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Countdown

af Greg Cox

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463555,097 (2.71)Ingen
Five unlikely superheroes must defend Earth against the machinations of Darkseid and the New Gods of Apokolips.
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Viser 3 af 3
Cox's novelization of 52 was not as good as the comic series on which it was based, but his novelization of Countdown is better. Mostly, this is down to the quality of their respective source materials: 52 was a good comic, and one of the things that made it good was its huge span, in terms of both time and characters, which was hard to pare down for a 300-page novel in a way that kept the story effective. One of the many things that made Countdown to Final Crisis bad was its aimlessness, its repetitiveness, its plot-lines that went nowhere, or issues that served only to repeat the content of previous issues. Judicious cutting could only make it better, not worse.

So, tons of the original comic is gone here, to good effect. First off, two whole plot-lines are just removed: there's no Karate Kid and Una search for a cure to the OMAC virus, and there's no Pied Piper and Trickster on the run for the murder of the Bart Allen Flash. These were probably the worst of the various threads of Countdown, so no loss there. This leaves four primary plot-lines: Holly Robinson and Harley Quinn among the Amazons, Mary Marvel trying to tame the power of Black Adam, Donna Troy and Jason Todd searching for Ray Palmer, and Jimmy Olsen investigating the death of the New Gods. These plot-lines still aren't great, but they are better, because Cox deletes a lot of terribleness. There's no tie-ins to wider DC universe events, like Amazons Attack! or the death of Bart Allen. Donna and Jason only visit a couple parallel Earths, and never encounter Monarch. There are no cutaways to the incoherent meetings of the Monitors. Jimmy Olsen doesn't learn ten times over that his powers only activate in situations of danger. OMAC doesn't eat Apokolips. Earth-51 isn't destroyed even once, much less twice.

Cox manages to give everything some focus: instead of being hunted by Donna and Jason because of something something morticoccus virus, Ray is seemingly recruited because he's needed to save Jimmy in the final battle against Darkseid. The whole book becomes about driving to that moment, to stop Darkseid from acquiring all the powers of the Gods and controlling the imminent Fifth World. (I'll be curious to see if Cox's novelization of Final Crisis makes any explicit links to the events of Countdown.)

If this all seems like damning with faint praise, well, it is. There's still no substance here. Mary Marvel still behaves stupidly for no apparent reason. Jimmy Olsen's romance with Forager is still pointless. Jason and Donna still stand around for most of the book. I did kind of like the Holly/Harley plot, but it's not much to write home about, either. How have they changed as people? Have we even learned anything about them? These aren't characters, they're ciphers being pushed around by a pointless plot.

It does read quickly, though.

Proposed Countdown novelization drinking game: drink every time a main character meets someone and thinks to themselves, 'I thought [x] was dead, but I guess I heard wrong/I saw wrong/they got better.'
  Stevil2001 | Apr 22, 2016 |
The original comic book series that this book is based on made little to no logical sense as I read it week to week of its release, but this book helped to fill in many of the gaps that I had been left wondering when I read it. I rather enjoyed the characterization that happened here of some of my all-time favorites comic book characters (Donna Troy and Jimmy Olsen) and I enjoyed how Cox was able to spin them into believable 2-D characters with staying true to their comic book personas. This is not a small feat when we are so used to seeing these characters drawn and in action sequences, instead here we have to form our own images. I loved being able to do this with these characters! I would recommend this particular book to those that were highly confused by the original and want to see how this could have been brought together if it had been done by someone with a more cohesive vision of the true potential of the series. ( )
  SoulFlower1981 | Jan 20, 2016 |
A little uneven at times, and a very condensed version of the story that unfolded in the comic books. ( )
  paulrharvey3 | Jun 24, 2013 |
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Five unlikely superheroes must defend Earth against the machinations of Darkseid and the New Gods of Apokolips.

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