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Harley Quinn #54: This Ain’t Funny Anymore

6.8/10

Harley Quinn #54

Artist(s): Lucas Werneck

Colorist(s): Gabe Eltaeb

Letterer: Dave Sharpe

Publisher: DC Comics

Genre: Superhero

Published Date: 11/21/2018

Recap

Harley and failed Female Fury Petite Tina go road-tripping! With their lives a roaring dumpster fire, Harley and Tina decide to get out of town for a mini-vacay, and wind up driving each other crazy instead. An unplanned detour leads them to run afoul of a new baddie called Minor Disaster, whose so-called “Disaster Dial” only causes small calamities such as texting your ex and pooping your pants. Harley and Tina must now put their differences aside to stop Minor Disaster before she spells disaster for them both!

Review

Part two of the ‘Minor Disasters’ arc sees some very dramatic developments for both Harley Quinn and her recent online popularity. After a particularly volatile video was “accidentally” uploaded showing Harley going after her own fans, it looks like her world is about to come crashing down. This moment gave writer Sam Humphries a chance to show some motherly insight, which has worked uniquely well for the series so far. Then, in maybe the most shocking part of the story, it turns out that her fans only love her more for it.

The creative team so far has managed to keep Harley whimsical while still bringing her humanity towards the surface, but this issue remains focused on the latter. These moments are followed by a scene involving Major Disaster scolding his daughter, Minor Disaster, which mirrors the previous mother-centric sequences interestingly. Overall, the issue sees Harley dropping the wild antics and unpredictable behavior in favor of more typical superhero tropes. As a fan, I wanted to see a bit more whimsy and maybe even a darker twist or plot element.

While I understand the emotional cues present are part of a larger character development occurring throughout several issues, this one in particular just seems to miss the mark in capturing some of the best parts of Harley Quinn. The artwork from Lucas Werneck has moments of brilliance, but there are also a few questionable depictions of Harley. These are minor issues *wink* though, and hopefully it will just get better from here.

Harley Quinn #54 has drama, action and a happy ending, but it just seems to be missing something. Harley’s family coming home for the holidays might be just what the series needs to ramp up the enjoyment factor though!

Final Thoughts

Harley Quinn #54 is far from boring, with plenty of family drama and action-packed devastation, but it loses some of the core aspects of Harley’s character in all of the developments. Despite this, there are some important and defining moments for Harley that fans will be interested in.

Harley Quinn #54: This Ain’t Funny Anymore
  • Writing - 6/10
    6/10
  • Storyline - 6/10
    6/10
  • Art - 7/10
    7/10
  • Color - 7/10
    7/10
  • Cover Art - 8/10
    8/10
6.8/10
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