obvious troll - have you even read the issue? let's see a comment if you're grading it a 1 lol
Hal Jordan is stuck on the worst possible planet he can imagine: Earth! Reassigned by the bold new Guardians to patrol his home planet, Hal finds himself a bit bored with his familiar haunts versus the infinite expanse and adventure of outer space. But when an invasion from the dawn of time strikes the planet, can Hal stop...the Ornitho-Men?!
Season Two seems to be off to a slow start, although, this issue is much more enjoyable on a second reading. Dropping the reader right into the drama is too disorienting. It works sometimes, but not as much as it needs to in this case. However, the art by Liam Sharp in his “full Wally Wood” style is supremely enjoyable. We all know this series is worth sticking with, remember, Season One took a few issues to really get going as well. Perhaps, Hal next step will be the one that gets the larger story going. Read Full Review
The Green Lantern: Season Two #2, a spectacularly bizarre issue from Grant Morrison, shows that while he may have adapted his style to fit this more straightforward cosmic epic, he has not lost an iota of his Morrisonesque charm. Read Full Review
Grant Morrison tosses us into the Wayback Machine for a done-and-one Silver Age homage and I couldn't be more tickled pink. Silly fun. Read Full Review
The Green Lantern Season 2 #2(Morrison, Sharp) is not an interpretation for everyone but if you want a wonderfully strange Green Lantern story, then it may be the one for you. Read Full Review
The Green Lantern: Season Two #2 is an homage to Silver Age that manages to accomplish something that has increasing rarity these days, a simple one-issue tale that lets us forget about whatever ails us for a little while and enjoy a tale of the fantastic. Grant Morrison and Liam Sharp have just begun the second season and if this is any indication we're in for as wild of a ride as the first twelve issues were. Read Full Review
Fans of their previous work together won't be disappointed with what Morrison and Sharp are doing here. Read Full Review
The Green Lantern: Season Two #2 is an homage to Silver Age that manages to accomplish something that has increasing rarity these days, a simple one-issue tale that lets us forget about whatever ails us for a little while and enjoy a tale of the fantastic. Grant Morrison and Liam Sharp have just begun the second season and if this is any indication we're in for as wild of a ride as the first twelve issues were. Read Full Review
Definitely a story any Hal Jordan fan should get in on if they haven't already. Read Full Review
The Green Lantern Season Two #2 is not nearly as interesting as last month's season opener. Given the news that this series has been restored to its original length following its previous reduction, I'm hoping that elements from this issue will recur further down the line to make it more worth reading. As it stands, it's a mostly self-contained story that doesn't add much to the larger plot. Read Full Review
The Green Lantern: Season 2 #2 has some nice things going for it and some lovely scenes. It's unfortunately bogged down by the very gimmick that was thrown in to make it more interesting. Read Full Review
Theres some nice moments here but this issue felt lacking in genuine substance to real warrant tracking it down. Read Full Review
The Green Lantern Season Two started off in a bold new fashion, and #2 looks to continue that trend, but ultimately fumbles along the way. Read Full Review
Another great issue, we really can see unlimited potentials and wonders Hal Jordan as a character stands for. Only the pace and the dialogues are a bit more off than usual.
I didn't find the first part interesting however it got better sort of weird....if that makes sense.
So cool! Birdpeople, facehuggers...
A somewhat amusing one-and-done story.
I sure as hell hope this wasn't anyone's first comic though, with Morrison flexing that esotericism he so loves.
Art by Sharp was good as it always is.
So like I understand why they were all talking like that, but man it made the whole thing a real slog to get through.
I enjoy experimental comics, but this felt like Morrison flexing for the sake of it and not much else. Reminds me of how Alan Moore eventually focused on recreating the unique style of older works.
Prelude:
Season Two started off well enough, let's see how things unfold here.
The Good:
Sharp's art is really good.
The Bad:
I'm sorry, I just can't understand anything in this issue at all.
Conclusion:
The art is of the usual standard but the writing and everything else, it just falls apart for me.
This is very weird issue, and not in a good way. The first half of this book read as nonsense, but it did get better by the end. That makes for an unfortunate reading experience though.