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JLA: Rock of Ages - VOL 03
 
 

JLA: Rock of Ages - VOL 03 [Paperback]

Grant Morrison
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (21 customer reviews)

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Front Cover | Copyright | Excerpt | Back Cover
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21 Reviews
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4.0 out of 5 stars (21 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4.0 out of 5 stars An excellent time travel story, Dec 18 2006
This review is from: JLA: Rock of Ages - VOL 03 (Paperback)
These were originally published as JLA #10-#15.

The story throws a few large curves in the beginning. The unexpected part of the Justice League is that all of the characters have their own story lines, so major events like Wonder Woman dying and Superman turning into pure energy contained in a blue and white suit happen outside of the JLA stories. But having Aztec join the JLA in his own story, not in a JLA story is asking a bit much of the reader (at least he has the grace to leave the JLA in a JLA story!). This should have been handled in the flow, kind of like the old Green Arrow's son taking over his place when the JLA fought the Key.

The other major twist is that the plot starts out as a battle with the newly formed Lex Luthor brainchild The Injustice Gang. This would have been quite ho-hum IMHO. I am quite happy that it took a mind-bending turn into back and forth time travel and multiple-dimensions, in a story worthy of our heroes. The ending of the story is a little forced, but the storyline gives the members many situations to show who they are beneath their powers, which is what makes the League a great book.

Our favorite panels: my son's is page 129, an excellent sketch of J'onn, Superman and Batman with Plasticman in the background. Mine is page 50, Bruce Wayne and Robin in the batcave, with Bruce, mask off, half way being Bruce and halfway being Batman.
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4.0 out of 5 stars GREAT JLA STORY BY GRANT MORRISON, April 30 2004
This review is from: JLA: Rock of Ages - VOL 03 (Paperback)
The Rock of Ages storyline, which collects issues #10-15, kicks off with an audacious claim to be the ultimate JLA adventure. It very nearly succeeds in that respect. Grant Morrison tells an engaging if sometimes confusing split-level tale concerning time travel, the philosopher's stone and a glittering cast of enemies. With a little patience, it's a quite decent adventure.

The premise is a setup for a battle royale between a Wonder Woman-less JLA (she "died" prior to this adventure) and Lex Luthor's Injustice Gang. Luthor has his hands on the philosopher's stone, a gem of incredible power that he can bend to his will. He uses it to send hard-light constructs to the JLA Watchtower to distract the league. Then the Genesis Wave hits the Earth, and various and sundry spectacular confrontations between the bad guys and the good guys ensue. To spice things up a little, Luthor has surrounded the watchtower with 12 nuclear warheads set to go off.

Of course, Batman figures out the mastermind behind the attack and plots a strike against the Injustice Gang, which includes the Joker. Metron, or an evil version of him, makes an appearance and informs the league that they have to locate the philosopher's stone and destroy it before it fall into the hands of Darkseid.

After splitting up to tackle the enemy on different fronts and having some vague, loopy adventures through time that don't really add anything of significance to the plot, Aquaman, Green Later and the Flash regroup at a point in time 15 years removed from the start of their battle. Darkseid has succeeded in taking over the Earth and destroying many of its heroes.

The three manage to achieve a pyrrhic victory over Darkseid and travel once more through time to the present, albeit aged beyond their years, in order to get a message through to the league not to destroy the stone. The hero Aztek works frantically to disarm the nukes while Batman, Martian Manhunter and Superman attack the Injustice Gang's satellite tower. Plastic Man works from inside the Injustice Gang as a counterspy, though his simply being accepted into the gang stretches credibility just a bit.

The destruction of the stone is what's responsible for this mess and for Darkseid's taking over the Earth, though exactly how it ushered in such a monumental event is unclear.

The biggest problem is keeping all the plotlines straight. They come together, pull apart and run parallel for a bit, then come back together again, but without benefit of smooth transitions.

The dialogue is at times about as subtle as a stomach pump, and the action, while eyepoppingly drawn with a generous and loving hand, is hard to follow at times, though some major action sequences are very well done. The strong visual content is one of the book's strengths. The heroes have rarely looked more powerful and heroic and just plain fantastic. The colors are deep and rich, though the women don't look quite as good as the men.

The book's most serious weaknesses are its confused plot lines and actions that don't quite make sense, such as Luthor sending hard light constructs to wreak havoc when he could have used such a powerful stone to do even worse damage, or why the time traveling leaguers would encounter a future version of Wonder Woman when she was deceased in the present.

The JLA suffers greatly from the absence of Wonder Woman, but perhaps it's nice to know how integral a player she is for the league, which really is not the same without her. However, an Injustice Gang with Luthor and the Joker, and Darkseid on the side, is too juicy to pass up. This is good old-fashioned comic book fun and a fairly compelling read in spite of the holes in the plot. Highly recommended.

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5.0 out of 5 stars "The only way we're gonna serve you is medium rare.", Aug 15 2003
By 
Sam Thursday (APO, AE United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: JLA: Rock of Ages - VOL 03 (Paperback)
This story is Morrison, arguably at the top of his form, writing a runaway train of a story with so much complexity that it takes several re-readings to understand everything. While the writing gets the book its five stars, there are a couple of sequences near the end of the book that are illustrated by artists who are not so much inferior to Howard Porter as they are jarringly different. Porter is a big, splashy superhero artist, and some of the art in the final chapter is a lot less showy. Usually, I'm all for that, but if I'm watching Charlie's Angels, let's please not have it intercut with clips from My Left Foot. That said, Porter's visions of the future JLA are really cool looking, and the final showdown with Darksied is worth the price of the book all by itself. One more caveat: this book does indeed feature the horribly designed, conceived, written, advertised, and promoted Super-electricity-man, representing perhaps the single most shameful "let's make a buck" moment in the history of DC Comics, so while the smart, funny writing and blockbuster art make the story fun, you can't turn a page without going, "Oh yeah, that costume." Be warned, but read it anyway.
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