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The most awesome thing in this issue: My Three Monitors. Way in the back of the backup feature, we get a couple Monitors sounding off. "On my earth, people wear shoes on their hands and hamburgers eat people!" The pointy-ears on Vampire Monitor were pretty precious, but that hastily drawn-on mustache hanging under the nose of Industrial Revolution Monitor? Sooo cute!
Joking aside, this does bring up a question that's been in the background for a while now. Bob the Monitor is from a universe full of noble superheroes doing their darnedest, and he is pretty noble and doing his darnedest. The Monitor from the vampire universe is a vampire. Is it too much of a jump to suspect that the trouble makin' Monitor might hail from Earth-3, home of the Crime Syndicate of America? And if that's the case, that a predominately evil universe carries with it a predominately evil Monitor, don't you think maybe the other Monitors would kick this guy out of the clubhouse?
Getting to the issue itself, the search for Keith Giffen has finally ended! Which means the art on "Countdown" might hit a level of consistent competence it's thus far fallen short of. I wonder if the folks in editorial realized how easily they could avoid fans confusing this story with the most recent issue of "All New Atom" by simply dropping in a line from Ryan along the lines of "Hey, this tiny universe is oddly similar to the not nearly as tiny universe I was just in the other day. How odd". Problem solved. A new problem arises from the fact that Jimmy Olsen's costume looks strikingly like Ryan Choi's. So much so that if you were flipping through this issue quickly, you might miss the jump from the Palmerverse to Metropolis. Given the lack of action we've seen in "Countdown" so far, it might have been nice to see Mr. Action's debut a little more directly, but I'm not one to call for 22 page fight scenes.
For those of you without the energy to track these things down, the person spying on Darkseid is Forager, a member of the Bug underclass of New Genesis, who sometimes get tasked by the New Gods to run errands and generally, y'know, forage for things. He has all the abilities of a humanoid bug, which means he's the Spiderman of slave labor.
Maybe it's that I'm coming off two days of reading a paper on class, gender and race, but let's take a pause here and discuss the depiction of women in this series. We've got your scantily clad Athena recruits, your fishnet sporting Zatanna, your practically skirtless Mary Marvel and...Donna Troy. This issue we get the brief addition of Darkseid's concubine, with the throwaway line about the removal of vocal chords (prompting a pretty unpleasant discussion between the dudes over at CBR. Guys, after you've both stated you'd buy a Mary Marvel/Zatanna one-off just for the ass-shots, the "silence my concubine" jokes have got to go). And the only member of the big three who has yet to make an appearance, despite the putative importance of the Amazons in the DCU right now, is Wonder Woman. I've said it before, but let me stress it here: the inclusion of women in this series so far has amounted to poorly rendered cheesecake. This story presents multiple opportunities to develop strong female characters, and so far we have yet to see a single female demonstrate anything that even resembles agency. To run it down:
Donna- Roped into a mysterious journey by bad boy Jason Todd, who has found her doing such superheroic feats as staring at a gravestone and sitting contemplatively.
Mary- Has Black Adam's powers more or less inflicted upon her and is finding her personality overridden by them.
Holly- Shrugged and okayed her way into the Athena's Bathhouse for Wayward Girls and almost kind of raised her voice when Harleen kicked a mother and her child back out into the streets.
Add to the list Wonder Girl's bloodthirsty rant at Bart's funeral, Forerunner who is bred to be a slave and the 100% personality-free-zone that was Duella Dent and you've got pretty much the whole female cast thus far.
I haven't yet read Dini's take on Zatanna in "Detective" but she seems to have grown into more than just a pair of legs, and "52" developed Montoya (I'm not ready to call her the Question just yet) into one of DC's stronger, fully realized female characters. I'm hoping with the addition of these two to the mix, the writers might actually show us a bit of heroism from the ladies.
Of course, it looks like all of the Monitors are dudes, so I'll keep my hopes in check for now. Talk to you kids on Thursday.