
Cast: Nathan Fillion, Jason Isaacs, Elisabeth Moss, Kelly Hu, Henry Rollins, Arnold Vosloo, Kelly Hu, Roddy Piper
Directors: Christopher Berkeley, Lauren Montgomery and Jay Oliva
Runtime: 84mins
Certificate: 12
Release Date: 07 June 2011
Directors: Christopher Berkeley, Lauren Montgomery and Jay Oliva
Runtime: 84mins
Certificate: 12
Release Date: 07 June 2011
Stewart R: DC look set to make this a lovely jade-hued Summer across a spectrum of media in preparation for the incoming Green Lantern live-action movie starring Ryan Reynolds. Geoff Johns is currently orchestrating the War Of The Green Lanterns throughout the various comic series, if you listen keenly, I swear you’ll be able to hear a thousand Chinese factories pumping mint-in-box toy after mint-in-box toy based on Lanterns of various description, and then there’s the latest DC Entertainment and Warner Bros Animation effort. Having wowed this reviewer some two years ago with Green Lantern: First Flight, Lauren Montgomery returns with Christopher Berkeley and Jay Oliva to lead us through further adventures of the Green Lantern Corps.
Oa, home of the Green Lantern Corps and the Guardians of the Universe, is threatened by an old adversary once thought vanquished and the growing menace proves dangerous enough to force the evacuation of the Corps homeworld and put the wielders of the Green Light onto the highest level of alert. During the preparation of the fight to come, the focus falls upon young Arisia, a Lantern in training with a big sack of self-doubt upon her shoulders. She is calmed and tutored by Hal and Sinestro in tales from the Book of Oa and Lantern lore that will see her through the dark days ahead. These stories reach from the exploits of the very first wearers of the green rings up until one of Abin Sur’s final missions, which adds the the terrific feeling of continuity (and potentially adds a slight connection to the events of this Summer’s big budget film).

A few studios have thrown collections of animated vignettes based upon a character or a franchise at us in recent years with mixed results. There have been loose interpretations of an accepted mythos and the occasional feeling that some chapters and stories are of far higher quality that others - see Batman: Gotham Knight, Halo Legends and The Animatrix. Montgomery and the writers make sure that things are kept tight and clean by having an overriding narrative run throughout which ties all of the various tales together and ensures that they remain relevant. To go into too much detail about the events that unfold would ruin the surprise for your potential viewing so I will simply say that this is how this type of animated collection should be handled. There’s heart by the bucket load, a nice measure on what must be sacrificed to become a Green Lantern, and a real feeling that this is one mission that the Corps may not survive.

It seems strange to get so close to the end of a review and not mention the vocal cast. This is not to say that their contribution isn’t worthwhile but for once I wasn’t making a point of spotting who was voicing who and was just absorbed by the story and the spectacle. Perhaps that’s a sign that everyone did such good work as to not be a distraction? Fillion and Isaacs do a decent enough job as Hal and Sinestro respectively, and Mad Men’s Elisabeth Moss instils enough uncertainty in Arisia to make her a stand out. The only slight misstep for me is Rollins’ casting as Kilawog, not having quite the deep and gravelly projection that Michael Madsen managed to deliver in First Flight that suits the gruff Lantern trainer so well.

4 comments:
Now, I am tempted by this, but I can only find the double play pack. Don't suppose anyone would know if it's available as a regular dvd for those of us not privileged enough to own a blu ray player?
I've looked and think it's only double play at the moment but Play.com and Amazon seem to have that for the bargain price of £7.99 at the moment so I'm even tempted to buy that considering I don't even own a blu ray player myself but may do in the future. (I rented it on iTunes for review purposes and it was still impressive in none-HD version)
And that's making the assumption of course Joe that you're in the UK! Apologies if you reside elsewhere and that price offers you no viable option! :)
Haha, it was the correct assumption to make, as I do live in the U.K. Thanks for answering my question both here AND on facebook!
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