Well, here's some good news.
"The announcement of the first new ongoing Aquaman comic book series since the end of the Kelly Sue DeConnick-written run in November, 2020 came during DC’s Absolute/All In Universes panel at New York Comic Con 2024. The series will be written by Green Lantern scribe Jeremy Adams, with art by John Timms; the title will launch January 8, 2025."
Apparently Aquaman will not only be back, but Better Than Ever.
Like any sensible person, I skipped the "Absolute Power" crossover. An upside of it, however, seems to be that if you take everyone's powers "away" for a bit...
...you can give them BACK in whatever form you want.
In the immortal words of that villain of villains, The Hooded Claw: "How TERRIBLY convenient!" |
There are probably several (many?) characters who are being polished with this plot device; today, we discuss only Aquaman, who, FINALLY, is getting some form of hydrokinesis. We know this not simply from the cover image about, but from solicits.
Each of the seven seas? There's a kaiju in the Adriatic Sea? I'm just going to assume you don't mean the Classical seven seas, but are using "the seven seas" to mean "all the oceans". |
That solicit refers, interestingly, to Dagon (historically a one-off hydrokinetic foe of Aquaman).
With a snarky attitude and really questionable taste in swimwear. |
It also refers to "The Blue" (also sometimes called "The Clear", because of course water isn't really BLUE), an aquatic parallel of "The Green" (the force that Swamp Thing accesses to control plant life) introduced in comics in 1995, but not discussed a lot since its initial introduction.
So, it sounds like this new writer, Jeremy Adams (whom the internet seems to love but I've never heard of), is using this opportunity to tie Aquaman back into some forgotten pieces of his lore, rather than crazily blasting off in some new, outré direction.
I mean, you'd have to be a fool or a monster to do that. |
I am certainly happy that Aquaman will return to comics, and to finally see him get some form of water manipulation power.
Which he has had in several other media instantiations. |
Because this means that Aquaman will at last have:
BALLS! |
Filmation Studios (makers of the '60s Aquaman cartoon) knew instinctively what Aquaman needed to round out his power set: a ranged attack that didn't require FISH.
Not that that power isn't awesome, mind you. |
A bottomless source of aquatic batarangs with which to wallop enemies. And so he had his hard water balls.
I know there are some Mera-stans who think hydrokinesis should be Mera's schtick, alone. But if you look closely, Aquaman's used of HK has always been more limited and specific than Mera's. Without belaboring the details, Mera's HK works at a distance and on a larger (and finer) scale . Aquaman's HK always works the same way: he can use it to create a smallish simple weapon he's holding. One assumes his hard-water balls have a limited distance or time they can travel away from him before they dissipate.
It's perfectly reasonable for Arthur to have a simpler, more limited version of this power, in the same way that not all characters with "superspeed" or "superstrength" or "telepathy" have the same kind or degree of that power.
That discussed, there is another aspect of this cover that I want to point out and it's just as ingenious and overdue from an artistic standpoint as the HK is for the purposes of plot.
Ask a gay person what color those pants and gloves are; they will NOT say "green". |
This cover does a great job of narrowing the color palette to create a more iconic image. But the key is the main change he has made in order to do so: the formerly green parts of Aquaman's costume are now AQUAMARINE.
Aquamarine is not green. Neither is it blue. Nor, for that matter, clear. |
THAT CHANGE makes Aquaman's color scheme click into place. Because while 'orange and green' are not the most natural color combination,
(which, as Rousseau knew, evokes the jungle, not the sea) |
"orange and aquamarine" not only look very complementary, but evoke a maritime environment.
After over 80 years, that single cover image has solved Aquaman's " costume problem".
A fresh take on Aquaman by a popular creative team who know how to synthesize a new interpretation that takes some of the best aspects from previous versions, integrating them thematically and visually with his environment?
Sign me up.
I can 100% get behind this. So long as the writing doesn't try to involve the Bunn Era "Your king is pissed" mantra, I'm in.
ReplyDeleteMy impression is that the focus will be on superheroing, rather than regenting.
ReplyDeleteAnything that brings Aquaman closer to the Batman: Brave & Bold version is okay by me. And I've always liked the hydrokinesis since the Filmation days.
ReplyDeleteOk. So what powers should Aqualad/Garth have?
ReplyDeleteHe can have hydrokinesis too. Superman and Supergirl have the same powers. There's like 40 Flashes now. I'd let Garth (and Jackson) keep mystical/sorcerous abilities too. I do think that hydrokinesis should be fairly rare among Atlanteans, just to set the "superheroes" apart from the normal folks.
ReplyDelete"The idea that "powers" are these magical abstractions that can be added and subtracted, rather than natural results of particular physiologies and circumstances is really too absurd even for comics, but... we are stuck with it."
ReplyDeleteI don't remember when I first realized this, but now it annoys me to no end.
Even if you can accept Amazo, ANIMAL MAN is a trying concept.
ReplyDelete"I do think that hydrokinesis should be fairly rare among Atlanteans, just to set the "superheroes" apart from the normal folks." I have always imagined that the more outstanding aquatic powers (any not absolutely necessary to living underwater) belong to the "royalty" (which is how they became royals), and that breeding with other Atlanteans (even other royals) dampens the activation of the genes involved. Thus, Aquaman is so powerful BECAUSE his father is a human, whose genes do not interfere with the full expression of Arthur's Atlantean "super"-genes.
ReplyDelete"The idea that "powers" are these magical abstractions that can be added and subtracted, rather than natural results of particular physiologies and circumstances is really too absurd even for comics, but... we are stuck with it."
ReplyDeleteYeah. I can get behind the idea that Amazo has technology capable of duplicating biological abilities; it's a stretch, but as soon as you invoke nanotechnology and computers, anything is possible.
And I can imagine, from there, that an enhancement of Amazo technology could involve figuring out how to neutralize powers, and you hit the target with nanites to suppress their abilities. Okay, fair enough.
The ability to SWAP powers, though ... if you held a gun to my head for an explanation, I suppose it would involve reprogramming the nanites that had been suppressing abilities, to instead simulate them. This is me trying my best to make sense of what we're seeing, within the bounds more or less set up in comics.
All in all, I'd rather get hit in the head with a toy airplane or a dog.
- HJF1
@HJF1:
ReplyDeleteI've always thought that most super powers are more psychic than physical -- it's just that metahumans frequently express their power activation through physical means. So super-strength is actually telekinesis, and invulnerability is actually a mental shield, etc. Basically John Byrne's theory of Superman (yes, I know but I felt like he had some good ideas). Some metagenes give people the psychic ability to access other dimensions, like the Speed Force or various energy sources like shadow dimensions, magic, etc. So Amazo duplicates abilities by scanning and duplicating the brain waves (or whatever) of metahumans and accessing the same power sources. Start with that, and I can see Amazo broadcasting "interference" for super powers, or even placing psychic blocks on heroes. It's not going to explain everything (Aquaman's ability to breathe underwater and his super-strength have to be physical, not mental, for example).
I spend a lot of time theorizing how powers work in comics.
" I'd let Garth (and Jackson) keep mystical/sorcerous abilities too. I do think that hydrokinesis should be fairly rare among Atlanteans, just to set the "superheroes" apart from the normal folks." I agree, Bryan (although, as always, I would prefer to see magical powers, like ANY ability, being more clearly defined and delineated). Classical Aqualad essentially didn't HAVE any "powers" per se (other than enough telepathy to understand any language, which still rocks my world), other than the general "strength and toughness and water breathing" required for him to be, ya know, an underwater hero. As I have noted in previous posts, Aqualad wasn't really written to be a HELP to Aquaman; he was used as a CONTRAST more than a complement.
ReplyDelete