Absolute Power

12676051055?profile=RESIZE_400xI've gotta say, I really liked the Absolute Power Ground Zero Special. I decided to buy this, and the main Absolute Power series (minus the sub-series and the tie-ins) on paper, waiting for the secondary stuff to show up on DCUI. And so far, I'm a fan.

This book is broken into three stories, each co-written by Mark Waid. The first shows the Suicide Squad tracking and capturing Jon Kent's boyfriend, Jai Nakamura, the son of the recent president of the island nation of Gamorra. The next shows Amanda Waller coercing D-list time-travel villain Time Commander into helping her with her plans. The third shows Waller enlisting and securing the help of the Brainiac Queen, who first appeared in the recent crossover in the Superman books. 

As I've probably written, I've moved away a bit from the anti-Waller bandwagon; I feel like her time on Earth 3 is sufficient motivation for a heel turn for someone who was already skeptical of superheroes, and while not every writer will play her on what I feel his her new moral line--I think there are some things she still won't do, as she still has protection of regular (American) humans as one of her core motivations--I can blame that on the creators, not the character. I think Waid and Dan Mora (and this series) will do right by her, in general.

And Dreamer! I honestly love what's being done with her, because it's so surprising to me. She's DC's flagship trans character, and you'd think they'd be wanting to keep her untarnished, always choosing the right thing. That's what I'd expected from DC, and also from writer Natalie Maines, who obviously has a very personal stake in the matter. But she's a much more daring writer than I'd expected (as seen in Suicide Squad: Dream Team, which this follows up on), and is taking some pretty huge risks with Nia. And having such a conflict between her and Jai is honestly the best thing ever for both characters, as well as Jon (who hasn't had a lot of great character moments since he aged up during the Bendis run on the Super-titles). I think this facet of the story will have great benefits.

The Time Commander story was fun, and made me want to go back and read his last appearance, in Batman: Urban Legend. I hope to do that soon.

As for Brainiac Queen, my only regret is that I spoiled the end of the Superman books for myself for reading this. But I like Waller's devotion to raising/indoctrinating her, and it was presented well. Ultimately, these stories give Waller very different relationships with all of her main allies: Dreamer, Failsafe, Brainiac Queen, and Green Arrow. (Who knows what his deal is? But as has been pointed out elsewhere, he's expressed distrust for superheroes for longer than Waller's been around, so there's certainly precedent...though I'm hoping for better from him eventually.)

So bring on Absolute Power! I think this will be exciting as hell.

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  • I'm on record somewhere on this site in thinking that the "Joe Chill killed the Waynes" retcon was a bad idea.

    100% agree.

    I think it's far too much to expect someone who has had the family losses Waller has suffered to have a principled stand against vigilantism. 

    She presents herself as ultra-rational and ruthless, which makes it hard for me to see her jumping to irrational, emotional conclusions and acting on them. I say it's irrational, because I genuinely don't understand how she gets from A: "my family was killed by a drug lord" to B: "All superheroes are bad." But then, her actions have been heinous -- she has murdered, blackmailed and tortured innumerable people -- and she still keeps thinking of herself as the good guy. So maybe she is irrational. 

    I do appreciate you trying to help me understand it. Keep trying, and maybe I'll get there!

  • Not reading this, but:

    Captain Comics said:

    She presents herself as ultra-rational ……

    Just because she presents herself that way doesn’t make it true.

    But then, her actions have been heinous -- she has murdered, blackmailed and tortured innumerable people -- and she still keeps thinking of herself as the good guy.

    Many bad people think they are entitled to something, unfairly deprived of it and therefore they are good. It’s “the enemy” that is bad, even if they are the police or superheroes.

    So maybe she is irrational. 

    Maybe she’s an insane killer.

  • Captain Comics said:

    She presents herself as ultra-rational ……

    Richard Willis said:

    Just because she presents herself that way doesn’t make it true.

    That's just what I was going to say.

     

    Captain Comics said:

    But then, her actions have been heinous -- she has murdered, blackmailed and tortured innumerable people -- and she still keeps thinking of herself as the good guy.

    Richard Willis said:

    Many bad people think they are entitled to something, unfairly deprived of it and therefore they are good. It’s “the enemy” that is bad, even if they are the police or superheroes.

    Too, too true.

     

    Captain Comics said:

    She presents herself as ultra-rational and ruthless, which makes it hard for me to see her jumping to irrational, emotional conclusions and acting on them. I say it's irrational, because I genuinely don't understand how she gets from A: "my family was killed by a drug lord" to B: "All superheroes are bad."

    Waller IS ruthless*, but "All superheroes are bad" isn't B for her; it's further down the alphabet.

    Consider: It is fair to say that Amanda Waller is one of the most controllingest of control freaks. So when she goes to work within the system by volunteering for a budding politician's campaign (which goes to your plaint about "establishing elected oversight of some kind"), she does it her way, by making it clear to said newly elected politician that his place is in her pocket.

    Later, she wangles her way into a government position and re-establishes Task Force X. Does she reconstitute it the way it was in the Silver Age, with a team of do-gooders fighting the paranormal?** She does not. Waller does it her way, with teams of expendable convicts she sends on suicide missions and whom she keeps in line with the carrot (if you do the job and survive the experience, you'll get time shaved off your sentence) and the stick (if you disobey orders or try to escape, you'll get a body part blown off).

    It's from there, and all the things that we've seen with her stewardship of the Suicide Squad (or, at least, you may have seen; I haven't seen what's been going on with Waller since the original Suicide Squad series ended), that gets Waller from "I need a team I can control" to "If I can't control them, then they shouldn't exist" to "Superheroes are bad" -- because they can't be controlled.

     

    * As Rufus T. Hackstabber once said, "Even you would be rotten without Ruth."

    ** I read Suicide Squad: The Silver Age Omnibus Volume 1, which collects the early Suicide Squad tales from The Brave and the Bold #25-27 and #37-39. It was painful. I'm sure MI-6 must force prisoners to read it as a form of torture. So how did I survive the experience? I'm a comics fan, that's how. We are made of sterner stuff.

  • Just because she presents herself that way doesn’t make it true.

    I phrased it that way on purpose, to see if anyone could tell me what's behind the presentation. I couldn't understand her reasoning.

    Waller IS ruthless*, but "All superheroes are bad" isn't B for her; it's further down the alphabet.

    OK, I can buy that.

    I read Suicide Squad: The Silver Age Omnibus Volume 1, which collects the early Suicide Squad tales from The Brave and the Bold #25-27 and #37-39. It was painful. I'm sure MI-6 must force prisoners to read it as a form of torture. So how did I survive the experience? I'm a comics fan, that's how. We are made of sterner stuff.

    I'd say you read bad comics so we don't have to, but I read that, too. I could hear brain cells screaming in their death throes.

    • I found myself up at 4 in the morning and re-read Absolute Power: Origins #1 and #2 ... and find I was off-base in half the stuff I wrote. Waller DID go from A: "My family was killed by a drug lord" to B: "All superheroes are bad." I think I let my memories of her history in the Suicide Squad series from back in the day override what was right there on the pages of the actual comic published in the here and now.

      Still, I think Richard nailed it: "Many bad people think they are entitled to something, unfairly deprived of it and therefore they are good. It’s 'the enemy' that is bad, even if they are the police or superheroes."

  • Absolute Power 3: Oh, man, another wonderful issues. I tried not to spoil too much here, so I'm being vauge about some things.

    So many great moments: The end of the fight with Bizarro! The secret plan for Jon… and Amanda’s genuinely maternal reaction to what happens to Braniac Queen! The secret benefactor (I was thinking Ollie, but Flash would have recognized his voice; I've heard another good guess with a connection to Waller, though...)! Aquaman’s pep talk to Air Wave! A couple of new heroes emerge, whom I know nothing about! Donna Troy actually being called Wonder Girl!

    Oh, I love it all.

    Also, I think the ongoing-title crossovers have been handled in the main series about as well as any I’ve ever seen: In issue 2, the heroes get their missions; in issue 3, we know the heroes are doing their missions; and by the end of issue 3, we find out those missions were successful! I don’t feel like I’m missing anything, and will read about those missions a month behind, on DCUI, without anything but the success of those missions being spoiled. All in all, that’s pretty deft storytelling!

    The one point I was fuzzy on was what happens with Black Alice. If she mimics magic powers, shouldn’t she have been intangible? I can’t make sense of that scene.

    Other than that, this baby was Pure Gold.

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