Kingdom Come 4 pts

 Since I had read Watchman a while ago and didn’t care much for it, I decided to instead read Kingdom Come this time around. The biblical title intrigued me. This story had a lot more scriptural elements than I expected from a superhero story. The main character wasn’t a hero, but a preacher who quoted a lot of verses and related them to the events of the apocalypse he witnessed; there were also the ideas of messenger angels and prophetic dreams. Even though supers were almost the undoing of the world, they got compared to gods several times throughout the story. The story headlined a lot of major Justice League members but mainly focused on the top three, Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman. It had a lot of similar relationship dynamics as other comics about these characters, probably to maintain consistency. The premise of metahumans fighting for the sake of fighting without discipline or restraint, but more out of selfishness and pride, was an interesting take that reminded me somewhat of how other superhero stories have tried to question the sovereignty of supers.  I noticed some subtle and overt political commentary, like the self-aware sexism, especially against Power Girl, and Trump as a self-righteous violent super called Americommando.  Prevailing messages of truth and justice wove through the whole story and challenged how some characters interacted with those concepts.

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