Nobody picked up Superman Confidential? Long wait sucked, and I completely forgot what happened in the first five parts, but a great final scene.
Yeah, I usually don't pick up comics that have been delayed for over a month. If the publisher can't bother to get it out within a month of its scheduled release date, I can't be bothered to give them my money for it.
X-Men #207
Solid issue, but an anticlimactic ending to the Messiah Complex crossover. I mean, really, Professor X gets shot? Wow. I'm. So. Shocked.

It's not like he's been presumed dead like 3 or 4 times already or anything. But at least Marvel's making no bones about the fact that he'll be back, judging by that X-Men Legacy description. Anyway, the rest of the crossover's threads don't get much closure either: the X-Men beat the Marauders, as we expected; X-Force beats Predator X, as we expected; Cable gives Scott the baby after a little speechifying from Professor X, then Scott gives her right back to Cable, which sets up Cable's new book nicely but made me roll my eyes as a conclusion to this whole crossover she started; mutantkind is still on the verge of extinction; Bishop's now evil, but he sucked anyway so no one really cares; Rogue's angsty and Gambit's inevitably going to chase after her, as always. That's pretty low-key stuff for such an intense crossover. I suppose it was a necessary evil, though, since this is a crossover of ongoing comics which must necessarily lack any sort of
real closure on everything. I still can't help feeling writers of Carey, Brubaker, et al.'s calibre couldn't come up with something more impressive for the big finale than this, though. Oh well, onto the new X-Men comics next month.
X-Men First Class #8
Good stuff. I was confused about Curt Conners' having two arms, but I guess one of them might've been a prosthetic? Or something?

Anyway, the team meets Man-Thing and goes on a charming jaunt through some alternate futures--and by charming, of course, I mean horrific. One future sees Jean go Dark Phoenixy again and kills everyone, and another sees Iceman evolve into a new frost giant and Thor in the process of stomping his ass while yelling about how he warned Bobby (which he did, back in the original X-Men First Class mini-series). Professor X explains that Man-Thing and the Nexus of All Realities are empathic--the kids were afraid when they went through the Nexus, so they wound up in futures that would terrify them. Kind of a cool take that extends Man-Thing's empath powers to the Nexus itself (I don't know if that's how it's always been, since my experience with Man-Thing is limited). The art was by Eric Nguyen and, while it wasn't terrible, it was muddled and kind of boring at times. It looked like it would be better suited to a dream sequence than actual events.