Green Arrow (page 2)

JLA Solicitations for March 2010

March 2010 appears to be Green Arrow and the JLA month with four-linked issues that spin-out of Cry For Justice and the events there-in. We’ve already covered their announcement, but DC has now released the solicitation details for those issues. It kicks off on March 10th with the Rise and Fall Special by James Robinson and J.T. Krul. Krul then follows that with Green Arrow #31 the following week (March 17th) and the start of the Justice League: The Rise of Arsenal the week after that (March 24th). Then at the end of the month James Robinson wraps up his first JLA arc and deals the implications of The Rise and Fall from the League’s side. Each of the four issues has a 1-in-25 variant cover created by Justice League: The Rise and Fall Special #1 artist Mike Mayhew.

Spoilers below…

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Krul to bridge Cry For Justice and JLA

J.T. Krul, current writer ot the Titans and Titans/Teen Titans Blackest Night chapters, has been recruited by DC Comics to write a special Justice League: The Rise and Fall issue (drawn by Matt Mayhew) that bridges the gap between Cry For Justice and the post-Blackest Night issues of Justice League of America. As announced by the DC Source blog,

What happens when a hero has a fateful decision to make? And how can another hero rebuild his world after a life-altering tragedy?

Both ideas are explored in two special books hitting in March, both written by J.T. Krul: JUSTICE LEAGUE: THE RISE AND FALL #1, which bridges the gap between JUSTICE LEAGUE: CRY FOR JUSTICE, JUSTICE LEAGUE OF AMERICA  and the upcoming JUSTICE LEAGUE: THE RISE OF ARSENAL four-issue mini-series. Concurrently, readers of the ongoing GREEN ARROW series will deal with the fallout in a storyline titled “The Fall of Green Arrow,” starting with issue #31.

Readers of Cry For Justice will know what event has happened to Green Arrow and Red Arrow, but I won’t spoil it here.

Krul talked to IGN about his new assignment and how it fits into the bigger picture:

IGN Comics: The one-shot is called Justice League: The Rise and Fall. There’s a lot going on with the Justice League property between Cry for Justice and James Robinson’s run on the regular JLA ongoing. Where and how exactly will your one-shot fit in regards to Robinson’s two JLA projects? Is there interplay between the three at all?

Krul: It will play directly into everything because James is involved in all of this as well. As we’re working on it, we may have other writers do certain portions of it so it’s more of a collective issue, if you will. But absolutely it will play into everything, because as you’ve seen in Cry for Justice, the whole story has been about this ethical rift between members of the Justice League on the tactics they take. “Are we a proactive team or a reactive team?” We’re taking those elements, and then the rest of the series amps it up and does kind of create this ripple effect that will be felt throughout the one-shot and into the Green Arrow and Arsenal stories.

As well as the single Rise and Fall issue, Krul will also be writing a mini-series called Justice League: The Rise of Arsenal and a Green Arrow arc called the Fall of Green Arrow that expand on the particular topics surround Roy Harper and Oliver Queen.

JLA Solicitations for February 2010

Newsarama have a preview of the JLA solicitation blurbs for February 2010. The cover for JLA #42 was teased a few days ago, but we get our first look at an image from Cry For Justice #7. The blacked out figure looks like he’s got a quiver so that’d make him either Green Arrow (Ollie) or Red Arrow (Roy).

JUSTICE LEAGUE: CRY FOR JUSTICE #7

Written by James Robinson, Art and cover by Mauro Cascioli

This is the big one! After the catastrophes seen in issues #5 and #6, a hero loses control, leading to an unexpected ending that will fundamentally change the lives of the World’s Greatest Heroes forever. This issue launches a major storyline in the DC Universe and is not to be missed!

On sale February 24 • 7 of 7 • 40 pg, FC, $3.99 US

JUSTICE LEAGUE OF AMERICA #42

Written by James Robinson, Art and cover by Mark Bagley & Rob Hunter, Variant cover by Adrian Melo & Mariah Benes

In the aftermath of the horrific events of JUSTICE LEAGUE: CRY FOR JUSTICE, a member is comforted by his friends and fellow Justice Leaguers over his tragic loss. And when Dick Grayson is offered membership, will the new Batman accept? Or would he rather operate outside the realm of the World’s Greatest Heroes?

Meanwhile, Ray Palmer attempts to unlock a device that’s been discovered by the team. Will it spell their doom – or something far worse? They’d better find out soon because Dr. Impossible has chosen now, of all times, to attack! Who exactly is this mysterious villain and who has he brought back with him? The new era for the team marches forward!

On sale February 17 • 40 pg, FC, $3.99 US

JLA roster revealed in BN #3 advert

bn3-jla-advert

A full page advert (above) in this week’s Blackest Night #3 revealed the JLA roster that had previously been blanked out on preview images. The advert proclaims “October 2009. James Robinson. Mark Bagley. Justice League of America. Issue 38. A new era begins.” It also features a copy of the preview artwork with the full cast revealed (shown below).

bn3-jla-advert2

There are three distinct groups of overlapping characters in that picture. The first group is Green Lantern (Hal), Green Arrow (Ollie) and the Atom were members of the original League and are the feature characters in Robinson’s current JLA: Cry For Justice mini-series. Congorilla is also featured in Cry, but this is his debut as a proper Justice Leaguer.

The second group is what I’d called the “Conway members”, those members of the League added to the rollcall because the writer happens to also be writing their solo title, i.e., in the way that Gerry Conway brought his Firestorm into the satellite era League or Grant Morrison brought Aztek into the Big 7 run. In this case Robinson is currently writing Superman featuring Mon-El. The Guardian is a major supporting character in Superman and he’s been flirting with his neighbour, Doctor Light. Mon-El, Guardian, and Light are all in the above image. She’s also important as she’s the only member shown who survives from the end of Dwayne McDuffie’s League.

The third group, and in some ways the most surprising, is the Titans. Donna Troy is appearing for Wonder Woman and Dick Grayson is there as he’s currently Batman. I suspect there is a major event building for Wonder Woman in Blackest Night – she’s in the final wave of BN DC Direct figures, but nobody knows why. We knew Dick and Donna already, but they’re now joined by Starfire and Cyborg.  She had recently refused Doctor Light’s offer of League membership. Where this leaves the currently meandering Titans title is unknown, but we had been warned the two teams would be coming closer together.

When Brad Meltzer relaunched this title he included Arsenal as the Titan who steps up to take his mentor’s place as Red Arrow. Former Titan Wally West eventually rejoined the group as the Flash, but he’s been a JLA member since his time with Justice League Europe. And while I’m on this divergence – notice that there is no Flash in the image, neither Barry Allen or Wally West appear, but that stop  any Flash Rebirth spoilers.

It’s an interesting roster and at eleven members one of the larger we’ve seen recently. I wouldn’t be too surprised if that image changed slightly when the issue actually ships (its something they did with the last comparable image). I certainly expect that Mon-El, Dick, and maybe Donna will make way for the real Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman once their individual plot-lines are tied up. That wouldn’t make the line-up look so radical – you’d then have six original members and only two former Titans.