Underworld Unleashed: The 25th Anniversary Edition
I started out loving it. The first issue of the original three-issue miniseries was great, setting the table perfectly. We’re introduced to Neron, a demon lord who is going around collecting souls and taking them to hell. His plan is to power-up all the world’s greatest supervillains in exchange for their souls, which will lead to planet-wide chaos. Among his “inner council” are the Joker and Lex Luthor. It’s a great start and I was expecting great things from it.
I kept my hopes up even after the main storyline was derailed by the introduction of the four standalone issues. The first of which takes place on the planet Apokolips and required stuffing what felt like the entire history of Game of Thrones into a couple of pages of exposition. Unless you’re up to speed already on that whole bit of world building you may feel a bit discombobulated.
I didn’t mind these change-ups that much. I felt the crossovers might have helped to tell a coherent larger story. Only they don’t. There’s another inter-story that has Neron making more trouble in Arkham Asylum for Batman, but since he’d already broken Belle Reve Prison wide open in the first issue this seemed repetitive. This Arkham story was good as a standalone, but not as part of a through narrative. I was also really disappointed by the final issue, which had Barbara Gordon trying to figure out who was behind all the outbreaks of violence and being interrupted by Neron. Most of this issue was just profiles of all the baddies that Neron had recruited, and nothing was at stake since even Neron knew that Babs wasn’t going to go for his deal.
Then the climactic episode of the main story fizzled because it turns out that Captain Marvel/Shazam was the key to Neron’s plan but we hadn’t been prepared for this at all (Captain Marvel hadn’t even been seen anywhere in the series before this) and Neron ends up being defeated kind of easily, with no help from the army of souls he’d been acquiring. Indeed, after the first issue I think we only hear from the Joker and Luthor again briefly as they’re attempting to figure out the source of Neron’s power, which is another point that never pans out as being of any significance.
Still, if I had to give this an overall grade it would be pretty high. There’s so much good, original stuff in here, and I like the changes in art across the different stories, even if in the end things just don’t add up as well as I thought they should have and it felt like a lot got left on the table.
Is it a DC/Marvel mash up? Is that allowed? And planet Apokolips! Seriously!
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Ah no, it’s a DC title. Captain Marvel was an alternative name for Shazam.
They actually did have mash-ups though. I have a Superman vs. Spider-Man comic from back in the day.
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Very confusing. Isn’t Captain Marvel a lady and Shazam a bloke?
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Yup, I’m with fraggle, are you saying The Rock and Brie Larson are the same person?
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What’s The Rock doing there? Zachary Levi is Shazam isn’t he?
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Or was it Helen Mirren? I’ll need to check my notes.
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Lost me now.
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I think he’s having a snow day.
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Marvel Comics also has (several) Captain Marvels, one of which was a lady. And Jean Grey of the X-Men was originally Marvel Girl, just to confuse things more.
From Wikipedia:
Fawcett ceased publishing Captain Marvel-related comics in 1953, partly because of a copyright infringement suit from DC Comics alleging that Captain Marvel was a copy of Superman. In 1972, Fawcett licensed the character rights to DC, which by 1991 acquired all rights to the entire family of characters. DC has since integrated Captain Marvel and the Marvel Family into their DC Universe and has attempted to revive the property several times, with mixed success. Owing to trademark conflicts over other characters named “Captain Marvel” owned by Marvel Comics, DC has branded and marketed the character using the trademark Shazam! since his 1972 reintroduction. This led many to assume that “Shazam” was the character’s name.
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Bonkers!
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Is this the one with Kate Beckinsdale in leather pants?
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Ooh I forgot about those, got them all on Bluray, might have to do a rewatch!
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Totally not worth it. And I think the pants were vinyl.
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Haha they were fun though, (the movies not the pants).
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Bill Nighy and Derek Jacobi, it’s I Claudius but with werewolves!
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and without the shiny pants.
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A spin-off.
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I’ve always wondered how “souls” act as power ups. It’s always just assumed that they have that capability. But no one ever even bothers to try to explain how or why.
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Yeah, they certainly could have done more with that part. This was such a promising idea for a battle royale comic and it just fell to pieces.
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Sad. But that seems to be the bane of most comic writers. They have a good idea but then no idea how to execute it or finish it….
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