![]() ![]() Tomasi and Patrick Gleason do a succinct job of explaining the post- Crisis Superman’s return. 1: Son of Superman doesn’t make this convoluted backstory too hard to understand, and writers Peter J. The New 52 Superman had never been as well-received as the post- Crisis version, though, and with Rebirth – which is basically an attempt to reinvigorate the New 52 Universe by infusing it with pre-New 52 concepts – the publisher has (again, “permanently”) replaced the New 52 Superman with the post-Crisis Superman. ![]() The catch was that the Superman to be killed off was the version introduced as part of 2011’s New 52 relaunch, which had effectively pushed the reset button on the DC Universe and “permanently” replaced the characters readers had been following since 1986 (when Crisis on Infinite Earths had similarly restarted the DC Universe) with new, younger versions unburdened by decades’ worth of continuity. In the months immediately preceding DC’s Rebirth initiative, the publisher decided to kill Superman – this time for good. ![]() ![]() Tomasi and Patrick GleasonĪrtists: Patrick Gleason, Doug Mahnke, and Jorge JimenezĬollects: Superman: Rebirth #1, Superman #1-6 (2016) ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |