Friday, July 26, 2024

Future State: Wonder Woman (comics)

Writers: Becky Cloonan, Joelle Jones, Dan Watters, L.L. McKinney

Artists: Jen Bartel, Joelle Jones, Alitha Martinez, Mark Morales, Leila Del Duca

Collects: Future State: Wonder Woman #1-2, Future State: Immortal Wonder Woman #1-2, Future State: Superman/Wonder Woman #1-2

I suppose it had to happen at some point. Didn't I say with Futures End I like alternate future stories? Today is my first foray into Future State, which was a two month "event" of sorts where the main line went on hiatus and were replaced with special two issue miniseries set in an alternate future. 

That's what it ended up being, at any rate. Originally, the idea was for this to just be the future of the DC Universe. Called 5G, it was essentially meant to move the DC Universe to the next generation by skipping five years, introducing new characters and letting some characters we knew take on familiar mantles. Bleeding Cool leaked a ton of information on it when it was still meant to be where DC Comics happened to be going. Ultimately, the idea of making it the new present of the DC Universe was scrapped, probably because it was a bridge too far, and the company ended up firing the long time editor in chief who spearheaded the move, Dan DiDio.

Credit given where credit is due, it was an incredibly ballsy idea. Dan DiDios time running DC was filled with moments like that for better or worse. Some worked out, some didn't. In my personal opinion, it's likely for the best this got canned. Merging the New 52, itself a ballsy initiative back when it happened, with the old pre-Flashpoint universe breathed a lot of new life into the line with the Rebirth initiative and there was no need to blow the whole thing up again with some radical change that shifted a bunch of characters around and forcibly changed the guard. Now, three years removed at the time of writing, a ton of books have had absolutely stellar runs in the continuing universe, proving it just wasn't necessary, and DC just announced an alternate line akin to Marvels Ultimate Universe, called the Absolute Universe, which will act as a fresh slate and new take.

But Future State was born from the ashes of 5G and I think it's worthwhile to look at them as their own books and ideas. Get a feel for what 5G might have been and see what might have been worth keeping. This volume collects everything on the Wonder Woman end of Future State with the idea seemingly that there were three Wonder Women, each with different mission statements.

The book starts by presenting the chapters involving Nubia, one of the new Wonder Women and the one who seems to still be active in the United States. Nubia is a character that's been around a long time, long enough I'd heard of her despite not being a Wonder Woman mark, but I'll be damned if I can remember much of anything that she's ever done before this. This seemed to do a lot for her, though; despite 5G's cancellation, Nubia's taken on a bit more spotlight in the years since, to the point she leads Themyscira now.

It's some meat and potatoes comics, probably the most familiar feeling sort of story in the book and it has its place as such. Grail, daughter of Darkseid, is gathering some artifacts for an unknown reason, and Nubis has to stop her. She looks to her family for help gathering artifacts, then ends up in another scrap with Grail that has Circe involved. A couple mysteries are teased that may or may not ever appear again in the main timeline, but it ends fairly tidily. Nothing super spectacular, nothing bad, I could see the character maybe holding something down for a bit, a miniseries at least if not an ongoing.

Diana Prince, Wonder Woman Classic, has something a bit more abstract, interesting and thematic. She's who the title Immortal Wonder Woman is referring to, now among the pantheon of gods, and her story takes place way past anything else in the entirety of Future State. In it, we're at the last moments of the universe, thousands of years into the future, as something called The Undoing is swallowing the stars and leaving emptiness in its wake. Earth is gone, what's left quickly follows and Diana is left alone struggling to hold on to hope and find some measure of life left, some reason to keep on fighting.

It's heavy stuff, with plenty of emotional moments. Everything is dying and even the amazons of Themyscira, mired in their ways, would rather fight and die rather than try and rebuild on some new planet in the universe. Swamp Thing is dying, itself the last hope if reviving something of life. Darkseid is in full nihilist mode, accepting the end coming and returning to Earth just hoping to find some challenge left worth fighting. Diana watches everything fall apart, wearing reminders of the people she loved, and has to find a reason to hope the universe can be saved.

The opening sequence is one of the most effective, as she returns to the long abandoned, decrepit, tomb quiet Batcave long, long after Batman is gone. She's looking for a memento of Bruce, something to take with her, and ends up conversing with what seems to be his spirit. She mourns him and obviously misses him, but he simply reminds her of who she is and what she meant to everyone. She was a light of hope. Batman and Wonder Woman have a great friendship, on rare occasion teased as something more, and the sequence leans into their connection as friends, comrades in arms and people who would trust the other with their lives. Of the many items she carries, Batmans utility belt is the one we directly see her acquire and gives us the mission statement of Immortal Wonder Woman.

She's hope. In the end, hope can save the universe, or at least leave it born anew. Two incredibly somber issues that end with her light shining. It's about as perfect a summation of the character as you could ask for.

Our last leading lady is probably the most interesting and, being a new character, has the most page space between her own two issue mini and the one she shares with Jon Kent, Superman in Future State. Yara Flor is immediately differentiated from the other two. Pigheaded but noble. Quick to lose herself in anger but not cruel. Enjoys the fight but not battle crazed. Mischievous but loyal enough to risk her very soul to dive into hell itself to attempt to rescue a departed sister Amazon. She seems to lean more into a modern fantasy sort of story. All in all, she makes a strong first impression, bouyed by some fantastic art, and I was immediately taken with the character. She has a nice friendship with Jon, too, being the voice of reason to his overworking himself. Even the place she seems to live, in the Amazon, gives her an interesting local of her own.

Unfortunately, it feels like she suffered the most for 5G being cancelled. Following this, she got a seven issue miniseries positioning her as DC's new Wonder Girl, but aside from appearing occasionally in Wonder Womans solo book she hasn't had any major spotlight that I've seen since a role in Dark Crisis on Infinite Earths. I'm not entirely sure why, but DC would do well to get on some kind of ongoing place for her adventures, because she's pretty great in what little I've seen of her so far.

Yara and Diana got the best of the art duties in this. Joelle Jones pulls double duty with Yara and she draws the hell out of everything Yara goes through to save her amazonian sister, from jungle dangers to Cerberus to the ferryman at the River Styx. I'll be reading the Wonder Girl miniseries to get more of the character and this art. Diana, meanwhile, has Jen Bartel on art. Shout out to the coloring here. The linework is clean and expressive, but the coloring does so much for setting mood, from the cold, dead, forgotten Batcave to the bright colors of Themyscira, reflected nowhere else in the world, to the glittering stars in the lonely void. It sets a hell of a mood. Plus, I love it when space is depicted with  gentle hues of color, rather than a simple void. Top shelf all around.

This is obviously only one piece of the overall Future State event. Is it an event? I guess it qualifies. It feels more akin to something like Age of Apocalypse, which did the "replace the ongoings for a couple months" trick too. Regardless of what you call it, this volume only handles the amazonian end of things, so the jury is out on anything else. But what is here is, I think, worth at least reading, if only for the first appearance of Yara Flor. Who knows, your local library might have it if you don't feel like dropping some cash.

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