Gotham City Garage comes to a close.
Overall, it was one of those series that started out a little uneven, found its
pace, and then stumbled at the finish line. As with Bombshells, the series
is/was based on a line of DC merchandise, with variations on established
characters. It’s a shaky premise, much like turning a 7-minute SNL skit into a
feature film. It rarely works.
In the case
of Gotham City Garage, it seemed to
run longer than it should have. It seemed to me less a story and more of a
showcase, like an hour-long commercial for the aforementioned merch. Thanks,
but not thanks. I am less inclined than ever to indulge in the garage culture
style figurines the series is based upon.
Let’s
consider the title: Gotham City Garage. It implies the garage is IN Gotham
City, but in actuality, it isn’t. Gotham is under the heel of Lex Luthor, and
the garage is far off in the desert, where the only curb appeal is some
abstract form of freedom.
In the end,
Luthor is defeated, because, y’know, girl power. That may appeal to some
readers in search of some imaginary feeling of empowerment. Since most people
are born with the same functioning two arms and two legs and comparable
intelligence, I have a hard time giving credibility to such concepts. For me,
concepts like inner peace, strength or faith don’t come from outside agent. You
either have them inside you or you don’t. You just need to know where to look.
As I said,
this book stumbled toward the finish line. Brian Ching’s artwork looks rushed
and sketchy, as if the book was published from his pencils without the benefit
of an inker. Maybe both DC Comics and Ching were done, and simply eager to move
on to a more interesting project.
Rating:
2/10