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Saturday
23Jan2010

The Authority: The Lost Year #5

Review by Joe David Soliz (grifter78)

"Blood Brothers" (No Spoilers)

Writers: Grant Morrison & Keith Giffen
Pencils: Jonathan Wayshak
Colours: Allen Passalqua
Letters: Rob Leigh
Assistant Editor: Kristy Quinn
Editor: Scott Peterson
Cover by Gene Ha & Alex Sinclair
Published by Wildstorm

A new story arc begins for The Authority and Keith Giffen is free to start fresh without Grant Morrison’s start on the series over-shadowing him, right?  Well, not exactly.  First off, this is still based on stories Morrison outlined and which Giffen is going to use through-out the rest of this mini-series.  But that’s ok because we already knew that.  The problem is we get a slight overflow of events from the last arc.  This is not a big deal if you’ve followed since the beginning but it might throw new readers off who are jumping on this issue because it’s being toted as a new story arc.

One thing that is evident in this issue from the start is that this is definitely the pre-World’s End Authority.  Before Dan Abnett and Andy Lanning’s World’s End run humbled the team and hopefully taught them a few things about being heroes, the Authority were basically powerful jerks.  The funny thing is this was the appeal in the beginning for a lot of people.  Warren Ellis (who created the team) was obviously using the team to poke fun at DC’s Justice League (which was ironic since DC had just purchased Wildstorm).  It’s that same attitude that’s evident here as we see the unceremonious way they deal with the events of the last issue.  There is also still that sense of arrogance as we see how they deal with the threat brought up in this issue. 

The Carrier has always been a point of mystery in The Authority books.  Ed Brubaker touched on its origins slightly in The Authority: Revolution.  And as evidenced by last week’s World’s End title, The Authority #18, that mystery could potentially be answered soon.  But we learn here that for as powerful as The Carrier has proven to be, it does have its weaknesses.  It’s this weaknesses which presents a huge dilemma for the team by the issues’ end as we get a pretty harrowing cliffhanger.

With this new arc we also get a new artist in Jason Wayshak.  I’ve never previously seen his art but I did find that he did work on two Wildstorm mini-series before: Ferryman and The Lost Boys: Reign of Frogs.  His art gets a little too cartoony sometimes for my tastes, especially with some of the facial expressions.  But I did like his design for one of the creatures in the issue.  It reminded me of something you’d see in Sam Keith’s series The Maxx.

Overall, a good issue that had a lot of action and very good cliffhanger but I think it could’ve been a tad more new-reader friendly.

Over All Rating 7 out of 10 (Slightly Above Average)

Want to see more of David's writing about the Wildstorm universe?  Then check out him out over at the Wildstorm Resource Wiki

Reader Comments (1)

I agree that there was too much overflow from the last arc. While I appreciate them commenting on what had just happened and dwelling on it a bit it probably made it near unaccessable to new readers.

As for the artwork I think it was inconsistent garbage that was indeed very cartoony. If you want to draw a book cartoony I would be fine with that but at the same time, at least be consistent and that it wasn't.

January 30, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterNightcraws

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