Yes. I don't understand this resistance to the idea of Steve Rogers coming back. He's one of the best heroes in Marvel's stable. The things being done in his absence are great, yes, but does anyone really believe we'll continue to see it handled so well whenever Brubaker decides to leave? We all know evolution in comics is illusory at best. I'd much rather see Brubaker bring Steve back as the logical, cohesive end to his storyline than have other writers struggle with Bucky before Steve is ultimately brought back--probably much more clumsily--by some other writer anyway. Quit fooling yourselves into believing this story is some long-lasting change in the making and enjoy it for what it is: an exciting temporary shift in the status quo. The Red Skull, Steve, and probably even Sharon will all be back to their normal status quos in a while, and the only long-lasting change that's likely to come from this run is that Bucky's probably going to stick around.
But why does evolution have to be illusory? Again, this is akin to in 1988 the people at DC went, "Y'know, Barry Allen launched the Silver Age of comics after the SEDUCTION OF THE INNOCENT era. Wally was fun for a while but it's time to get him back into New Teen Titans and Barry into the saddle." And then imagine, at least according to legend, all the good Flash comics that never, ever, would have happened.
Right now, I see Bucky as Marvel's Wally West opportunity. You have no idea, or maybe you do, how rare it is to not only off a title hero, but to replace him with a logical successor and not only for it to be an amazing story, handled amazingly well, but has the popular will of the majority of the fans. CA comics are selling like they never have in ages, even without a crossover tie-in. The wind's at Buck's back right now.
Maybe people theorize that what helped lead to the "crash" of 1994's comic market was the promotion of the DEATH OF SUPERMAN, which was build up and overexposed as this everlasting thing. It caught the attention of old fans and new fans alike. Then, after a year, DC busted out the "just kidding" thing. Maybe pros feel this disenfranchised quite a lot of casual readers, helping explain some of the massive sales dips. Yeah, there was overpromotion, gimmicks, and so on. But this didn't help. This helped breed the cynicism that you see about the biz, and in yours truly, where absolutely nothing any comic EIC says is taken seriously, no promotion is believed, and no status-quo shattering story, good or bad, is believed. We just shrug and count the months until things go back to "Neverland", timeless Archie formula. Even Newsarama does this with their "Cap is Still Dead" titles to CA articles.
Joe Q's Marvel talks a big game about meaning what they do. He insists it isn't just talk, but action. He's reversed course on "dead means dead" and lord knows how many other things. If he ever wants to be taken seriously, he has to stick to a decision, especially one that worked out for him. After all, Brubaker wouldn't have been able to do all this if Joe Q said "No".
The media bent over backwards to report CW #2 and Spidey's unmasking, and then the demonic annulment, but thankfully they were too dumb to put both together and realize OMD #4 basically made CW #2 essentially worthless. I didn't mind that because it was a huge OOC moment. But this isn't.
The fact that nothing ever lasts in the industry probably costs it from every gaining massive influxes of new fans. The stuff that attracts new people for any given period is undone and they lose interest. Look at how the X-Books dipped for a while when everyone was undoing the Top 10 selling Morrison run brick by brick. Readers got the hint. Nothing they read matters. People SCOFF at mainstream comics because of this, and NOT ONE SOUL at these companies seems to get that. Not one. DC, at least in the past, stuck to some of it's ballsier decisions. Barry Allen stayed dead. Barbara Gordon stayed crippled. Dick Grayson stayed Nightwing. Grayson & Starfire stayed broken up (admittedly, I always got annoyed at this since neither found any better lovers since, but whatever). It gave enough of an "illusion" of change that there was positive buzz, if only for a year.
Maybe it is a shame that Marvel always is #1 without any effort. I don't think any editor would risk a dip in CA sales post-Brubaker if they had to actually compete with DC. But, they don't. DC has no new tricks, and Marvel can coast and top them.
Yes, I do know Steve will return, if not under Brubaker, under another writer 2, 3, or even 10 years in the future. But I think James Barnes is worthy of a run at Cap, without everyone counting down the issues before Steve returns and Buck is reduced to a sideline in MU, which is what he will be once Brubaker leaves. The evolution of Bucky from Winter Soldier to Capt. America WAS a steady evolution and character arc. Taking the role of Cap away from him, basically, is like taking Hawkeye from Clint Barton. It makes that entire evolution and development worthless. At some point, Marvel has to stop teasing their fans by undoing any positive innovation in the name of tradition. Out of any runs, this is the one to support for a bit.
Like, do you seriously think Odin won't retake Asgard as soon as JMS leaves? That Thor won't be bumped down to his iconic status eventually, and all his new development stripped away? Because I'd hate to see that. I hate to look back at classic stories in my comic or trade collection, and basically go, "well, now THAT's pointless." Like what used to be my favorite ASM story, "THE DEATH OF GWEN STACY". So much crap has become of that, that the original story hardly has the impact. And as a disturbing trend, I have seen far more recent stories become irrelevant far too soon. Like 2-3 years.
Brubaker can revive Steve and it will probably make sense and be good and all. But that is the first step to making Bucky's reign as Cap obsolete, and at this point I feel that is too soon and a waste of potential. Nothing irks the **** out of me more than wasted potential.