Wednesday, June 24, 2020

Superman: Action Comics Vol. 1: Invisible Mafia (Review)

Action Comics is the original title in which the Man of Steel first appeared way back in June 1938. The title celebrated the publication of its 1000th issue in 2018, and, after making the jump from Marvel to DC, legendary comics writer Brian Michael Bendis took over writing duties on issue #1001. Bendis's run on the title opens with Invisible Mafia, and this volume feels very much like a first chapter.

Superman: Action Comics Vol. 1: Invisible Mafia
Bendis already made his big introduction as Superman's newest guardian with The Man of Steel miniseries, a big, bombastic story oozing classic appeal. For better or worse, Invisible Mafia brings things back down to earth. Clark Kent is back in the newsroom of the Daily Planet, working alongside newer faces like gossip columnist Trish Q and reporter Robinson Goode, as well as stalwarts like photojournalist Jimmy Olson and editor-in-chief Perry White. Noticeably absent is Lois Lane, a classic Superman character and now Clark's wife. She is accompanying their son, Jon, on his rite of passage across the stars, but to everyone at the Daily Planet, Lois and Clark are just having marriage problems and taking time apart. As those rumors swirl, fires begin breaking out across the city of Metropolis, and Superman is named as the arsonist responsible, an accusation that nobody really seems to believe. This is where Bendis's story begins.

While Superman works to get to the bottom of things, Clark uses his connections as a reporter to comb through leads. Of course, the arsons are revealed to be part of a larger scheme, a distraction to keep Superman busy while a new cabal—the titular "invisible mafia"—plots in the shadows. This volume is almost entirely narrative set-up with very little payoff, suggesting that Bendis intends to play the long game with his readers. Given all the fanfare surrounding his taking on Superman, this really comes as no surprise. Bendis will be writing Superman for a long time.

There's nothing groundbreaking about Invisible Mafia, and there doesn't have to be. Not every Superman story has to be about planets colliding or stars exploding. Yet this story feels like classic Superman, marking a return to a kind of earlier status quo wherein Superman worked to save the good citizens of Metropolis from mostly human threats. "Mostly" applies here because the most memorable villain debuting in this volume is the mysterious Red Cloud, who materializes as an ethereal crimson mist with a vaguely human face. The volume's stellar art goes a long way in making this new villain instantly iconic, and Bendis sets up the mystery of Red Cloud to be a major storyline going forward.

A couple of interesting subplots thread through the volume, from Lois's secret return to political intrigue surrounding the city's mayor. Classic villain Lex Luthor gets a brief tease that will likely have greater significance in the context of the larger narrative. But, like the main storyline, these subplots are mostly introduced with very little resolution. The real joy of reading this volume lies in seeing Bendis lend his deft touch to these classic characters. There are some really clever lines of dialogue that had me smirking because they sounded like something Superman would actually say, and the newsroom antics at the Daily Planet are fodder for some real laugh-out-loud moments, most often courtesy of Perry White, the original grouchy newspaper editor.

Invisible Mafia is not the biggest or the most magnificent Superman tale, nor does it set out to be. But in terms of establishing what the world of Superman will look like under Bendis's penmanship, the volume accomplishes what it sets out to do. In more than one way, the story is a distilled version of Superman, unplugged and stripped down for a back-to-basics storytelling approach that calls to mind the kind of Superman your grandfather might see if you asked him to close his eyes and think back to the Action Comics of his youth. With art by Ryan Sook, Patrick Gleason, and Yanick Paquette, the Man of Steel looks as iconic as ever. After all the Flashpoints and paradoxes and world-shattering events that have characterized the DC Comics universe the past several years, it's nice to see Superman back in Metropolis fighting for truth, justice, and the American way.

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