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Green Lantern #20 is big, dumb and beautiful

Just like how Blackest Night had a bunch of cool moments that didn’t really make sense and then somehow something happens and the bad guy gets defeated and willpower or something emotions life brightest death darkest life yadda yadda

well, same thing happens here

A bunch of really awesome but confusing things happen and theres a happy ending (unexpectedly so). The ending, more so than the climax, is excellent- very Gurren Lagann.

So the writing isn’t great but somehow it just… works, I guess. And then we’re treated to about 10 pages of people congratulating Geoff Johns and a lot of it actually sounds sincere! 

But then the best part- a comprehensive guide to all the shit that led up to this issue and it helps a fuckton.

Okay I lied. The best part is the reveal of the Orange Lantern Oath.

Multiversity #7: Ultra Comics. This is set in the real world – our actual world, the one you’re reading this article in. He claims they are using an amazing new technology to craft this issue that he can’t talk about or reveal, but he insisted that “this book is haunted!”

“The Earth Prime one, the Ultra Comics,” Morrison told me, “it’s like a technology, it’s like we’ve discovered something you can do with comics that hasn’t been done. In terms of novelty, that’s really got me excited, you know? I don’t want to talk about what it is, because other people will latch onto it and probably use it before I get a chance. It’s so obvious, I can’t believe no one’s done this thing. It’s a haunted comic book! You will have an experience you’ve not had before. It’s a haunted comic book. It doesn’t involve anything that you’ve never seen in a comic book before. We use the old style technology of panels on a page and ink.”

“What would a superhero be like in this world?” he posited. “It’s not Kick-Ass and it’s not Batman. It’s something you have never seen before, and it’s for real and an actual superhero. We’re going to make a superhero in front of you.”

Grant Morrison on Multiversity Issue #7

Multiversity #6: Master Men – basically, it will be Nazi superheroes, in a reality formerly known as Earth X (aka Earth 10, he said, which hearkens back to Weapon X becoming Weapon Ten) where the Nazis won World War II and took over the world. What if baby Kal-El’s ship landed in the Sudetenland? Morrison says this is his epic Shakespearean Game of Thrones kind of heavy parallel world story, and it apparently opens with Hitler on the toilet reading Action Comics.

“Imagine you’re Superman,” Morrison explained, “and for the first 25 years of your life, you were working for Hitler, and then you realize ‘oh my god, it’s Hitler! Shit! Now I get it! Now I see who the baddie is!’ And he cleans up, and they create a utopia, but the utopia is based on the Nazi principles that he was indoctrinated with, so the architecture’s all this soaring, cheesy, sentimental, overwrought, overwritten, grotesque stuff. Everything’s overblown, everything’s wrong, everything’s ripe and ready for destruction in this culture, and Superman knows it, so you’ve got this conflicted character. Not only a Nazi Superman, but a Nazi Superman who knows that his entire society, although it looks utopian, is built on the bones of the dead and is ultimately wrong and must be destroyed.

“Into this come the Freedom Fighter characters, led by Uncle Sam, who is the last remnant of an America that was conquered in 1956, and he’s now gathered all the people that Hitler killed – give me your huddled masses, basically. The Freedom Fighters characters, we recast them all as Hitler’s enemies. Doll Man’s a Jehovah’s Witness, The Ray is gay, Black Condor’s a black man, Phantom Lady’s a gypsy – basically, all the people who Hitler persecuted and they suddenly come back. This is the return of the repressed.”

Grant Morrison on Multiversity Issue #6
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