
By: Eric S. Trautmann & Brandon Jerwa (writers), Julian Lopez (breakdowns), Carlos Rodriguez (penciller), John Lucas (inker), John Kalisz (colorist)
The Story: The Mighty Crusaders enter the forbidden safe into a volatile dimension, all in an effort to track down the Shield’s father and retrieve a fatal piece of alien technology. With the warring factions of aliens closing in, it may be impossible for all the Crusaders to escape alive.
The Review: There were some doubts over the decision to bring the Mighty Crusaders (formerly the properties of Red Circle Comics) into DC’s fold. Reviving relatively unknown characters into the midst of a whole universe of icons was by itself a difficult challenge. Even harder was trying to convince readers these characters deserved ongoing titles while more popular characters had none. Ultimately, those titles never gained the audience they needed to survive, and folded.
DC’s latest attempt to sell the Red Circle heroes teams them up into the government-backed Mighty Crusaders. You can say this miniseries acts as a test run to check if these characters fare any better as a group than individually. And if their futures will be determined by this venture, then it’s likely you won’t see them again soon. From the first issue to this last one, the whole series has been generic, at best.
It’s not hard to see why. Government superhero teams abound in the DCU, whether in the uber-patriotic Freedom Fighters or the questionable Suicide Squad—and these are just the more famous ones. The Crusaders need some kind of identity or at least a mission statement to separate them from the other guys, and they don’t achieve even that. This mini focuses on their attempts to retrieve an artifact essential to the plans of those who threaten the US government—which is nearly the exact same premise of the story over in Freedom Fighters.
Eric S. Trautmann and Brandon Jerwa also have the problem of trying to give every member of the Crusaders a distinctive personality and background, but except for the Shield, the Web, the Hangman, and Inferno (who all had their own, albeit short-lived, titles), you never get a sense of who they are or what they’re fighting for. In fact, if you haven’t read those titles, you probably won’t get a strong sense of even those guys. You could take put any hero in their places, and the issue will read about the same. Ten Crusaders (plus their supporting cast) and a conflict involving several factions of enemies—I mean, you do the math. It’d be very tough to make heads or tails of any of these in only six issues.
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Filed under: DC Comics, Reviews | Tagged: Brandon Jerwa, Carlos Rodriguez, DC Comics, Eric S. Trautmann, Hangman, Inferno, John Kalisz, John Lucas, The Comet, The Fox, The Mighty Crusaders, The Mighty Crusaders #6, The Mighty Crusaders #6 review, The Shield, The Web, War Eagle | Leave a comment »