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This felt very much slapped together. It's more of a lead-in to the post Future State of the DC universe more than anything else. Black Adam is the main lead. He's written so one-dimensionally arrogant with nonstop complaining that he knows better than the Justice League. Lanning should have looked back at Geoff Johns's JSA run to see Black Adam done right. The book is meant to be a lead-in to Black Adam and Hippolyta joining the Justice League. With some introductions to Titans Academy and Swam...
A ok DC crossover. If you are going to push the mist powerful characters in the DC universe to the limits you need a powerful enough villain.A tragic story of crossing the line between man and monster. I would have liked more of Batman in the book but I think it was the right choice to let the more powerful characters take the lead and have the Justice League stretched. I do also like the personal sides of the JL is also mentioned, but I thought more could have been done with that.There us nothi...
This was such an epic read!It starts with JL taking down some weird criminals like Icicle and Dupilex but when an ancient foe called the Frost King (Edwald Olafsson) comes in and freezes the entire world, the JL has to split up and reach their own answers and reunite to defeat this foe and we like switch to the past where we see the JL of the Viking age aka Hippolyta, Black adam, Viking Prince and swamp thing fighting this monstrosity and its origin. Its such a great and simple origin and I love...
I’d give it 2.5 stars if I could. It’s a fun story. The characterization is pretty surface level, and it never needed to be nine issues. Black Adam is pretty irritating though. It’s clear it’s filler until the next storylines started. But it’s fun in a Saturday Morning cartoon sort of way.
DNF.
Not bad, for a sprawling event. There are nine issues here, but it didn't feel that long or even decompressed. Most of the issues are functionally side stories, showing how the casts of various books deal with the endless winter of the title. They're all connected by a few pages of ongoing backstory that explains the origins of the threat, which makes their inclusion in this collection necessary. Also a good way to catch up on what some of these books have been up to, and you don't need to be to...
“Endless Winter” was a 2020 DC graphic novel series in which the Justice League battled the Snow Queen, Elsa, in the Kingdom of Arendelle. Olaf and Detective Chimp strike up a weird friendship. John Constantine turns Kristoff into a reindeer and tries to seduce Anna.Just kidding, by the way, although that would be an awesome series.In reality, “Endless Winter”, written by Andy Lanning and Ron Marz, was a pretty decent “crisis” story in which an ancient evil, buried in the Arctic in the 10th cent...
A very disappointing flop if you ask me.It had all the makings of something great. An ancient Justice League comprised of Hippolyta, Swamp Thing, Black Adam, and the immortal Prince Jon! Character plot for Black Adam (a very complex charater) that could provide back story and growth. And Vikings!!But it was all executed terribly! For some reason the back story of the Frost King and the ancient "justice league" team up was told in sections, as a mini prelude story at the start of every issue. And...
This felt like one of those "forced events", where the editorial team "needs" some type of crossover written but there just weren't any original ideas available.The story is fairly run of the mill: a man develops ice powers and his family is hurt because of people's fear of his powers. He gets angry and decides to take it out on the world, literally by subjecting the planet to subzero temperatures. One of the problems was it spends over half the issues just showing how the members of the JLA are...
The concept could have been written into something compelling, but it's pretty silly, and made worse by some inconsistent artwork. A lot of the facial renderings look pretty bad, to the point where they almost look like different characters from panel to panel. It was distracting, even though the colors were great and some of the panels are actually well done. Whole story felt too rushed and the logistics of this ice-vasion were questionable.
Pretty cool haha crossover . Some surprises and lots of characters and cameos.
Not-your-grandpappy’s-Frosty the Snowman turns the whole world cold so capes’n’masks gotta punch ice until things somehow get fixed! I know, it sounds like a Eugene O’Neill play, doesn’t it? It’s the worst Justice League book since… well, the last one. They’re all bad! Endless Winter is crap even by… actually no, this is on par with what I’d expect to see from Andy Lanning and Ron Marz. A comic even lobotomy patients would describe as woefully uncreative and simple. You know how Mister Freeze’s
Last Christmas' winter event is finally collected just in time for this Christmas because synergy! A monster from the past returns when some ill-advised digging awakens him from his slumber, and it'll take the remnants of two Justice Leagues to put him back to sleep.Endless Winter's an inoffensive mini-event that passed the time last year between the end of Death Metal and the beginning of Future State. It's a story we've seen before, but there's some clever plotting from Ron Marz and Andy Lanni...
This felt pretty thrown together by editorial, and many of the one shot issues barely move the plot forward. The Frost King had a cool origin and I liked how it tied into a past "mini Justice League" consisting of Swamp Thing, Black Adam, Hippolyta, and Viking Prince 1000 years in the past (when are vikings not cool), but the plot overall felt undeveloped and took 9 issues to tell a story that could've been told in 4-6. The art is serviceable, but overall this is a very skippable Justice League
Not technically the worst comic ever but definitely disposable and dull. Everyone is characterized flatly, to the point of flanderization. The basic premise is good, but the plot is split between all these issues and paced so horribly that nothing comes off it. The villain’s origin is just a suped up Mr. Freeze. I think an adaptation of this similar to how Young Justice or JLU adapted DC storylines. Remove a lot of the context of the comics and replace it with the context and seasonal plot of th...
A disposable Justice League story, a retread of Final Night that mostly serves to give Black Adam a little more prominence before his movie comes out, but doesn't really find anything new to say about any of its characters.
Nos anos 1990 a DC Comics publicou uma saga chamada A Noite Final, em que um vilão chamado Devorador de Sóis acabava com a luz e o calor na Terra. Pensei que essa saga, Inverno Sem Fim, fosse um evento do tipo. É e não é ao mesmo tempo. Ela lida com um retcon em que o Príncipe Viking, o Monstro do Pântano, Adão Negro e a Rainha Hipólita conhecem o poder do Rei do Gelo. Anos depois, a Liga da Justiça se vê frente a frente com o mesmo inimigo, que congela a Terra inteira e precisarão da ajuda daqu...
A fantastic follow-up to the multiversal battle of Dark Nights: Death Metal, the series really does an incredible job of highlighting the secret history some of the DC Universe’s oldest figures and powerful foes have with one another, united against a tragic figure in the Frost King. Exploring ancient mythology and cultures, the narrative and contrasting timelines will unite the heroes and highlight how people’s judgments and misperceptions can create the monsters we so desperately fear. A memor...
Buried below Superman's previous Fortress of Solitude (in the arctic) is a powerful being known as Frost King (Edwald Olafsson), who was trapped there by a team in the past (Queen Hippolyta, Swamp Thing, Viking Prince, and Black Adam) after manifesting powers of cyrokinesis. Separated from his family (conveniently also frozen in ice), he is able to use the power of the remaining Kryptonian crystal shards to put all of Earth into an 'endless winter'. Freed from captivity by a greedy scientist int...
There are some themes of family and decision making tied into a soft plot. There were some cheesy character entrance's. I do give credit for the range of characters used to move the story along in a global setting but over all the best it showed me was a current version of Black Adam. This was close to a complete waste of time.