Friday, October 10, 2025

I'm usually more ahead in my posting, but...

Sometimes, if for some reason I'm not watching Star Trek reruns, I'll put in a DVD while I'm maybe going to be blogging. But, the audio is sometimes an issue: if it doesn't have captions, for instance, I might have to pay more attention, especially for something as wacky as Kung-Fu Zombies! There was a stretch about a year ago or two when the local dollar stores were getting DVD's and even some Blu-Rays--I think they were actually a dollar even, so maybe it was a bit ago. There were a few name brand ones in there: I know I got Child's Play, Return of the Living Dead, and the 1978 Invasion of the Body Snatchers. But, there were a lot more cheap ones, and I'm having to go back through some of them and label them if they're awful, so I don't accidentally watch something like The Strangers: Prey at Night again. (Spoiler alert: it suuuuuuucked! It wasn't even my least favorite part, but the dad is pleading for his life, after his wife, Christina Hendricks, was killed: no, just kill me. You lose someone like her, you would give up on life at the earliest convenience.) 

Still, like we looked up before, the Criterion Closet has like 1500 discs in it, although a lot are probably duplicates. No way I'm going to get that many DVD's, but even the lowest end Criterion discs are like 15 bucks a pop new: I'm usually getting between three to fifteen DVD's for that! I did splurge about six bucks each for Event Horizon--the bestest horror movie I will never say an unkind word about--and, as I think H. suggested, Judge Dredd which...maybe has some good bonus features or something? I don't know if I'll watch the latter for spooky-season. Along with, um, six more movies in that Kung-Fu Zombies set, I still have the recent Nosferatu (wow, Nicholas Hoult is in everything!) and the first Black Phone; before I start digging back into Tubi or Shudder. I say that now, but I might see what they've got; and see you next week!
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Thursday, October 09, 2025

I don't see how you're going to use disaster power for your planet's energy, but I guess I'm not the alien scientist.

All the days after the Great Disaster probably run together, and this might be a typical one for the Last Boy on Earth. From 1976, Kamandi #38, "Pyra Revealed" Written and edited by Gerry Conway, pencils by Jack Kirby, inks by Mike Royer.
While Kamandi is captured by a strange band of humans--they look human so far, which means they're probably going to peel their skin off any minute--Pyra's spaceship had been shot down and crashed, and after she pulls the shaken Dr. Canus from the wreck, the alien girl tells him her story. Her people, the Zirandians, were basically fireballs that occasionally took humanoid form to build or work; but when the planet started running out of energy, Pyra was sent searching for new sources, and saw what she later learned was the Great Disaster--whatever it was--from far in space, and began investigating earth. Unfortunately, most of earth was a flaming ruin by the time she arrived, with no one that could tell her what happened. She began collecting "artifacts," up to and apparently including the Great Sphinx from Egypt, and teleporting them back to Zirandus. But, she hadn't heard back from them, in all the decades she had been there.
One of the humans of "the tribe" had seemingly been a talking baby, and the girl Arna takes Kamandi to "the stalls." The tribe was what was left of a "top secret experimental population center," breeding children that grew from infancy to adulthood inside of three years...but they would also die around five or six. Arna asks Kamandi to put his hand in a machine, and he obliges, getting surprised with a "ZAZZZK" and a numb hand! Arna tells him that's only temporary, but that he'll soon be a father! The machine took "a reading of his genetic pattern," seemingly not even taking cells? And combining them with Arna's...shades of A Boy and His Dog there; not even having kids the fun way.
Kamandi, freaked, takes off running; and Arna gives chase, not just to get him back, but because losing a prisoner would be a sign of weakness and a death sentence in the tribe; so the guards were after them both. By the time Kamandi gets to a boat, the whole tribe was after them: a gaggle of really pissed off children with guns. As usual, Kamandi's too soft-hearted to leave Arna to die, so takes her onboard, but accidentally throws the boat into full speed. Arna also picks a bad time to admit, the machine wasn't a "genetic sampler," but took a sample of his "life energy," and would've taken more and more if he had remained: Kamandi considers putting her off the boat, but then has to knock her out when they struggle over the controls. Still, as usual Kamandi's out of the frying pan, into the fire, as their boat is attacked--and destroyed--by a giant lobster! Which seems a fairly typical Kamandi cliffhanger, as the next issue blurb teases "The Air-quarium!"
This was the first issue scripted by Gerry Conway, and Kirby only had a couple left on pencils. Read more!

Wednesday, October 08, 2025

"Deep."

In Mark Waid's Fantastic Four run, there were repeated jokey references to Ben and Johnny using, and probably abusing, the time machine. Reed had put notes all over like "THIS IS NOT A TOY" and "REMEMBER THE ALAMO," as well as repeatedly asking them to leave poor Davy Crockett alone, for some reason. Whenever he wants to go off by himself, I'm positive Ben has routines set up with H.E.R.B.I.E., maybe dating back to his Two-in-One days. Reed almost certainly could override those if he wanted, but doubtless at least tries to respect Ben's privacy. Also, I know Reed likes H.E.R.B.I.E. too much to T-Bob him like the character from M.A.S.K.

If you have too many toys or watch too much TV, you might recognize the recall devices: the bigger ones are WildC.A.T.s communicators, and I've had to type a lot of acronyms today. The little white one is a GDO from Stargate: SG-1. I had another device in mind for Ben's big-button remote; the big-antenna'd thing Madame Masque was using here.  

I would love to have a time sled vehicle, but it would be probably kind of big; since it needs like seven seats or spots.  Hey, we don't have human-Ben Grimm or She-Thing/Sharon Ventura, either! 
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Tuesday, October 07, 2025

The twist wasn't Identity Crisis-level bad, but I still booed the reveal.

Don't let this put you off getting them, but the day I got my shots, I felt pretty good and had fun getting DVD's the rest of the day; then the next day was really muddled through work and had a brutal headache in the afternoon. Then I took a nap, read some comics, and am all better? Even if they weren't my favorite comics: from 2019, Event Leviathan #1-6, written by Brian Michael Bendis, art by Alex Maleev.
This feels mean to say, and might not be completely accurate, but it feels like Bendis is following the same path as Chris Claremont, and maybe even Jack Kirby: coming over from Marvel, they were seen as a big get for DC, then their DC stuff maybe didn't take off as expected. (Were the New Gods or the Demon big for DC at first? Sure, they made hay off of them over the years, but...) Event Leviathan was a spy/detective story, as the detectives try to figure out, what happened to all the spies? The big spy/clandestine organizations of the DC Universe--Argus, Spyral, the D.E.O., Cadmus, and probably Kobra on the bad guys side--are all seemingly wiped out; everyone that worked for them gone, even the buildings destroyed. Amanda Waller and Sam Lane are both attacked, with Waller disappearing and Lane hospitalized after a heart attack. Batgirl and Green Arrow are taken, with GA returned and Batgirl offered a spot in the new organization Leviathan was putting together. Several people are framed or set up as patsies, including Steve Trevor and the Red Hood. Even Lois is seen as a potential suspect, or a red herring, by some.
With Superman gone for part of this, Lois Lane teams up with Batman, and they put together a team of detectives to work the case: Plastic Man, the Kate Spencer Manhunter, GA, the Question, and Damian. Lois also sets up a group of mostly magic-types to work it as well: Zatanna, Constantine, Ralph Dibny, Harvey Bullock, Deathstroke. Damian maybe figures out the motive, telling a story Alfred had told him, about how being a spy largely blows: like so many jobs, it maybe isn't about what you actually accomplish, as much as it's about looking busy. Still, Leviathan seems to be going out of his (or her!) way, to avoid a big body count: it's implied that most of the missing spies joined him (or her!) in a mission to make the world for-real better, by revealing everyone's secrets, all at once. Still, I don't think Leviathan's reveal was fair play, even if you had been reading DC comics non-stop since the mid-80's or longer, but there are clues! Spoilers after the break! Batgirl was offered a job: Leviathan had worked with her as Oracle before, almost from the start. Bullock had been involved with Checkmate back in the day, which had a crossover with Suicide Squad and some other books. Manhunter realizes she's being set up as a suspect, and her tech is bugged with super-science. Leviathan tries to explain his goals to Superman, and reveals himself, as Mark Shaw, the 80's Manhunter! Making this like his second heel turn, after being used to kill some of the others that had used the name in Kate's book. Sam Lane had become aware of the discontent in the intelligence communities, with intelligent and good-intentioned people frustrated by never getting anything done: he had meant it as warning, Mark took it as a roadmap for action. He tries to turn Superman, revealing that Spyral had files for contingencies labeled--apparently literally--"things to do in case the Son of Superman hits puberty badly."
Actually, Mark probably had some heel-turns before I started reading him: he had been the Privateer and the Star-Tsar in old Justice League of America issues. I don't love the new mask at all though; either the full Leviathan one or the partial eyepatch like one, which maybe is a callback his Privateer days? Lois Lane writes an expose revealing Mark's new identity, but she didn't really have to do a lot of investigative work: he told Superman, who tells her, fairly straightforwardly. There's also a bit of Manhunter history, which New 52 either glosses over or outright cuts out Millennium: the Manhunters were basically the Green Lantern Corps before Green Lanterns, and had liberated multiple worlds...just not earth, which Shaw describes as "unfair," "total chaos," and "a circus." He's not wrong, but good luck bucking that status quo with Superman, Batman, etc. protecting it.
I can't quite tell if this is something anybody could've figured out: somebody had told me Manhunter was in this, but I assumed--rather, hoped--they just meant Kate Spencer. Plotwise I might not love it, but Bendis's real strength is dialogue, and there are some zingers here and there; although there's too many characters for anyone to get a lot.
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Monday, October 06, 2025

I mentioned a bit ago, not being real up on current Batman continuity. But, I had a random issue from two years back handy; let's see if that does anything. From 2023, Batman #136 (Legacy #901), "Dusk to Dawn" Written by Chip Zdarsky, art by Belen Ortega.
I was trying to remember an issue, I want to say after "War Games," where Bruce takes a couple drinks, and everyone seems to think that was the worst thing in the world he could ever do; but if you drink every time he says "I'm fine" this issue, you will get more messed up! After a multiversal trip, Bruce gets a checkup from Mr. Terrific, and physically he's doing well; but emotionally? The wedding with Selina had recently fallen through, the Penguin was supposedly dead and that activated Batman's robot "Failsafe" against him, there was a multiverse full of Jokers out there, and Batman was losing time to his backup personality Zur En Arrh, who tells Bruce that Batman can't be weak. Batman gets back out into Gotham to intimidate the Penguin's kids, who were moving into illegal gambling there; then visits the incognito Selina at her favorite bagel shop. She had just broken out of jail, and Bats wishes she had let him use his lawyers to try and free her legally; but Selina is a bit more hands-on than that, and wanted a fresh start, not unlike the Penguin, who had faked his death for just that...Batman is stunned to hear that, since the Penguin's "death" had set Failsafe on him and his family. While he wishes they didn't have secrets from each other, Selina accurately points out they were both "all secrets," which prompts Bruce to admit he had just been in another universe's Gotham, where he fell for another universe's Selina, who betrayed him. That feels like a bit much, and Selina's less mad about that, then that Bruce has secrets even from himself.
After Selina leaves him in the rain, Batman gets an alarm message: someone was at Wayne Manor, where he didn't currently live. (And Alfred's still dead? Feels like that's lasted a spell.) He races there, expecting maybe the worst, since Zur En Arrh had built a backup Batcave under his; but instead finds the kids. All of them, from Dick down to Duke. They wanted to have breakfast with him, to see how he was: Bruce keeps it together, but inwardly is almost panicked, that he can't see what's coming next, he was blind as a bat...
Also this issue: "The Plans Below" Written by Chip Zdarsky, art by Jorge Corona. Some time back, when Alfred was still alive and Batman much newer, Zur En Arrh takes over for a bit, to test the Failsafe robot. They seem to agree there were lines that Batman, as a concept, couldn't cross; but Failsafe also seems to have an existential dilemma: if Batman goes too far and it stops him, then what does it do? Zur En Arrh tells the robot to await further programming, then lets Bruce/Batman take over again, after telling him to "be better" than taking hits from random thugs.
Coming into this cold, it felt familiar? Possibly because some bits reference other stories: I'm not sure I read all of Grant Morrison's Zur En Arrh stuff, but Failsafe feels like a callback to Mark Waid's "Tower of Babel." That and as usual, Batman has support just about everyone else in the multiverse can only wish for: a cadre of sidekicks and tech support, contacts with the JSA and JLA and everyone else; and yet he still goes it alone, because he's Batman. Geez, even his backup personality seems to work with others better, come on. Also, although we only see his early form this issue, and the clock is running out for McFarlane's DC license, there's a Failsafe figure coming. Reading the bio there just made me more angry at Bruce and his overplanning. Read more!

Friday, October 03, 2025

If even Thunderbolt Ross admits "yeah, that was a bad decision," you KNOW it's bad.

During the Red Hulk/Thunderbolt Ross era of...Thunderbolts; there's an issue--#7--where the rest of the team--Deadpool, Elektra, the Flash Thompson Venom, and the Punisher--decide they've had enough and try to jump him. And get clobbered, just shellacked. And Ross even had a secret weapon in reserve, one that even worried him, as he discusses today with Flash: from 2013, Thunderbolts #13, written by Charles Soule, art by Phil Noto.
On this team's first mission, Mercy had slaughtered a band of armed rebels, effortlessly and somewhat thoughtlessly; and Flash finally confronts her on it. She tells him, he no longer interests her: maybe once, when he had lost his legs and wanted to die, but now that he had "this creature," the Venom symbiote...testing a theory, Mercy tears the symbiote off Flash. Although he wants it back, Mercy can see he no longer wanted to die, so swipe left, bored now. Taking the symbiote back, Flash stomps into Ross's office...is it weird that even as vigilantes, Ross still has a desk and files like he was still a general? Ross downplays Flash's accusations of him "keeping a monster," since hey, what was one more? But he was unaware, and mildly dismayed, to hear Mercy had taken out those rebels, even if they probably weren't good guys. The amount of control Ross had over the rest of his 'team' was largely contingent on if he, as the Red Hulk, could currently reach them; but that didn't work on Mercy; and he tells Flash her story, as much as he knew.
Mercy had fought the Hulk--"the other Hulk"--and lost, going into a dormant, coma-like state. (Ross describes it like she had lost a punch-up, like she was the Abomination or something; but I believe it was more that Mercy wasn't able to 'help' the Hulk by putting him out of his misery, and she didn't know how to deal with that.) The Army had tried to study her, but learned nothing, and basically walled her up and left her. Ross describes the Army as like a "hoarder," and says he himself hung on to stuff like that...just in case. He had taken a couple soldiers with him, but didn't know one had just been left by his wife, and was pretty wrecked by it: enough that Mercy could feel it, killing him, then disappearing. Much later, as the Red Hulk, Ross investigated a report from the Himalayas, of a strange temple, where travelers went not in search of wisdom or healing, but to die. Mercy had taken a Kali-like form, and was pretty happy with her set up: people that wanted to die came to her, she killed them. So, what's the problem? Ross was still mad over the loss of his soldier: he was depressed, sure, but he probably would've come out of it. He thinks he can stop her, but killing everyone that come there to die, Mercy picks up enough juice to launch the Red Hulk off of her mountain. It was a good hit, but he recovers, climbs back up, and causes an avalanche to crush her temple.
Appearing as a young woman with purple hair--fairly normal looking, not alien or distorted like she maybe did back in her early Hulk appearances--Mercy tells him, now she had to go back out into the world, probably killing all willy-nilly. Ross makes a judgement call, that he admits to Flash was not a great decision; offering her "all the death you need" with his Thunderbolts. Mercy agrees to stay...for as long as she was interested. Neither Ross nor Flash now, had any idea what to do with Mercy: they couldn't control her, the best they could do was maybe point her at targets that deserved to die. Although, if said targets didn't want to die, did Mercy have any power over them? I can see the creative team maybe wanting a player on the team that Ross couldn't just Red Hulk over, but Mercy was a wild card with vague rules. And there would apparently be some reveals for her later, that I think make even less sense? She seemed possibly alien in her first appearances, or perhaps a metaphysical manifestation like Death; later in this series she would be neither. And I think Ross might make more bad decisions regarding her then... Read more!

Thursday, October 02, 2025

The current Space Ghost book from Dynamite? Pretty good! The current Green Lantern books...um. Hmm. I know I had picked up one recently with a fun cover that wasn't as fun inside, so I'm not as sure. Today's book: back on the fun side, mostly! From 2017, Green Lantern/Space Ghost Special #1, "The Wonders of Space" Written by James Tynion IV and Christopher Sebela, art by Ariel Olivetti. Olivetti had done other Space Ghost stuff for DC and did the main cover for this one, but this is the Doug Mahnke/Christian Alamy variant.
Coming from their respective dimensions, Hal Jordan and Space Ghost land on a world in a darkened void, that believed it was alone in the universe and that there was no other life anywhere. They were becoming dicks about it, and the paid have to team up to help a scientist and his niece prove there was more to the universe (no Prime Directive for them!) although the scientist dies after getting to see the stars for the first time.
Also this issue: a deep cut from Hanna-Barbera, and a lesson in television history, from Howard Chaykin: Ruff 'n Ready! The pair had been the first color Saturday morning cartoon, Ruff the smarty cat and Reddy the dimmer dog; but they were pals instead of foes. In Chaykin's version the pair were stand-up comics, who find out their former partners were stealing their bits, which inspires them to team up themselves. It's not like the pair were Tom & Jerry, so there's probably more leeway, but there are jokes I'm surprised Chaykin got away with!
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Wednesday, October 01, 2025

"Busywork."

Part of the notion of this one is maybe from a book that's aged like milk: Warren Ellis's Ultimate Fantastic Four run. Instead of being from the Negative Zone, Annihilus was from the universe below ours...however that works...a universe nearing the heat death Mobius describes. So, Annihilus and his buggos were a little anxious to move up to a dimension that was warm! (That is one of the few things I recall from that run, except for the Ultimate FF being squarely in bed with the military-industrial complex: U-Reed, later the Maker, gets out of trouble by mentioning all the military applications for what he had just discovered, and T-Bolt Ross changes his tune right quick.) One of the last episodes of Star Trek: Lower Decks also mentions multiversal travel being a wash: in that theory, if you open a hole into another universe, another hole will open somewhere else to balance the equation. ("Fissure Quest.") Of course, in comics, particularly Marvel comics that maybe try to explain the physics of the impossible, I think sometimes the explanation just leads to more questions.

For instance, I forget where exactly the Time Variance Authority is: it's not at the end of time (that's Vanishing Point over in the DC universe!) but somewhere outside of it, right? Pretty sure there are rules regarding relative time at the TVA, to keep people from leaving, then returning before they left and creating paradoxes all over the place.
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Tuesday, September 30, 2025

The "serious breach of galactic law!" isn't on earth. At least not yet.

My local Comic Book Shop does a great job of presentation, and has two other locations that are hubs for card gaming; but you know me: I'm there for the cheap comics, and those they can throw in a pile and I'll root through them like a raccoon through your trash. Recently, they've even had some bona-fide quarter comics: old boxes full of them, pulled from storage, ready to be dug through again. Although, I find something like this, and I wonder why I missed it before: I haunt the cheap books! Was...was I sick? Anyway, at least we finally get today's book: from 1981, Captain Victory and the Galactic Rangers #1, story and pencils by Jack Kirby, inks by Mike Royer.
The GCD calls this the first creator-owned comic: that might not be strictly true, since Joe Kubert retained rights to TOR back in '59, and Simon and Kirby himself owned Fighting American as well. But this was new, in a retro sci-fi way: in deep space, Captain Victory and his crew discover another earth-like planet has suffered a "takeover," stripped of resources and ruined by invaders. Although he calls his executive officer Klavus a hothead, the Captain still straps a "portable command unit" to his head and gets up to the bridge, despite repeated warnings that it would come under heavy fire, since the enemy "hated his guts." The portable command unit might seem a bit silly and dated now, but you know, it was probably solid-state, resistant to jamming, decent head protection--eee, maybe not, Captain Victory is killed like nine pages into this thing, but the crew fights on, since this maybe wasn't an unusual happening. Meanwhile, on the other side of the planet, the Lightning Lady makes her escape: she seems somehow sad to have had to kill Victory, and wants to create a hive somewhere the Rangers won't find them. Her regent has found a planet, out in the proverbial sticks, that might suit them...
Meanwhile, as you might expect, Captain Victory is revived in a new clone body--his tenth! Klavus mentions he could run out of them, but the doctors seem to enjoy the idea that now "our idols can die with magnificent regularity!" Kirby may have been on to something there. After deploying a "world-killer" to destroy the hive planet, Victory and crew take off after the Lightning Lady, catching up to them on earth. Which isn't a big dramatic reveal there, since we already knew that's where the Insectons were headed, but it's still like a page turn and Victory's on earth, talking to a couple highway cops in Colorado, as his dreadnaught "Tiger" fires into the hills at the unseen enemy. I think the cops serve a narrative purpose: somebody for Victory to talk to there, that would need explanations and be suitably impressed by the goings-on; as opposed to Klavus, who might be a bit of a buzzkill. It seems like he should be Admiral Victory, but that just doesn't have the same ring. I hadn't read this series before, but got like six or so from the quarter box. Kind of hoping more turn up! I had seen Captain Victory before only briefly, in the tail end of the abortive Kurt Busiek/Keith Giffen Kirbyverse crossover Victory #1. His uniform (and hair!) seems less bombastic there, almost like fancy navy; kind of like the transition from original Star Trek to the Star Trek II uniforms. Victory is also seemingly taking over earth, but also perhaps without malice: it's for our own good, we're stupid baby primates. Can't really argue with him there. Read more!

Monday, September 29, 2025

A week or two ago, I picked up a batch of McFarlane DC figures, which I don't always since I don't usually love the scale, but he was doing a Metron and I didn't have the DC Universe Classics version. It would've been more expensive, but I wonder if I shouldn't have held out for the DCUC: McFarlane's Metron doesn't sit as well, the chair feels a smidge small, and is open/unfinished on the back side. Now granted, McFarlane probably figures who's going to open that thing, and who would even display the back side; but it still feels like you're getting about half of the Mobius Chair. (There is a chase version in black, for reasons.) Also, for those of you keeping track, this is like the third bald McFarlane figure I've bought largely for their chair, after Black Adam and Lex Luthor, although they were both seriously marked down--wait, is Metron bald under his little hood-cap-whatever? Also, I forget why Lex was in, as Vixen put it in a year-end post, "Darkseid-Superman cosplay", but he's got at least part of that going in today's book, which was sitting in the blog pile for some time because I had five issues and no goddamn idea what order to read them in, if any. From 2016, Justice League: Darkseid War: Lex Luthor #1, "The Omega Judgment" Written by Francis Manapul, art by Bong Dazo.
I'm really not up on New 52-era Justice League, but I think this was from a stretch where Lex was, at least in practice, a member of the League: I could be wrong on the reasoning, but I think his argument was, earth was his home and he could defend it just as well if not better than any stupid Kryptonian, especially since he wouldn't be encumbered by stuff like "morality" or "laws," so nyah. I don't know if they fully committed to the bit, and made Lex an official, card-carrying member; or if they left it open so when the inevitable backslide came they could say he was never "really" a Justice Leaguer. This issue, with Darkseid allegedly dead, Lex had the Omega power; and was being instructed by a woman named Ardora, who may have been one of the "Lowlies." She wanted Lex to use the power against those still enforcing Darkseid's rule, but also makes it clear she would stand beside Lex, but not beneath him. Lex then wonders if others would follow him, what did he need her for, and tries to use the power to murder her. Not being in control of it yet, he blows up most of a rock face, leaving him hanging off a cliff.
There are several flashbacks this issue, that try but maybe don't quite explain why Lex is the way he is: his dad leaves him to get himself out of a dry well after he falls in, telling him only the weak ask for help, "the strong find a way to succeed." Later, Lex tries to browbeat Perry White into killing a story, and is furious at Perry's defiance. (Luthor also says he had asthma as a child, which I'm not sure has been mentioned before or since?) Later still, Lex lets himself fall, rather than let Superman save him: I'm not sure how Lex made it out of that one, unless Superman still saved him regardless. Ardora tries to get Lex to simply ask for help, but ultimately has to go a step further, and jump off the cliff and fall with Lex, which ultimately gets him to accept help and opens him up to the Omega power, saving them both. Ardora tells him, gods need not be alone, and introduces Lex to his army...of Parademons! (They look impressive, but remember, as usual, conservation of ninjutsu rules apply: one Parademon is a terrifying, implacable ogre. An army of them are creampuffs.)
I grabbed four other Darkseid War books from the dollar bins, but didn't get the Darkseid War Special, which is probably the conclusion--no, looks like it ran in the regular book from #46 or so to #50. Shoot, I think I have some JL #50's, but not that JL #50? Oh, comics. Read more!