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Superman #11: The Unity Saga: The House of El (pt. 5)

8.7/10

Superman #11

Artist(s): Ivan Reis, Joe Prado & Oclair Albert

Colorist(s): Alex Sinclair

Letterer: Josh Reed

Publisher: DC Comics

Genre: Action, Drama, Space, Superhero

Published Date: 05/15/2019

Recap

Jon Kent has just finished explaining to Superman where he’s been and why he’s suddenly been aged up. Superman, with a serious mad-on for his dad, sought out Jor-El. Only to find him at the centre of a war between Thanagarians, Khunds, and Triliums. If that’s not bad enough Zod and Rogol Zaar.

Review

This issue only moves forward by a few inches. We get a little insight on how Zod and Rogol Zaar escaped the phantom zone before jolting straight into an epic, action-packed space battle. Attempting to broker peace so he can get a grasp on things Superman is forced to fight instead and the battle rages on.

People complain that the recent Knightmares story line in Batman was Tom King having it both ways. But I’m yet to hear stern words about Bendis writing multiple branches of the same tree. Jon Kent being aged up, not terrible, also isn’t popular and doesn’t lend itself to improving this story. It worked as a shock but when that wore off fans realized they were happy with the adventures of Jon when he was a boy.

But that’s OK because there are other books where this hasn’t taken effect right? For now. So we get Teen Superboy. Except we’re getting the one true teen Superboy over in Young Justice. Written by Bendis I might add. Bendis is doing fine writing some space adventure for Superman, but he’s also showing over in Action that he really knows how to write Superman at a higher level.

Does any of this mean this issue isn’t worth your time? Not at all. While there isn’t anything really crucial here it’s not like Bendis hasn’t stretched a story into more parts than it needs before.

It’s just that every other issue there’s another layer added to proceedings. So much so that it feels like this thing could collapse under its own weight. When really if there was less fat on this it would have worked so much better.

Ivan Reis though, as with Patrick Gleason’s Young Justice, draws one hell of an issue despite the flaws of the writing.

Man does he draw one hell of an issue. There’s something like an amalgam of George Perez, Jerry Ordway, and Dan Jurgens in his artwork. Even if you’re not one for DC’s cosmic leanings he uses Superman’s power set and renders his character traits so effectively it’s a wonder to view.

No matter whether you’re for or against Jon’s growth spurt Reis draws him so well you suspend judgment for the time being.

The art really elevates an OK story and revels in the ‘more is more’ edict to present the reader with truly epic scale rife with creativity.

Final Thoughts

Final Thoughts: It isn’t that this is a bad issue. It just feels like this storyline doesn’t need to keep hitting critical mass every issue. Bendis isn’t writing his usual page filled with snappy dialogue and long exchanges here, but you wouldn’t even notice because there’s so much going on. Luckily Ivan Reis is getting an overdose of a yellow sun because his pencils, backed by Prado, Albert, and awesome color work by Sinclair, are seriously superstar stuff.

Superman #11: The Unity Saga: The House of El (pt. 5)
  • Writing - 7/10
    7/10
  • Storyline - 6.5/10
    6.5/10
  • Art - 10/10
    10/10
  • Color - 10/10
    10/10
  • Cover Art - 10/10
    10/10
8.7/10
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