The latest Icon and Rocket comic series is a distillation and update of the original Milestone Comics from the ‘90s. The plotting within the Dakotaverse (the name of the continuity) is tight and displays and awareness of the limited time and space granted to comic universes which are not part of the Big Two. The only character from the Dakotaverse who can hold his own long-running series is Static, and even that is sometimes tenuous. The Rocket who appears in Young Justice: Phantoms is a significantly different character in a very different world; that version is not addressed here. The leads of this comic are the titular Icon and Rocket. Icon is an alien who crashed on Earth in the antebellum South in a field; strange visitors from another planet are required to land in a field – unless they are causing cataclysmic destruction by crashing into the city prematurely. Rocket is a teenager who breaks into Icon’s house. These versions of Icon and Rocket do not exist in some separate multiverse; rather they are part of the DC multiverse or Omniverse; the gravitational pull of DC is too strong for virtually all the copies, commentaries, and deconstructions.
This Icon has tried to change the world, which resulted in a
different conclusion for the Civil War; this might be considered cheap until
one recalls that in Marvel the Human Torch (the original, android version)
killed Hitler and in the prime Earth of DC Hitler used the Spear of Destiny as
his primary defensive weapon. Comic book universes do not, and should not, have
identical histories to the real world. This variation from our history in the
Dakotaverse is a secret from the public. The concealment reflects the general
ignorance of important events in Black history; but the method by which it is
concealed is true to comic book aesthetics. The public history of the
Dakotaverse must be the same as out real world because the George Floyd
protests are the setting for the Big Bang, from which most of the powered
individuals (but not our leads) gain their abilities. This update is
reminiscent of the sliding scale of Marvel Comics, where the failed rocket
flight of the Fantastic Four is move to the closest relevant international
competition.
Icon has failed to change the world; Rocket inspires him to
try again. The limited run time of the series allows the characters to execute
real changes in their world that do not need to be reversed to the status quo,
even as that same limitation restricts the amount of detail in which the
characters can discuss the issues presented. If you want a series which
features black leads and supporting cast, which is well thought out, and does
not raise baffling alternate history questions, this could be the series for
you.
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