ANIMAL MAN #18

Review by: harpier

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Story by Jeff Lemire
Art by Steve Pugh
Colors by Lovern Kindzierski
Letters by Jared K. Fletcher
Cover by Jae Lee & June Chung

Size: 32 pages
Price: 2.99

*Minor spoilers* Let it never be said that comics shy away from hyperbole. As the #18’s stark black cover proclaims, “This is the most tragic day in the life of Buddy Baker!” From its beginning, the strongest part of Lemire’s Animal Man run has been the Baker family, particularly since Buddy’s one of the very few–startlingly few in retrospect–superheroes to have one. Throughout the Rotworld arc his wife Ellen and his two children, Cliff and Maxine, have remained his motivation, the solid center in his increasingly concerned Ellen and especially her mother, ever the disapproving mother-in-law. In the epilogue, this tension comes center stage when, separated from Swamp Thing in the time-travel Death portal, Baker returns to Louisiana, just at the point of Maxine’s surrender to the agents of the Rot, in an attempt to save his family.

Like Snyder’s Swamp Thing, Lemire’s Animal Man eschews the completely happy ending, which the resolution could have provided. In sending Baker back in time to the crucial moment of his family’s destruction, all personal consequences of Arcane’s maniacal plan could easily have been undone, fully restoring the Baker family to their pre-Rot state. The cover’s proclamation may be hyperbolic, but it is also likely true. The tragic consequences of its events will, no doubt, reverberate for a long time in the series, both immediately and in the long view. They also make revisiting the first few episodes of Lemire’s run, which I did upon completion of #18, all the more poignant knowing the future of its characters.

In addition to the personal tragedy, which weighs heavy and grounds the issue emotionally, Lemire provides a few surprises regarding the history of the Rot’s recent conquest, as two of the Rot’s warriors are revealed to be different than expected. In the words of totem-turned-family-pet Socks, “I’ve no idea what to make of this” (Animal Man #18, p.19). Though the direction the rest of the issue takes leaves their identity and the mystery of their possession by the Rot to quick speculation, their place in future Animal Man issues is delightfully suggestive.

Story: 4 - Very Good
Art: 3 - Good

Comments

  1. This cover reminds me of an early 90’s Flash cover. Back in Waid’s run.

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