

He laces this installment with comedy, pop-culture references, and a pleasurable appearance of a rather obscure DCU character that is equally accessible and satisfactory for longtime fans.

In practice, Miller builds a humorous Valentine's Day issue that continues to show off Stephanie Brown's general good nature. The push to digital is exciting, but it could result in lower sales.On paper, I realize that sounds incredibly weird. “New allies abound! New enemies afoot! And old friends return where they’re least expected!”Īccording to The Source, the series will feature key cast members from Smallville, including Chloe Sullivan-Queen and Green Arrow, whose own CW series is currently in the works.Īfter the incredible disappointment of Stephanie’s end as Batgirl, and then not seeing Miller picked up as a 52-writer, I am very relieved that he’s remaining in DC and writing what could potentially be an excellent title.Īlso, how interesting that DC is choosing Smallville to be a digital-first title. “Six months after Clark Kent donned the cape and took to the skies to save Earth from Apokolips… enter Season 11!” Miller teased for The Source .

Miller, loved by Batgirl fans for his work on Stephanie Brown’s run, until its untimely end thanks to the DC New 52 reboot, and art by Pere Perez, who also did work on Batgirl. This eleventh season will be written by Bryan Q. The comics are to be released digitally in April of this year, followed by print editions in May. In the same way that comic book characters are never really dead, a series finale is never really a finale…especially when there’s a second life waiting in comics!Īccording to MTV Geek News, the beloved Superman show Smallville is continuing on the shelves with “Season 11,” which will pick up right where the series finale left off.
