompanied Booster into Rip Hunter’s lab and that he now needs Daniel to accompany him back there.

Skeet's meets Daniel Carter (Week #19)
Skeet's meets Daniel Carter (Week #19)

Daniel sees the the notes about “Its his fault” and tell’s Skeets. The robot realizes that Hunter knows about him and seals Daniel inside the lab. The Evil Skeets reappears in Week #24 when he ambushes a wannabe version of the Justice League.

Next: 52 interlude – who was that JLA?

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New JLA creative team: Robinson and Bagley

In hindsight it was a fairly obvious move. Once Dwayne McDuffie was fired from JUSTICE LEAGUE OF AMERICA there was of course still one other writer at DC who was working on a JLA book. James Robinson’s CRY OF JUSTICE mini-series was originally to have been on ongoing project, but was turned into a limited series. Now DC’s The Source has announced that Robinson will be taking over the main ongoing JLA title.

“It’s a thrill to be given the reins of DC’s flagship team book and to know that my partner in crime(fighting) will be the esteemed Mark Bagley who’s dynamic storytelling skills I intend to make full use of.  It’s further exciting/gratifying for me that I can dove-tail the events of Cry For Justice into the main book where post-Blackest Night will emerge a new team and a new exciting direction as they get caught up in the next wave of events building throughout the DCU.”

It’ll be interesting to see how Robinson preforms, but he’s no stranger to Justice League teams. Least we forget that it was James Robinson who created a version of Justice League Europe in STARMAN just so he could have them all assassinated by the Mist. Hopefully the Leaguers left over from McDuffie’s run will avoid that fate.

Joining James Robinson with be Mark Bagley who moved from Marvel to work on DC’s weekly TRINITY title. Kurt Busiek’s scripts gave Mark almost every single character in the DC Universe to draw so a JUSTICE LEAGUE OF AMERICA should be quite relaxing for him. In a recent CBR interview he noted that,

I occasionally wanted to strangle Kurt [Busiek] when I’d get the [Trinity] plots involving the entire DC Universe. I wish I could have been faster so [inker] Art Thibert and [colorist] Pete Pantazis would have had more time to do their jobs. They are both terrific, but I know we were all a bit compromised by the speed we had to work. Also I wish Batman, Superman and Wonder Woman had been in their “normal” forms for more of the story but that wasn’t what the story dictated.

Well it now look’s like he’ll get his chance with Justice League – providing DC can actually let Robinson and Bagley have the big guns back.