Difference between revisions of "Adventure Comics 308"

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*[[Legion Publication History/Index/Series#Adventure Comics|Quick index of links to other ''Adventure Comics'' issues]]
 
*[[Legion Publication History/Index/Series#Adventure Comics|Quick index of links to other ''Adventure Comics'' issues]]
  
[[Category: Pre-Crisis]]
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[[Category: Pre-Crisis issues]]

Revision as of 01:04, 1 December 2010

Adventure Comics #308
Preboot » Pre-Crisis
Adventure308.jpg
Cover by Curt Swan, George Klein and Joe Letterese
Story title The Return of Lightning Lad
Previous story Adventure Comics #307: The Secret Power of the Mystery Super-Hero
Next story Adventure Comics #309: The Legion of Super-Monsters
Publication date 28 March, 1963
Cover date May 1963
Creators
Writer(s) Edmond Hamilton and Mort Weisinger
Penciller(s) John Forte
Inker(s) John Forte
Letterer(s) Joe Letterese
Editor(s) Mort Weisinger
Cover artist(s) Curt Swan, George Klein and Joe Letterese

The Return of Lightning Lad

Plot Synopsis

While visiting Lightning Lad’s tomb, the Legionnaires notice his body moving in its glass coffin. As they open the coffin, they discover that Lightning Lad has mysteriously revived! However, Cosmic Boy suspects that Lightning Lad may have lost his powers while in his coma, and decides to test him. Sun Boy, too, believes that Lightning Lad is powerless, but covers for his friend by secretly using his powers when Lightning Lad is called on to use his.

The Legionnaires are asked by the Science Police to raid the Thieves Planet, a notorious hideout for criminals from all over the galaxy. They capture a ship of three-headed criminals from Hydra World who are transporting stolen animals. One such creature, a small Protean from Antares, imitates Chameleon Boy; impressed, Cham adopts the creature as his pet and names him Proty.

The Legionnaires learn the general location of the Thieves Planet from the Hydra men, and find the planet behind an invisibility force field. They land and pretend to be criminals in order to infiltrate the world, but their identities are discovered by the Master of Thieves World, a sphere of electrical energy that reads minds. The Master imprisons the Legionnaires in a “jewel jail,” but the heroes escape when Chameleon Boy persuades Proty to imitate a ray gun so they can fool the guard. However, it is Lightning Lad who defeats the Master by revealing that he has lighting powers, after all.

“Lightning Lad,” however, turns out to be a female imposter – the real Lightning Lad’s sister, who had taken her brother’s place in his coffin. Sun Boy suspected the truth when he saw that she had no Adam’s apple or tan on the back of her neck, where here long hair had been. But he didn’t know that Lightning Lad’s sister had also gained powers from the lightning beasts of Korbal. She kept her powers secret until after her brother’s death, when she decided to carry on his work.

She is then admitted to the Legion under the name Lightning Lass.

Critique

The Silver Age Legion had its moments of greatness. This isn’t one of them. From the faulty premise to the creative team’s inattention to detail, “The Return of Lightning Lad” is one of the Adventure era’s sillier offerings.

Motivation and logic problems are rampant. If Lightning Lass wanted to replace her brother in the Legion, why not try out like everyone else? Why go to the trouble of pretending to be him – a ruse that couldn’t have lasted very long, regardless? Why does Cham need Proty to imitate a ray gun, when he can do so himself, or imitate a bird and fly through the opening in the door. (In fact, Cham never does use his powers in this story; perhaps Cos and Sun Boy suspected the wrong Legionnaire of being powerless!) Why do the Legionnaires, who are well-known and celebrated throughout the galaxy, infiltrate Thieves World in their own costumes?

Perhaps the story’s only saving grace is found in Sun Boy’s touching loyalty to his friend, Lightning Lad. Even though Sun Boy must know that he cannot protect his “powerless” friend forever, he tries anyway. Sun Boy’s single-minded dedication, going beyond all reason, is a theme that would be revisited again in a far more serious story, in Adventure #318: “The Mutiny of the Super-Heroes.”

This story is noteworthy for the introduction of Ayla Ranzz (though she is never referred to by this name in the story), known as Lightning Lass/Light Lass (and other codenames). Ayla would become one of the most intriguing characters throughout Legion history, but you’d never know it from her implausible introduction.

Roll Call

Legionnaires

Featured roles:

Supporting role:

  • Lightning Lad (in flashback to his origin and death; also appears as a corpse)

Cameos:

Villains

Supporting Characters

  • Proty (retroactively referred to as Proty I, following the introduction of Proty II)

Other Characters

  • Science Police Commissioner
  • Jon Arvol, a scientist

Planets and Settings

Technology, Gadgets, and Other Neat Stuff

  • The Legion Flag
  • Autom guards of Thieves World

Alien Wildlife

Notes

Errors and Oddities

  • Lightning Lad is shown wearing his Legion costume in both Cosmic Boy and Lightning Lass's flashbacks to his origin.
  • In Cosmic Boy's flashback, Lightning Lad thinks that his new powers may qualify him for membership in the Legion – but the Legion doesn’t exist yet. (It had not yet been firmly established that Lightning Lad co-founded the Legion with Cosmic Boy and Saturn Girl.)
  • Likewise, Cosmic Boy’s comment to Sun Boy – “Remember the strange origin of Lightning Lad’s power, which he told us when he joined the Legion ...” suggests that Sun Boy joined before Lightning Lad.
  • Legionnaires pop in and out of this story without explanation. While many stories featured cameos of members (sometimes attending meetings) who did not take part in the main adventure, this story inserts them at odd moments:
    • Mon-El leaves on a mission with Saturn Girl on Page 2, but is shown moving one of the animal cages on Page 6. (And why does Mon need Bouncing Boy’s help to move the cage?)
    • Invisible Kid, too, is shown moving one of the animal cages, but he appears nowhere else in the story. (Perhaps he forgot to turn visible again, as he did in the previous issue.)
    • Saturn Girl is depicted in the splash page “teaser” of the story, even though she is not present after “Lightning Lad” is revived (with good reason, as her telepathy could easily have confirmed whether or not this was the real Lightning Lad).
    • Superboy and Supergirl are both present at Lighting Lad’s memorial, but then disappear from the story.
    • Shrinking Violet is present at the memorial and at “Lightning Lad”’s test afterwards, but then doesn’t appear again until the final panel of the story.
  • Lightning Lord is not shown in either Cosmic Boy or Lightning Lass's flashback to her and Lightning Lad's origin on Korbal.

First Appearances

This issue marks the first appearance of the following characters and recurring key Legion story elements:

  • Lightning Lass
  • Korbal (planet) and the lightning beasts

Retcon Alert

Other

Other Stories in the Same Issue

There is an additional story that does not feature the Legion - "The Super-Menace of Smallville"

Reprints

This Legion story has been reprinted in the following:

See also