Review Action Comics 983

I have never been shy about my age. I am on the back half of my 40s and have been reading comics for over 30 years. I have read so many comics ... some might say too many. But I can remember as a kid, sometimes comics would just transfix me. Id be gripping the pages, so engrossed, pulled into the story. One of the most common types of books to grab me like that would be an outright brawl between heroes and villains under the most dire circumstances. Add a little plot and I would be transported into the universe.
I long for those moments now. When a comic can make me be young Anj again, heart-pounding, watching titans battle, the fate of the world at stake, I am ecstatic. But with so many comics under the bridge (so to speak), it is hard to do that. How many world-saving fights can I read?
All of this preamble is to set the stage for Action Comics #983, a comic by writer Dan Jurgens and artist Viktor Bogdanovic. It is the Superman Family versus the Superman Revenge Squad with planet Earth at risk. There are battles and tragedy and a great wrinkle. There is General Zod that I actually like reading, loving to hate him. And there is so much Supergirl, appropriate for a Superman Family fight but something missing for too long in the super-books.
I read the issue and reread it and reread it again. I was young Anj, reading a comic he had folded and put in his back pocket, under a tree at the summer hour again.
God I loved this issue. This is why I still read comics.

"Revenge Part 5" picks up right where the last issue left off, a standoff between Team Superman and the Revenge Squad. A blinded Superman hopes that this influx of allies will even the odds. Meanwhile, Lois and Jon are trying to sneak out the back door in an escape pod.
Look at this two page splash. Brilliant. We see the scope of this battle. It is going to be epic.
And I like this angle, the villains in the foreground looming, the heroes together, bracing themselves. We could have gone classic, the two teams facing each other like the Secret Origins of the Super-Villains treasury or Uncanny X-Men #100, but this slight turn of the camera adds a fresh perspective.

And then we get a rundown of all the participants.
As I have said ad nauseum on this site, the cousins need to be loving family, supportive, and present. We didnt get that much for the first years of the Loeb take on the character or the first years of the New 52 book. That is being fixed in Rebirth.
Kara is the first one named. She says families stick together. Perfect.
And Lex as an ally is still something I am getting used to. And I dont know how much we can trust him. He seems interested that these villains want into the Fortress. That little curious is so ominous. Because regardless of recent history, he is still Lex Luthor.

And then the groups break off into pairs for combat.
The Cyborg Superman may have brought these people together but it is clear that Zod is in charge here. He is the one leading the villains. I have never been a big fan of Zod, feeling he has been overused since New Krypton and usually a tad boring. But this Zod, scheming, angry, and filled with hate has grabbed me.
And I love that Supergirl is tasked with fighting the Cyborg Superman. A version of the Cyborg has been a thorn in Supergirls side for a while now. She is ready to throw down.

Steel fights Metallo. Superwoman fights the Eradicator.
And Lex gets Mongul.
All the fight scenes are tense and gripping. I love how Lex isnt scared of facing off against a monster like Mongul.

But the big fight is Superman versus Zod. It doesnt take long for Zod to deduce that Superman is blind. The General clearly has the upper hand.
But this sequence shows how Zod can also fight a psychological battle as well. He calls Superman weak and soft. Kal could have been more ... a conqueror.
Saying these words while absorbing the biggest blows Superman can deal out is just wickedly fantastic. You are weak, physically and mentally. You could have been something more.
Now that is a Zod I can sneer about!

But then Zod hears Lois and Jon trying to sneak away in the escape pod. And this infuriates Zod.
The idea that Clark has a family enrages Zod. He lays down a sort of curb stomp, screaming that Superman doesnt get to have that.
Is this because Zod thinks it weakens the Kryptonian bloodline? Or is this somehow linked to Zod being denied a family? Are Ursa and Chris Kent in continuity? Is Zod upset because Clark has something that Zod wants, that Zod lost??
Again, all this makes Zod more three-dimensional, more odious, more villainous.

Without a thought Zod uses his heat vision to vaporize the escape pod zooming away. (I have to assume Lois and Jon werent on it but for now, they seem dead.)
Faced with losing her cousins family, Supergirl shows how fierce she can be. I use that word ... fierce ... a lot to describe Supergirl when she sees an injustice and lashes out against it. She is less controlled than Superman at times. This panel shows me that fierceness. I love it.

Zod wipes her out with one punch.
But then there is one more twist. Already Zod had won me over as a tremendous villain. But he had one more trick up his sleeve. From the beginning, Zod has said he wanted the Phantom Zone projector from the Fortress to release his army to run roughshod over the world. But it was a lie.
He wanted the projector to use it. Without hesitation he sends the Superman Family (except Supergirl) into the Zone. And then, he wishes the Eradicator well in fulfilling his secret mission and sends Cyborg Superman and the Eradicator into the Zone as well. A backstab ... no honor among thieves!
Now that is an incredible ending to an incredible issue. What is Zods secret mission? Why did he leave Kara out of the zone? Where are Jon and Lois?
I want more. I want it now. Ill be here under the tree in the backyard of the summer house!
Overall grade: A+
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