![]() Teen Lantern’s boundless energy and hopeful nature shine through here to make for an engrossing tale. Campbell gives the narrative a fun sense of humor that sets it apart from the hopeless tone that has pervaded many of the other tales. What makes it even more bizarre is its sudden disappearance in the final panels, making the preceding pages all the more off-putting.įor this issue’s first backup, Josie Campbell and Andie Tong catch up with Teen Lantern. The blatant repetition with minimal visual cues unfortunately stunts the flow of the reading experience. Due to his injuries, Stewart develops a frequent cough that ends up more distracting than effective. This lies largely in the protagonist’s dialogue that takes a bizarrely annoying shift about halfway through the story. However, the issue’s dialogue becomes a weak point for the story. Thorne continues to imbue the story with a creative sci-fi flair, spanning from bits of alien dialects to the more intriguing plot points. With John Stewart captured by the Khund cult and death swarming around the planet’s inhabitants, the stakes are at an all-time high. The issue opens with the finale of Geoffrey Thorne and Tom Raney’s “Last Lanterns”. On the whole, this issue delivers a flawed main tale but some more cohesive backups than the previous entry which sets a perplexing trajectory for the Green Lantern’s future that will leave many fans dissatisfied. Here, John Stewart’s battle against the Khund cult culminates, alongside giving readers a glance at how Teen Lantern and Hal Jordan react to the Lantern’s loss of light. This week brings the conclusion to Future State‘s Green Lantern anthology. ![]() As we move into the second month of DC’s Future State initiative, many of the various series are beginning to conclude. ![]()
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