Reviews

Power Girl by Paul Kupperberg, Paul Levitz, Geoff Johns

librarimans's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

This was a lot of fun and Amanda Conner's art (as always) really stands out.

dantastic's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

Power Girl: Power Trip collects JSA Classified 1-4 and Power Girl 1-12.

This has been out of print for ages and I thought I got a good deal on it from Amazon. Well, someone got a good deal and it wasn't me. This is an ex-library book for one thing and for another it looks like someone read it out in the rain without an umbrella. Water damaged as hell.

Anyway, Power Girl: Power Trip is a fun book. Amanda Conner's Power Girl is cute and bouncy but not ridiculously so. Gray and Palmiotti wrote a love letter to both Power Girl and her convoluted place in the DC Universe. Old favorites like Psycho Pirate and the Ultra Humanite make appearances, as well as lesser known characters like the current version of Terra and Vartox, a Sean Connery from Zardoz ripoff from the 1970s.

I wasn't crazy about all of it, though. There's a cringey explanation of Power Girl's boob window that isn't "guys like to look at boobs" and an attempt to give the Ultra Humanite a sympathetic origin. Some times bad guys are just shit heads.

Given how convoluted Power Girl's origin has become over the years, the book is surprisingly accessible. Power Girl is trying to figure out her place in the world and Terra and the readers are along for the ride. A lot of humor comics wear thin after a while but I thought the jokes landed very well in this. DC could easily make Power Girl a more humor oriented character ala Byrne's She-Hulk if they wanted to devote more resources to her. They won't because she's not part of the Bat-Family but the potential is there.

Aside from the ridiculous condition of my copy, I enjoyed this very much. Power Girl: Power Trip is hilarious and the most accessible DC book this side of Scooby-Doo Team-Up. Four out of five boob windows.

nenya_kanadka's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0

I just love Power Girl SO MUCH.

modkuraika's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0

Revisiting this run further cemented why Power Girl quickly became my favorite female superhero, and why she's stayed such. The best compliment I can give to Palmiotti, Gray and Conner is that I will trust anything they decide to bank on.

wyrmdog's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

Power Girl has - in my mind - always gotten a bit of the short shrift when it comes to the luminary paragons of DC. With power, abilities and ethics approaching that of her pseudo-cousin Superman, it's never made a lot of sense that she seems so frequently stuck with villains from the rogue's galleries of others. But such seems to be the case for most female heroes, especially those that are crafted from the mythos of an extant male one (Superman, in this case).

The biggest failing of the book is that it reveals very little about her past or where this volume sits in the greater continuity, or if it's part of the New 52 or whatever. As I am still new to the mainstream DC continuity (Marvel and Image are far more familiar properties), this was a bit of a disappointment for me. We are told in snippets and asides that she is from another universe and if you are paying attention, it's obvious that she is Supergirl from that universe (just a little older, a little...bigger). Most people know this but many won't and it constitutes a weak spot in an otherwise strong book. In other words: in typical comic book fashion, you're left to sink or swim with regard to the backstory. That can be a selling point or a detriment dependent on who you are.

Partway in, I realized it wasn't New 52, but rather a part of an ongoing story that seems to branch out of (or at least intersect with) Supergirl's return in Superman/Batman: Supergirl and then in the Supergirl series immediately following (collected in Supergirl: Power and Supergirl: Candor). There are, in fact, several panels that this volume and those share.

But on to the actual book and it's story:

This book is pure fun. Unlike all the self-congratulatory and cynical deconstruction that's all the rage in some quarters, Power Trip revels in being a superhero book in a way few others do. Power Girl (Karen Starr, or more accurately, Kara Zor El) struggles to be 'normal' despite having no idea what that means. Her villains are silver-age crazy and even though it doesn't shy away from a few sharp edges, it's full of hope and optimism and makes you want to cheer. There are man-apes, a 70s vintage conqueror, vengeful sidekicks, super tech and mad scientists and team-ups and...well, you get the picture.

It doesn't spend a lot of time with agendas, but does touch on gender and feminism and exploitation a bit. It isn't heavy-handed about it even as it doesn't shy away from it, acknowledging it even as it indulges in it. In the end, it enhanced rather than detracted from the experience.

But the art. Good grief the art. It's beautiful, kinetic, sexy, silly, expressive, honest. Sure sometimes the expressions Conner draws look a bit like someone that's been punched in the face (when no such punches have been thrown), but most of the time, they're remarkably true to life. Often I found myself lingering on a panel just for the expression Kara is wearing. I didn't know I was an Amanda Conner fan until I read this book.

Though you won't like it if you are more into deconstruction and 'realism,' this is a great superhero book in nearly every way. Pure unadulterated fun in spandex. I loved it.

robotswithpersonality's review against another edition

Go to review page

Further reinforces my preference for slice of life and interrelationship tidbits when it comes to superheroes, over a prevalence of action scenes. Kara visiting Terra's hometown and  Wonder Woman interpreting for Power Girl's cat (I believe the name settled on was Stinky? 😁) were the highlights.
 Felt a bit disjointed, plot wise, but if you take a step back it's pretty standard 'oh no how do I find my place and balance life and superheroics?!' Gotta say, in comparison to the team up with Harley Quinn I recently read, this collection felt a little more 'boob forward' despite having the same costume, as well as featuring more blatantly sexualizing poses and scenarios for all female characters. 🫤  I do appreciate that commentary on women who happen to match modern beauty standards and those with larger breasts getting high levels of unwanted attention right along the spectrum to clear harassment, was a theme, because it's a reality many face. That being said, even if Vartox didn't have anything physical in mind,  his actions present a missed opportunity for a much clearer discussion about consent - not helped by the 'Kara needs more wine before she'll make the decision to help him' part, either. 😬 Very much feeling the 2009 publishing date. 

ashleyomeganova's review against another edition

Go to review page

adventurous funny lighthearted medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

5.0

rene20tx's review against another edition

Go to review page

  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix

books_plan_create's review

Go to review page

1.0

I love Power Girl, but I wasn't too keen on the various origin stories

lberestecki's review against another edition

Go to review page

3.0

I just can't get over the art in this volume - it's a prime example of comics art being super sexualized for no reason. This was definitely a female-based comic that was designed to appeal mostly to guys. Aside from the artwork, I felt like the stories required a little more understanding of the DC Universe than I necessarily have. I did really like the last short comic about Power Girl and her cat though :)