
By: Brian Clevinger (writer), Scott Wegener (art), Ronda Pattison (colors), Jeff Powell (letters) & Lee Black (edits)
The Story: Atomic Robo has to rescue stranded astronauts.
What’s Good: It’s just nice to have Robo back. Atomic Robo follows the Hellboy publication practice where there is a miniseries that runs for ~6 issues and then Robo goes away for a few months. I sure do miss the guy when he is gone because Robo is unlike any other comic I read– and I read a pretty diverse lot. No other comic quite captures the feeling of fun/science/banter/adventure/amazement that you get from Robo. And it gets all of that without ever having a downer moment. Robo is kinda like that person we all know who never has anything negative to say about anyone.
The humor is what really sets Robo apart. For example, we open on a scene of Robo chatting on the phone with someone, complaining about the design of the iPad (his mechanical fingers don’t work nicely with it) and he says, “So, this is another thing where your faulty design is actually everyone else holding it wrong?” (of course referencing the iPhone 4 antennae snafu). Then he is called away and as he says good-bye, we realize he was talking to Steve Jobs. LOL!
And, it’s always so nicely delivered. You could take Robo’s words and make them pissy as hell, but because they’re delivered by this lovable and slightly naive robot who is ~100 years old who is simultaneously an action hero and scientist, he just comes off as more earnest than the rest of us. Robo is never mean and malicious because he doesn’t have to be: he’s superpowered, smart and basically immortal. He’s kinda like what Doc Savage would be like if he never became aloof and cynical.
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