Another overall excellent batch of high-concept, sci-fi tinged superheroics with insane threat levels. A lot of cliche superhero stories lean on "Gotham City is going to be destroyed by this lame idiot" or "the entire world is going to be destroyed by this hokey asshole," but Morrison manages to make the villains and their plans so absurdly enormous that it fully loops around on itself and becomes cool again.
The first of these megathreats comes from Lex Luthor and his newly formed Legion of Injustice, including The Joker and some other villains I was less familiar with, in a storyline called "Rock of Ages." This one starts off a little weak, with Lex's plan and its various machinations and twists being pretty forced and unexplained. He basically just gets one over on the JLA because of a bunch of plans he only tells us about (we don't see most of it actually pan out), leaving the plotting feeling pretty unclear and cheap.
But, about halfway through, it suddenly (because of a bunch of interstellar spacetime travel that is classic Morrison insanity), the story shifts into becoming a post-apocalyptic future story featuring several lesser JLA members having to fight Darkseid and the evil gods of Apokolips. Things like this chunk of the story are the entire reason I read superhero comics. Tons of excellent characterization, well-earned twists, monumental action, and fantastic artwork from Howard Porter. This really turned the book around for me.
Then, once "Rock of Ages" wraps up, we're treated to the thrilling, surprising debut of Prometheus, a villain I assume Morrison created (I didn't Google it, sue me), a normal man intent on destroying the JLA, and who almost pulls it off in about an hour. It's a great, high-octane story centered on a very unlikely villain, and I'm hopeful Prometheus makes a return in later issues.
Finally, this wraps up with the somehow great "JLA/WildCATs" team-up graphic novel, which proves Morrison, who is often premise over character, can really nail the personalities of two entire teams if he really sets his mind to it. His approach to Grifter is particularly fun, and even though this one feels a little throwaway, it's a good enough time to recommend giving it a shot.
So, I continue to be impressed with Morrison's take on the JLA. It's interesting to see him writing such an approachable comic for once, and I gotta say, I'm down for more.