• The upgrade to XenForo 2.3.7 has now been completed. Please report any issues to our administrators.

A Jewishy Hobbity Bought/Thought 5-18-11

Avengers #13

Gotta say, I agree with everyone else. This issue was crap. Not only is it a month late in its relevance (we're already on issue #2 of Fear Itself, Bendis...and, this doesn't even come out and reveal what happened at the end of issue #1), but it takes all the development we've seen between Hawkeye and Mockingbird in the last couple years and throw it out the window. (Yeah...I'm highly peeved at Bendis for just throwing in something completely out of left field...just to fit it into his storyline. Plus, you KNOW he'll grow bored of it, just like he has already done with Squirrel Girl. Where is she lately?? Last I saw, she had a one page..if not a one panel...appearance.)

Yep, it might just be the worst of the week. Makes my disgust for X-Men Giant-Size seem rather small. :csad:

X-Men: Prelude To Schism #2

Most of the X-books are really getting good now; but, you can skip this crap, unless you desperately want to read (yet again) backstory one certain characters. This time, it's Magneto...but, nothing truly new gets revealed. I was bored, and Marvel isn't going to tell us what Schism is even about. At least it isn't over priced. :dry:

Alpha Flight #0.1

A decent issue, reintroducing readers to these classic characters. It didn't hook me on the new book; but, for a one-off story, Van Lente and Pak do an alright job. (I did like Snowbird as the traffic ticket lady. I wasn't expecting that at the end.) :yay:

Astonishing X-Men #38

Man, has this book gotten good. Not only is Way's X-Men just fun to read (much like the Skaar book); but, Gage's group (introduced this issue) is a must for any fan of last year's SWORD series. I gotta say, I was disappointed when I saw that we were getting a break in the action; but, I quickly got on board within the first few pages. Great to see Beast back with the team, and the reunion between Kitty and Lockhead was classic!

This X-book does not take itself too seriously; and, the fun is finally back in the X-Men. It doesn't matter if it's Way or Gage, pick it up. (Best of all, we're not getting delays with these writers. Three good issues, and they're just banging them out.) :yay::yay:


Out of the 11 issues I just read, I think my favorite was Astonishing X-Men, with Giant-Size being a close second. That hasn't happened in ages with an X-title! The worst, HANDS DOWN, is Bendis' Avengers. What a stinking piece of crap.
 
@JewishHobbit: Yeah I'm also really Enjoying X-23's ongoing. Probably one of my favorite marvel books right now.
 
Now with the page count news out of the way, onto some reviews! Spoilers as always.

DREAD'S BOUGHT/THOUGHT FOR 5/18/11 - Part 1

BOOSTER GOLD #44: This is the start of an official crossover with FLASHPOINT as well as the return of writer/artist/creator Dan Jurgens on the series, with Norm Rapmund on finishes and Hi-Fi on colors. The difference between Jurgens and the prior writing team of Keith Giffen and J.M. DeMatteis is like night and day. While Jurgens is capable of writing amusing one-liners or comedic moments, he mostly plays Booster, or at least his adventures, mostly straight. Giffen and DeMatteis, on the other hand, often wrote the series like a comedy routine with the adventures as wacky as the dialogue. I knew this would take place after Jurgens' TIME MASTERS series, and to be honest the transition between regular issues is a little awkward, but not too bad. The point is that Booster and Skeets have returned to the "normal" time stream from wherever they last were, only find that it has completely changed. Coast City is now an area under military lock-down, at war with Atlantis (presumably the army led by Aquaman). Cyborg is in a high position of military power and the alien monster Doomsday is a weapon of last resort. At first Booster and Skeets assume they fell into an alternate timeline, or this is a test by Rip Hunter, but neither are true.

The downside is we got ANOTHER recap of Booster's origin here, which has been done several times. How often? About half as often as Ed Brubaker writes a recap of Steve Rogers' origin. Jurgens assumes his audience is fully abreast with TIME MASTERS, which sold LESS than regular issues of BOOSTER GOLD, yet assumes regular readers of BOOSTER GOLD need a refresher course on his origin? After Giffen & DeMatteis' last arc specifically dealt with a loose tie from it? Clearly, editor Rex Ogle didn't feel like stating the obvious to an old DC steward like Jurgens. Not that this is something that is bad, but given that DC comics are 20 pages these days, having one or two seem useless almost feels like stealing.

BOOSTER GOLD has tied into DC events before. It is a spin off of 52 and had a successful tie in with BLACKEST NIGHT last year. With sales nearing the cancellation mark another tie in is inevitable. Plus, since Booster Gold deals with altered timelines all the time, it does make sense. The fact that this is the ONLY ongoing title that directly ties into FLASHPOINT could draw extra attention, so perhaps it is for those readers that an origin recap is there. The artwork is incredible as usual, and I do think it is good for BOOSTER GOLD to straddle that line between straight adventure and slapstick, not fall too far into one or the other. After all, if the premise is that Booster is a proper hero PRETENDING to be a goof ball to the general populace, why have him act like a goof ball on his time flung adventures? While this issue seemed to be a set-up issue, the cliffhanger is quite effective. Given that Jurgens was drawing SUPERMAN at the time of Doomsday's debut, this should be interesting indeed.

SCIENCE DOG SPECIAL #2: To a degree, this is a bit of a personal project for Robert Kirkman which he has decided to release in a different format than before. SCIENCE DOG was his initial launch idea to Image Comics, which was rejected. However, he has worked the character into being a fictional property in his INVINCIBLE universe, and under that premise, has Cory Walker draw a 10-12 page SCIENCE DOG story in every 25th issue of INVINCIBLE. Thus, there have been 3 such stories so far, which were not reprinted in trade collections of INVINCIBLE. SCIENCE DOG SPECIAL #1 sold the stories from issues 25 and 50 in one issue, and this one has the tale from issue 75, as well as new material from Kirkman and Walker that wraps up the "arc" in a bow. Even under this format, the special ran later than expected, which is obvious when you see the note that the cover was drawn in 2010. I believe this was originally solicited for February, but if Cory Walker's schedule wasn't an issue, he wouldn't have had to leave regular duties on INVINCIBLE after issue 7.

At any rate, this completes the long 2 issue story of the titular character trying to thwart his mad scientist enemy Walter while still managing to save his friends. Aliens have kidnapped him in the middle of trying to save them, which resulted in his pal Daniel being killed by Walter. In the 11 months he spent trying to help the aliens with their fuel issues, Walter has taken over the world. Thus, Science Dog decides to complete the experimental time machine that originally created him (and empowered Walter) to fix things and prevent Daniel's murder. Only, as a twist, he manages to go back in time and STILL fails to save Daniel. Science Dog decides to once again turn to a time machine to fix things, and in the process cuts himself off from the people and the time line he is in. This leads to an ending that is bittersweet while still being a little predictable part of the way.

While SUPER DINOSAUR is likely Kirkman's pitch to Cartoon Network, SCIENCE DOG is on the whole a better one. At any rate, whether a half reprint issue is worth $3.50 to you depends on how big a fan you are of the title and Kirkman. Overall, 50% of these two issues were new to me, so I didn't mind adding to my Kirk-lection. For the record, Cory Walker is set to return to INVINCIBLE with issue #85, likely for another 2-3 issues like he did before.

ALPHA FLIGHT #0.1: We are now at the point where Marvel has so devalued the purpose of a #1 issue due to so many relaunches, that they had to come up with a new strategy to sell debut issues of upcoming mini-series or ongoing series. Thus, their “.1 Initiative” is now being used to promote series that have technically not started yet. Why issue number 0.1? Because it’s not a zero issue, which was a gimmick of the 90’s. The excellent tag-team of comic writers, Greg Pak and Fred Van Lente – the scribes who brought us CHAOS WAR, INCREDIBLE HERCULES, and HERC currently – unite to bring a return of Marvel’s one and only Canadian superhero team. Created by John Bryne in 1979’s UNCANNY X-MEN #120, they got their own ongoing series in 1983. Bryne wrote and drew it for the first two years and change before handing things off to another creative team, and it ended in 1994. Since then, Marvel has tried to relaunch it twice before; in 1999 and 2004, but it didn’t stick. A potential relaunch in 2005 as OMEGA FLIGHT was scheduled with Mike Oeming and Scott Kolins, but Marvel panicked, and re-solicited it as a five issue mini series – which proved to be an error as it sold well enough to have been successful as an ongoing title. The last one shot featuring the team was in November, as part of the CHAOS WAR event (by Jim McCann and Reilly Brown). This .1 issue, however, is the prelude to an eight issue mini series coming up. Thus, this is the start of a nine issue engagement for the Flight, which is the longest investment Marvel has put into the franchise in 6-7 years.

There have been many changes to the original line up; in fact, most of the team members were killed in NEW AVENGERS in 2004. However, many of them were revived during CHAOS WAR, which means this issue reunites the original line up from 1983. It picks up at some point where the CHAOS WAR one shot left off, although any mention of it is left to the recap pages; the characters just pick up where they left off. The artwork is done by Ben Oliver, who has improved greatly since his days drawing ULTIMATE X-MEN earlier in the decade. Frank Martin does the colors and Dan Green does the inks. As former Department H founder Gary Cody runs for political office under the Unity Party in Canada, the founding Alpha Flighters are trying to enjoy a day off in their lives. Unfortunately, a terrorist attack involving an armored maniac and the daughter of a famous purple mind-controller, who was once a junior Alpha Flight cadet, sparks their attention. Guardian, Vindicator, Sasquatch, Marrina, Northstar, Aurora, Shaman, and Snowbird all reunite to save the land up north once again.

Long time Alpha Flight fans will notice one founding member missing, and that is for a very good reason; the diminutive absentee has appeared in WOLVERINE as being part of Hell. Future solicitations do promise that he may return to the series at some point, or some mention will be made. In terms of the story, Northstar doesn’t actually want to be in Alpha Flight full time, since he is dating a great guy and served with the X-Men at times. Marrina has gotten a bit of a redesign and a more “in your face” attitude. Sasquatch is still making doe eyes at Aurora, who once again claims to have gotten over her mental instability (for now). Guardian is still the stiff leader and Vindicator is still his wife. And Shaman is still the awesome Indian magician, who hopefully has told his daughter Talisman he’s alive again.

This is a brief story, perhaps due to Marvel’s unannounced but obvious plan to trim many $2.99 priced books to 20 pages instead of 22. However, the team at least assembles all of their members in this issue as well as sets up the subplot for the upcoming mini series. It will also be part of the FEAR ITSELF series. The dilemma with past incarnations of the team is that beyond the fact that they’re from Canada, not every writer has managed to make the characters appealing. They are a quirky team that consist of mutants, mutates, humans, an alien, and even a goddess, which are all ore for many stories.

Overall, this was as good as a prelude issue as one could expect. Dale Englesham will be the regular artist for the proper mini series, which should benefit from his style. With so many superhero teams being sold by Marvel, every one has to find their own niche to remain appealing; hopefully ALPHA FLIGHT can pull that off. The creative team of Pak and Van Lente have a great record of success, and hopefully this will be one of them.

AVENGERS ACADEMY #14: Marvel are a company that, for better or worse usually feel there is no such thing as too much of a good thing. If WOLVERINE is selling well, or okay, they'll give him as many other series, spin-off's, and team appearances as the market can bare. Same thing for Deadpool last year, Punisher and Ghost Rider in the 90's, and their "about to star in a film" heroes of recent years - Iron Man, Capt. America, and Thor especially. Even AMAZING SPIDER-MAN, which hasn't been the best franchise for launching spin-off's for years, will be extended with their "Spider-Island" story and has successfully relaunched VENOM. However, at times Marvel editorial can attempt to push a series that may not be selling the best, but is actually GOOD, or strikes their fancy behind the scenes. AGENTS OF ATLAS benefited from this editorial dedication for a couple of years. The Hercules material by Greg Pak and Fred Van Lente (see below) have benefited from the same tenacity that Marvel display with BLACK PANTHER or MOON KNIGHT. A common criticism of newer characters is that Marvel will often abandon them at the first sign of struggle - X-MEN: ACADEMY X are one example. This time, however, Marvel are dedicated to keeping their newer characters in AVENGERS ACADEMY around. Not only is the main series double shipping lately, but we have gotten an giant-sized special, a .1 issue in a fortnight and a two issue arc in AMAZING SPIDER-MAN - all written by Christos Gage. Sean Chen is the artist of this issue, but he and Tom Raney have seem to become a tag team of regular art on this series, since the departure of Mike McKone.

After taking a break with the action for the delightful "Super Hero Prom" issue, this issue offers a lot of action for three bucks. While the cadets of Academy managed to successfully defeat Korvac, Whirlwind, and Arcade, this issue shows that they still have a lot to learn when it comes to battling larger scale villains without the aid of cosmic power boosts or their mentors. As the cover notes, the Sinister Six arrive on the scene to test this team's mettle (pun intended). In a nod to MIGHTY AVENGERS, Hank Pym has led most of the adult Avengers into dealing with a volcano eruption in Italy. When a crisis arises in a laboratory in France, Tigra is convinced to lead the cadets against who they think is a lone member of the Six, but things grow more complicated from there. This was a potentially delicate issue to handle from a broader standpoint. In order to have newer heroes build a reputation, or even to show how competent or "cool" they are, they usually have to battle and defeat well known opponents. In GRAVITY in 2006, for instance, the title hero took down Shocker, Whirlwind, and Rhino to build his rep. The first issue of NEW WARRIORS in 1990 had the teenage heroes take on Terrax, a former herald of Galactus. The dilemma to this is that if a well known villain gets taken down too easily too many times in a row, even by novice heroes, the villain can lose their reputation and be seen as a "jobber" - Rhino, the Wrecking Crew (fed to the titular kids at the start of the second volume of RUNAWAYS) and Mr. Hyde have all suffered this in recent years. On the other hand, if the kids lose too many of their battles, their training phase can seem endless, as THE NEW MUTANTS experienced in the 80's. This issue attained that good balance between these dynamics, especially since the Sinister Six are being built up from being more than a tricky collection of nasties who organize for one arc and then lose, but remain a large scale threat to more forces than Spider-Man. In the end, not only did the teenage cadets get tested, Hank Pym and their mentors have to face adversity and consequences to actions as well.

Chen's artwork is naturally enhanced by Scott Hanna's inks and Jeromy Cox's colors. This issue gives the former NOVA regular artist a real chance to shine with a lot of action sequences. He has been getting a better handle on the characters since he started on this series, and the battle between the Six and the Academy is quite exciting. Thankfully, this issue doesn't clash much with their appearance in AMAZING SPIDER-MAN, so it doesn't much matter which order a reader digests them. This is the last issue before a whopping five issue crossover tie-in with FEAR ITSELF, the event du jour for Marvel this summer, and in that sense it sets up what should be the most challenging arc of the series yet for the series' stars. The speech Pym gives at the end is quite honest and touching about the rigors of being a hero and his own expectations as a mentor for himself. It is good to see him evolve past being a half crazed scientist. Even Quicksilver got in a few of his usual smug, yet insightful, lines.

Marvel has shown editorial support for what has become a critical darling, with extra issues being shipped as well as appearances in better selling comics and a crossover tie in - even free reprints in AVENGERS. Their reward thus far have been stabilizing sales, although they remain in the danger zone. At any rate, while Marvel have taken many stabs at a "young heroes in training" concept before, AVENGERS ACADEMY under the helm of Gage has quickly become their strongest one to date - especially considering Marvel's often found the best success at junior X-Men teams. All of them have become memorable characters and Gage has a solid voice for them. AVENGERS ACADEMY has become one of a rare class of launches from Marvel to not only survive past issue twelve, but to be all but assured a 20th issue. One likes to think this is not just because Gage is pals with Dan Slott or Marvel wants extra Avengers material lately, but because of how good it is. Don't miss out on the bandwagon. This series remains the best Avengers title on the shelves.
 
Part 2 of 2:

AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #661: For the first time since the launch of BIG TIME in November, Dan Slott was in no way involved in writing this issue. He has been credited as the sole writer for the series since that time and is the overall architect, but Fred Van Lente has been co-writing some issues. However, in order to give Slott some breathing room for "SPIDER-ISLAND", the big Spider-event for the summer, his old collaborator on MIGHTY AVENGERS and AVENGERS: THE INITIATIVE, Christos Gage, takes over writing two issues. He doesn't come alone, and brings his AVENGERS ACADEMY cast with him. In terms of marketing, this is a good move; ASM consistently sells in the Top 10-15, or at least double what ACADEMY sells. Exposing more readers to them can't be a bad thing. Furthermore, since Spider-Man was the ORIGINAL teenage super hero in Marvel, he makes perfect sense to be a guest instructor for the cadets - the web-slinger makes this point himself. Fortunately, Gage is smart enough to not assume too much advance knowledge of AVENGERS ACADEMY from Spidey's readers, nor does he have his characters hog the story. The issue flows very well from the last one, with Spidey and the rest of the Future Foundation taking on a giant gorilla. When Giant-Man arrives and asks for a substitute teacher for his Academy, Spidey makes his case as a former licensed teacher. Unfortunately, these aren't his fellow classmates of Midtown High from the pre-Internet years; the Academy cadets are often overconfident and feel they know better than their mentors. Much as with AVENGERS: THE INITIATIVE, Gage works well by feeding off of subplots that Slott had established in prior issues, such as the villain of this two part story (Psycho-Man, who always had a great name but a cheesy design). Part of me was a little dismayed that Spidey was in over his head as a teacher (although he likely hadn't done the job in at least a year and was probably rusty), but with Psycho-Man having been in the background, it made sense that Peter was off his game a bit - he IS the villain that turned Sue into "Malice" after all. The artwork by Reilly Brown is incredibly strong, especially when flanked by Victor Olazaba on inks and John Rauch on colors. The interaction between Spider-Man and Gage's cadets is loose and natural, and while the appearance of a super-villain is obligatory, it is also essential to showcase that while these kids may be more street smart than Peter was at their age, he still has a lot he can teach them (and they a lot to learn).

The only thing holding this issue back is the back up strip by Paul Benjamin and Javier Pulido which isn't bad but ultimately pointless. It covers a "day in the life" of Peter Parker, which naturally includes a "To Do" list and some villain battles. The artwork is nice, although Pulido is naturally in the same class as Marcos Martin and Steve Ditko in his work. The "Infested" subplot takes a break, and for a run that some feared was entering a rut, this is a solid diversion.

ASTONISHING X-MEN #38: Not a glitch or a joke! This is my first issue of AXM since Joss Whedon and John Cassaday finished their much delayed run on the title with issue #25 (or the super special, whichever you prefer). Warren Ellis has had his own lengthy and delayed run on this issue, before the start of this new era. This is the start of an arc by Christos Gage, who I naturally adore as a writer for his work on AVENGERS: THE INITIATIVE, AVENGERS ACADEMY, and MIGHTY AVENGERS (among others). He will alternate with Daniel Way, who I had enough of on GHOST RIDER, writing every other issue. While I haven't paid for an X-MEN story in years (and a non-Whedon story in even longer), Gage was enough of a draw for me to dive in here. Given that ASTONISHING X-MEN has devolved into the "pointless adventure book absent from continuity with UNCANNY X-MEN or X-MEN or whatever is the flagship these days", it usually is a solid place to jump in and follow someone. I mean, I like Kieron Gillen too, at least on THOR; he isn't worth wading into the X-Men again with after all these years (or Loki).

This all said, this issue was underwhelming for me. On the bright side, I believe that Gage is such a solid story teller that even an "underwhelming" issue for him is usually no worse than average by overall comic book standards for me. Unfortunately, such a script really needed a dynamite artist to distract and impress for it, and Juan Bobillo isn't that for me. He isn't a bad artist, and I'd prefer him to Chris Bachelo, but this story needed an artist of a little higher caliber. A comic can read better than it should if it has a great script and an average artist, or an average script and a great artist, and ideally should have a great script and a great artist. But the other end of that extreme doesn't elevate this for me. Bobillo draws women fine, and handles the aliens like Lockheed and the Brood fine; however, he makes Beast look like some cross between a troll and a Klingon, and his Colossus isn't very inspiring. The colors by Chris Sotomayor and inks by Marcelo Sosa are good, and again, I don't think the art is BAD. It just isn't something that dazzles me, which I could say for the whole issue.

As mentioned, this is another X-Men vs. Brood story. The angle this time is it naturally involves Beast's girlfriend Brand from S.W.O.R.D., an agency that deals with aliens. An experiment to try to figure out how to remove a Brood larve from it's host has gone wrong, and now Brood are occupying the station. Faster than you can say "ALIEN", a squad of X-Men tag along with Beast to sort things out on a rescue mission. The cast on the cover are the cast you get; Brand, Beast, Colossus, Shadowcat (still in her "I'm trapped in ghost form" suit), Lockheed, and Storm. Also, it seems Lockheed can now talk in some odd alien language that those close to him can figure out, Chewbacca and RD-D2 style. I assume this is a hold over from the S.W.O.R.D. series, but I could be wrong. He COULD talk in the old days, but it was very rare. At any rate, I didn't mind it and a scene where he and Kitty finally make peace after parting on bad terms is actually pretty sweet. The characters all interact well with each other as old allies, which makes sense. Brand, actually, doesn't appear much aside for the opening and end pages, but that likely will change in the next issue (and if you can't tell what has happened to her in a Brood story, you haven't been reading X-Men long).

Probably the most awkward bit, which likely is more to do with editorial than Gage specifically, is Beast grousing about not being able to enlist his Secret Avengers allies to help because they're "supposed to be covert". The problem is they're only more "covert" than standard Avengers teams. Steve Rogers, who is very recognizable and well known, is willing to jump through ROXXON windows without a mask or even gloves that cover his fingertips. The team are willing to beam down to Hong Kong in broad daylight to counter a terrorist strike. Thus, I really don't see the problem with intervening with a crisis with aliens in space, considering they recently went to Mars of all places, considering War Machine's armor can likely breach orbit, and Valkyrie doesn't need to breath in space. Plus, S.W.O.R.D. is itself a secret organization mostly unknown to the public. Again, these clashes between the covert premise and the execution of the Secret Avengers are more Brubaker's fault than Gage's, but it still is an awkward line. He might have been better off claiming they were "too busy" at this juncture. The rest of the story is average and about what you'd expect. The X-Men go in, smash some aliens, things go predictably wrong in the cliffhanger, cue TO BE CONTINUED. I'd wanted to give Gage a full investment here, but $3.99 books really can't afford to be average, so I'll be iffy on trying part two. Hopefully, it falls on a slow week.

HERC #3: This is FEAR ITSELF issue, by which some villains that escaped the Raft explosion in FEAR ITSELF #2 wind up here. Greg Pak and Fred Van Lente continue with their relaunch of Hercules' ongoing title with a new direction for the character. No longer mentoring Amadeus Cho and lacking his godly powers, Hercules has remained a super hero due to his eons of battle experience as well as enchanted weaponry. After defending the Boerum Hill section of Brooklyn from the Hobgoblin last issue, Herc has become a local celebrity in his local Greek immigrant neighborhood. While he still seeks to destroy the Warhawk gang, his co-worker and lover Rhea convinces him to embrace his local fame to become a "man of the people" around their block - at least to support the ATHENA restaurant where he works. What follows is a hilarious one page sequence before some escaped super-villains go on a bank robbery (standard villain procedure) and Herc is convinced to intervene - complete with a new costume made by his fans. Hercules has sported new costumes before, besides his Greek duds designs by Jack Kirby, but this may be one of his better redesigns. The climax brings about a massive siege between Herc, the villains, the Warhawks (led by Kyknos, son of Ares) and a new goddess who changes the playing field dramatically. Neil Edwards and Scott Hanna do the artwork (with colors by Jesus Aburtov), and while it is great for the action sequences, Edwards struggles with some of the physical comedy elements. An unexpected highlight is that Pak and Van Lente don't treat all of the escaped villains as expendable action fodder - the Man-Bull (a discarded Daredevil villain) probably gets more to do here than he has in years, if not over a decade.

The trade collection of CHAOS WAR was one of Marvel's top ten selling trades in April, and that may have helped HERC #1 sell better than any Hercules comic has since at least 2009, which is a considerable feat. While many relaunches are done just to spike sales for one or two issues, Pak and Van Lente have used the opportunity to make a legitimate change with their title character and to a degree their direction, and that gamble is paying off. While Edwards appears to possibly be struggling with the schedule (this should have double-shipped in April, not May), it remains another worthy installment in the mighty INCREDIBLE HERCULES opus that these writers have produced since 2007. Like with AVENGERS ACADEMY, this is one well criticized but small book that Marvel has shown some editorial support of, which is a promising sign.

HEROES FOR HIRE #7: Much like HERC and other titles this month, HEROES FOR HIRE is double-shipping; a lark Marvel seem to be keen on lately. Perhaps to make up for many of their $2.99 priced books only having 20 pages without any announcement, unlike when DC did so? At any rate, Dan Abnett and Andy Lanning start the second arc on their high quality but poor selling relaunch of this series, which unlike AVENGERS ACADEMY or HERC doesn't quite have a stable audience yet. Perhaps as a sign of that uncertainty, Spider-Man has guest starred in two issues in a row, with a third on the way. It is somewhat refreshing to see Spider-Man, and not Deadpool, Wolverine, or Ghost Rider, as the guest character flung at struggling series. The Punisher did show up for two issues, in what was a cameo performance. In this second arc, Misty Knight and Paladin are trying to make a genuine go of their new "heroes for hire" set up, now that the Puppet Master has no longer been pulling the strings from afar. The problem is that no other heroes will join them, which means when Spider-Man happens along, Misty is overjoyed to include him. Paladin, as a professional mercenary who has developed very unprofessional feelings for Misty, sees him as irritating competition. Unfortunately, all of the underworld scourges that Misty and Paladin thought they'd uprooted during the Puppet Master era are still plaguing the streets with a vengeance, and Capt. America's old sparring partner Batroc shows that he's more than an accent and funny outfit. Tim Seeley (HACK/SLASH, ANT-MAN & WASP) fills in for art here for Brad Walker, with Jay David Ramos on colors, which works out well for both the action and comedy of this issue. Paladin comes close to breaking the fourth wall about what kind of ranked hero he is (as well as alluding to characters set to star in future issues, if the solicitations are accurate). While the lack of recognizable characters may be what is hurting this book in terms of sales, it is an enjoyable romp for a pair of writers best known for space operas that plays well with the leftovers of SHADOWLAND.

THUNDERBOLTS #157: Maybe it is the shadow of FEAR ITSELF about to yank away some of Jeff Parker's cast here, or maybe it is long term story tic that refuses to improve itself, that made this issue seem a bit mundane despite itself. It takes place before FEAR ITSELF #2, but since that took place already, we can predict what is about to happen for some characters. The artwork is by Frank Walker and Declan Shalvey, with two inkers in tow and three colorists - clearly, a deadline to be met.

Parker's strength as a writer is in his character interaction - he relies on it so much that it is practically the only reason to keep coming back to his stories. While he does subplots and character arcs, these rarely involve a reoccurring threat or villain figure. He simply writes teams of characters who fight random oddness in strange locations. This was charming for the AGENTS OF ATLAS for years, although it did have moments where it wore out some welcome. This is the same for his run on THUNDERBOLTS, only here he has certain things he didn't have to worry about in ATLAS. His cast isn't stable here, and this is more firmly attached to the Marvel Universe. Rick Remender in VENOM is having Flash Thompson do similar missions yet still has a reoccurring villain as well as a secondary villain show up. Ed Brubaker in SECRET AVENGERS had a defined cast of villains causing all the problems (to a fault). This series is the opposite of SECRET AVENGERS, where the physical threats are all short term and random. In fact the only time it wasn't was for SHADOWLAND, and that was only because they fought some ninja. The lack of a central villain makes issues like these, where there are too many characters and too much going on to focus on, seem blander than it should.

The "alpha" squad of Thunderbolts (Luke Cage, Moonstone, Ghost, Man-Thing, and Satana) are fighting some sort of floating demonic Nazi castle, but to be honest I totally forgot about it and needed to read the recap page to remember. Even after, all it provides is some strange designs to be punched for a few panels. Maybe the demonic Nazi "captain" of the castle will be a reoccurring villain, and maybe he won't. The "real" story is in warden Walker as well as Fixer, Songbird, and Mach-V assembling a "beta" team of Thunderbolts - which they'll need sooner rather than later. As could be predicted last issue, Mr. Hyde was slipped "controlling nannites" in his serum, so Zabo is thus kept in control. The rest of the beta-team include Gunna/Troll, Shocker, Boomerang, and Centurius. They're immediately deployed to help deal with some zombies in Iraq. The issue ends on a cliffhanger, with one of the "beta" team seemingly to die.

Parker seems to have taken Mr. Hyde literally, as his new costume looks very much like the Victorian garb he wore in LEAGUE OF EXTRA-ORDINARY GENTLEMEN. I have to admit it isn't such a bad design, complete with walking cane. It simply feels too on the nose, like Grant Morrison's justification of making Beast feline as, "all Beast versions in Disney and stories are lion men". I like the inclusion of Gunna's axe (apparently all Asgardians have magical weapons), and Shocker's T-Bolt costume isn't bad - he's the beta team member I am most interested in. There is one decent bit where the "alpha" team are forced to face their own fears by a spider-demon, but it plays out like about every "face your fears" sequence in fictional history. Everyone blubbers about it until someone does or says the Maguffin word that ends it. This is used to justify Juggernaut being left behind on the Raft, so he can become Worthy in FEAR ITSELF #2, and it usually feels rushed. I hate to imagine how awkward Man-Thing's departure may be. Considering that Parker was making a go at reforming Juggernaut, it is a shame to see it all become moot like that.

Anyway. The characters remain strong, but this book needs a reoccurring villain in the worst possible way, and has for quite a while now. Without one, extra busy issues like this can sometimes feel more mundane than they should. Perhaps there was some rush to make the new 20 page format, combined with double-ship months, but I've read better issues of this.
 
BOOSTER GOLD has tied into DC events before. It is a spin off of 52 and had a successful tie in with BLACKEST NIGHT last year. With sales nearing the cancellation mark another tie in is inevitable. Plus, since Booster Gold deals with altered timelines all the time, it does make sense. The fact that this is the ONLY ongoing title that directly ties into FLASHPOINT could draw extra attention, so perhaps it is for those readers that an origin recap is there.

Considering the concept of Booster Gold, it makes perfect sense for him to tie into Flashpoint unlike the other books. And personally, I don't think that the sales boost is going to matter, I'm starting to think that Booster Gold will end soon in favor of the new Justice League International ongoing and the rumored OYL-styled revamp of the entire DC line in September.
 
Considering the concept of Booster Gold, it makes perfect sense for him to tie into Flashpoint unlike the other books. And personally, I don't think that the sales boost is going to matter, I'm starting to think that Booster Gold will end soon in favor of the new Justice League International ongoing and the rumored OYL-styled revamp of the entire DC line in September.

Part of me has wondered if DC would decide to call it a day on BG by issue #50. Even though that would be the 51st or 52nd issue since there was a #0 issue and a #1,000,000 issue. They've naturally been mysterious about what is coming after August.

Still, BOOSTER GOLD has hung tough for quite a long time. It did get a substantial sales boost for those BLACKEST DAY issues, although the popular plastic ring promotion helped in that. It is correct that BG is a book in which tying into a reality warping event makes sense. FLASHPOINT really does look a lot like DC's HOUSE OF M, though (which was itself inspired by AGE OF APOCALYPSE). I suppose the only difference is if Geoff Johns is a better writer than Brian Bendis.
 
Except unlike House of M in which nothing really mattered, Flashpoint actually appears to bring substantial changes to the DC Universe.
 
Except unlike House of M in which nothing really mattered, Flashpoint actually appears to bring substantial changes to the DC Universe.

HOUSE OF M did matter to the Marvel Universe and brought substantial changes. Just because many of them sucked or were poorly executed doesn't negate that.

Post-HOUSE OF M:
- Bought M-Day, the depowering of 90% of the world's mutants. For better or worse this has changed the entire X-Men line and franchise objective for the past 6 years. Personally, I feel it has sucked the premise of the X-Men dry which is why many creators have either struggled, avoided it with alien subplots, or suggested a shake up to the status quo every season to distract the audience.

- Helped boost Ms. Marvel, which led to her getting her own ongoing title which ran 50 issues as well as a place on the NEW AVENGERS or MIGHTY AVENGERS rosters.

- Continued the path of making Scarlet Witch a hopelessly insane plot device and removed from regular Avengers issues for the first time in 40 years.

- Led to the formation of the NEW AVENGERS, which has spawned all sorts of investment in the Avengers and spin-off's.

No, that's not a CRISIS ON INFINITE EARTHS, but the X-Office alone is about 35% of Marvel's collective output, and a story that drastically changed things for it for 6+ years has to be considered a major story, even if it and those changes sucked.

The problem with FLASHPOINT, though, is that DC has reset and altered their universe several times already. CRISIS was the biggie in 1986. The 90's brought about "Hypertime" and "Zero Hour" if memory serves. Then we had INFINITE CRISIS in 2006, and then FINAL CRISIS in 2009. Thus, DC resetting their universe happens about as often as Black Panther gets a series at Marvel, and that's a dilemma. "This time, Geoff Johns has been PROMOTED!" is not enough of a different angle. DC's resetting their universe? Must be a leap year. At least that is how it seems to me, a relative outsider. I don't think I have read a "mainstream" DC book since I left DETECTIVE ages ago due to some Ra's Al Ghul crossover I didn't give two spits about buying.
 
- Bought M-Day, the depowering of 90% of the world's mutants. For better or worse this has changed the entire X-Men line and franchise objective for the past 6 years. Personally, I feel it has sucked the premise of the X-Men dry which is why many creators have either struggled, avoided it with alien subplots, or suggested a shake up to the status quo every season to distract the audience.
1. House of M destroyed much of the potential the X-books had with the direction Morrison decided to take.

2. No prominent mutant lost their powers during M-Day, and those that did like Magneto, Professor X, Iceman, Angel, etc. so in the end it feels like nothing happened.

3. New mutants still pop up all the time, again making it feel like nothing important happened.

It's kinda hard to feel bad for what happened to the mutant race when the protagonists weren't affected at all. That and it destroyed the potential of the future for the X-Men franchise.

- Helped boost Ms. Marvel, which led to her getting her own ongoing title which ran 50 issues as well as a place on the NEW AVENGERS or MIGHTY AVENGERS rosters.
You didn't need House of M for that. Bendis could have simply ****ed her out the way he did with Spider-Woman.

- Continued the path of making Scarlet Witch a hopelessly insane plot device and removed from regular Avengers issues for the first time in 40 years.
Something that happened in Avengers: Disassembled.

- Led to the formation of the NEW AVENGERS, which has spawned all sorts of investment in the Avengers and spin-off's.
That's Avengers: Disassembled.

The problem with FLASHPOINT, though, is that DC has reset and altered their universe several times already. CRISIS was the biggie in 1986. The 90's brought about "Hypertime" and "Zero Hour" if memory serves. Then we had INFINITE CRISIS in 2006, and then FINAL CRISIS in 2009. Thus, DC resetting their universe happens about as often as Black Panther gets a series at Marvel, and that's a dilemma.
Hypertime was not an event and Final Crisis didn't deliver a line wide revamp at all, it did nothing to effect the continuity of the DC Universe. Flashpoint appears to revamp the DC Universe in minor ways the way Zero Hour and Infinite Crisis did. Crisis on Infinite Earths is really the only time the universe was flat out reset.

This time, Geoff Johns has been PROMOTED!" is not enough of a different angle. DC's resetting their universe? Must be a leap year. At least that is how it seems to me, a relative outsider. I don't think I have read a "mainstream" DC book since I left DETECTIVE ages ago due to some Ra's Al Ghul crossover I didn't give two spits about buying.
I feel that DC can use a fresh start. Titles like Superman, Wonder Woman, and the Justice League are a mess and using Flashpoint would be a good way to start things a new.

Maybe you should take advantage of what DC is offering post-Flashpoint. They're offering a new Justice League International book, plus anyone who isn't reading the Batman stuff by Morrison or Snyder is seriously missing out.
 
ASTONISHING X-MEN #38: Not a glitch or a joke! This is my first issue of AXM since Joss Whedon and John Cassaday finished their much delayed run on the title with issue #25 (or the super special, whichever you prefer). Warren Ellis has had his own lengthy and delayed run on this issue, before the start of this new era. This is the start of an arc by Christos Gage, who I naturally adore as a writer for his work on AVENGERS: THE INITIATIVE, AVENGERS ACADEMY, and MIGHTY AVENGERS (among others). He will alternate with Daniel Way, who I had enough of on GHOST RIDER, writing every other issue. While I haven't paid for an X-MEN story in years (and a non-Whedon story in even longer), Gage was enough of a draw for me to dive in here. Given that ASTONISHING X-MEN has devolved into the "pointless adventure book absent from continuity with UNCANNY X-MEN or X-MEN or whatever is the flagship these days", it usually is a solid place to jump in and follow someone. I mean, I like Kieron Gillen too, at least on THOR; he isn't worth wading into the X-Men again with after all these years (or Loki).

This all said, this issue was underwhelming for me. On the bright side, I believe that Gage is such a solid story teller that even an "underwhelming" issue for him is usually no worse than average by overall comic book standards for me. Unfortunately, such a script really needed a dynamite artist to distract and impress for it, and Juan Bobillo isn't that for me. He isn't a bad artist, and I'd prefer him to Chris Bachelo, but this story needed an artist of a little higher caliber. A comic can read better than it should if it has a great script and an average artist, or an average script and a great artist, and ideally should have a great script and a great artist. But the other end of that extreme doesn't elevate this for me. Bobillo draws women fine, and handles the aliens like Lockheed and the Brood fine; however, he makes Beast look like some cross between a troll and a Klingon, and his Colossus isn't very inspiring. The colors by Chris Sotomayor and inks by Marcelo Sosa are good, and again, I don't think the art is BAD. It just isn't something that dazzles me, which I could say for the whole issue.

As mentioned, this is another X-Men vs. Brood story. The angle this time is it naturally involves Beast's girlfriend Brand from S.W.O.R.D., an agency that deals with aliens. An experiment to try to figure out how to remove a Brood larve from it's host has gone wrong, and now Brood are occupying the station. Faster than you can say "ALIEN", a squad of X-Men tag along with Beast to sort things out on a rescue mission. The cast on the cover are the cast you get; Brand, Beast, Colossus, Shadowcat (still in her "I'm trapped in ghost form" suit), Lockheed, and Storm. Also, it seems Lockheed can now talk in some odd alien language that those close to him can figure out, Chewbacca and RD-D2 style. I assume this is a hold over from the S.W.O.R.D. series, but I could be wrong. He COULD talk in the old days, but it was very rare. At any rate, I didn't mind it and a scene where he and Kitty finally make peace after parting on bad terms is actually pretty sweet. The characters all interact well with each other as old allies, which makes sense. Brand, actually, doesn't appear much aside for the opening and end pages, but that likely will change in the next issue (and if you can't tell what has happened to her in a Brood story, you haven't been reading X-Men long).

Probably the most awkward bit, which likely is more to do with editorial than Gage specifically, is Beast grousing about not being able to enlist his Secret Avengers allies to help because they're "supposed to be covert". The problem is they're only more "covert" than standard Avengers teams. Steve Rogers, who is very recognizable and well known, is willing to jump through ROXXON windows without a mask or even gloves that cover his fingertips. The team are willing to beam down to Hong Kong in broad daylight to counter a terrorist strike. Thus, I really don't see the problem with intervening with a crisis with aliens in space, considering they recently went to Mars of all places, considering War Machine's armor can likely breach orbit, and Valkyrie doesn't need to breath in space. Plus, S.W.O.R.D. is itself a secret organization mostly unknown to the public. Again, these clashes between the covert premise and the execution of the Secret Avengers are more Brubaker's fault than Gage's, but it still is an awkward line. He might have been better off claiming they were "too busy" at this juncture. The rest of the story is average and about what you'd expect. The X-Men go in, smash some aliens, things go predictably wrong in the cliffhanger, cue TO BE CONTINUED. I'd wanted to give Gage a full investment here, but $3.99 books really can't afford to be average, so I'll be iffy on trying part two. Hopefully, it falls on a slow week.
I'd go so far as to state Bobillo doesn't draw a very good anything except for Brand. As far as other women go, his Kitty is horrendous in every panel, and his best Storm was the image where her face was shrouded by a hood. His Beast and Colossus, as you said.

But it's not such a problem because Gage isn't depending on up-close and personal characters to drive the action, except for the Kitty-Lockheed scene, where Bobillo's line art actually works very well, due in large part to his very well done rendition of Lockheed. But even the "reunion" scene early in the issue doesn't depend so much on the artwork than Gage pushing through the scene to get to the action, and a "better" artist really wouldn't have made much difference there.

The majority of the issue is action, and Bobillo's line art and panel work convey proper kinetics and proper pacing. His art is certainly not a detriment. I mean, it's not like Larry Stroman was on art duties. :woot:

And I took the Beast line about the Secret Avengers as a bit of tongue-in-cheek on Gage's part, for the reasons you cited. Gage is quite capable of tongue-in-cheek dialogue with authorial voice, and it tends to come out when he's writing something that's "fun."
 
1. House of M destroyed much of the potential the X-books had with the direction Morrison decided to take.
Wasn't this Marvel directive? Once Morrison was gone, almost every single decision was in an attempt to reverse anything and everything he had done, with the exception of Jean's death.
 
1. House of M destroyed much of the potential the X-books had with the direction Morrison decided to take.

2. No prominent mutant lost their powers during M-Day, and those that did like Magneto, Professor X, Iceman, Angel, etc. so in the end it feels like nothing happened.

3. New mutants still pop up all the time, again making it feel like nothing important happened.

It's kinda hard to feel bad for what happened to the mutant race when the protagonists weren't affected at all. That and it destroyed the potential of the future for the X-Men franchise.

Again, just because M-Day sucked and/or was executed poorly does not mean it had no "substantial" effect on the X-Men franchise. It has.

I do agree that the lack of prominent mutants being effected while gutting the central metaphor of the X-Men was a double whammy. Jubilee was probably the most well known mutant effected by it, and she's a vampire now.

I never said HOUSE OF M changed things FOR THE BETTER. But it still changed things for the X-Men. And the X-Men are a large chunk of the Marvel Universe.

You didn't need House of M for that. Bendis could have simply ****ed her out the way he did with Spider-Woman.

The same Spider-Woman that Bendis can't make last 12 issues even with a hot artist? Twice in a row? I disagree. Brian Reed had far more success with Ms. Marvel and HOUSE OF M was a decent springboard for her.

Hypertime was not an event and Final Crisis didn't deliver a line wide revamp at all, it did nothing to effect the continuity of the DC Universe. Flashpoint appears to revamp the DC Universe in minor ways the way Zero Hour and Infinite Crisis did. Crisis on Infinite Earths is really the only time the universe was flat out reset.

Even discounting Hypertime, that still means DC does some modest revamp to their universe about once a decade. It is 2011, so, they're due.

I feel that DC can use a fresh start. Titles like Superman, Wonder Woman, and the Justice League are a mess and using Flashpoint would be a good way to start things a new.

Maybe you should take advantage of what DC is offering post-Flashpoint. They're offering a new Justice League International book, plus anyone who isn't reading the Batman stuff by Morrison or Snyder is seriously missing out.

The problem is that's always their solution to a rut. Just flush stuff down the toilet, start over from scratch and make it up as you go along. This makes the histories and backstories for characters confusing. Where does Wonder Woman begin or end? Nobody knows. And if DC ran titles like SUPERMAN, WONDER WOMAN, and the JLA so badly into the ground that they need massive revamps, that's kind of showing how badly they messed up, right? Like every time Marvel spits out a new #1, or #0.1, or #600, or #57,000,000,000,000.1A launch.

Aside for AMAZING SPIDER-MAN, which has "pre-OMD" and "post-OMD" continuity, Marvel has largely avoided that cosmic reset button (at least in so blunt a manner; they reset franchises all the time, but rarely literally). I think for DC, their success with COIE has made it too common an option. Run crap into the ground? Have someone punch a Monitor and start fresh.

I guess for me it's moot anyway. I don't plan to really dive into the DC Universe I am unfamiliar with given how I'm already being sucked dry by Marvel, a universe I know fairly intimately. But maybe for DCU fans who are used to that sort of reset button being hit every ten years or so, it's welcome news. I just can't relate.

Wasn't this Marvel directive? Once Morrison was gone, almost every single decision was in an attempt to reverse anything and everything he had done, with the exception of Jean's death.

And Cyclops dating Emma (just because Jean stayed dead didn't mean Cyclops HAD to stay with Frost; he could have rekindled his fling with Colleen Wing for all we knew). And Beast being a feline. But, yes, all of the fundamental ideas of Morrison's run have mostly been removed, with some of the more trivial details remaining.
 
I read Batman: Gates of Gotham this morning. Great first issue. Right off the bat, the book has a great feel for a Bat-family book. We've got Dick and Tim playing to their strengths throughout, working as you would think they should, with Dick on the ground saving people and putting the fear of the Bat-God into people and Tim combing intelligence reports to figure out what's going on. Cass and Damian show up but don't do much, although this is the first Cass appearance in a while that hasn't made me want to tear my hair out, so that was nice. Looking forward to how Snyder uses her through the rest of this mini. No Bruce this issue, but the idea of some plot centering on the four "main" families of Gotham--the Waynes, the Cobblepots, the Elliots, and an unknown fourth family--is intriguing. I like that it shows us some of Gotham's history while remaining grounded in the present. The art is lovely, too. Never saw Kyle Higgins' work before, but now I'll have to keep an eye out for it. Good stuff all around.
 
House of M wiped out alot of the X-Mens villains as well which is why they are mostly fighting aliens and vampires now.

I didn't mind them getting rid of some mutants because Morrison made mutants almost too common in which the Marvel Universe. Marvel should of just reduced the numbers back down to pre-Morrison times.
 
I like what Morrison did by increasing the amount of mutants. Made them a more of an actual race, where them being persecuted was more believable.

Other things he brought in were great too. Beast had some brilliant characterisation. I liked the introduction of Fantomex and the concept of "the world". I also thought Xorn was an interesting character... up until it was revealed he was Magneto all along.

It's the last time I actually enjoyed reading about the X-Men. Uncanny X-Force is great, but I don't really consider it a proper X-Men book.
 
X-Factor was the only X-book I read for a while. Now I'm getting back into Astonishing and Uncanny because of Gage and Gillen, respectively. I don't really care about the number of mutants so much as whether or not the mutants I'm reading about are total *****ebags or not. Lately, they have been in most of the X-Men comics, so I've just avoided them.
 
Gregg Land is still on Uncanny isn't he? I refuse to pay for anything with his name on it.

I usually don't let bad art put me off a book if it's well written. But with Land, I make an exception.
 
Yeah, that is kind of a problem. But it'd be tough to keep track of the series enough to only buy issues that are both written by Gillen and drawn by someone other than Land, so I just said "f*** it." I'll try Gillen's run out and if Land's art doesn't totally put me off, I'm fine with it.
 
I agree that it was the last time I enjoyed reading X-Men every month. I feel that Morrison's ending with killing Jean and hooking Cyclops with Emma is what started teh downfall of my enjoyment of the line. I've stuck with it all this time but it's never been as good as prior to that turn of events. There have been good stories here and there but nothing much. It's only just now starting to upswing again and hopefully it'll continue this time, as there've been other times when it started to feel good again and died away quickly.
 
Hundred Penny Press Presents: The Rocketeer

A great, cheap introduction to The Rocketeer and his origin, especially with the new book coming out this same week. I remember seeing the movie (which bombed); but, I never read the comic before. It's got a nice, old school feel (kind of like the previous Spirit comic, before DC ruined it with the new direction), and I would have easily played full price. :yay::yay:

Rocketeer Adventures #1

That said, this issue wasn't as enjoyable as the dollar one mentioned above. It's a bunch of short stories, and a relaunch of this character would have been better with a full issue story. It wasn't bad...it just wasn't anything that begs you to buy the next issue.

Buy the dollar comic...skip this unless you're a huge Rocketeer fan. A mild :yay:.

28 Days Later #23

Picking up right where 28 Weeks Later practically begins, this new storyarc sees the two main characters separated and supposedly safe. (Those familiar with the second movie, though, know things take a turn for the worse.) That sequel gets mentioned a few times, and this issue has lots of zombie action. By the end, the two main character hook up again...and, their blossoming romance doesn't feel forced after 23 issues. :yay:

Hulk #33

This title has been so much better with Parker doing the writing duties (makes me wonder, what the heck is Loeb even doing these days???); but, still, it's a book that never is top of my reading priority. Something about Parker's writing (and, this book has a lot of the same feel as Parker's Atlas did) just doesn't reach out and grab me. Maybe it's the quirky villians (like this issue's Black Fog), or the off-beat style of his writing. A mild :yay:.

DMZ #65

I was reading the letter column of this issue, and was a bit amazed how a comic shop owner was bragging how he recommends this book to anyone who asks him for something good to read. Yeah, it's not bad...but, if you haven't been following from practically day one, you'd be horribly bored. As it is, I would possibly even drop this book, except it's finally nearing its conclusion. I read it each month, think, "Yeah, that wasn't too bad;" but, like Parker's Hulk, I find myself wanting something more.

A mild :yay:.

Wolverine #20

Another of Marvel's dollar comics, and I'm quite enjoying the trip down memory lane...even though I own all these books that Marvel is putting out. Wolverine was bad for soooo long, and this "Enemy Of The State" storyline was one of the first that made me sit up and take notice. Romita's art looks wonderful (and, it makes me think his current stuff on Avengers is rather rushed), and the writing fantastic.

Nice cheap price for a pretty darn good book. :yay:

Justice League Of America #57

Even though I dropped this title about a month ago, I think I've only missed an issue or two. Robinson's writing has improved it quite a bit; plus, my shop still gives me the variant covers that come out. Most of all, this current storyline feels a bit epic. Eclipso is back...and, even though last issue fell a bit flat with all the narration and action, this one hooked me back into it all. Sure, you get a bunch of narration again; but, it brings up some interesting facts about religion in the DC universe. Also, we get two AWESOME scenes. First, is the death of The Spectre (yeah, I don't believe that will stick), and the second is the moon being split in half.

Can't see what happens next! :yay::yay:

Batman #710

Good to see the Two-Face storyline being picked up again. Without his coin, Harvey Dent is more ruthless than ever (turns out, his true nature is to do the most violence...and, the coin gave people a chance to be spared his punishments), and he's desperately in search for it. :yay:
 
Loeb is now in charge of Marvel's television division. His job is to have various Marvel properties show up throughout Disney's various channels like ABC, ABC Family, Disney XD, etc..
 
So was he the one who consigned Avengers to DisneyXD rather than putting it on a far more accessible channel/time slot?
 
3. New mutants still pop up all the time, again making it feel like nothing important happened.

There have been a total of 7 new mutants introduced since M-Day, Hope and the Lights. That's it to my memory. There has been some retconning and resurrections, but as far as I know, those are the only new mutants that have come out since, and that's storyline dictated.
 
There have also been a ton of new superhumans who aren't mutants essentially just because writers say they're not. Several of the students in Avengers Academy, for example, just had their powers appear one day, but they're not mutants just 'cause.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top
monitoring_string = "afb8e5d7348ab9e99f73cba908f10802"