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Superboy #10 – Review

By: Too many to list—check out the review.

The Story: No offense, Superboy, but honestly, one of you is more than enough.

The Review: From the get-go, we knew the Hollow Men would wind up Superboy’s first major opponents in this title, but only in recent issues have we gotten some clarification about their exact nature.  While previously, they seemed a race unto themselves, Jeff Lemire revealed they merely act on the orders of one Eben Took, a former Smallville resident who used some dark means to say alive.  As it turns out, that dark means has a name: Tannarak.

There’s a bit of bad timing in all this, as the revelation of this new villain came just two chapters before the title must run its course.  This issue is an attempt to shore up Tannarak’s background and give the evil sorcerer some kind of weight before things wrap up in a couple weeks.  We do get to learn a couple bits of important information: that ol’ Tan’s been around for a while, and he’s powerful enough to give even famed Atlantean sorcerer Arion some pause.

Instead of making us take the necromancer seriously, the period sequences actually have the opposite effect.  AA defines insanity as “doing the same thing over and over but expecting different results,” and under that definition, Tannarak can pretty much be classified as old-school megalomaniacal.  In each time period, he stubbornly makes the same attempt to conquer the world through doppelgangery, only to be defeated—rather simply, I might add—every time.

But if Tannarak expects different results this time around, he has ample reason for once.  After all, his biggest obstacle has always been the Phantom Stranger, and now he literally has the white-eyed man crawling on his knees—hatless, on top of that!  What you really would’ve liked to see is more of the specific relationship between the two mystics and their origins, as even way back in 45,025 B.C., they already had a mutual dislike that went back even further.

Even though the story lens focuses on the ancient mastermind this issue, we also get some light shed on our (relatively) more human villain, and how he got caught up in all this.  Don’t expect Took’s tears over his dead baby son, the resurrection of whom motivates him to join forces with Tannarak, as his grief comes less from a deep, paternalistic attachment and more from regret that his family can’t grow any bigger.  As is, this goal sounds mostly like the ravings of a radical nutjob; we have no idea why it’s so particularly important for him to have a huge family.
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Superboy #9 – Review

By: Jeff Lemire (writer), Pier Gallo (artist), Jaime Grant & Dom Regan (colorists)

The Story: It’s like looking in a mirror, isn’t it?  Make that several hundred mirrors.  In 3D.

The Review: It’s sometimes difficult to take teen superheroes seriously partly due to their smaller scale adventures.  Their villains tend to be sub-par versions of more famous counterparts (not unlike the heroes they face off with), and even when they manage some degree of originality, they rarely pose the kind of serious threat Justice Leaguers face on a daily basis.

Superboy sure has come a long way from sparring with King Shark off the Hawaiian coast.  Ever since he saved the universe during Infinite Crisis, his caliber of villain has definitely gone up a notch.  Limiting his flying grounds to Smallville seemed on the surface to hold him back, but this issue proves there’s plenty of dastardly stuff happening in the Midwestern farm town, and let out of control, the world will no doubt suffer.

Of course, the fact Phantom Stranger is involved should be proof enough that Superboy faces nothing short of an epic challenge, especially considering the fedora-wearing man’s unusually urgent behavior of late.  This recent take-charge attitude turns out to be a ruse for a pretty significant plot twist, one with half a chance of surprising you.  Although Lemire does a fairly good job using Stranger’s cryptic clauses to cover up the big reveal at the end, let’s face it: old P.S. has been acting rather out of character (read: grim and patronizing) lately.

Actually, we get quite a lot of major developments this issue, as Psionic Lad’s (Psion, I should say, as he and Simon agree the “Lad” part sounds more like something his great-uncle would’ve really dug) loyalties finally get put to the test.  While it’s comforting to see his moral compass remains squarely in goodhearted territory, it all becomes a moot point when the mission in Smallville’s underground Hollowville takes a turn for the worse.
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Superboy #6 – Review

By: Jeff Lemire (writer), Marco Rudy (artist), Jaime Grant & Dominic Regan (colorists)

The Story: Could this be the death of Superboy—again?

The Review: Crossover stories can be fun, wild events, but they definitely have a downside as well: call them forced tie-ins.  It’s one thing to have certain titles leech into each other during a crossover, if the characters and their individual plotlines make sense within the larger story.  It’s another thing when an ongoing story is completely derailed to fit in an event that has little bearing on the title’s long-term interests.

That brings us to this issue.  Of course, the entire Superman family has been wrangled into joining the whole “Reign of Doomsday” extravaganza, and that includes Superboy.  Setting aside the idea that Doomsday is a shallow character who nobody much cared to see return in the first place, the bigger problem is Superboy just started his solo adventures.  It seems too early to get him involved in his role model’s big conflict.

It also flies in the face of the tone Lemire already established for this title.  Superboy brawling with Doomsday just feels like your garden-variety, mindless action, which goes against the carefully plotted supernatural/sci-fi adventures Lemire has going so far.  It’s obvious this Doomsday thing comes from left field; he literally appears out of nowhere, randomly attacks Superboy for a while, then teleports out on his way to the real match-up in Action Comics #900.

Perhaps the worst thing about this tie-in is it makes Superboy cannon fodder for Superman—never a strong light for a sidekick.  At no point in this matchup do you feel he’s on a level playing field (Doomsday gets telekinetic eye-beams, for crying out loud), so it’s just a game to see how quickly Doomsday can beat him to a pulp.
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