
By: Nick Spencer (writer), Wes Craig (artist), Hi-Fi (colorist), Sam Keith (feature artist), Jeromy Cox (feature colorist)
The Story: NoMan teaches us that living in a clone body can’t get in the way of friendship!
The Review: One of the things I really like about T.H.U.N.D.E.R. Agents—and there are many—is its point of view. Most of the superhero titles on the stands are fairly clear-cut in who the good and bad guys are. Even that darkest of knights, Batman, is obviously a force for good in the world, no matter what the urban legends say. Very rarely do heroes have a moral quandary that’s truly unnavigable; in the end, they nearly always do the right thing.
About the only series that really mired itself in gray area was Gail Simone’s Secret Six, which almost took masochistic pleasure in confronting hard questions and having no answers. Though completely different in tone and substance, T.H.U.N.D.E.R. Agents is very much a spiritual successor to the Six. Both feature a cast of characters thrust into unpleasant situations for which no easy solutions can be found, forcing them to take uncertain moral chances in their attempts to come out the other side in the black, however slightly.
The major difference, of course, is the Six made no pretensions about being heroes, though (very) occasionally motivated by principles of justice. The Agents, on the other hand, sincerely believe what they do, they do for the greater good. Ultimately, however, they owe their existence to a wrongful war, and we all know that nothing exactly equates to the greater good in such circumstances. At best, the Agents can only hope for what all war victors hope for: that history will vindicate them in the end.
That’s what makes Henry Cosgei’s (a.k.a. Lightning)—spoiler alert—sacrifice so meaningful and yet so tragically pointless. While the death of Dynamo seemed sudden and had little emotional weight, given how little we knew of him, Spencer actually invested a great deal of time in Cosgei’s background and reasons for joining the Agents. When you reflect on the fact that he put his life on the line to restore his honor after a bit of athletic cheating, you really understand the measure of the man, but too late. And what did he die for? For the Agents to retrieve their irreplaceable weapons? To strike a blow against an oppressed people?
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Filed under: DC Comics, Reviews | Tagged: Colleen Franklin, DC, DC Comics, Demo, Emil Jennings, Hi-Fi, Jeromy Cox, Lightning, Menthor, Nick Spencer, NoMan, Raven, Sam Keith, T.H.U.N.D.E.R. Agents, T.H.U.N.D.E.R. Agents #4, T.H.U.N.D.E.R. Agents #4 review, Toby Henston, Wes Craig | 4 Comments »