There is a lot happening in the DCU right now. And, surprisingly... I endorse almost all of it, including...
Green Arrow.
You read right; I'm recommending Green Arrow.
And that's not something I do lightly. |
Point 1. Green Arrow's scope has been limited appropriately. In the previous run on GA, Ollie was padding about space-time more easily than running across of a rooftop.
Perhaps I could have chosen a better metaphor. |
It also focused very much on his role at the paterfamilias of the Arrow Family. Which is nice and all, but...
it works much better when the central character is rock solid. It's something you can do with Batman. But, as history teaches us, simply pretending Green Arrow is Batman doesn't make him Batman.
The new creative team recognizes this and are focused on Ollie himself Green Arrowing.
Point 2. Good pacing. I rail on a lot about decompression. Green Arrow (#1 and #2) is great example of story that doesn't dash along at a Silver Age pace but is still not guilty of decompression. It takes three pages (its FIRST three pages) to show "there's pollution at a local playground". But this isn't padding; it's zooming in on the crux of the story. This is important, not only to our story but to Green Arrow.
Point 3. They let Green Arrow detect. Look, Ollie's not the World's Greatest Detective. He may not even been a great detective. But he has a keen eye and is good at lateral thinking and the action should show those advantages.
People who think normally do not think of Plastic Cat Arrows. |
The story gives a couple opportunities for Green Arrow to make contributions to an investigation outside of shooting arrows at stuff.
Point 4. The creators have done a great job with Ollie's personality.
Ollie is a hard-ass who will let you know if you have failed this city. |
But he is genuinely sorry for you that you messed up. |
They have created a balance for it I have not seen before (outside the TV show).
On the one hand, Ollie has no trouble being a rude pain in the neck. |
On the other hand, he's not just spouting "liberalisms" randomly. His outrage isn't diffuse and random, it's specific, targeted, and (arguably) justifiable. THIS is a Green Arrow I can get behind.
And nobody wants to get IN FRONT of Green Arrow. Not even Barry. |
Point 5. His outfit is cool.
Okay, fine; "cool" is a relative term when it comes to Green Arrow costumes. But the black and green works, his little cape is adorable, the opera gloves are VERY Mike Grell, he's wearing a utility belt, and, for the first time in my memory, he's covering his FACE with a scarf.
It's REALLY adorable. It's like he's still a member of the Junior Spectre Fan Club. But, really, it does look like something you'd wear in Sherwood Forest, so I think it works. |
So, now, it's just Ollie Queen who has a goatee, which doesn't even look all that stupid any more.
Ollie's a tech-bro, after all. It would be almost weird if he DIDN"T have that facial hair. |
Point 6. The creators aren't shying away from the problems of writing a tech-billionaire who cares about The Little People. Ollie is connected to the victims in the case (and might become one!) because he "ran the (evil) company for a month as a favor" to a friend. That's just the most billionaire-bro thing EVER.
Point 7. The first and current plot is about a big multinational not caring about some of their business causing poisoning among The Little People and the writers take the time and care to personalize it. Not only is that perfectly on point for Green Arrow (as a '70s-style activist) is excellent a creating a niche for Green Arrow's adventuring.
This is some visual storytelling like I haven't seen since the '70s. It made me care. The panel with the fallen groceries hit me in the feels. |
Point 8. What this (and some more) adds up to is: Green Arrow feels unique.
Which, in Green Arrow's case, is not a given. |
And unique in a good way.
That's eight reasons. That's enough for now.
Eight is enough, as they say. |
I endorse your reading the new Green Arrow.