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Nostalgia plays a huge role in the way that fans look at them. However, when you go back and look at these stories, they aren’t as great as we once thought. These five DC events don’t stand up, wistful nostalgia making us remember they’re better than they are.
5) Blackest Night

Blackest Night has a great reputation. The book by Geoff Johns and Ivan Reis paid off the War of Light story introduced in “The Sinestro Corps War”, and did so by giving readers a compelling story full of ups and downs, amazing battles, and some of the coolest pencils of Reis’s career. Blackest Night is definitely a good comic, but it’s not as great as a lot of people seem to think it is. A lot of the story revolves around the shock of who is going to die, who is going to come back as a Black Lantern, and how the heroes are going to win. However, once you know all of this, what you’re getting is a pretty standard event comic, except a little bloodier because Johns loved writing really, really violent event stories.
4) The Flash: Rebirth

Barry Allen came back to life in Final Crisis, outrunning the Black Racer with Wally West, using the embodiment of death against Darkseid in the final battle. Soon after, readers got The Flash: Rebirth, from Geoff Johns and Ethan Van Sciver, which brought Barry back to the Flash family, and brought Reverse Flash back as his greatest villain. Let’s be frank โ this is actually kind of a bad comic. It’s purpose was to make Barry Allen a more important Flash than Wally West, and it did that in the weirdest, most antithetical ways you can imagine. Barry is made into the engine of the Speed Force, the Negative Speed Force is invented and basically never used again so Reverse Flash seems important, and the book kind of follows the example of Green Lantern: Rebirth when it comes to the way it’s structured. On top of that, Van Sciver’s art is often terrible, over-rendered and suffering from bad proportions and details. Some fans think this book is good, but it’s just not.











