


Adventure Comics #5The main story may have been a “Blackest Night” tie in, but the focus on Superboy-Prime holds more weight than the always popular zombies also featured.
Superboy-Prime was a major player during the Infinite Crisis, his role was that of a super-powered pawn of Alex Luthor to recreate the Multiverse. Since his reemergence, S-Prime has been portrayed as a spoiled brat who’s super-powered temper tantrums ended the lives of many characters of the DCU. After Infinite Crisis, S-Prime was a member of the Sinestro Corps and then led the Legion of Super-Villains before being exiled back to his proper universe Earth-Prime. Earth-Prime is our Earth where the DCU heroes exist only in comic books, the same comic books that show Superboy-Prime as a villain. Last Week In Comics (LWIC):
I enjoyed reading about Superboy-Prime trashing the DC Comic offices, but what was even better about this comic was the short story setting up the next arc – Conner Kent, the current Superboy, vs Lex Luthor.
Amazing Spider-Man #614Recently Electro returned to NYC broke, grumpy, middle aged, with uncontrollable powers. Ticked off that he lost all of his investments from the money he stole in the past, he created a couple of viral Youtube videos encouraging the people that were hit by the recession to stand up against the large companies and their government bailouts. Targeting the DB (formerly the Daily Bugle) and Dexter Bennett specifically, Electro makes a deal with the publisher that he will back off if he pays. Using the “blood money” from Bennett, Electro pays the Mad Thinker to cure him of his now uncontrollable powers. Instead of removing them, the process did the opposite – Electro became supercharged. LWIC:
Before the DB (formerly the Daily Bugle) was destroyed, Bennett gave the property and business back to the original owner – J. Jonah Jamison. With Jamison back in control of the Bugle, even though there is no physical building, and the formation of a team of super-villains this comic was a great read for the setup of the next storyline alone.

There was a time before “cross-company” mandated crossovers when Super-Heroes “use(d) their powers to police day-to-day crime while also combating threats against humanity by supervillains, who as their name implies are criminals of ‘unprecedented powers’ in the same way that superheroes are crime fighters with ‘unprecedented powers.’” (source Wikipedia) Batgirl, while tied into continuity, steers away from the “company-wide” take on storytelling and returns to traditional take on super-hero comics. LWIC:
This book was easily the BEST COMIC OF LAST WEEK because, unlike the other Batbooks, the legacy of Batgirl isn’t being continued by Stephanie Brown, its being reinvented. This comic is just a true coming of age story for a new type of hero; a type of hero who existed before and was recently forgotten.
