Home / Detective Comics #1050
Detective Comics #1050 has been added to your cart.
I'm just here to review the 'World's Finest' portion of the book, but if you need something on paper for the rest, the main story is drawn by Ivan Reis, gorgeous to look at, and a confusing mess of flashbacks. It is not intended to be new reader friendly.
Next is part of a Scarecrow story, very well written by Matt Rosenberg and clearly (if not appealingly) drawn by Fernando Blanco. It's fine.
So, World's Finest...
There's a suprising amount of exposition here for a Mark Waid DC story. These are characters he knows very well, and for his big return to DC, this could be considered either pedestrian or lazy.
I think its neither.
Instead, I think it is a deliberate move to make this story, this TITLE (starting next month True DCeivers!) into something that works for the casual reader, the new reader. If you don't know a thing about Metallo, you'll know everything you need to by the time you're reading superhero Pulp Fiction happen. If you don't know anything about Poison Ivy, you'll get a very uncomplicated version with the main bells and whistles all intact. The art by Dan Mora is big, bombastic super hero stuff, blue cape yellow chest symbol Batman swinging into Gotham, a bright blue and red Man of Steel, and a fiesty, loyal Robin willing to take on the worst to save the best.
IF your reaction to that is "Well, I've read all THAT before...", I get it. Let me try to give you a reason to stay onboard. Comics, ALL comics, need new readers. Last year was a great one for the industry in spite of Covid, but we, the comic reader 'we', want that to continue. That means new readers, new faces, opening doors and walking to racks. When someone comes in for the first time in March and says that they want to read Batman, DC has provided what looks to be a perfect book to put in their hands. Think back, remember your introduction to these characters- someone is going to have that same reaction because of this book.