
By: Paul Levitz (writer), Geraldo Borges (penciller), Marlo Alquiza (inker), Hi-Fi (colorist)
The Story: Calling the love of your life chubby may not be the best way to get on his good side.
The Review: Of the Legion Academy cast, Comet Queen is most likely to have any familiarity, first appearing to the Legion in the eighties (also under Levitz’s pen) then joining the first set of Academy recruits. As such, she has the most developed personality and history among her classmates and she acts as a direct link between them and their mentors.
All this is grounds to question why Levitz would choose to devote an entire issue to retelling her origins. Her motivations for wanting to join the Legion read like a stalker’s biopic: small-town girl, enamored with a Legionnaire (Bouncing Boy, of all people), follows any and every crazy impulse possible to get close to him. She literally stands in the path of a passing comet, turning her into a super-powered energy creature instead of, well, space dust.
About halfway through her story, you’ll regret that comet didn’t just toast her off, as most of her astoundingly shallow behavior rings home just how annoying a character she is. Her ridiculous speech patterns are just the tip of the iceberg, but they demonstrate very well Levitz’s often unwise storytelling decisions. Such obviously artificial dialogue wears thin quickly if not written with some restraint, and he goes all-out, giving you lines like, “Settle your grav-drive in, and I’ll tell you, still-shaking-from-your-first-thrill-ride-girl…”
Levitz spends more time glossing over the major events of her life, and so fails to make her very sympathetic. Getting pawned to the Legion of Substitute Heroes hardly merits her description of them as “burned-out stars that never shined” (look how many ended up in the Legion proper). Her mind-wipe at the hands of Saturn Queen has more potential to give her character some depth, but Levitz avoids showing you any really harmful effects. Her first reaction upon waking from the wipe is to love-tackle Bouncing Boy—which she probably would’ve done anyway.
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Filed under: DC Comics, Reviews | Tagged: Adventure Comics, Adventure Comics #527, Adventure Comics #527 review, Bouncing Boy, Comet Queen, DC, DC Comics, Geraldo Borges, Glorith, Hi-Fi, Legion, Legion Academy, Legion of Super Heroes, Marlo Alquiza, Paul Levitz | 2 Comments »



