Green Lantern: The Lost Army #4

Writer: Cullen Bunn Artist: Javier Pina Publisher: DC Comics Release Date: September 16, 2015 Cover Price: $2.99 Critic Reviews: 8 User Reviews: 7
5.9Critic Rating
6.6User Rating

Things are looking grim for the lost Corps members! With tensions running high, the brewing distrust between Kilowog and Guy Gardner comes to a head!

  • 9.0
    SciFiPulse - Patrick Hayes Sep 19, 2015

    Why the lanternsare lost is slowly coming to light. Things start slowly but kick into overdrive when other lanterns are encountered. Read Full Review

  • 7.8
    IGN - Jesse Schedeen Sep 17, 2015

    The plot certainly picks up the pace in this issue as more is revealed about the Lost Lanterns' plight and the fate of other missing characters, but Bunn doesn't allow the conflict to get ahead of itself. Read Full Review

  • 6.0
    Blog Of Oa - Myron Rumsey Sep 16, 2015

    Green Lantern: The Lost Army #4 picks up the pace a little from previous installments and we finally get to see what has happened to a number of other members of the Green Lantern Corps. With only two issues left there's a feeling that there's too much to resolve and not nearly enough time for Cullen Bunn to provide a satisfactory conclusion. We are two thirds of the way through the series and we haven't gotten any answers as to why the Army of Green Lanterns is lost yet. Javier Pina's artwork is a bit of a step behind what readers have come to expect from the first few issues. Three out of four lanterns. Read Full Review

  • 6.0
    DC Comics News - Robert Reed Sep 20, 2015

    Green Lantern: The Lost Army#4 suffers from the inertia of previous issues. While the plot finally sees some real movement in this chapter, it's hard to get a sense of momentum with so many questions still unanswered and unclear stakes. Javier Pina is a talented artist, but the art doesn't quite match the cleanliness of Jesus Saiz's work on this series. Ultimately, this is another issue that never quite attains the intensity the story deserves. Read Full Review

  • 5.5
    Weird Science - Eric Shea Sep 17, 2015

    While this is probably the best issue of Lost Army, it's only because something finally happens to further the story, but at this late in the game it feels too little too late.  The series is coming to an end and the most that I can say for it is that the characters looked great and it had some excellent colors.  Hopefully, we get a decent conclusion but right now it doesn't seem likely. Read Full Review

  • 5.0
    The Fandom Post - Chris Beveridge Sep 17, 2015

    Green Lantern: Lost Army comes across well here with Javier Pina stepping in for the artwork as he carries the style well and works the various scenes in space and on the ship in a good way, albeit with minimal detail since there really isn't a need for a lot. The variety of creatures he gets to illustrate definitely works well and his style certainly fits the book, making it a seamless transition for me. Unfortunately, the story itself really feels like it's clunking along more and more as it progresses. Or doesn't progress as the case may be, as we get the group thrust into another situation, now without their rings, where they're going to succeed because they're all also really good without them compared to the light bearers of this universe. I'm continuing to be hopeful that there's a real story and resolution to be had here, a point to all of it, but four issues in and I'm starting to lose that faith. Read Full Review

  • 4.0
    Green Lantern Corps - iggy Sep 17, 2015

    Another issue of Green Lantern Lost Army, and now with only two more issues to go, I doubt readers will be given any sort of satisfactory conclusion. Read Full Review

  • 4.0
    Comic Book Resources - Greg McElhatton Sep 18, 2015

    "Green Lantern: The Lost Army" #4 does its best to start wrapping things up for its readership, although ironically the blunt method in which it does so may actually scare off some of those readers from sticking around for the conclusion. As said earlier, the majority of the problem is not Bunn's or Pina's, as they work with the hand they were dealt. Nonetheless, the result is underwhelming. Read Full Review

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