A great combo, IMVHO.
In the latest DnA interview [URL=
www.comicbookresources.com/news/newsitem.cgi?id=2438 ]DnA at CBR[/URL] DnA mention that the characters aren't changing relative to past portrayls, they're just getting different aspects shown.
Umbra is certainly no Shadow Lass, so I guess DnA are only going back to the reboot. That's fine - the original Tasmia was too much of a Lar-groupie for my taste (hey - you're a
warrior girl*! Act like it!); in fact, she even claimed that she joined the Legion for the strong men or to get a boyfriend or something....
Umbra is living up to her name - she does indeed take umbrage with many people and situations. Some definitions of umbrage from my dictionary: a reason for doubt: suspicion; displeasure, resentment. That's certainly how she left it when she returned to Talok in her wonderful ceremonial costume.
Can't hardly wait to see why she lost her powers. I wonder if she's fighting all those bad guys on the cover without her powers, or does she get them back? I suspect she's tough enough to take on all comers without her darkfield.
* Scholarly footnote: "Young women had started to reclaim the word girl, just as the gay movement had reclaimed the word queer, and they were using the previously forbidden word in the titles of their comics: Real Girl, Action Girl, Deep Girl, Girl Hero, Girltalk, Girljock, Rude Girls and Dangerous Women. (It's interesting to note here that throughout the 1990s, "bad girl" comics - the kind produced for adolescent and teenaged boys, and starring hypersexualized women with large breasts and little clothing - are often preceded by the word lady, as in Lady Death, Lady Justice and Lady Rawhide, while the feminist comics have the word girl in their titles.)" - from Trina Robbins, From Girls to Grrrlz
Rude Girls and Dangerous Women - that's my Umbra!
Steve Lightle will have to be Nice Guys and Great Artists, I guess.