The JLI--Booster Gold, August General in Iron, Godiva, Guy Gardner, Batwing, O.M.A.C. and Firehawk--face off against the Burners, who want to create anarchy by any means necessary!
We do get a couple of small moments between August General in Iron and O.M.A.C. over their similar situations and another scene of Guy Gardner visiting Ice in the hospital, but the focus is on a group of relatively unitnteresting super-villains that ends with the JLI smacked down again along with yet another cliffhanger. Hit-and-Miss. Read Full Review
Unfortunately, the pacing is still atrocious, the villains range from respectably boring to irritating, and a lot of filler is put into the romantic escapades of the members of the JLI. With only two issues left, I'm sticking through this series to see the end of the JLI, and this issue has given me a little hoping via the entertaining action sequences, but offered little else. The writer needs to start focusing on what is important. Read Full Review
The art is better than the script, fortunately. Aaron Lopresti does a fine, if some what forgettable, job. There is nothing exciting or dynamic in these pages. His art looks good, but it lacks that punch that holds you on a page for a moment. Sadly, this is the kind of comic that you just read, close, and forget. Justice League International doesn't leave a lasting impression. It is guilty of the worst and most heinous of all comic book crimes: it is boring. Read Full Review
So this is the issue that highlights all the problems the title has. They are mainly narrative based as Jurgens has seemingly run out of steam. The antagonists are uninteresting and the interesting heroes have become annoying as they regurgitate a flat script. Lopresti does his best to keep us visually engaged, but it doesn't distract enough from the narrative. For now the Justice League International is a title that has too many problems. Read Full Review
Dialogue-⭐⭐
Art-⭐⭐⭐⭐
Plot-⭐⭐