THIS JUST IN:
Now, THAT is something to talk about!
The last time that anyone heard from Jean Loring, she had been stripped of the power of Eclipso (this was after her failed attempt to seduce the Spectre, but it's really best if we just don't go there right now) and fell to her death in the Atlantic Ocean, where she was eaten by a shark.
Poor, innocent shark; doesn't stand a chance. |
And by "last time" I mean "last time we saw her alive". Naturally we saw her LATER after she was dead in one (or two?) of those "Every Dead Character Comes Back as The Evil Dead" crossover events (probably Blackest Night).
Jean was one of the few characters substantially DOWNGRADED by becoming a Black Lantern. I remind you that in her heyday she terrified not merely entire civilizations but ENTIRE PLANETS. |
I was very disappointed at the time; it was the first and only confirmation that Jean actually WAS dead. I was expecting (hoping?) that she would just pop up alive someday declaring that she had landed ON the shark, which was thereupon knocked unconscious, and then ate the shark.
Like that guy in Watchmen nobody remembers, except Jean would have no remorse at what she had become. |
That pretty much put a stake through the character's heart.
Or would have. IF SHE WERE NOT JEAN LORING.
Courtesy of Geoff Johns, who bends DC reality to his will like a steroidal Fifth Dimensional Imp, she has just popped in the pages of Justice Society as if nothing had ever happened. And by "nothing" I mean her murder of Sue Dibney, in a wholly unpleasant story that every reader would like to pretend never happened. But Geoff Johns knows that Jean Loring as a deluded, homicidal lunatic is just too darned compelling a character to leave in back issue dustbins. So back she is, no explanation required. She is back simply because the DCU is more fun WITH her than without her.
The name "Cold Coast" is absolutely perfect. As is that IMPOSSIBLE view of the moon, chosen to evoke Eclipso, and the fact that all asylums in DC simply have to look Like That. |
Say what you will; nobody can encapsulate a character as efficiently as Geoff Johns, who does it here without even SHOWING Jean. |
You'd think Dr. Mid-Nite would use a voice recorder, rather than a note pad as if she's the Silver Age Lois Lane, Gal Reporter. |
This panel, you may note, is an homage to her "oh GOD Jean is STILL INSANE" panel in the prestige story-that-will-not-be-named. |
Skipped those electives in Psychiatry, huh, Dr. M? |
And if there is anyone who deserves to be committed, it's Jean Loring. Dr. Mid-Nite doesn't even HAVE lapels. |
A randomly chosen example. |
Pictured: pithy and piercing. |
Jean has got a point:
ReplyDeleteHer Ray could be ANYWHERE.
How do you fix sane?
- HJF1
If words hold power,
ReplyDeleteIt's best not to record Jean's.
Pen and paper's smart.
- HJF1
I had not considered the potential magical danger in recording Jean's utterances; good (poetic) point.
ReplyDeleteWe thought her dead. Gone.
ReplyDeleteBut Jean, like the sun, burns bright.
Run, Ray Palmer. RUN!
Personally - and this is probably only me - I don't like crazy Jean Loring. I'd like her to be cured, maybe some sort of explanation like Demons From The Atomic World coming after Ray through her.
ReplyDeleteIt just seems like an unfortunate use of a character to turn them evil. Granted, that could be my Hal Jordan Fan #1 talking. But I think it holds up as a general principle.
- HJF1
Your inclusion of haiku-appropriate nature imagery is appreciated, Misfit.
ReplyDeleteThe grip of madness.
ReplyDeleteUnder an Eclipso moon.
Jean comes back to us.
points for "Eclipso moon"
ReplyDelete