Weekly Wonder Woman

Review: Wonder Woman #14/Justice League #14/Batwoman #14

Wonder Woman 14

It’s another wonderful month over in DC. Kind of. Ignore the fact it’s still Tony Akins doing the illustrations on Wonder Woman, since we have fights, innovation, ruses, New Gods and old gods to deal with. And I’m proved wrong – oops!

Meanwhile, over in Justice League, Aquaman does something useful for a change, we have some nifty Wonder Woman continuity references, Wonder Woman and Superman go on a date – and Batman is revealed to be a stalker, but we could have figured that out ourselves.

Justice League 14

And then in Batwoman, Wondy and Batwoman talk a lot, we go off the reservation when it comes to Greek myth, before heading back to Gotham, and we learn that absolutely, definitely for sure, DC’s editors don’t talk to one another.

Batwoman 14

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Weekly Wonder Woman

Review: Wonder Woman #13/Justice League #13/Batwoman #13/AmeComi Girls

Wonder Woman #13

Well, it’s a pretty wondrous month all round at DC. We have Wonder Woman #13, in which we get some new gods, some new demi-gods, and a very old god, the mysterious disappearance of Athena is finally addressed and, most importantly of all, I’m proved right – HA!

We have Justice League #13, in which a certain super romance is allowed to play out reasonably well, and Wonder Woman is front and centre as the entire Justice League faces off against (and gets their arses kicked by) her most famous villain from outside of Greek myth: The Cheetah.

Justice League #13

And then we have the continuation of the multi-issue crossover with Batwoman #13, which sings the praises of our Wondy, while covering her in creepy crawlies, and demonstrates that DC really doesn’t have any editors paying attention or at least talking to each other much.

Batwoman #13

Oh yes, and Wonder Woman gets made head of the Justice League over in AmeComi Girls. Which is nice.

Amecomi Girls

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Weekly Wonder Woman

Review: Wonder Woman #0/Earth 2 #0/Ame-Comi Girls #1-2

WW #0

Although DC’s nu-52 so far can hardly be described as epic in its sensibilities, it has at least one thing in common with Homer: it began its stories ‘in medias res’ – that is, in the middle of the action. There were no origin stories, no explanations for what had happened before each issue. Instead, we were thrust into the stories, assuming we would learn later on what was going on.

And so it is this month, 12 months after the first of the nu52 titles came out, that DC has released issue #0s for a whole range of both its surviving titles and its forthcoming titles. For the most part, these have been simple origin stories – Catwoman explains how Selina Kyle lost her memory and became a criminal, Supergirl explores why her parents sent her away from Krypton, Batgirl looks at how Barbara Gordon became Batgirl and lost her ability to walk, Batwoman looks at how Kate Kane was trained by her father and so on. Even Justice League #0 is merely about how Billy Batson gets the power of Shazam.

The thing is, we know nu52 Wonder Woman’s origin already: born on the island of the Amazons to Queen Hippolyta, her father the god Zeus – that much is clear and has already been (infamously) spelt out in issue #3. True, we’ve not really seen Steve Trevor crashing on Paradise Island, but we’ve had that reasonably well covered in Justice League #12, which only really left a couple of possible elements that needed covering: ‘the Contest’ among the Amazons to be the one to take Trevor back to the outside world and the point at which Wonder Woman decides to stay and fight for mortals against gods and monsters.

So leave it to Brian Azzarello to do something completely different. His #0 is a far more interesting affair: a story that takes an affectionate look at the Silver Age with an alleged tale from All-Girl Adventure Tales For Men #41 to explore just how Wonder Girl became Wonder Woman, and more importantly, given it’s Wonder Woman, how she learnt there’s more to being a warrior than killing.

We also learn exactly what DC thinks of Wonder Woman and what their master plan is.

So after the jump, let’s look at Wonder Woman #0, as well as Earth 2 #0, in which an alternative universe Wonder Woman appears to have no romantic interest in Superman, Action Comics #10, in which in retrospect the nu-52 Wonder Woman actually does appear to have some romantic interest in Superman, Justice League International Annual, in which the nu-52 Wonder Woman and Superman very much have a romantic interest in one another (and the superheroes of the future are not best happy about that), and Ame-Comi Girls, in which an alternative universe Wonder Woman proves that she’s the strongest superhero of them all – and is definitely not interested in Supergirl.

Incidentally, Cliff Chiang had already drawn a cover for Wonder Woman #0, before all the #0 issues were standardised on the ‘burst’ motif. Wouldn’t this have been just so much better?

Cliff Chiang's alternative cover for Wonder Woman #0

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Weekly Wonder Woman

Question of the week: is another go at a Wonder Woman TV series a good thing or a bad thing?

Wonder Woman

So Wonder Woman’s going through something of a renaissance right now. One of the few decent comics to come out of DC’s infamous nu52 reboot was Wonder Woman. A writer has been hired once again to write a Wonder Woman movie after the mighty Joss Whedon failed. After decades of no or rubbish boyfriends for Wonder Woman, Superman now has the honour of having to work out what to get the Amazon princess who has everything for Valentine’s Day, which can only mean more Wonder Woman in normally Wonder-free comics.

And now, The CW, which managed to squeeze 10 seasons of TV and a digital comic’s worth of origin story out of Superman for Smallville and is about to try to do the same for Green Arrow with Arrow, is about to give us Amazon (working title), a Wonder Woman origin series.

Now, obviously the last attempt at a Wonder Woman TV series was a colossal f*ck up – you can read all about it, the previous Wonder Woman TV series, movies and pilots and even watch the abomination itself over here. However, this new version does have a few things going for it:

  1. It’s not going to be on NBC
  2. It’s not being written by the guy behind Ally McBeal, David E Kelley, who had never actually read the comic
  3. It’s being written by Allen Heinberg, who as well as being a decent scriptwriter anyway, was also behind the rather good soft reboot of the character for Volume 3 of the Wonder Woman comic.
  4. It’s on The CW, a network largely aimed at girls and women, and which has carried several shows about kick ass women in the past (eg Buffy, Nikita)

Of course, there is the possibility that a TV series would detract from a possible movie, that it’s going to be more like The CW’s Gossip Girl than like Buffy, that everything that makes Wonder Woman what she is will be ignored (Amazons, her mum Hippolyta, Greek gods, super-powers, compassion, intelligence, decent fight scenes), that a teenage Wonder Woman will be underpowered and a bit pathetic (cf Smallville), or that it’ll have a budget of £2.50.

So today’s question is:

Is a Wonder Woman TV series a good idea? And will you watch it if it’s on?

While you’re thinking of an answer, I’ll be off watching last night’s Robot Chicken.

Weekly Wonder Woman

Review: Wonder Woman #12/Justice League #12/Batwoman #12

WW#12

Has it really been this long? Yes, we’re now 12 issues – a whole year – into DC’s nu52 reboot of its entire universe. The reboot has energised some titles, thrown the status quo into turmoil, ditched many much-loved characters, introduced a few not-so-loved ones and restored some to their original prides of place. Although thrown together perhaps a little too speedily, judging by some of the inconsistencies between the titles, the nu52 clearly at least had some kind of plan, a storyline designed to last a few years rather than just a few issues, which in his day and age of instant web gratification is something of a throwback.

The evidence for both this planning – and occasional lack thereof – and desire to change the status quo is on display in both Wonder Woman #12 and Justice League #12, officially released in what can only be described as ‘Snog Wonder Woman while she’s flying’ month, judging by their covers. Wonder Woman #12 concludes the ‘pregnant Zola’ storyline with the inevitable – and then mixes it all up with more than a few surprises – before re-introducing an old new character (I’ll explain later).

Meanwhile, Justice League reveals what in retrospect it’s been hinting at throughout its run (even if no one over in Superman’s own titles appeared to know about it) – if you’ve been wondering why Lois Lane has had bugger all to do in the nu52, it turns out she’s superfluous to requirements. There’s a new power couple in town…

Justice League #12

And just for luck, let’s look at the first proper Wonder Woman crossover of the nu52 – Batwoman #12, in which our wonderful Amazon princess makes the first of at least two guest appearances. No snogging on this cover, despite that Batwoman being a lesbian and everyone having their suspicions about those Amazons – something the nice people at DC seem intent on stamping out…

Batwoman #12

See you after the jump…

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