deemar325
Avenger
- Joined
- Aug 26, 2005
- Messages
- 12,622
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Hey assassin old buddy, what happened with Gail simone?
I'd like to know also.
Oh yeah whatup people.
Hey assassin old buddy, what happened with Gail simone?
You realise Iron Fist is not in The Loners.
He was talking **** about her on another messageboard and gail Simone pwned his ass, its all quite comedic.
GHOST RIDER #10: To my bemusement, the cover actually hypes TWO events; the icon for WWH is at the side, and the banner is under CASUALTIES OF WAR. Out of all the tie-in's, GHOST RIDER's is the mose shallow; basically the only connection that the corpse that Satan has just reanimated is the latest Jack O'Lantern, who was killed by Punisher in CW #6. This is stretching it at best, and considering GR sells moderately above the Top 50, one wonders if Marvel is pushing their luck for only a temporary and minor boost, if any. The story takes a bit of a twisted way of getting to the point of Blaze and the sheriff coming to an understanding to fight Jack O'Lantern/Satan and his army of zombies. As usual, Texeira's art is lovely, and worth the price alone. But sadly this has often been the case of GR, where the visuals were far stronger than the story. The story isn't bad, just a shame it's based around an utterly useless and dishonest origin retcon (it's dishonest because Way seems to believe it's not a retcon and just chugs along). The story is dragging a little but hopefully next issue seems some more kick to it. It is good to have a hero on the open road again, though. Readable, but not spectacular.
NEW AVENGERS #29: Back to our regular programming, where superheroes fight other superheroes, and Bendis insists on ninjas. And Yu gets in two gratuitus arse shots of Elektra within the first 2 pages. This title has improved since CW started, but this issue suffers from some sketchy art and some of Bendis' wonky story order. In an attempt to liven things up, he switches back and forth between various flashbacks, as if he'd seen MEMENTO that weekend. The Mighty Avengers come off as *****ebags and even Ms. Marvel's semi-compassion isn't much better than the "Oh golly, this feels wrong but I'll comply with these nasty orders anyway!" baloney that Mr. Fantastic and Spider-Man gave us for half a year. Fortunately, Dr. Strange's magic comes off big here, allowing them to easily escape Iron Man and even hide in plain sight from him; until he sics Brother Voodoo of all people, who risks breaking some of Strange's seals. Iron Man also gets the runaround from Danny Rand's lawyers, but frankly the CW BATTLE DAMAGE REPORT already revealed this sort of bit, so I saw it coming. Bendis continues to be incapable of keeping a secret, and he gets no favors from Marvel, which is astounding considering he is their unofficial vice EIC. So the issue more or less ends where it started, and while some backstory was nice it felt a bit like filler. Interesting filler, but still filler. The Mighty Avengers are coming along as not much more than Iron Man's stormtroopers, though, as Marvel inists that Iron Man wasn't the antagonist of CW, despite what 99.999999999999999999999999% of their audience believes. So far, even with the stupid ninjas, this is a better arc than some, which isn't saying much for this title. So, any bets on how anti-climatic the second Ronin reveal will be? More or less than the first?
NOVA #1: If you didn't read ANNIHILATION, get it. Buy the HC's, track down the trades, even DL it, whatever has to be done to have not missed Marvel's strongest event in years. For those concerned about sales, ANNIHILATION overall sold moderately, starting around the Top 40's and ending around the 60's, which considering that it was the midst of CW and starring characters who are C-List and lower prior, those are solid numbers. Amung the better selling mini's was NOVA, which is written by the same duo that pen here. This takes place some time after the end of ANNIHILATION #7 with Nova, the last Corpsman, stretching himself thin trying to respond to one crisis after the next because there are no more Nova Corps to patrol the universe. The Worldmind urges him to rest or rebuild the Corps, but Rider won't, insisting that any time wasted is time better spent helping. And so Rider goes about smashing giant Planet-destroying beings and smashing more bugs, only to break down upon finding an adrift space station, months too late. A reunion with Earth is set up when attempting to use his powers to travel through some stargate to respond to yet another crisis winds him smack dab near Earth, where Iron Man & SHIELD have detected him as a threat. Of course they do. He's a power outside of their control, and anything Iron Man cannot control is a threat. Hence why he "really hates magic". Anyway, the first issue shows how much Nova has grown. Sure, he does joke a little, but he has become a true champion, literally trying to rise above his limits to try to save the universe, one planet at a time. The war is over and he still hasn't given up on his mission. He still has issues from losing the Corps, but he doesn't let it render him into an inert emo ball. He flies out and he kicks arse. And he doesn't take lightly anyone who tries to get in his way; he isn't the kid who used to have trouble fighting the Rhino anymore, as he tears apart cosmic enemies rather quickly with the Worldmind and all the Corps' power at his back. Yeah, it's probably like Ion, but as I always say, if you are going to rip something off, at least get it right. There is a reckoning with Iron Man & The Thunderbolts for the next two issues, and while it may have seemed a little convient getting there, it should be worth the ride. I definately hope this book succeeds as like MOON KNIGHT and IRON FIST, it looks like another successful relaunch of an old franchise, least in terms of quality. The art's good too. Buy it!
PUNISHER: WAR JOURNAL #6: At least the background isn't one still photo for the entire issue. And it continues the theme of breaking up the order of scenes to attempt to make them more interesting. Hey, look, I know it is a common literary tool, but some people do it well and others just use it for shorthand. Fortunately, while some bits of this book seem silly, like Castle in some ad-hoc "Captain Punisher" costume and the new Hatemonger, Fraction's had a bit of quirky humor throughout. I mean this is a book that had Punisher fight little Iron Man robots, after all. Hatemonger is manipulating anti-terror vigilance to wage war on Mexico and Punisher escapes SHIELD to try to fight him, but winds up bound to a stake in barbed wire with dogs about to eat him. Just about the usual for Frank. It's fairly silly, but it's not like Ennis hasn't relied on some wonky humor for the past, like, 700 years? He gave the Russian inflatable boobs and a dress for F's sake. And it keeps Castle's one-note schtick from seeming too stale. The concept of Punisher wanting to wear a silly Cap costume seems ridiculous, but I can't look away. And besides, no one said the fella was sane. He just does a service by offing crooks.
See, this here, people, is a real reviewist. Dread, along with BrianWilly, make these B/T threads worthwhile. Longwinded as they may be, they really get into it. You should all be ashamed. Thank You, Dread and BW.
Don't knock the hoff, man. I wish every man was as sexy as the hoff... ew.I'd be more ashamed having a horrid picture of a naked David Hasslehoff as my avatar. That just creeps me out every time I see it.
"Okay. Lets Review. Your ride is toast. I'm Nova. You're dead. Allow me to demonstrate."
See, this here, people, is a real reviewist. Dread, along with BrianWilly, make these B/T threads worthwhile. Longwinded as they may be, they really get into it. You should all be ashamed. Thank You, Dread and BW.
There's something on your nose there.![]()
See, this here, people, is a real reviewist. Dread, along with BrianWilly, make these B/T threads worthwhile. Longwinded as they may be, they really get into it. You should all be ashamed. Thank You, Dread and BW.
Dreads reviews most noticeably, the NA one are shorted than usual.
1).Is it a stretch tie-in? A bit, yeah, but I'm enjoying it, if not just because of Satan as Jack O'Lantern. The bit with him leading the zombies out of the cemetary, screaming "THIS IS THE WORST ARMY OF THE DEAD I HAVE EVER SEEN!" was hilarious to me.t:
2).Wait, first off...there is such a thing as stupid ninjas?![]()
But anyway, I digging this new approach the New Avengers is going. If my predition is correct, then the NA are going to be assisted by The Hand to take out the SHRA. This gray morality--though it probably annoys someone who hates it when these comics are anything but bright and optimistic--is a very interesting approach. I wonder how this will go.
3).I haven't read Annilation yet--waiting until it hits TPB--but I read this and very much liked it. I was suprised that it was actually beginner friendly. I assumed there would be a lot of jargon crap to go through, but it was pretty cool. I espicially loved this one line from Nova after taking out the spore for the bugs.
"Your ride is busted, I'm Nova, and you're all dead. Allow me to demonstrate."
Bad. Ass.
Looking forward to the next issue, wonder how he'll fare against Iron Man.
4).Actually, I think the concept of "Captain Punisher" actually got some merit after this issue--Punisher sees this Hatemonger guy wearing a Cap-like costume killing innocent people for reasons of "patriotism." The bastard is sullying Cap's name, after all the s**t the man went through before he died.
So this makes Frank angry. Very angry. And while normal people, when we kick something or curse outloud when angry, Frank puts on his hunting gear, gets some automatic weapons, and busts on the skulls of the wicked. Now he's going to do that, and, in his way, reclaim Cap's honor alongside it.
That's how I read it, anyway.
Anyone get Loners #1?
Dread said:THE LONERS #1: After a mild degree of buzz from WIZARD and Newsarama, the spin-off mini to RUNAWAYS' first arc of their second volume is finally upon us. The cover is strange, with poorer art than Moline's interiors, and it literally has text at the bottom explaining the premise. In a way it seems like a movie poster, which will be the theme of all 5 covers, supposedly. But it did make the book seem odd. Maybe they are trying to make it look "mainstream indie" to try to attract some newcomers, but that seems odd considering it is a spin-off of the good but low selling cult fave RUNAWAYS. It is akin to the low selling Mirage TMNT comic having a spin off about CASEY JONES. Despite all their efforts, one cannot imagine the audience for this being large. I have been eagerly waiting for this launch for months now, and after some fears from the previews that it would be a spandex free, emo-palooza, well, those doubts are wrong. Yes, there is plenty of angst, but this is about a superhero self-help group, so it is supposed to have angst. But the second half of the tale does have genuine superhero action. Against an actual supervillian, to boot! Yes, yes, superheroes fighting supervillians post CW, and 500 civilians didn't even die. Shocking, but apparently Marvel can still publish these. Cebulski is coming off of X-MEN: FAIRY TALES and editting the first volume of RUNAWAYS. In a way the set-up of the heroes having a "superhero anonymous" meeting gives Ceb the ability to have his characters literally name themselves and summarize their stories. Ceb takes a step back from RUNAWAYS #6, which had the team become a de-facto team group. This time around, the group is back to their original premise to attempt to "kick the self-destructive habit" of superheroing because it always wrecks their civilian lives, and is dangerous to boot. Chris Powell (Darkhawk) is unstable and new member Mattie Frank ("the young one" of the Spider-Women) has her own horror stories from ALIAS. Civil War is mentioned as a reason for why the group needs to maintain their retirement, seemingly to adhear to the law. Julie Power ends up using hers and explains it as it being the hardest of all for her because she gained her powers as a child, younger than even the mutant Johnny Gallo (Ricochet), and cannot remove it via a costume like Micky (Turbo) and Phil Urich (Green Goblin). But it turns out Mattie really doesn't want to retire, and merely moved to CA to track down the MGH gang that messed with her, and manages to rope along Darkhawk and Ricochet into the battle. Their fight is well drawn and paced, and so within the first issue we sort of have a schism between this group. Half the team will be fighting the MGH dealers on the side, and half wonders where they keep running off too. The cover asks if the team can keep out of the spandex for good, and so far it seems like they won't. But I think that is the forgone conclusion. It's the ride getting there that counts. Honestly, in a way this is like DYNAMO 5, only with more established characters; a superhero series with a twist. Off to a solid start. It was worth the wait so far. Moline's artwork is also quite fitting, with some good colors/inks. Give it a try.