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'Green Lantern' #35 expands Odyssey's role
DC

Comic Books

‘Green Lantern’ #35 expands Odyssey’s role

Is Odyssey ready for the cost of celebrity skin?

Jeremy Adams continues carving out a unique niche for Kyle Rayner as the lead Lantern of Green Lantern, and this latest issue leans fully into the glitz, grime, and weirdness of Hollywood. With Odyssey chasing a future in the entertainment world, Adams shifts the series into “cosmic noir” territory while still keeping the heart and humor that have defined this era. Joined by artists Ig Guara and Osvaldo Pestana Montpeller (aka Montos), along with colorist Romulo Fajardo Jr., the creative team delivers a strange, stylish adventure that feels both grounded in Los Angeles and bizarre enough for the Green Lantern mythos.

Green Lantern #35

DC

One of the strongest aspects of Kyle Rayner’s current direction is how fresh it feels. Adams clearly enjoys exploring Hollywood culture from Kyle’s perspective, and the setting gives the series a very different energy from Hal Jordan’s more traditional cosmic adventures. That freshness shows immediately with the introduction of the issue’s villain. The opening sequence is unsettling and grotesque in a way that fits perfectly with the idea of Hollywood’s darker underbelly. Even with the horror elements, the villain still feels at home in a Green Lantern story thanks to the connection to displaced aliens and the broader cosmic world.

Green Lantern #35

DC

The issue also does a solid job of fleshing out Odyssey. Adams gives readers more insight into why she and Kyle are together and why this journey matters to her. There’s a nice balance between her flashy public persona and the more vulnerable layers underneath. The Hollywood setting works well as a backdrop for peeling back those layers, especially as the dangers around her begin to escalate.

That said, the issue’s brief check-in with Hal Jordan and Jayna feels underdeveloped. Their scenes tease larger developments, but the story quickly pivots back to Kyle and Odyssey before those moments can leave much impact. It doesn’t derail the issue, but it does make the subplot feel more like a trailer for another story than an essential piece of this one.

Visually, the issue shines. Guara, Montos, and Fajardo Jr. lean hard into the horror atmosphere, especially during the doctor’s office scenes involving Odyssey. The sterile environments, uncomfortable framing, and disturbing villain design create some genuinely creepy imagery. Once the story reveals more about the villain, the tone shifts even further into psychological horror, giving the issue a strong “Stephen King meets Green Lantern” vibe.

Green Lantern #35

DC

Overall, Green Lantern #35 embraces its “filler episode” label with confidence, but there’s more substance here. The issue expands Odyssey’s role, gives Kyle another entertaining spotlight, and sets up a horror-tinged second chapter with plenty of promise.

'Green Lantern' #35 expands Odyssey's role
‘Green Lantern’ #35 expands Odyssey’s role
Green Lantern #35
Green Lantern #35 takes Kyle Rayner and Odyssey into the heart of Hollywood for a creepy, stylish adventure filled with cosmic horror and celebrity satire. Jeremy Adams continues to give Kyle a fresh direction while developing Odyssey into a more layered character. Though some subplot teases feel slight, the strong atmosphere and unsettling visuals make this an engaging setup chapter.
Reader Rating1 Vote
8.8
Fresh Hollywood setting gives Kyle Rayner a unique direction in a strong horror atmosphere and a creepy villain introduction
Freaky visuals from Guara, Montos, and Fajardo Jr.
Balances cosmic elements with grounded social commentary
Hal Jordan and Jayna's subplot feels underdeveloped, almost losing interest
More setup than payoff as a first chapter, so the next part is going to have to be very heavy to balance the arc
7.5
Good
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