Bought/Thought for June 9th, 2010 *SPOILERS*

If it's any consolation, Corp I was pretty pissed off too. T-Bolts (the only decent version) was such an amazing run, and really turned those guys into more than just straight up bad guys.
 
Yeah, now I remember why I hardly post in this forum. To be fair to everyone though, Doc hates like 97% of Marvel does anyway.
 
Not true!

Loving the X-Men stuff right now BIG TIME (until the vampire thing, anyway). Also reading quite a good bit of non-Bendis Avengers stuff now, too.
 
OVERREACTION ALERT! OVERREACTION ALERT!

[YT]7J-y2rFfny8[/YT]

Finish the arc like a ****ing man, maybe Brubaker will have a reason to this "madness". Maybe Zemo is on his period.
From what I hear, Brubaker didn't have any reason to his Chuck Xavier madness in Deadly Genesis or his Black Tarantula madness in Daredevil. If he can't bother to write a story that makes sense with the characters' established personalities, I'll drop that s*** same as I do with Bendis and Millar's comics when they do it (far more frequently, granted).
 
Not true!

Loving the X-Men stuff right now BIG TIME (until the vampire thing, anyway). Also reading quite a good bit of non-Bendis Avengers stuff now, too.

If I had feelings, I would cry. :yay:

From what I hear, Brubaker didn't have any reason to his Chuck Xavier madness in Deadly Genesis or his Black Tarantula madness in Daredevil. If he can't bother to write a story that makes sense with the characters' established personalities, I'll drop that s*** same as I do with Bendis and Millar's comics when they do it (far more frequently, granted).

I'll give you Chuck, but seriously, you're crying about Black Tarantula? Come on Corp, you're really stretching there.
 
I'm not, although I did like him as the noble, sophisticated anti-villain in ASM. But other people who were bigger fans noted how horrendously Brubaker f***ed him up, and Brubaker being Brubaker, it's his version that'll stick. The star-power of the character doesn't matter to me one iota, though--again, second-favorite character is the Black Knight. If I know for a fact that a writer will f*** up a character I care about in an arc, I won't buy that arc. Simple.

If this is all some elaborate plot on Zemo's part and we learn later that he's not the monumental psychopath over Bucky that he seems to be, I'll eat my fair share of crow, pick up the trade or the back issues, and move on. Wouldn't be the first time. I thought Young Avengers was gonna be s*** initially, yet now I love all of those characters.

But we know from past experience that Brubaker is perfectly capable of f***ing up characters with no rhyme or reason and, seeing as how Zemo matters to me, I don't want to see Brubaker f*** him up. I'm not overreacting--I'm not dropping Captain America forever or claiming that I'm done with Marvel altogether or anything--I'm just choosing not to buy an arc that I know I won't enjoy because of a fundamental part of its basic premise.
 
I was wondering why you cared so much about my buying habits in the first place. :)
 
I was at my comic shop this week, and since UPS was late, I had to wait for a bit until all my comics got pulled. Looking at All-Star Batman And Robin Volume 1, and wondered if there will ever be a conclusion to that story. Wasn't DC promising us over a year ago it was going to be concluded??

Iron Man Noir #3

This has been my favorite of the Noir series thus far, and it's mainly thanks to Scott Snyder's brilliant idea to make Tony Stark a Noir-Indiana Jones. It's just too bad that this issue finally put Tony in the Iron Man armor; because not every Elseworld-type of story has to follow the same 616 formula. (Yeah, it really wouldn't be "Iron Man," but it was so much more fun before.) Even with Tony (and Rhodey) in armor, this comic was still enjoyable. They must rescue Pepper from the evil Nazis and collect the prize relic that was stolen from them by Baron Zemo. (Yep, it's very much like Raiders Of The Lost Ark in that respect.) It's good fun, and much more enjoyable than Invincible Iron Man has been. You sure get a lot more action. :yay:

Ultimate Spider-Man #11

Another good issue by Bendis, only slightly ruined by the art. MJ goes to Gwen and Peter, showing them that she's got footage of the incident with Kitty and the Feds at their school, and Peter brings MJ and the footage to Ben Urich at the Daily Bugle (which is now an online newspaper). Peter's Spidey-sense goes nuts when JJ Jameson shows up, and upon following him discovers the reason why: He's actually The Chameleon. In the end, he takes over Peter's identity, which is very reminiscent of a storyline from last year's Amazing Spider-Man. Good stuff! :yay:

Echo #22

I still don't know how JH gets this comic a week before the rest of us! But, I loved this issue. Terry Moore being Terry Moore, of course we get some lesbianistic undertones this issue. I just really love the character of Ivy. I think she's stolen the thunder from all the other characters; and, her dealing with Hong in the later half of the book was classic. My only complaint is we don't get enough story with each issue, and I always find myself disappointed that it ends too quickly. :woot:

Deadpool #1 ($1.00 reprint)

I thought it was neat that Marvel was reprinting for a buck the first issue of Deadpool; but, sorely disappointed that it was the more recent volume. I think all Deadpool fans would have appreciated a reprint of Kelly's first issue, and one that would cost a fan much more to get than this one. :csad:

Predators #1

Yeah, I don't need to get the rest of these issues. This prequel to the new film is split in two. The first deals with a group of soldiers being taken out by the Predators, and the second is the actual prequel to the film, looking at Adrian Brodie's character and what he did before the film, I guess. It's just the Adrian Brodie stuff really doesn't deal with the Predators...at least not yet. :dry:

Solomon Kane #4

This final issue was greatly delayed. Sadly, Allie's second Solomon Kane mini wasn't as good as the first. I found myself bored with the story, and the art wasn't that good either. :csad:

The Light #3

Thankfully, this mini is so much better than the previous two comics. I like a good supernatural comic, and this one has delivered. The main two characters (a father and daughter) continue to try and avoid looking at any light that comes from power lines. (Other light sources, like flashlights or car headlights, are safe.) They also learn this issue, as they join another group of two survivors, that looking into the light doesn't necessarily kill a person right away. So, it just adds another level of terror to their lives.

This comic borrows a lot of elements that we've seen in other stories and movies, like the daughter demanding that they go to Portland to try and see if her mom is still alive. (I'm not expecting that to turn out well. Most times, the person they go in search of only ends badly. Not only is the family member dead, but various characters along the way tend to bite it, also.) Still, I love a comic that isn't the same old superhero-genre. I don't need originality with my comics. I just asked to be entertained. :yay:

Dracula #1

HUGE disappointment from Marvel here! Ya see, I already own this comic; but, Marvel decided to re-release it, but this time with color. Not only is it not needed for that reason, but Dynamite just put out a Dracula adaptation that surpassed this one last year. :csad:

Dream Logic #1

Dream Logic pretty much takes the place of David Mack's Reflections. It highlights his artistic talent, and gives those who are interested an indepth look into the processes he uses. I find it fascinating; but, it sure isn't for everyone. There is a nice segment of this comic that looks into Mack's "dream logic," where he examines the meanings of his dreams. (At least, I think it might be a bit autobiographical in that regard...but, I guess he could have made it up.)

What I loved about this book most wasn't even about the comic. It was that the gal behind the counter of my comic shop also is a big Mack fan, and we had a nice conversation about what a neat guy he is, and how he's so personable to his fans. She even showed me the Kabuki tattoo below the back of her neck. :yay:
 
I don't see why Peter can't be a moderator or something at Daily Bugle. He created the web site!
 
Captain America #606 - Baron Zemo goes back to being a villain; having not read Thunderbolts, I have no particular attachment to this either way. Butch Guice back on art, and it looks a bit different this time around (some sequences have a very Colan-esque feel, I thought). Surprisingly, the Wrecking Crew for once doesn't get totally jobbed. I liked the interaction between James, Steve, and Sam; and the mentions of James and Natasha's scheduling difficulties was fun (makes sense, given how active their lives are).

Oh, and I loved Zemo wearing a mask over his regular mask.

Daredevil #507 - The "Daredevil in Japan" arc concludes; this was three parts, protracted by a fill-in one-shot, and overall it worked pretty well, particularly given that this was all done using a bunch of new Hand characters we've never seen before. They did a good job of creating a group of identifiable personalities. The fight scene between Daredevil and the white-clad ninjas in the snow was beautifully drawn. The info about White Tiger was the main twist of this arc (plus the possible reappearance of Elektra), and that likewise is very logically presented here (though either Izo severely miscalculated or he's playing a whole other game here). The last-page reveal was a "who?" moment for me, but looking over their backstory, it all makes sense, and it's a great use of continuity.

Heroic Age: Prince of Power #2 - Continuing from Part 1, we get the obligatory hero vs. hero fight when Cho could have just told Thor what he told him to end the fight (though here, at least, they get sidetracked by a different issue, ie, whether Thor really was Herc's BFF, which he claims to be here). Our villain, an old Hulk foe named Vali Halfling, proceeds with his nefarious plan to become a god, bringing in more old plot devices from past Olympians stories, such as the Promethean Flame. He does commit the classic Bond villain mistake of not killing Athena when he has her totally at his mercy; that surely won't totally come back to bite him in the ass. The fight between Thor and Cho is nicely done, and it's nice to see a visit to the Egyptian corner of the Marvel Universe.

Invincible Iron Man #27 - three issues into the new arc, and I can feel my interest starting to sap again. I can never make up my mind about whether I like this book or not. I did like the return of Tony's old secretary, Mrs. Arbogast (who hasn't been seen in a very long time), but the main plot of this arc (supposedly) isn't going anywhere fast, and at times it feels like a lot of tech jargon is being substituted for characterization. Eh.
 
Oh, son of a b****, my shop either didn't get Prince of Power or it sold out. I knew I was forgetting something. Balls, I was really looking forward to it, too. :csad:
 
Young Allies #1

I don't know what went wrong with McKeever over at DC; but, he was never as good as what he's put out for Marvel, this issue being right up there with anything he's ever put out. I enjoyed the backstories of Nomad in Captain America...but, this is on a different level. Sure, the team hasn't officially come together by the time the first issue ends with a disasterous bang...yet, you can see the members of the group are going to work together beautifully. (It just makes me scratch my head at how bad Teen Titans was, and how good this is.) LOVED this issue! LOVED the Bastards Of Evil, too! Great name! :woot:

Ultimate Avengers 2 #3

Meh. It's not a bad issue...it's just nothing to write home to Ma about. I like seeing Ultimate Ghost Rider; but, it's just this team of Ultimate Avengers really doesn't gel. I can give a rat's patoottie about Nick Fury, and I care even less for Tyrone Cash. Take that and add a pretty generic story, you just don't have much. :dry:

Batman #700

You basically get a 30 page story by Grant Morrison for $4.99. They throw in a gallery and a look at the Batcave in the end; but, I don't think the price is worth whatcha get. Still, the story isn't bad for a stand alone, as we get to look at the three stages of Batmen (Bruce, Dick, and future-Damien). The last few pages of the story seem to be a promotion for future comics, like Batman Beyond...so, it's not even really a full 30-page story. I'll still give it a :yay: for Morrison's tale, but a :dry: overall for the high price and b.s. filler at the end.
 
Heralds' second issue was a mixed bag. I feel like Immonen was going for a very thickly layered mystery where no one is certain of anything, but it turned out very obtuse and awkward in practice. Add to that the fact that the dialogue was just weird at times and the second artist sucked after Zonjic established a really good tone in the first issue and a couple pages in this one, and it was quite a letdown from the first issue's promise. So apparently Frances is not Frankie and there are a bunch of Phineas Horton clones and another Frankie is back as Nova and Photon might've maybe killed someone but not and then Johnny Storm's in the mix and... yeah, just all over the place. I hope Immonen can pull it all together in the coming issues so that I look back on this one and think, "Oh yeah, I see what she was doing there now that I know how it ends." But that only happens very, very rarely, I've found. Usually if something is confusing in an issue, it's just because it's a mess.
 
Batman #700

You basically get a 30 page story by Grant Morrison for $4.99. They throw in a gallery and a look at the Batcave in the end; but, I don't think the price is worth whatcha get. Still, the story isn't bad for a stand alone, as we get to look at the three stages of Batmen (Bruce, Dick, and future-Damien). The last few pages of the story seem to be a promotion for future comics, like Batman Beyond...so, it's not even really a full 30-page story. I'll still give it a :yay: for Morrison's tale, but a :dry: overall for the high price and b.s. filler at the end.

Thanks for the hands up on this one. I was considering picking it up since it's standalone and such, but if it's really that much fluff I'll probably pass. I wish DC and Marvel both would treat their big numbers anniversaries like ASM #600.
 
I wish it were longer, but after finishing Batman 700 I came away feeling that I got my 5 bucks worth. Morrison was great as usual, a lot of nice nods to past continuity. The artists were great, though I wasn't too impressed by Finch. If you have enjoyed Morrison's Batman, then I'd say pick it up.
 
My problem with Batman #700 was that it felt like it was a great but meaningless one-shot while Marvel has really set the standard on how awesome milestone issues are with Thor #600, Daredevil #500, and the Amazing Spider-Man #600.
 
Not to mention Morrison already did this "Batman will never Die" thing. Sure this one had a reference to a Silver Age comic where a man became Batman to fight Fura space nazi robots, then you had a reference to Batman Beyond and DC 1,000,000 Million aswell.

I really don't see how it took Morrison "2 months" to write something he defined as "monster of a chapter" >_>
 

Corp, though I thoroughly enjoyed Cap 606, I understand your feeling. When Avengers #1 hit earlier in the month everyone was like "COOL" and I was like "**** YOU!!! they jobbed Kang!"

God, Spider-Woman and Bucky not knowing who he is still rattles me...what Kang did in The Kang Dynasty is about 1,000 times bigger than 9-11...he blew up Washington...he should be basically in history books at this point.
 
Well, to be fair, "Kang Dynasty" has pretty much never been mentioned since, and that's because the events in it were so huge they would fundamentally reshape the MU, and that ain't happenin'.
 
Decently large week for me, with two new launches featuring super-kids! As always, full spoilers ahoy! And as always, reviews are up at Examiner via the link in my sig.

Dread's Bought/Thought for 6/9/10:

BOOSTER GOLD #33:
Word is that that this title is meant to tie in with JUSTICE LEAGUE: GENERATION LOST, a bi-weekly series which is also written by Keith Giffen. I wasn't up for another weekly (or bi-weekly) DC series after 52. Although if I do change my mind, it should be soon, before I miss too many issues. At any rate, I feel this issue has done a fine job of standing alone. I don't feel like I have missed anything just by sticking with this title. J.M. DeMatteis is along for the writing chores, with Chris Batista on art as well as some solid color and ink work.

While this issue is somewhat less comedic than the last, the focus is still very much on comedy, despite Booster Gold's general task. It seems that Max Lord was revived at the end of BLACKEST NIGHT, only nobody on Earth knows he exists except the D-List JUSTICE LEAGUE INTERNATIONAL squad. They naturally have tried going around to convince the other heroes that Lord exists, but they don't know what they are talking about ("We'd have remembered if Wonder Woman snapped someone's neck on TV. That would have been out of character!"). After a fight with an Obligatory Villain, Brigadoom (last month it was Emerald Empress), Booster Gold has coffee and lectures Cyborg about why the "Bwa-Ha-Ha" era of the JLI should be remembered for more than just slapstick comedy. Yes, Giffen & DeMatteis do sound like they are talking through Booster on that one, but I don't find myself disagreeing with them entirely. To this end, Booster decides to go back in time to that JLI era in order to see if Max Lord has covered his tracks via time travel vs. just a major psychic mind-wipe in the present. Upon seeing that Lord still exists in the past, Booster looks for some sort of evidence to "prove" that Lord existed (and that couldn't be alledged to be fake). This also allows him to stalk around the old headquarters, and wear his old costume. Interestingly, his cover isn't as good as it seems; J'onn IMMEDIATELY figures out that this Booster is from the future, and it is assumed that Black Canary would notice his "hairline" as well. Ah, back before "realism" made superheroes into blundering morons. Unfortunately, all Booster does is open up old emotional memories of simpler, happier times.

In the meanwhile, Rani, the kid from the future, shares the headquarters with Rip, who under Giffen sounds a lot more like Booster's son than a mentor, which isn't too bad actually. Two issues into this run, I am not entirely sure how I think about it. It has a lot more comedy than the last run, but it still has emotional character beats here and there. I don't mind the return to comedy, although I don't think the balance between comedy and drama is as well executed as Pak & Lente pull off in their HERCULES/PRINCE OF POWER material. Still, I was glad to not feel lost on this, and will likely continue to buy it.

AVENGERS ACADEMY #1: The first of Marvel's two teen team launches, and the one that will garner the most attention; which is understandably so. Christos Gage did some exceptional work on AVENGERS: THE INITIATIVE, which was washed over by the waves of FOUR major line wide crossovers. I've often argued that when he got settled, he wrote that book better that Slott did (at least working off Slott's foundation). Along for the ride on art is Mike McKone, who seems to be using a new inking technique. Some people for some reason dislike his art, but I certainly enjoy it. At any rate, initial expectations would be that this would be what The Initiative would have been if Iron Man hadn't been a well meaning despot, or Osborn a fanatical psychopath. In execution it springboards well off of the end of A:TI as well as MIGHTY AVENGERS, while having a premise that does link up with the future rather than trying to spit shine the past.

Aside for Reptil, all of the new recruits at the Academy are new. Despite being housed in the "Infinite Mansion" invented by Pym, there are only six students; that is good because A:TI at the start got very crowded, very quickly. The P.O.V. character for this issue is Veil, a girl from Long Island who transforms into a black mist. Part of me imagines that this series could take on the format of Matt Fraction's THE ORDER, where every issue begins from the perspective of one of the new characters (a formula so effective it is amazing it isn't ripped off more often). Like the rest of the kids (aside for Reptil), she was initially found by Osborn and virtually tortured to manifest her abilities faster. And like many of the kids, that forceful experimentation has harmed her body; in Veil's case, she is slowly breaking down, and one day may never be able to reform.

The staff for the school are Pym and Quicksilver from MIGHTY AVENGERS, and Justice, Tigra, and Speedball from AVENGERS: THE INITIATIVE. In many ways, Speedball is more like the kids than the instructors. He's in his old Speedball costume and codename, but he was never an Avenger or a teacher before. He was just as manipulated and exploited as the kids by Osborn, only he outright rebelled. He still is acting much like Penance, riddled with guilt and eager to help the kids master their powers, lest they become like him. Pym's the team doctor and Justice is basically the dreamy guidance counselor. Tigra doesn't do a whole lot in this issue, but Gage clearly likes her and always does good stuff with her, so I won't complain. Quicksilver's only on the team to distance himself from Magneto (who is active again, but Pietro acts like Magnus is a villain again when he's a Cyclops invited member of the X-Men, unless I missed something), and while he seems all wrong to be a teacher, by the end it actually makes perfect sense for him to be there, perhaps even more so than Pym.

The other members of the team are filled out, and some could argue they are a tad stereotypical, although most new characters are and have room to grow. Probably my favorite of the bunch is Mettle, who I call Red Skull Jr. No one else does, which is pretty weird as most of the kids are not very nice. He's a big metal lunk but he isn't aggressive at all, which is nice. Next is Striker, who may as well be Lightening Lad from LOSH with a cloaking device on, at least for now. I imagine his costume will be a design that EVERY artist aside for McKone struggles with. Rounding out the feminine portion of the cast is Hazmat, whose skin and fluids are toxic so she has to wear a hazmat suit at all times (and chooses to compensate by being rude to everyone), and Finesse. Finesse seems interesting in that she can learn anything she wants at super speed; this seems similar to Taskmaster, but also similar to Melee, another character Gage created for A:TI. In fact the only differences between Melee and Finesse were that Melee had more piercings, and spoke more words in Spanish. They are so similar that part of me wonders if Gage will say they are the same character, and Finesse is Melee with more skills. It seems a bit odd to have two characters from the same writer with such similar abilities. It is as if Steve Gerber created Man-Thing and Muck-Human, or Howard the Duck and Jerry The Goose. They could be related. Maybe Melee was a "sketch" of what Finesse will become. In terms of character, Finesse is one of those "ice cold perfect military woman" that we've seen a dozen times, so far. One imagines a conversation between her, Maria Hill and Agent Brand would be such a case of one-upmanship that some of the male characters would groan, "and they say MEN want to measure it". Which might actually work.

Part of me also wonders that if the X-editorial office won't end M-Day outright, that other writers on other books will put some cracks into it little by little, and thus eventually force that ridiculous plot line to shatter. Veil is obviously a mutant. There is no accident or artifact to explain her powers, and her origin fits perfectly well with most mutants. And why is that a problem? It works out fine. What matters is how a character acts and engages, not always their origin. I mean if you want a flat character with a great origin, there's always X-23. Unless the rest of the kids were zapped by rays or whatnot, some of them could be, too, and I would have zero problem with it. The problem with the X-Men was NEVER "too many mutants". It was an editorial board stocked full of repetition rather than innovation, and writers telling the same soap opera stories from the 80's over and over until we all die. After M-Day, the X-Books have lacked their central metaphor and thus a lot of focus. When Ed Brubaker and Matt Fraction can't make it work, that should be a major warning sign. At any rate, so far Reptil is the only one who has a clear case of a non-mutant origin, powered by a dinosaur artifact.

Pym and the rest make a big deal about telling the kids how they are the best and brightest of the kids that Osborn recruited, but Finesse becomes suspicious and the kids end up learning the "omigod" surprise truth; that they're in fact the recruits Osborn tormented the most, and the teachers want to make sure they don't become villains. While they aren't mentioned, wild packs of rotten teenage superhumans such as the Young Masters or the new "Bastards Of Evil" roaming around Marvel lately with little regard for property damage or human life add some intangible urgency to that goal, which helps the book. Part of me imagines that Tigra will be most involved with Reptil, since she mentored him before (and like him, is coping with a lost family member or members; Reptil's parents are MIA and presumed dead, while Tigra's husband was murdered). The touchy issue is whether it was right for the Avengers teachers to lie to the kids outright. Their options were limited. Telling them to quit and be normal wouldn't help, especially as some of their experimentation made a normal life not an option (such as for Mettle and Hazmat). Treating them like criminals wouldn't help. Personally a best of both options would have been ideal rather than outright lying, but it is worth noting that out of all of the Avengers teachers, the only one with the best instructing experience is Tigra. Pym was offworld for most of the Initiative, replaced by a Skrull. Justice spent most of his Initiative days exposing the corruption. Speedball spent most of it in a padded cell. And Quicksilver can't even handle his own kids well. Tigra was the only one of them who was a mentor from Initiative to now, and Pym seems to be calling most of the shots. But in the end, Quicksilver seems to be the one most like the kids; spawn of a villain, started out a terrorist and has spent time on both sides of the fence more often than many Avengers, including very recently. In fact while Veil, Reptil, and Mettle could likely listen to the more "noble" heroes, from what I have seen so far, it may take someone like Quicksilver to get through to types like Striker or Finesse. Out of anyone, he should be the one who advocated not lying to the kids; didn't Magneto lie to him for half his life about being his father?

Justice also acts as if he doesn't quite know that Firestar recently got, and overcame, cancer to the point that the chemo mangled her hair, and she needs wigs. Maybe she's not told him about some of that. He merely mentions the times in the 90's when Pym was able to save her from her microwave powers. It isn't a major deal; one imagines for Angelica, telling her ex-fiance (who has moved on) that she had and fought off cancer last month would be an awkward subject. But it perhaps shows that Firestar would probably be better off here than in YOUNG ALLIES; the drama would write itself. But I digress.

I still haven't decided which of these launches I liked more, this or YOUNG ALLIES. While neither are perfect, this one offers better original characters and I probably have a little more faith in Gage than McKeever. Plus, it follows up from two prior Avengers titles very well. The crossover with the THUNDERBOLTS should be very interesting.

CAPTAIN AMERICA #606: Ah, for the first time since DEADLY GENESIS, a Brubaker comic issues controversy. Baron Zemo is back after a hefty absence from comic books (mostly to get off the stage of THUNDERBOLTS once Osborn took it over), and he's a villain again. For some readers, the internet is cracking in half. Me? I have to admit hypocritical bias. I never read T-Bolts with Zemo in them. I never attached to him as an anti-hero. Therefore, I don't give a damn that Brubaker's making him a villain again. It's blunt, but it's honest. I imagine many people felt that way when Venom was made into a villain again after a long turn as a vigilante in the 90's. I'm more concerned that Techno has seemed to join up with Zemo already, which seems to be giving away a plot point to the next issue of THUNDERBOLTS pretty early (and if not, is a continuity hiccup).

Zemo's back and he's irritated that Osborn reached a position of power that Zemo wanted, and instead of changing the world, he squandered it. Thus he fears his time as an "anti-hero" has passed, because this is the "Heroic Age". Unless Anti-Venom joins the Secret Avengers, of course. Outside of the X-Men, everything is black and white again. He's further irritated when Ghost informs him that the new Captain America is James Barnes, the "Bucky" that Zemo Sr. seemingly iced. The original Baron Zemo was one of those dime a dozen WWII villains, always second fiddle to Red Skull or Master Man. He only accomplished two worthwhile things in his entire career of villainy; killing the original Citizen V, and killing Bucky. Obviously no one gives a damn about the former, but the latter always at least gave Steve Rogers some sort of guilt or turmoil. Zemo Jr., on the other hand, accomplished a lot more. He's organized squads of Masters of Evil. His team nearly killed Hercules and Jarvis. He made Rogers cry. He even tricked the world a few times with the T-Bolts. Zemo wants to honor his own legacy, so to see some aspect of his father's legacy made moot, I can perhaps understand the logic circuit of wanting to do something about it. To be frank I always found the concept of Baron Zemo becoming a hero a little silly, but then again until recently I never bothered with T-Bolts. My issue was it robbed Marvel of good, genuine villains with history and character, because absolutely ZERO new villains ever were created to fill the void. Tell me, while Baron Zemo was being an anti-hero, who replaced him in Cap's rogues gallery? Protocide? If you can't replace a villain removed from the stage, don't remove him. Besides, Zemo was a post-modern Nazi war criminal; him becoming Rogers' best friend always felt odd to me. It's like if Mr. Sinister became a superhero, an X-Man, and Cyclops' personal physician. It'd be too absurd for words. Although I admit I never read the T-Bolts issues, so, I could be talking out of the wrong end here. And I'll admit giving Zemo the angle of, "wanting to take over the world to save it" like Dr. Doom probably isn't a bad motivation. Even if it is Dr. Doom's. But Doom's been knocked down a peg lately, so Zemo could always fill that gap.

Honestly, some of the best stuff of the issue comes from showing Barnes' obvious turmoil from the Grand Director arc. It was the second time he'd had to fight an evil version of Steve within a few months, and this time he had to shoot to kill (and did). Guice, often an inker, pencils an issue himself and does a bang-up job, especially on Barnes' dream page. Barnes' head is so out of the game that he screws up a fight alongside Falcon and the Wrecking Crew (sans Wrecker) actually manage to escape from a robbery, because Barnes is a bit careless. Rogers and Wilson stage a bit of an intervention at a bar, and it's solid stuff. Even the little bit with Natasha always being away on SECRET AVENGERS or solo stuff is a nice touch.

Zemo naturally is out on a personal vendetta; he cleans house at the old Island Of Exiles (another nice touch), he consults Sin at a mental ward, and he blows up Barnes' bike, injuring Wilson (poor fella just can't catch a break). Maybe it helps if you remember that the original Baron Zemo was such a bungler he literally killed HIMSELF with a laser gun and some debris - because lord knows the best thing to do when Cap screws up your aim is to fire a wild shot over your head (and unlike his son, didn't manage to cheat certain death a few times). Icing Barnes was his masterstroke. Or at least that is how I see it. I suppose Brubaker could have handled Zemo's turn a little better than, "and now I DESTROY him!", but we'll have to see what future issues bring. Barnes will inevitably be captured and then his conversation with Zemo should be interesting. Still, I wasn't a fan of the pre-Parker T-BOLTS so to me Zemo is still another villain, and one I don't mind seeing show up during Brubaker's run. It puts me in the minority, but such is life.

There's also the NOMAD strip, by McKeever & Baldeon. That means that between this and YOUNG ALLIES, Baldeon managed to pencil 30 pages of material within a month, and may have to do so for longer (as well as the inker and colorist). That's quite speedy. The story itself has Rikki struggling to make ends meet while living in some abandoned shack, while lying and making it seem to her friend Arana that she's just living solo. A bit interesting that Natasha is willing to give Rikki her Nomad costume, but not set her up with some sort of pad; on the other hand, the impression is that Rikki wants to rely on her own gumption (such as refusing social services). At any rate, she ends up trusting the wrong person and trapped in the basement of a killer. A bit low key, but I imagine it'll somehow connect to the Secret Empire. I didn't mind it. YOUNG ALLIES was better.

So in short, I liked this issue of CAPTAIN AMERICA, although I was less disposed to be offended by anything Brubaker did with Zemo. He probably could have layered it a little better, but it isn't a deal breaker for me at all. I imagine the lure of legacy vs. legacy here as well as the intertwined history was more than enough for Brubaker, and me as well.
 
Part II of II:

INVINCIBLE IRON MAN #27: I love Iron Man's expression on the cover. He looks like he let one rip, with those Felix the Cat optics.

I don't know what it is about this title. I suppose it was another solid installment, but I find my interest wavering. Maybe it's all the talking and not enough action, even if it is good talking. Pepper talks Stark into making her into Rescue again, despite his objections. Bambi Arbogast comes back, which is a nice and natural surprise. The Hammer women are branching out into Japan, staging their own crisis to get Detroit Steel in with Japan to convince the Americans to double down. And Rhodes has a conversation with Stark using gambling as a metaphor for "working with Stark" thing.

It seems that every issue is 10 minutes of an hour long episode, and that means it takes four for anything modestly entertaining or exciting to happen, and maybe that's starting to be a drag. For every 1-2 good slam bang issues there seems to be another 1-2 issues of middling, of taking 22 pages to do something that could be done in ten, and maybe it is starting to ware on me. The whole run is often like a movie where you like it but want to FF to the good parts. Usually when I drop a book I don't hate it, I feel blase' about it. I fear that for some reason lately I am feeling that way towards INVINCIBLE IRON MAN.

Still, some of the dialog is quite good, especially some of Pepper's retorts to Stark. "Hulkbuster" really isn't neutral.

HEROIC AGE: PRINCE OF POWER #2: While sales on the HERCULES WITHOUT HERCULES mini's have fallen steadily, the quality hasn't. Fred Van Lente and Greg Pak make it all look so easy, mixing the comedy gold with the dramatic weight, the action with the slapstick, the old continuity with the new ideas. It really isn't this easy, they just make it look so with skill. Reilly Brown also is a solid hit with artwork that captures both the action and the physical comedy with equal relish. This could be a short review, but that may be because there's little to complain about.

Vali Halfling, who's looking youthful as ever, has successfully infiltrated the Olympus Group, capturing Hebe and Athena, and snuffing their eternal flame (along with getting Hebe's immortal nector to himself). He and Cho are on a race to assemble their "God Making Juice" (best recap pages EVER are in this series), and right now Vali is way ahead, 2-0. Cho has been tricked by him into fighting Thor, who thinks that their own magic apples have been stolen by him.

Cho puts up a valient effort with his force field and Herc's mace (as well as his hypermind), but don't worry, Thor fans, he is able to dispatch with Cho when he has to. That isn't the crux of it; even if their fight is actually funnier and more entertaining than expected. The real conflict is Cho questioning how much of a friend Thor was to Hercules, at least recently, and what it means to want to honor him. When Cho lets slip that Hercules may be able to be revived, Thor is convinced to accompany him. The final sequence when Cho doesn't know where another artifact is, though, is pure gold.

The Olympians are aging at a quickened rate and Vali seems overconfident, but it appears he's neglected Delphyne, which may prove to be a mighty mistake. The question is whether she'll exploit her one, best chance to kill Athena once and for all to deal with him. She has been willing to put her revenge behind her Amazonian duties, and Vali did imprison the rest of the Amazons too in jail cells. Certainly should be interesting. I must say I was wary of these Hercules-less issues, but Cho's handling things very well. It helps that his character has developed, and that this arc is better than his last solo arc, IMO. Still, it will be great to have Hercules himself back for the relaunch. At least the ride to that will be quite entertaining, and the Pak/Van Lente streak on this title continues.

YOUNG ALLIES #1: The OTHER teen hero launch this week, which will likely be missed in comparison to AVENGERS ACADEMY. It isn't part of a well known franchise, or a recent comic. McKeever's also just coming back from a TEEN TITANS run no one liked, and a NOMAD mini no one read (seriously, it's sales were barely above some Image books by issue four). I would have wanted to release this in another week, but maybe that wasn't an option. At any rate, Nomad and Arana from the NOMAD: GIRL WITHOUT A WORLD back up strips unite with Gravity, McKeever's original creation from 2006, as well as Firestar and a new Toro.

On the whole, I did enjoy this. It assembles the team and gets them into action quite quickly. The new villains, the "Bastards Of Evil" are entertaining; in fact I wish the Young Masters from the last Young Avengers title had been half this entertaining (and they got triple the page count). They're the unwanted offspring of Electro, Grey Gargoyle, Graviton, Radioactive Man and Pyro (apparently), and they want to do nothing more than spread panic and brag about it online. The irony is these spawn aren't even the only unwanted children of villains. Nightmare has TWO children, Daydream and Trauma. Piledriver has his kid who was thrashed by the RUNAWAYS once. And so on. It is a little awkward how they make sure to spout their names and parents in the middle of the action, but that's needed exposition, and it has to go somewhere.

Another "original" creation is Toro. In essence he is the 616 version of the horned metahuman Toro from the "Heroes Reborn" universe where Rikki came from. He's a young boy who was kidnapped from his home and trained to fight in some Columbian despot's army. He grows up quickly and has a rivalry with another boy, "the Dragon", who will so obviously be showing up within an arc or two. Unfortunately for the evil mad scientist, the act of being empowered re-awakens Toro's memories of his loving mother, and he apparently flees to America. There is a lot of nasty stuff going on in Columbia, but so far I couldn't help but feel that Toro is a bit of a stereotype, about as racially sensitive as Gorilla Girl. I suppose he will probably improve with development, but I was probably liking Veil or Mettle in AVENGERS ACADEMY more this week.

One major problem is this series expects a lot of knowledge of the reader about what these characters have been up to, and even the handy recap pages in the back gloss over quite a lot. I didn't really know until this issue that Arana is supposed to be powerless, just relying on her SHIELD training and a grappling line. The story mentions it, but the recap page doesn't; apparently she lost her powers in an arc of ASM lately. Furthermore, she is in a new black costume that is exactly the same as that as Julia Carpenter. Even characters in the comic itself mistake her for "Spider-Girl" or "Venomette". The problem is if even the citizens of Marvel are confusing her for someone else, how do they think fans, who have ZERO tolerance for any new character, will react? Black wasn't even ever part of her color scheme. It's something I see too often at DC, dressing a teen hero in some legacy outfit that instead makes them more mundane and easy to ignore, like when Impulse became Kid Flash. It is especially ironic as Arana is the only one of these characters who has held her own title for any length of time this decade - about 19 issues worth (including a full year headlining her own book). Her problem was never her powers, it was her ridiculous origin, and she just needed solid stories told without it. Instead she's had her powers torn away and is wearing someone else's costume, demanding to be noticed as unique. She's got a tough road ahead of her. Imagine if we removed X-23's claws, and her powers, and dressed her in Nightcrawler's costume. Would it really be a stellar move? And Marvel wonders why their new characters never catch on.

Firestar and Gravity both happen to be going to ESU, just a few years apart. Angelica is trying to manage being a student without being distracted by her "Marvel Diva" friends, while all of Greg's continuity hassles have been hand-waved away. While his death and rebirth is recapped in the back, there is no mention of how Lauren knew his identity even before his death as Gravity, how he was buried with his codename on his gravestone, and so on. Watcher offered to basically return him to status quo if he helped Dr. Strange and the Fan Four heal Eternity, which I guess meant a continental mind-wipe. Which actually is a little absurd, unless Greg's memory was wiped clean as well. Otherwise he'd remember that he was merrily dating Lauren in between suiting up, he'd know that she was at his funeral and mourned his loss. Now he's acting like it is GRAVITY #7, circa 2006. I'm not saying that it is altogether bad that Gravity is back to his mini's status quo, but it does seem a bit neat and tidy for something that really shouldn't be. It is not far removed from Morph being possessed by Proteus, then Proteus being made to think he was always Morph, and the rest of the Exiles yucking it up like nothing ever happened. Dude, Lauren and you used to joke about "post-superhero sex"! You had an alien brainwash her into forgetting you died! And you're talking to her on a lawn like nothing happened? That's messed up! But, at any rate, Greg does seem to have retained the "harder edge" he had since joining the Initiative, and fighting the Skrull Invasion (where he wasted a few of them left and right). He's not the "aw shucks" rookie anymore; he's mulling around capital punishment for dangerous metahumans who can't be held in prison. Talk about shell shock.

The Bastards of Evil stage an attack, and in true "new warriors" fashion, the young allies assemble. The heroines are the first on the scene, but Gravity shows up, and cripes, he's pretty damn bad-ass about punching villains out. I sort of feel sorry for Firestar here; while I understand her desire for a normal college life for a while, she really should be over at AVENGERS ACADEMY, not taking on no-name villains with going-nowhere young heroes that no book apparently wants but this one. But, we'll see how the second issue takes things. They may not even be an official team, just a bunch of heroes who happen to know each other and patrol the same area, such as her and Gravity at ESU, and Arana & Rikki attending the same school. And Toro just being a "mysterious immigrant". It seems Arana has started to bond a bit with Toro, and she may bring out the best in him. The cliffhanger is quite explosive and effective. I liked the villains and the action, and most of the characters. I just think some of them have taken some missteps, and Marvel may be overestimating how much attention NOMAD has gotten backing up CAPTAIN AMERICA if they think this will last beyond 10 issues with a $4 price tag for such obscure young heroes. I liked that it got to the point quickly, and while I don't think this title will last long, I am curious to see what McKeever does with the issues he does have with these characters, and whether he addresses some of my concerns.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top
monitoring_string = "afb8e5d7348ab9e99f73cba908f10802"