Titans Vol. 2: Made in Manhattan

Titans Vol. 2: Made in Manhattan

The Return of Wally West left off with Deathstroke wondering who Wally West was, but we don’t pick up on that here for some reason. There’s just another quick cutaway to Deathstroke spying on the gang’s flashy new headquarters, the Titans Tower, which rises out of the East (or Hudson?) River across from the Manhattan skyline. I don’t know how they got a building permit for that, but surprisingly they do acknowledge that this might have been problematic.

So . . . instead of Deathstroke what we have here is the return of Bumblebee, in a storyline that has an evil company called Meta, run by the Fearsome Five, offering to take superheroes’ powers away (they’re a curse as well as a blessing, you see) and then selling them on the black market. This was five years before Facebook turned into Meta, which for all anyone knows is up to something even worse. I don’t know if there was any connection there.

I wasn’t too happy that the Titans, despite ditching the “Teen” prefix, are in fact still a bunch of undergrads. Titans Tower is just the typical superhero dormitory, with a gym and a cafeteria and individual bedrooms with posters of rock stars on the walls. They spend a lot of time eating pizza and drinking pop. There’s boyfriend-girlfriend nonsense going on with Donna and Roy (Arsenal), and Wally and Linda. They get mad at each other, kiss and make-up, etc. I found this juvenile, but that shouldn’t be surprising. I think they were still going for an adolescent demographic.

It’s a decent comic. There are two storylines. The first is the one where they take on the Fearsome Five. In the second, which was a standalone that ran in Titans Annual #1, the four junior Titans are transported to a very dark site where they meet up with their four seniors. So there’s Wally West Flash and Barry Allen Flash, Nightwing and Batman, Tempest and Aquaman, and Donna Troy and Wonder Woman. It’s unclear who was behind the abduction, but the eight heroes come together and smash their way free of the prison they’re in, which turns out to have been in Alaska.

Both stories end abruptly. The Fearsome Five are sent packing, leaving the Titans to speculate as to who was fronting them. And the ghoulish guy who was running the extraordinary rendition scheme in Alaska disappears through a dimensional doorway, where he meets the sinister force who was pulling his strings. But that’s all we get, as we never see who was behind it all.

And as I say, Deathstroke is still waiting in the wings. I think it’s time for him to start getting more involved.

Graphicalex

7 thoughts on “Titans Vol. 2: Made in Manhattan

  1. No Abra Cadabra this time? You didn’t mention Deathstroke in Vol.1 review, or Bumblebee (isn’t he in Transformers?)so presume this Volume 2 is not a follow on but a different thing.

    Like

    • Abra Cadabra was the previous story arc. He gets beaten, but as is usual in comic books you know he’ll be back. This is the next book in the series, so it’s a sequential continuation but has the team fighting new adversaries. Deathstroke just makes an appearance at the end of the first volume watching a video of the Titans, and here he’s still watching them. The next volume has him getting directly involved, and it’s not much of a payoff I have to say.

      Liked by 1 person

    • They’re the next generation! Nightwing is Dick Grayson (the first Robin, all growed up). Flash is Wally West, previously Kid Flash (nephew of the original Flash), and Tempest (formerly Aqualad) is Gareth, the adopted son of Aquaman. For Donna Troy see above response to Booky. She’s sort of WW’s daughter.

      Like

Leave a reply to Bookstooge Cancel reply