…who is pretty much the same as the old Superboy. (sorry couldn’t pass up a reference to one of the greatest songs written by The Who). He’s emotionally and morally flawed in a major way, as evidenced by his massive failing of a test while walking around in his virtual reality “prison.” These flaws are probably the result of his evil Luthor DNA. He’s created in a super secret lab that is under investigation by Lois Lane through info supplied by her mole on the inside. He’s about to join the Teen Titans, etc. etc. About the only real difference is that the lab is somehow involved with characters and organizations last seen in Wildstorm’s Gen13, or so I’m told. I didn’t ever read Gen13. As far as being new and up to date in imagery and “real world” tech etc. about the best we get is a short shot of a realistic looking flash drive. The rest is futuristic tech and lab tanks. That’s not to say that Silva’s art is completely cookie cutter sci-fi by any means. It is crisp and clear with concise and sharp lines, solid and realistic anatomy, and decent facial expression. Rob Lean’s inks are a little thick, but that doesn’t detract from the look of the book in any way. In fact it clearly highlights the rather bland backgrounds Silva comes up with, giving it some depth. The absolute worst thing about the art in Superboy #1 is the cover. While it’s not poorly drawn, it doesn’t fit with any image in the book and is wildly wrong as far as Superboy’s physical composition is concerned. While it might be a nice 1990s throwback image, something the DCnU is loaded with, Superboy, as shown at least thus far, has no cybernetic components beyond The Matrix like plug in ports that he displays while trapped in his lab tank. Overall, there isn’t much that is bad about Superboy #1, but there isn’t much that is appealing or new either. His origin is pretty similar, his motivation and character flaws are pretty similar as well, if at least much more self-centered at this point. Besides seemingly removing the Doomsday storyline’s connections, what’s really the point here? © Copyright 2002-2026 by Toon Doctor Inc. - All rights Reserved. All other texts, images, characters and trademarks are copyright their respective owners. Use of material in this document (including reproduction, modification, distribution, electronic transmission or republication) without prior written permission is strictly prohibited. |