BOOK 136
Suicide Squad: Trial by Fire, by John Ostrander.
The Suicide Squad has become a somewhat notorious institution at DC. This ragtag group of supervillains being deployed to dangerous missions for the US has gained even greater knowledge thanks to the various adaptations of the DC universe. But how would this omnibus of the modern Suicide Squad’s original run go down?
The Suicide Squad, official name: Task Force X. Not that it can have an official name. The revival of this old concept is the brainchild of the ruthless Amanda Waller, who has brought together the worst supervillains, offering them time off from their sentences, should they survive dangerous missions. But they are, in the end, expendable, and their conflicting personalities, as well as the problems of their handlers, can be their worst enemy, more than those they face…
I have to be honest, I didn’t quite like the style of art and writing from this time. The writing is more melodramatically cheesy than what I am used to from comics these days, and some of the issues are badly dated. In addition, it feels like I’ve been dropped in the deep end with these characters, unable to form a proper attachment to them for the most part, and I feel a few more background stories could have been put into this omnibus.
Still, the stories are surprisingly mature and morally ambiguous for the time. This was, after all, not that long after Watchmen and its ilk broke new ground on such things. But it handles things very well, despite my issues mentioned above. Flag’s struggles with his personal and romantic life, Waller’s moral ambiguity, June Moon’s struggles with her Enchantress persona, and so on are compelling, as are the thrilling stories, dated though some of them are.
Overall, while not as good as I had hoped, this introduction to the original Suicide Squad (well, the revamp) was a decent one. Just wished it was a bit more…
***½
Suicide Squad: Trial by Fire, by John Ostrander.
The Suicide Squad has become a somewhat notorious institution at DC. This ragtag group of supervillains being deployed to dangerous missions for the US has gained even greater knowledge thanks to the various adaptations of the DC universe. But how would this omnibus of the modern Suicide Squad’s original run go down?
The Suicide Squad, official name: Task Force X. Not that it can have an official name. The revival of this old concept is the brainchild of the ruthless Amanda Waller, who has brought together the worst supervillains, offering them time off from their sentences, should they survive dangerous missions. But they are, in the end, expendable, and their conflicting personalities, as well as the problems of their handlers, can be their worst enemy, more than those they face…
I have to be honest, I didn’t quite like the style of art and writing from this time. The writing is more melodramatically cheesy than what I am used to from comics these days, and some of the issues are badly dated. In addition, it feels like I’ve been dropped in the deep end with these characters, unable to form a proper attachment to them for the most part, and I feel a few more background stories could have been put into this omnibus.
Still, the stories are surprisingly mature and morally ambiguous for the time. This was, after all, not that long after Watchmen and its ilk broke new ground on such things. But it handles things very well, despite my issues mentioned above. Flag’s struggles with his personal and romantic life, Waller’s moral ambiguity, June Moon’s struggles with her Enchantress persona, and so on are compelling, as are the thrilling stories, dated though some of them are.
Overall, while not as good as I had hoped, this introduction to the original Suicide Squad (well, the revamp) was a decent one. Just wished it was a bit more…
***½