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Works by Duncan Rouleau

Superman/Batman: DC Compact Comics Edition (2004) — Illustrator — 82 copies, 1 review
JLA, Vol. 13: Rules of Engagement (2004) — Illustrator — 79 copies, 2 reviews
Metal Men (2008) 49 copies, 2 reviews
Superman Red & Blue (2021) — Illustrator — 49 copies, 1 review
The Multiversity Guidebook #1 (The Multiversity, #6) (2015) — Illustrator — 7 copies
The Nightmarist (2006) 3 copies
Blue Beetle (2006) #5 - Secrets, Part One (2006) — Illustrator — 2 copies
New X-Men [2004] #29 (2006) — Illustrator — 1 copy

Associated Works

Big Hero 6 [2014 film] (2014) — Original characters — 858 copies, 5 reviews
Blue Beetle: Shellshocked (2006) — Illustrator — 176 copies, 6 reviews
Blue Beetle: Road Trip (2007) — Illustrator — 138 copies, 3 reviews
Superman: Our Worlds at War (2006) — Illustrator — 75 copies, 4 reviews
Superman: Infinite Crisis (2006) — Illustrator — 70 copies, 1 review
New X-Men: Childhood's End, Vol. 3 (2006) — Illustrator — 55 copies
Marvel Holiday (2006) — Illustrator — 13 copies
The Multiversity: Ultra Comics #1 (The Multiversity, #8) (2015) — Cover artist, some editions — 5 copies
The Flash by Mark Waid Omnibus Vol. 3 (2026) — Illustrator — 4 copies

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Common Knowledge

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Reviews

7 reviews
Access a version of the below that includes illustrations on my blog in two parts here and here.

In the first story here, Return to Krypton, the sterile Krypton of John Byrne's Man of Steel reboot is revealed to be an illusion, and the "true" Krypton is something closer to the Krypton that we saw in the comics of the Silver Age; Jor-El created fake data about Krypton for Kal-El so that he wouldn't miss his home. It's a little convoluted-- retconning a retcon always is, I suppose-- and show more probably doesn't really track with the details of Man of Steel, which I remember really liking, though it's been over a decade since I've read it. In that story, people on Krypton no longer bore children, so baby Kal-El was sent to Earth in a "birthing matrix," and thus literally born in Kansas. Return to Krypton makes it clear that Lara bore Kal-El in her body, and then he was placed in the birthing matrix to be sent to Earth, so the story maintains some details of Man of Steel while ignoring its spirit.

Superman learns much of this from a message Jor-El left in his rocket in a crystal. Then, with the help of Professor Hamilton and John Henry Irons, he is able to use thought projection to make an image of Krypton in the Phantom Zone, into which he and Lois travel to see what the planet was "really" like before it was destroyed; the story is ambiguous about whether Clark and Lois actually traveled to Krypton of the past, or if only to a recreation of it. Clark is able to hang out with his parents briefly, but soon events get crazy: he helps Jor-El adjust Krypton's orbit so it won't be destroyed, but this drains his powers so Lara has to rescue him in a rocket, but space travel is against the law, so General Zod comes to arrest Jor-El and Lara, but they all go on the run, and Zod gets angry and deposes the Kryptonian leadership because he blames their complacency for the crisis, and then all of a sudden Jor-El has been made president in a counter-revolution. Whoa.

It's action-packed (particularly part three, Man of Steel #111), which is the big weakness of it all: I feel like this story should have had more emotional weight. This is momentous! But most of the story is spent 1) massaging the continuity to the preferred form of the 2000s writers, and 2) making things explode again and again. The human story gets lost in the middle of it all. I know this is a superhero comic, but I feel like there must have been a way to balance them better than they were.

One thing I do like about these comics is their emphasis on narration. Three of the five issues use narration: the prologue is Pa Kent, while parts one and three are narrated by Lois. This keeps some emphasis on character, and I particularly liked the focus on Lois, who I think could otherwise have very easily gotten lost in the shuffle.

As for the retcons... I dunno. The Stevil2001 criterion for judging retcons is that The new thing must be at least as interesting, if not more interesting, as the old thing being replaced. I did like Byrne's Man of Steel, especially its vision of Krypton, but I'm open to stories about other forms of Krypton being told. But based on this tale, this new old version of Krypton doesn't have more to offer, but I also believe it could. Weirdly, the story indicates Superman might actually have changed Kryptonian history (wouldn't that have wiped him from existence) and kind of hints that the Man of Steel Krypton still exists. I guess I'll see if either of these ideas are picked up in Adventures going forward.

My feelings about the sequel, Return to Krypton II, are more straightforwardly negative. It seems to me that both of these storylines threw away a potentially emotionally powerful premise in favor of a combination of empty action sequences and unnecessarily complicated continuity "fixes." In this story, the Jor-El of the Phantom Zone duplicate of Krypton manages to travel from the Zone into the real world, seeking Superman's help in pushing back against a tide of fundamentalist Kryptonian zealots who don't like Jor-El's new enlightened age. Honestly, for a supposed utopia, Krypton seems like a giant shithole, perpetually on the verge of complete social collapse at the drop of a hat. They ally themselves with General Zod's lackies against the zealots, trying to save Jor-El's wife and baby Kal-El before it's too late. It just all seems like pointless action sequences.

Then in the end, we finally get an explanation for this Krypton. I thought when reading the original Return to Krypton that all this was intended to retcon away John Byrne's Man of Steel vision of a sterile Krypton; that story claimed Jor-El presented a lie of a sterile Krypton to Kal-El so that he wouldn't feel so sad about his dead homeworld. This story rewrites that, so that we learn that after the Imperiex War (I think), Brainiac 13 time-travelled to pre-destruction Krypton (which really was the sterile world John Bryne showed us) and tried to kill Jor-El to stop Superman from being born. He failed, but made off with Jor-El's diaries and the Eradicator Matrix (I guess this is related to one-time Superman villain "the Eradicator," a.k.a. the Cyborg Superman, but I don't know enough to know), which he used in concert to make a fake Krypton as a trap for Superman. Only since Jor-El was a weirdo, his diaries recorded not the actuality of Krypton, but his dreamed, ideal Krypton. So this Krypton is a real place, a planet in the Phantom Zone, but it is not the real Krypton. Phew.

It's not an explanation that convinces. Why would Jor-El dream up a Krypton where the government is a fascist dictatorship that suppresses dissent with lethal force, and where psychotic fundamentalists lurk in every corner? Like, dream up an actual utopia, dude!

And why did Return II even need to retcon the retcon? This was published in Sept. 2002; exactly one year later, Superman: Birthright would begin publication, removing Byrne inventions like the birthing matrix from continuity just as the first Return seemed like it was going to. By the time Return II came out, editor Eddie Berganza had to have known those changes were coming, so I just don't even get why this story-- which retcons the retcon of a retcon-- even exists.

And if you subtract the continuity jiggery-pokery, there's nothing here worth discussing. None of the five Super title crossovers published during Joe Casey's run on Adventures were exactly great, but Return to Krypton II is definitely the worst of them.

(Incidentally, all of these retcons would themselves be retconned! In Superman: Infinite Crisis we're told that Kal-El's backstory changed because of Superboy-Prime punching at the edge of reality, and thus not because of any of these shenanigans.)

I did like that Krypto was in it, I guess, but Superman is not always a good dog-owner.
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I ABSOLUTELY LOVE the art in this series. Unfortunately the story was so twisted with time travel that I almost never understood what was going on. It reminds me of the Steampunk comic, Chris Bachalo is probably my favorite comicbook artist, but I was lost a bunch of the time and sometimes his frames are so full and dark it's hard to tell what's actually happening. The same thing is happening here with Mr. Rouleau.

Would definitely love to collect all his work to look at, just not sure I show more would enjoy reading it. show less
½
I thought I really enjoyed this series when I read the original comics years ago, but this time I found it completely incoherent. Maybe it felt less overwhelming broken down into monthly installments? There are good bits in it, and I really liked the art, but I couldn't follow the plot at all.
Joe Kelly rocks. I really never thought I would enjoy a comic with Wonder Woman or Superman in it but he consistently delivers. The art is great (although I like Nyugen less than the other guy). The writing has current topics like torturing enemy combatants to save lives etc... I started somewhere in the middle with JLA so I'm also excited about seeing how much I like the Grant Morrison stories.
½

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Pascual Ferry Illustrator
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Ibrahim Moustafa Illustrator
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Joe Quinones Illustrator
Marley Zarcone Illustrator
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Denys Cowan Illustrator
Rian Hughes Illustrator, Cover artist
Grant Morrison Illustrator, Cover artist
Joe Prado Illustrator
Jake Wyatt Illustrator
Paulo Siqueira Illustrator
Andy Macdonald Illustrator
Dan Jurgens Illustrator
Declan Shalvey Illustrator
Marcus To Illustrator
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Jeff Johnson Illustrator
Juan José Ryp Illustrator
Jed Dougherty Illustrator
Ben Oliver Illustrator
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Giuseppe Camuncoli Illustrator
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Gene Ha Illustrator
Chris Burnham Illustrator
Jae Lee Illustrator
David Finch Illustrator
Kelley Jones Illustrator
Cameron Stewart Illustrator
Brett Booth Illustrator
Jon Bogdanove Illustrator
Chris Yost Author
Tom Nguyen Illustrator
Geoff Johns Contributor
Jaime Mendoza Illustrator
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Yoshitaka Amano Illustrator
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Paco Medina Cover artist
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Statistics

Works
12
Also by
10
Members
288
Popularity
#81,141
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
6
ISBNs
14

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