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Green Lantern/Superman: Legend of the Green Flame

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2000 DC Comics comic book
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Green Lantern/Superman: Legend of the Green Flame
Publication information
PublisherDC Comics
FormatOne-shot
Genre
Publication date2000
No. of issues1
Main character(s)Green Lantern
Superman
Creative team
Written byNeil Gaiman
Artist(s)Eddie Campbell
Mark Buckingham
John Totleben
Matt Wagner
Jim Aparo
Kevin Nowlan
Jason Little
Penciller(s)Mike Allred
Eric Shanower
Inker(s)Terry Austin
Art Adams
LettererTodd Klein
Colorist(s)Matt Hollingsworth
Kevin Nowlan

Green Lantern/Superman: Legend of the Green Flame was aone-shotprestige formatcomic book published in 2000 byDC Comics.

Plot

[edit]

In 1949 Berlin, Janos Prohaska and Weng Chan of theBlackhawks Squadron go down into a deserted bunker covered in rats and littered with long dead bodies. The two are looking for a German secret weapon Janos heard about from a mysterious 'she'. They come across a strange green railroad lantern buried in a pile of rubbish. Janos is intrigued over the object as he is faintly reminded of a legend surrounding a green lantern although he is unable to recall the specific significance of the lantern, and he decides to take it with him.

In the present day,Clark Kent findsHal Jordan inMetropolis and invites him over to spend some time together. When Clark asks Hal about his relationship withArisia Rrab, Hal succinctly states "We split". Clark, aware of how difficult a dual life and a relationship are to manage, also knows that any words as this moment would be too thin to offer any real comfort. Hal explains he's having a personal crisis, stating he used to be part of theGreen Lantern Corps with a purpose and a plan. But with Oa drained and the Guardians having fled, all he is now is a man with a ring.

After some reassurances from Clark, they accompany each other to a museum convention Clark is supposed to cover for theDaily Planet, and briefly run intoSelina Kyle. They then find the green lantern discovered by Janos in an exhibition. Hal recognizes it as a power battery, and tries loading his power ring with it despite Clark's wariness. The effect is disastrous and a wave of magic energy kills both heroes. They wind up in the Region of the Just Dead and encounterDeadman, who explains that their deaths are not irrevocable until they have gone "into the light". Hal then tries using his ring to take them back to their bodies, the worst thing he could have done.

Meanwhile, thePhantom Stranger sits in the apartment given to him by theLords of Order, his current masters. Sensing that something else needs his attention, he finally leaves the apartment and dismisses the Lords, who insist that he cannot leave. The Phantom admits to no membership or affiliation with any group and also denies belonging to this place or even having a home, because if he belonged then he would cease to be a stranger. He bids the voices farewell, even as their threats of wrath echo in a now empty room.

Superman and Hal have wound up in Hell, where Superman's super-senses cannot experience anything but suffering, fear and pain. Horrified by realizing that he cannot save these innumerable souls, he is slowly going mad. When the two of them are attacked by blood-thirsty demons, Hal once again uses his ring, and they disappear.

Superman and Green Lantern encounter the power that killed them – the sentient Green Flame, the remains of the magic energies of Maltus. The Green Flame explains that their deaths were a result of Jordan trying to load his scientific ring with supernatural energies. Then it tempts Hal to give in for the supernatural power of the Green Flame instead. At that point, the Stranger appears, and teaches Hal how to tame the corrupt Flame. Hal reads the oath ofAlan Scott, loads his ring, and the threat of the Green Flame is neutralized. The Stranger returns Hal's and Superman's souls to their bodies, disposing of the lantern.

Alive after this experience, Hal is feeling better. Superman tells Hal that, even given tonight, it was good to see him, and lets Hal know he is always just a call away. After a warm goodbye, the two heroes part.

Publication history

[edit]

The script for this book was written after Gaiman'sBlack Orchid was completed but prior to its publication. It had been solicited byMark Waid, then-editor of the short-lived anthologyAction Comics Weekly, to conclude that title's run as a weekly anthology in 1988. Waid wanted the story to incorporate all of the characters featured in the book at the time:Green Lantern (Hal Jordan),Catwoman,Deadman, thePhantom Stranger,Etrigan the Demon,the Blackhawks, andSuperman. Etrigan was later removed from the story, so Gaiman "created an anagrammatic demon creature to replace him, whose dialogue consisted of one sonnet".[1]

Gaiman completed the script and submitted it to Waid, who "loved it".[2] Shortly thereafter, Gaiman received word fromSuperman group editorMike Carlin that, as a result of some residual fine-tuning in the aftermath of the character's 1986reboot, Hal Jordan no longer knew that Clark Kent is Superman. As this was a key element in the plot, the story could not be published as written. Waid, who had a personal philosophy of not interfering with his creative personnel's work, opted not to ask Gaiman for a rewrite. Gaiman was paid for his work and the script was filed away (as revealed in the Green Lantern story inAction Comics Weekly #606 in 1988, Hal Jordan knew Clark Kent to be Superman as he had phoned Clark asking for help; in 1988'sGreen Lantern Special #1, Superman already knew Hal Jordan as Green Lantern visiting Jordan at his apartment; as each serial in ACW was edited by different editors, continuity was not being maintained by DC editorial).

In 1996, after the phenomenal success ofThe Sandman, DC sought to repackage Gaiman's earlier uncollected work for the company'sVertigo imprint in a book calledNeil Gaiman's Midnight Days. Recalling the previously rejectedAction Comics Weekly script, Gaiman sought Carlin's approval to see if the story might now be published apart from established continuity. Carlin agreed, but one further obstacle remained: neither Gaiman nor DC had a copy of the script anymore. Gaiman remembered making a copy of the script for Brian Hibbs, but he no longer had it; however, he had previously copied it for his friend James Barry. Gaiman acknowledged both men in his introduction to the book.

Credits

[edit]

Written byNeil Gaiman

Art by:

Cover art byFrank Miller

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Gaiman, from his Introduction
  2. ^Waid, from his Afterword

References

[edit]

External links

[edit]
Novels
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collections
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adaptations
Miscellaneous
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Supermanpublications and storylines
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and one-shots
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continuity
Intercompany
crossovers
Storylines
1930-40s
1950s
  • "The Mightiest Team in the World"
  • "The Super-Dog from Krypton"
  • "The Super-Key to Fort Superman"
  • "The Super-Duel in Space"
  • "The Boy of Steel vs. the Thing of Steel"
  • "The Menace of Metallo"
  • "The Supergirl from Krypton"
  • "The Battle with Bizarro"
1960s
  • "How Luthor Met Superboy"
  • "The World of Bizarros"
  • "Superman's Return to Krypton"
  • "The Phantom Superboy"
  • "Superboy's Big Brother"
  • "The Giant Turtle Man"
  • "The Last Days of Superman"
  • "Superman in Kandor"
  • "The Last Days of Ma and Pa Kent"
  • "Superman, King of Earth"
  • "Power of the Parasite"
  • "Superman's Race with the Flash"
  • "The Leper from Krypton"
1970s
  • "Kryptonite Nevermore"
  • "Must There Be a Superman?"
  • "The Man Who Murdered the Earth"
  • "The Luthor Nobody Knows"
  • "Who Took the Super out of Superman?"
  • "The Great Phantom Peril"
  • "Superman Takes a Wife"
  • "Krypton Dies Again"
  • "Mxyzptlk Spelled Backward is T-R-O-U-B-L-E"
  • "Let My People Grow"
  • "The Life Story of Superman"
1980s
1990s
2000s
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Other
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