Suspended Animation: Starman

<b>To enter the Suspended Animation - kotv.com Comic Book Trivia Contest, <a href="http://kotv.com/pages/viewpage.asp?id=14072">click here</a>.</b><br><br><br><b>Review by Mark Allen</b><br><br><br>Some

Friday, December 22nd 2000, 12:00 am

By: News On 6


To enter the Suspended Animation - kotv.com Comic Book Trivia Contest, click here.


Review by Mark Allen


Some stories are so good, it's hard to read just one 32-page pamphlet at a time. Such is the case with D.C. Comics' Starman.

Chances are, once you sit down to read "Sins of the Father," the first trade paperback (a collection of past issues), you will want to continue with "Night and Day," "A Wicked Inclination," and "Times Past," the only four t.p.'s published at this time.

Jack Knight is the son of scientist Ted Knight, the original Starman of W.W.II. He loves old things; antiques, old movies, old magazines, you name it. The only old things Jack doesn't like are the stories of his father's adventures as a costumed hero. He scoffs at the thought of grown men running around in brightly-colored spandex costumes, and finds it laughable that his older brother chose to follow in their father's footsteps as the next Starman.

He continues to ridicule and chide, until his brother is struck down and killed by a sniper's bullet. Now, pursued by his brother's murderer, who seeks to acquire the cosmic rod, the creation which allowed Ted Knight to become Starman, Jack is thrust into the role he once found such a joke; he is the new Starman.

Despite the premise, Starman is not your basic super hero comic. The fact that Jack Knight despises the spandex scene, and decides to take up his father's mantle on his own terms is a big part of what makes this title so entertaining. From my own experience talking to readers, it's possible that this book appeals as much to fans of alternative comic books as it does to hard core superhero readers.

Writer James Robinson uses great characterization to draw the reader in, and penciler Tony Harris mesmerizes same reader with one of the most aesthetically pleasing art styles in comics today; expressive, yet highly stylized.

Available in comic shops, bookstores and online at dccomics.com; go to "direct currents," then "backlist." Starman:Sins of the Father, Published by D.C. Comics,
152 pages, $12.95
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