Like Miller, he's too good to let slip away.) Perez's art helps contribute to the overall goofy tone of the comic, with the occasional distorted expression like Batgirl tackling the Orphan, or Squire making little Bat/Knight ears next to her face while rolling her eyes. (Although with regular artist Dustin Nguyen not announced on a new title for September, one hopes that Nguyen's next project simply is slated for a little later in 2011. Pere Perez is back again on art, and presumably closing out the run on the title. It's nice to have another comic where the primary goal appears to be to just have fun. The book doesn't take its subject terribly seriously, but its lighthearted nature is part of the selling point for the comic. The idea that the Greenwich Mean is now the cork in a hole in time is a prime example of that it's silly and goofy, but at the same time I found myself getting more entertained with each new development. Miller also follows up on Paul Cornell's "Knight and Squire" mini-series by making the DC Universe England a place full of strange and fun things to encounter.
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