My mission: to read DC Comics' output from January 1980 (cover date) to Crisis. This week, I'm looking at the comics that were at newsstands in the week of September 6, 1984.
Atari Force #12: Conway/Helfer and Garcia-Lopez/Smith move toward the climax of the arc. Christopher Chance starts his trial on New Earth by condemning the authorities for their foolishness and trying to escape again. Meanwhile, the crew of Scanner One, still dealing with Blackjack's betrayal, are pulled toward the Dark Destroyer's ship in orbit around a planet at the edge of New Earth's system. Escaping via a smaller craft, they land on the planet in secret and discover the Dark Destroyer's horrifying antimatter bomb. They attack the Dark Destroyer's forces, but they're outnumbered, and Blackjack betrays them again. Though defeated, Martin confronts the Dark Destroyer, who removes his helmet to reveal he's Martin Champion, or at least looks like him.
There's a humorous Hukka backup story by Giffen. In the letter column, we're given the news that Garcia-Lopez is leaving the book for the New Teen Titans and Barreto is replacing him.
There's a humorous Hukka backup story by Giffen. In the letter column, we're given the news that Garcia-Lopez is leaving the book for the New Teen Titans and Barreto is replacing him.
DC Comics Presents #76: Mishkin/Cohn and Barreto team-up Superman and Wonder Woman. As weird creatures attack a demonstration of new biological research, the heroes spring into action. It turns out the mastermind behind the attacks is a woman raised by the Amazons who now uses their secret of living clay, like the substance from which Wonder Woman was created, to make warriors and monsters that do her bidding. Ultimately, it's revealed she's doing this to seize the scientist's formula as rescue herself from the potentially fatal results of her self-experimentation, but she fails and dissolves to mud in Wonder Woman's arms.
Fury of Firestorm #31: Cavalieri and Kayanan/Tanghal pick up where last issue left off. Mindboggler has Firestorm in her control, but before she can bring him back to Breathtaker, the cops show up and arrest him for his erratic behavior in Central Park. Still out of it, he's beat up in jail, before being picked up for transport to another facility. It turns out, though, that the transport is a fraud, perpetrated by Incognito who has gone rogue to prove himself to Breathtaker. Firestorm escapes after a run-in with a rival gang, but Mindboggler grabs him again and appears to be in total control.
Justice League of America #233: Conway and Patton kick off the Detroit League's debut in the regular title with a story that perhaps emphasizes their new direction: a focus on the characters and their interactions. The spotlight here is mostly on Vibe who is challenged by the Skulls to take a stand in the conflict between their gang and his former gang, El Lobos. Zatanna and Vixen step in to help, but Vibe doesn't appreciate their involvement. When local grandmotherly type Mother Windom fills in the other Leaguers on Vibe's background and the fact that his brother is now leader of El Lobos, they get involved in the turf war, easily ending the conflict--for the moment. Not exactly high stakes superhero action, but in the coda, Crowbar, former leader of the Skulls, is mysteriously transformed by an unknown being calling itself the Overmaster.
Vigilante #13: Kane is still on art, and Wolfman switches things up for a more investigative mystery sort of story, though still with a lot of action. Vigilante sets out to clear a man who appears to have murdered his partner and his partner's wife (with whom he was having an affair) by poisoning, but Vigilante doesn't buy it. In the course of proving the man's innocence, he fights with the guy twice, then causes him to fall from an airplane in a continued scuffle, shoots him, and steals his parachute, leaving his dead body to drop to the ground. But in the end, Vigilante figures out who framed the guy even though he can't tell anybody. Justice!
Wonder Woman #322: Mishkin and Heck/Maygar engage in some patching up of continuity as they bring this arc to a close. Following Eros's assertions last issue, we find out from Hippolyta (and Aphrodite) that the goddess was only able to resurrect Steve Trevor the first time he died by melding him with the power of Eros, which is why Eros now thinks he was Trevor. The manipulation of Diana's memory is revealed, but then Eros goes on a rampage, trying to kill the Steve Trevor, who (this issue reminds us) is the Steve Trevor of an alternate Earth. Anyway, by the end of this issue the current alt-Steve Trevor has the memories of the dead Earth-One Steve Trevor, so all's well, and we can never speak of this all again! Diana, disillusioned by the Hippolyta's manipulation leaves Paradise Island "forever."
In the editorial, we're told that due to sales, Wonder Woman is going bimonthly following this issue. The next issue blurb teases an appearance by the Monitor who, we are told, has been appearing all over the DCU getting ready for his role in something called Crisis: Earth.
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