by leonmallett » Thu Jan 28, 2010 10:03 am
Well, having read #5 today (the first comic book I have read in 2-3 weeks), I was suprised by the Black Hood's introduction. I hadn't picked up on any of the previews of the issue, nor read the solicitation blurb, so I had no expectations really except from the Guggenheim interview.
It is a new Black hood in many ways isn't it? The name pays homage to the original in a loose way, yet the concept is quite an inversion, criminal to hero all in 22 pages. I had hoped that the notion of a mystical hood with significance down the ages would be included (since I liked that aspect of the !mpact version), but it was quickly apparent that this isn't the case (although room exisst to bring such an idea in).
I have only read through the issue once, so maybe I missed some things, but I didn't really 'get' the motivation for change from criminal to (anti)hero. I will re-read to see if I did miss this.
That said, for 22 pages it was a pretty packed story. I hope DC recognise that some pretty nifty work can come from done-in-one issues (to whit, Brave and the Bold currently).
What we have is probably the most violence-prone hero in the DC Red Circle line-up aside from Inferno and Hangman. But then the Gray Morrow version had that sense of violence around him. Tonally the array of DC Red Circle heroes line-up is quite varied thus far, and I think it will be interesting to see them teamed up together as a collective. It isn't a recognisable Black Hood as we have known them, but I like this iteration nonetheless.
Discovering new superhero worlds through the MLJ/Mighty Crusaders legacy...