J. Farrell wrote:
Writing dialogue that is clearly intended for the reader and not the person who is being spoken to in the comic is a clunky, overly expository device that, IMO, doesn't belong in the modern age of comics. It's something that people who don't have much experience with comics make fun of about comics.
So far, I've been seeing more positive reaction from people who don't normally read comics, and more picking apart of the story by long time comic readers. But it's still early in the process.
Like with many things, for every person decrying an aspect of the story, there are others who thoroughly enjoyed those same things.
Pieces of entertainment will click with some people and not with others.
Entertainment Weekly (by someone who's not a hard-core comics reader):
Johns’ writing, which is capable of a high degree of complexity in both comics history and emotion, is kept at an intentionally straightforward, almost hard-boiled terseness here. He’s grounding us in the new DC universe in a way that a pre-teen who’s never picked up a comic book will be able to follow. Jim Lee’s art work is characterized by his trademark brawny musculature that in his best panels also achieves a striking degree of fluidity: Few artists make muscle-bound men move so sleekly.
Combine this with an overall tone that mixes sincerity with wisecracks, and this is a very inviting way to reinvest in some of the most familiar superheroes ever created.
New York Times (by 2 self-proclaimed "comic-book fans" on NY Times staff) comes off more negative:
ADAM: Exactly. It’s hard to read this book and imagine that this is the future of the medium. There’s nothing in this first issue that’s innovative, in either the story or the art. Perhaps that’s the point?
GEORGE: That feeling just confirms for me that I – as a long time reader of comic books – am not the target audience for this. This initiative is part of the quest for the fabled “new reader,” which, for the sake of the industry, I hope is found.
The Express-Times (look, I'm just searching for reviews from non-comics sites......)
I picked up "Justice League" No. 1 yesterday and was pleasantly surprised by what I read. The dynamic and back-and-forth banter between Hal Jordan (Green Lantern) and Batman was terrific.
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"Justice League" piqued my interest enough that I plan on buying the second issue. It definitely felt like a fresh start. The book had an air of cool and a swagger that hasn't been felt in a long, long time in comics -- lifting the thick cloud of staleness that has choked the fun and wonderment out of most books (that also goes for DC's main competitor, Marvel).
InsidePulse.com
The characterization is the bulk of the issue, and I personally enjoyed it.
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The issue really does feel like a part one of ___ kind of issue. It has a lot of qualities of a first issue, but at the same time it’s essentially one big Batman/Green Lantern team up that’s bound to lead into the formation of the Justice League.
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It’s the first issue of the relaunch, the book they felt so strong about that they released it first to make it the cornerstone of everything that they’re doing. It’s not the perfect issue, it’s really enjoyable but not perfect, but it does manage to be exactly what DC wanted out of it. This is our introduction to the new DC Universe, and it succeeds in making me wish that it wasn’t the only New 52 book out this week.