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The Kingdom

by Mark Waid

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1563176,413 (2.93)None
Written by Mark Waid; Art by various Continuing to look at a possible future of the DC Universe and it heroes, the young boy who survived the holocaust that consumed the farmlands of Kansas has grown up and judged Superman at fault for the destruction that he lived through. Using newly granted powers, Gog has set out on a mission to remove Superman from existence throughout all of time. Now it is up to the children of Batman, Robin, Flash, and Plastic Man to work together to save the Man of Steel and the world from the madman's quest.… (more)
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Okay so I took a break from Marvel's Exiles to read this (as I just found my copy)...which is actually very similar to Exiles.

When I originally read this, back in middle school (I think) I hadn't yet read Kingdom Come by Waid & Ross. Well. Not the COMIC. I had read the novelization and it made me sad enough that I didn't think I wanted to read the comic.

(I would read it years later and indeed need tissues)

So when I read this originally, I took everything at face value. It was pretty deep into DC's love of Elseworlds, so it was easy to convince myself the individual issues were like them.

Of the individual character issues, "Kid Flash" was my favorite. Not just because it confirmed my negative feelings towards Wally West, but also Iris was so cool to me. She refused to back down, refused to give in, refused to just...let things work out how they will. She became a hero worthy of the Fladh mantle (for good or ill).

"Nightstar", about the daughter of Nightwing & Starfire finding her own path to udnerstanding the intersection of heroism, sacrifice and mortality, was gut wrenching when I was younger and my own parents had freshly split. Now it reads a little...immature.

"Son of the Bat", about the son of Batman & Talia al'Ghul (yes...ironic considering his current son, Damien) is...honestly kind of a brat. Unlike Nightstar, who clung to an admittedly childish, but sincere belief that her father was an invincible hero and could not truly fathom a world where that wasn't true, Ibn...was a brat. Essentially, back in the late 90s Waid gave us Damien before Damien was a thing.

"Planet Krypton" didn't resonate with me as an early teen, but as an adult almost 20 years out of HS and looking back at the 'what might have beens', Rose's doubts and feelings ring fucking true.

"Offspring" and "Gog"...I just hated. So let's skip past those.

So we get to the core of this mini-series sequel to a momentous comic book event. "The Kingdom". The kind of 'hey so maybe we didn't fix this so much?' question no one asked after Kingdom Come.

It was...okay? Later Hypertime, which this whole mini-series seemed to REALLY be about, would later be importantish to the DCU. As much as anything really matters in DC before multiple reboots.

Overall this isn't horrible. There are still interesting moments strewn throughout and I certainly wish for certain ideas to come to fruition Nightstar let's goooo, but largely this isn't essential reading. Fun, but easy to miss. ( )
  lexilewords | Dec 28, 2023 |
587
  freixas | Mar 31, 2023 |
This review is written with a GPL 4.0 license and the rights contained therein shall supersede all TOS by any and all websites in regards to copying and sharing without proper authorization and permissions. Crossposted at WordPress, Blogspot & Librarything by Bookstooge’s Exalted Permission

Title: The Kingdom
Series: Elseworlds
Author: Mark Wade
Rating: 1 of 5 Stars
Genre: Graphic Novel
Pages: 232
Words: 23K

Synopsis:


From Wikipedia

20 years after the events of Kingdom Come, a survivor of the Kansas disaster is granted power by four members of the Quintessence (Shazam, Ganthet, Zeus, and Izaya Highfather), who dub him Gog. The power drives him mad, and he takes out his anger on Superman, killing him and carving his "S" shield on the ground. He then travels a day backward in time and kills him again...and again. A shadowed figure vaguely resembling the Phantom Stranger, the fifth Quintessence member, opposes this action, as Gog now intends to accelerate the Kansas Holocaust, but the other four are prepared to let things unfold; Shazam hopes that Captain Marvel will no longer have to die, Ganthet hopes that Green Lantern will avert the catastrophe and become more renowned than Superman, Zeus hopes that the ancient gods may be 'worshiped' once more as Earth seeks something to believe in, and Highfather feels that a new war may fracture Earth in a manner similar to New Genesis and Apokolips.

As Gog travels closer to the modern DC Universe, the Linear Men panic when they see that their ordered index of time is unraveling; Superman is dead in the 21st century, yet alive in the 853rd, and their instruments register no error. When Rip Hunter, acting upon the orders of the shadowed figure, tries to stop Gog from killing Superman on the day his and Wonder Woman's child is born (that being a day when 'anything seemed possible'), Gog manages to steal the infant (named Jonathan), whom he plans to raise and name Magog (in issue #2, this was revealed to be a red herring. The child did not grow up to become Magog; instead, he became the shadowed figure, whose true identity is then revealed to be Hyperman, a Hypertime-traveling superhero wearing a costume based on the costumes of his parents and his godfather, Batman).

Although the other Linear Men object to the idea of the heroes of that time travelling back to defeat Gog, Rip Hunter recruits Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman from the Kingdom Come era to stop Gog in 1998, the heroes concluding that, since innocent people will die if they do or do not take action, they will take the heroic option and go back despite the apparent loss of their own reality by having them interfere in their own pasts in such a manner. Four young heroes-Kid Flash, Offspring, Nightstar, and Ibn al Xu'ffasch-come together to try stopping Gog on their own, and are recruited by Rip Hunter to assist in his plan. When Jonathan is seemingly erased from existence soon after being rescued, Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman team up with their 'past selves' and battle Gog to a final confrontation in a "Planet Krypton" restaurant outside of reality, where they use various weapons gathered from across Hypertime against Gog. During the fight, the future Wonder Woman reveals to the Superman of the present why Gog is after him, and Superman vows that the timeline of Kingdom Come will never happen in his universe, as he strikes back at Gog, finishing the battle once and for all. As the heroes return to their proper places in time, Hyperman reveals himself, assuring the future heroes that his infant self actually hid himself within the stream of Hypertime upon being rescued from Gog, and Rip Hunter explains the existence of timelines, so the Kingdom Come reality still exists, but it will no longer be the future of the DC Universe.

My Thoughts:

Well, after my experience with Kingdom Come you'd think I'd have learned my lesson. I guess I'm either really stupid, a glutton for punishment, a Completist or A Genius the Likes of Which the World has Never Yet Seen. I'll leave it up to you to pick the, ahem, correct interpretation.

While I had none of the problems from the previous comic, I had a whole new bunch to contend with. This was not an actual miniseries by one writer and artist. It was bookended by The Kingdom and then had a bunch of new DC titles that were all #1's in the middle, and all were the children of other superheroes. Considering this was in '98, that was at the tail end of the Comic Boom in the 90's and it was easy to tell that DC was trying to get some more comics into circulation and grab what cash they could. I don't think it was considered an Elseworlds story until after the fact. None of the titles took off, nor did they deserve to.

The art was also atrocious. Well, maybe not atrocious, but pretty sad. With each book being a different title, obviously the artists changed and hence the artwork, but it never improved,it was all uniformly junk. The only exception I noticed was the Kid Flash comic. That seemed pretty sleek.

The story could have been interesting. Gog, the main villain, looked just like Magog, the villain from Kingdom Come. He was trying to kill all the possible Supermen throughout all of time. Now doesn't that sound like it has a ton of potential? Sadly, it was all wasted as the intervening comics were just as much about trying to introduce the new kids on the block as they were about advancing the storyline. Plus, it dealt with a multiverse and ever since the New52 I feel like DC over uses the reset/reboot button way too often. So my bitterness about the new direction of DC bled over into this older story. Surprise!

Kingdom Come I found abhorrent. The Kingdom was simply a bore.

★☆☆☆☆ ( )
  BookstoogeLT | Jul 13, 2020 |
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Written by Mark Waid; Art by various Continuing to look at a possible future of the DC Universe and it heroes, the young boy who survived the holocaust that consumed the farmlands of Kansas has grown up and judged Superman at fault for the destruction that he lived through. Using newly granted powers, Gog has set out on a mission to remove Superman from existence throughout all of time. Now it is up to the children of Batman, Robin, Flash, and Plastic Man to work together to save the Man of Steel and the world from the madman's quest.

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From the dark future of the award-winning Kingdom Come comes a new tale about a madman, a survivor of the holocaust that consumed the farmlands of Kansas, who threatens to annihilate Superman by killing him over and over as he works his way back through time. Now the heroes of the future must join forces with the heroes of the present to save the Man of Steel from being wiped out of existence!
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