Titans Hunt #1 review

Hard-luck hero Roy Harper is having feelings of deja vu. He can't put his finger on it, but that T-shaped water tower reminds him of... something. 

When an Atlantean turns Dick Grayson's latest mission for Spyral into a bloodbath, the unnatural whirlpool into which the stranger flees reminds the former Teen Wonder of... something. 

Newborn Amazon Donna Troy has been drawn to an abandoned clubhouse which reminds her of... something. 

Actor Mal Duncan is about to collect an award when the vision of a twisting stairway to Heaven reminds him of... something. 

Addictions counsellor Lilith Clay sees two young girls playing in her waiting room and it reminds her of...something. 
Aha, I got this one. They're playing Twister. Mr Twister was the villain of the first Teen Titans story. And Dick is seeing a kind of inverse waterspout. And Mal's staircase is twisting. 

OK, Mal and Lilith weren't in that first adventure, but I'm probably thinking in the right direction. It's a safe bet Roy is thinking of top-heavy Titans Tower, the ugliest HQ in comics. Is Donna flashing back to the original Titans clubhouse, which I can't picture right now, where the Silver Age Wonder Girl lived for a time? I don't know. 

I do know that this is a niche book. It's for fans of the Silver and Bronze Age Teen Titans, the team which preceded the more successful New Teen Titans. The team that went from zany Haney teen tales to spooky sagas and ho-hum heroics. 

It's pure continuity porn, the central mystery being the connection of post-Flashpoint versions of the original Titans to their other-dimensional predecessors. Given that since 2011 DC has been actively ignoring its legacy, it's weird that they're opening the door to the past with this series, and last week's wonderful Lois and Clark. 

But open it they have, and I rather enjoyed the debut issue of Titans Hunt. Dan Abnett rises to the challenge of producing a story that makes sense, introducing his characters and plot points with short, sharp, highly entertaining scenes. My favourite moment sees Roy meet a familiar face. 
Funny. Abnett really knows how to use a page turn. When was the last time we saw the Teen Titans' prehistoric pal? It's clever that he works in a place called Ice Age. And was he ever called 'Caveboy', as Lilith's files suggest?

There's more wit in a scene in which Roy wakes up after a night of drinking - it's black, but speaks to character and serves the story. 

Abnett's sharp script is matched by the clean, pacey art of Paulo Siqueira and Geraldo Borges. The characters we've met previously in current continuity are spot on, while the debuting Mal and Lilith (I think Karen has shown up as Bumblebee in Justice League) look like their classic selves. The Dick splash has real impact, Gnaark is the sweetest cave person ever and Aqualad ...
...oh, unfortunate. Is that how Garth looks in Aquaman these days? To the barber!

Hi-Fi colours, Carlos M Mangual letters and everything looks great. The last page, in particular, is a winner. 

I'm not sure about naming this series after one of the least-loved New Teen Titans stories ever, but I do love the logo, a take-off on the early Seventies masthead, and the issue's title, 'The Brave and the Bold', a nod to the series in which Robin, Aqualad and Kid Flash first teamed up. 
An Easter egg for my aged eyes is Siquera and Hi-Fi's moody cover, which homages Justice League of America #100, the first issue I ever bought. 

So, I can't see this book having wide appeal, but happily, it's a limited series, so hopefully whatever (probably modest) sales it gets will likely be enough to let the story be told. Maybe we'll even get to see the real Joker's Daughter!

Comments

  1. I think the "hunt" in question is the seemingly endless quest this property has with finding an audience. Regardless of who is involved creatively (I certainly don't need convincing that Dabnett knows his way around a comic), every time I see a Titans relaunch my first thought is "who is this book for?" By the looks of things, that won't be changing anytime soon.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I dunno, at least for once DC aren't trying to recreate the NTT, maybe there'll be enough oldies to make this a success on less ambitious terms.

      Delete
  2. I'm sorry, I'm still snickering at "the Dick splash."

    ReplyDelete
  3. I personally enjoyed how Mal kept thinking of a "flash."

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Oho, great spot! That can't be deliberate. And I like that Mal is apparently a film composer, lots of horn section, I expect.

      Delete
  4. No Wally? Are they pretending Kid Flash wasn't a Titan?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Unlike the rest of them, Wally hasn't become Kid Flash in this universe. Hopefully he'll show up somehow anyway...particularly if they can work the Convergence Wally in.

      Delete
    2. I'm still hoping a Convergence wave or something comes along and zaps Wally into our Wally, but I guess TV won't allow it.

      Delete
  5. Count me squarely in the cohort that this book is for. I'd long since given up hope that DC would give me a Titans book I'd want to read -- Johns refashioning of Young Justice into the Titans sucked whatever joy was left out of the franchise -- but Abnett, Siquera and Borges are off to a great start.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Johns' dismissal of most of YJ, and blending out of Bart and Kon was ruddy criminal!

    ReplyDelete
  7. Bart, Kon, and Cassie -- three distinctive, fun characters that turned into miserable CW wannabes overnight.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yep, Cassie too. I don't know why he would do that to the team.

      Delete
  8. I liked this issue well enough. The pre-NTT Titans fared better here than they ever did under Wolfman. When he didn't care for or know what to do with a character, the results were always cringe worthy. Lilith's whole Bad Touched By An Angel story ruined her for years. His Kid Flash was a joke. The only problems I had was Garth's redesign had me thinking this was Nightwing's evil future self at first and Roy's alcoholism being excused as a multiverse thing rather than the serious ailment it should remain...

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. You mistook this Garth for Deathwing? Phew. Thought it was just me. There's a character I never want to see again.

      Delete
  9. They had me at Dan Abnett.

    "It's pure continuity porn, the central mystery being the connection of post-Flashpoint versions of the original Titans to their other-dimensional predecessors. Given that since 2011 DC has been actively ignoring its legacy, it's weird that they're opening the door to the past with this series, and last week's wonderful Lois and Clark."

    Loosing 2 million dollars on the New 52 probably.

    ReplyDelete
  10. I hope this book sells all right because I'm afraid otherwise DC might say that they gave the original Titans a chance and no one wanted them. As it is I wish I could do my part and pick this up, but I just can't afford it. I hope that the overall outcome of this book is either more like it or that the good things of yesteryear will merge and change the bad of today. It would also be great to have a Titans book again featuring these characters. Also, is the Titans TV series still going forward?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I believe the Titans show is happening, apparently entitled Blackbirds, but it's all gone suspiciously quiet.

      Delete
  11. Thanks. I had read "Blackbirds" might be a working title if not the actual new title but it has gone pretty silent. Maybe they're waiting to see how the rest of DC's properties go before they really commit, as we should have had some cawing and pecking by noow. :P

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment