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Bought/Thought November 25th, 2009

I really think the event and the Green Lantern titles have been great. The core event did drag a little, but if you ignore the other tie-ins, the story doesn't feel as stale. It's the Character A's book vs Character A's dead villains/family over and over and over again that gets boring. This was done just a bit too much in the main mini, but once you move beyond that the story has been pretty good.

And yeah, I think this was probably the best issue of the mini thus far.
 
This is post-Thanksgiving review spread, and I'll try to get through it as quick as possible. As always, reviews were up at my Examiner link below on time. http://www.examiner.com/examiner/x-...v-25th-2009--Overstuffed-Thanksgiving-Edition

As always, rants and spoilers below.

Dread's BOUGHT/THOUGHT for 11/25/09:

AVENGERS: THE INITIATIVE #30:
As the cover shows, Nightmare fights everyone. Those who claim covers aren't accurate anymore to interiors have to be happy here. In fact this is among one of the most accurate covers of the last few issues. Now, the funny thing is that every time someone asks someone at Marvel about whether or not they "overdo" some characters by having them appear a gazillion places. Lord knows Iron Man was done to death during Civil War/Initiative, and Osborn & the Dark Avengers during Dark Reign, as well as Spidey and Wolverine since forever. This month, apparently, it is Nightmare. He's shown up in DEADPOOL TEAM-UP #899 and DOCTOR VOODOO within the last 4 weeks, and this is apparently his third appearance. Usually when some non X, Spidey, or Avengers villain shows up a lot, it is Dr. Doom (such as in THOR or CAPTAIN AMERICA REBORN). Still, he's one of the more potent members of Dr. Strange's rogues gallery, and since Dr. Strange himself has been demoted, virtually stripped of all magical power and saddled babysitting some desperate Sister Grimm wanna-be at a baseball field, now is the time.

In proper Christos Gage fashion on this title, this is the culmination of one arc while seeming to start onto the next, which will tie into SIEGE. For the last few issues, Trauma has been placed under the strain of keeping Penace in "fighting shape" for Taskmaster and Hood, although without actually helping his psychosis. Still a mess from where he was left off by Paul Jenkins and Warren Ellis, Penance barely remembers anything about his past (such as his real name or his friends or family), and for the sake of his mother's care, Trauma has obliged. Unfortunately, Terry Ward is the son of Nightmare, and his distress allows Nightmare to take command of his power and power, to basically effect the living world as if it was a dream. This comes to a head just as the Avengers Resistance are raiding Camp HAMMER to save Night-Thrasher (who may or may not have sold them out as a last stab effort to resurrect his brother) and are facing down Osborn's Initiative members, including Penance (who is their old ally, Speedball, once upon a time when Marvel comics could unclench). Molina takes over for Sandoval on art again, although the latter does draw the cover.

It's the usual solid issue, loaded with characters who all get their own distinct moments, from Tigra's leadership to Slapstick's TICK inspired nightmare to Taskmaster proving himself more of a man than Hood is. The focal points of the issue are Terry and Penance. Nightmare allows Penance to fully remember his past as Baldwin/Speedball as well as the Stamford disaster. Now, Penance as an end to Speedball is a dead end, and an overly emo one; I am presuming that Gage wants to rehabilitate the character without, say, some "it was a Skrull" style retcon, which is fine - a step in the proper direction for him. The Avengers Resistance get to rescue Thrash, and it seems Penance is taking the first steps to redeem himself. Diamondback, who Constrictor is dating, ends up being "the mole" in Taskmaster's squad, despite him having pegged Cloud 9 for it. Past stories with Cloud 9 or even Johnny Guitar are referenced with Nightmare's illusions, and are a good way to summarize how far everyone has come.

Ironically, unlike the last NEW WARRIORS which barely featured any of the actual New Warriors, this AVENGERS series, especially since Dan Slott left regular writing chores, has heavily relied on prior New Warriors as stars, such as Justice. Tigra, left as a whimpering victim by Bendis and dismissed as a "sexy furry" by many other writers, has really come into her own on this title as a leader figure (being the only Avenger on the title with the most experience).

There is something quite sad about how the affair ends for Baldwin. "I can't. They know me as Speedball. Happy...funny...I...I just can't. Not like this." It was pretty potent, even if it does remind me about the Slott & FabNic GLA/DEADPOOL one shot from a few years ago in which Squirrel Girl debunks all of Penance's reasons for being an emo psycho within about 4 panels. "Hawkeye's impulsive and reckless, everyone loves Hawkeye. Kang killed hundreds of people in Washington and the Avengers didn't all slit their wrists", basically. Still, it seems as if Gage is treating the story seriously, while looking for an objective at the end of the tunnel for Baldwin, and that is the best way to do it. Issue after issue, AVENGERS: THE INITIATIVE continues to be terrific and essential reading for lovers of good superhero adventure stories, winding subplots, and B and C listers treated with dignity and respect while still going somewhere in a story. This is sadly the first AVENGERS title to slip below the Top 50 sales chart in years, but it should see through to it's third year and hopefully continue onward. It's good stuff, too often ignored or taken for granted.

Now here, at least, I also didn't mind Neils.

FANTASTIC FOUR #573: I wanted to like this issue, I really did. It was the first issue of the Johnathan Hickman era to not exclusively star Reed Richards. It stars Ben, Johnny, Franklin, and Val as they try to have a vacation on Nu-Earth, left over from Millar's run (and from the abysmal mini, FANTASTIC FORCE). Naturally, things go horribly wrong and Hickman essentially closes the door on Nu-Earth in all but a panel. It seems this new "perfect dimension" isn't so perfect after all, as a black hole opens nearby and has caused time to move unnaturally fast there. Years have passed in months, and the Fantastic Force have essentially become tyrants, oppressing the 8 billion refugees from the future that are home there. Or at least half of them. Lightwave and Psionics rule over the land, with Ultron ultimately turning on them, Banner Jr. serving self-imposed imprisonment until the end, and Wolverine nowhere to be seen.

Ben and Johnny stumble into the adventure and ultimately aid in overthrowing the Force, with Val fixing the portal back to 616 and Franklin summarizing the adventure with his mother. It seemed to be an attempt to bookend the whole "Future Defenders" story but it seemed a bit rushed. One could imagine a whole new universe should be more interesting and imaginative than this.

To be honest, this issue seemed like filler in between Reed's chapter and the upcoming arc about Franklin's birthday. Which is exactly what it is, but it shouldn't seem so obvious. Ben and Johnny deserve better. They're all but pedestrians in this story.

The cover by Alan Davis is nice, and the fill in art by Neil Edwards is good. It's hardly a bad issue, but it lacked some of the spark of prior issues, and as rare as it seems, was rushed. Considering we got 4-7 issues out of a "Reed once again learns that his family is more important than science", a plot like this probably could have been stronger with two issues.

There are some good lines and moments between the characters, and to be honest I haven't seen any writer besides Bendis be as willing to just stomp on something Mark Millar created to move onto something else in a great long while. Still, a bit of a let down after last issue, and part of me is thinking that it could have been skipped. Even the worst issue of Dan Slott's THE THING series was better than this. And I honestly couldn't pick one of those 8 issues that was the worst, because they were all great. I suppose it fits the theme of Fantastic Four going on episodic sci-fi adventures, but this issue didn't click with me too well. It could be due to my little invested interest in Nu-Earth.

GIANT SIZE THOR FINALE #1: Or, essentially, THOR #603 A. Considering than next week's issue of THOR technically ships in December, for the life of me I don't know why this couldn't have shipped as an issue of THOR. Was editorial that fearful that it would miss this ship date? Did they seek to avoid another fiasco like issues of WOLVERINE shipping out of order? At any rate, Marvel has risked this finale of the JMS run selling lower than usual because one-shots of ongoings haven't sold as well as regular issues in, oh, about 10 years. But the great thing about the Joe Q era is that simple realities of the business that are obvious to any pedestrian who examines the biz for five minutes are akin to superhuman ephiphanies for editorial. What any layman could figure out usually takes Marvel 2-4 years to execute, at swiftest. And this is a company that would publish comics criticizing slow politicians.

At any rate, this is the 17th issue of the JMS launch of THOR that now concludes, after about two years. I suppose that's fine in terms of Joss Whedon publishing standards, but surely Marvel expected this to be a faster book. JMS only agreed because he wanted at least 8 issues on his own without crossover tie-in's, and by and large Marvel more than doubled his request. When JMS leaves a book, he usually leaves it in three ways: hanging without a conclusion, in utter shambles, or unfinished. While such practices would have gotten him fired in the TV biz, Marvel editorial is a desperate sucker, willing to be endlessly stood up on proms by Allen Heinberg, so JMS has nothing to fear - and to be fair, DC is little better. For THOR, JMS delivers an exciting final issue for his run, which in usual fashion casts Thor as a supporting guest character, and has a lot of action. But it is not a conclusion. It merely sets up the next chap, K. Gillen, to maybe get around to a conclusion. It passes the buck, which for an A-List writer is not the best finale. The art is done by Djurdevic, who has proven slightly more reliable than the old regular artist, Oliver Coipel. He will be drawing SIEGE, and if Marvel editorial seriously believes that they can get 4 monthly issues out of him without one delay, then they either have given him considerable lead in time (like about a quarter of a year) or they're delusional beyond all hope of therapy. Every regular assignment he has had that was beyond one issue has run late after a while, two issues max.

"William the Warrior" becomes "William the Corpse" in a few pages (within the 5-6 page online preview of the issue, in fact), and while it is a powerful sequence and send-off for Bill, it comes with the idea that Balder the Brave needs the help of a half-dead mortal with a magical sword in order to defend himself from three random Asgardians. He also needs Bill to literally tell him what the plot of this series has so obviously been for 12 issues now under his dying breath. Balder, at best, has been a chump in this run, and this issue does nothing to change that. Balder declares that he'll actually, maybe, almost do something, while Kelda grows some stones and declares revenge against Loki for Bill's death. Her fate, which is revealed in the 5 page preview for THOR #604, is hardly pretty (Doom basically kills her in a few pages). There's a nice send-off for Bill, but if you read THOR for Thor and not the adventures of a fry-cook, you might grow impatient.

The climax of the issue are the attack squad of "Anti-Thor Doombots" flying into Oklahoma in Loki's desperate attempt to kill Donald Blake to eliminate any threat of Thor messing with his plans. Because lord knows if I was the God of Lies and was able to easily trick Thor into handing his entire kingdom into my hands, moving it into the lair of the worst villain Midguard has ever had, and successfully walked around in the corpse of his beloved for about a year, I CERTAINLY would reveal my hand in so crude a fashion as to send a fleet of ****ing robots to kill him. And in due fashion, Thor barely shows up in the fight. The man of the hour is Valstagg, who finally does something besides be the butt of fat jokes. It's an epic moment for ol' Valstagg the Mighty and he probably hasn't had a moment that cool in, well, ever. The art for this moment is well paced and it was executed well. It was the highlight of the $4 issue.

The rest, though, is a bit middling. Blake is blasted by the robots before he can summon Thor, and, hey, turns out his mortal form is crippled again and needs the "staff" to walk. Wow, that was worth four bucks. And nothing has been resolved. Thor is still exiled. Asgard in Oklahoma is still empty, and Sif and the Warrior's Three are still working in the diner. Doom and Loki are still laughing it up in Latveria, chopping up Asgardians for experimental purposes. I suppose with SIEGE what it is, there was no way JMS could have done a proper finale, and to be fair this issue was better than some of his last. But a run has to seem like it accomplished something, and outside of the first few issues, it accomplished little besides make Thor a guest star in his own book, make Balder look like a gutless, clueless putz, and make Loki even more invincible and unbeatable than the Joker in THE DARK KNIGHT. There were many solid and even epic moments, but even the worst issue of the Pak & Van Lente HERCULES outdoes this run by a mile. JMS stretched an 8-9 issue story way too far and than has left a proper resolution to the next guy; passing the buck as it were. The fact that Gillen is willing to gracelessly kill off Kelda in his first issue perhaps vents the frustration of being tasked by some hot shot writer to finish HIS story for him. I tear into Joss Whedon a lot for his slow-shipping runs on RUNAWAYS and ASTONISHING X-MEN, but to give credit, he always finished his runs.

THOR's an alright book. Nothing in it is unreadable or horrendous. But it will likely become very overrated, and it proves that the only A-List writer that Marvel has that actually delivers A-grade work on a regular basis is Ed Brubaker. Jeph Loeb has quickly devolved into a clueless hack who seems to care more about a monthly deadline than writing a cohesive, readable story, and monthly produces overpriced work that flat-out insults the intelligence of the fans. Bendis has been an overrated hack for several years now, incapable of writing any character differently from the next and needing 7 issues to make the most mundane event happen, and treating every mundane, no brainer story twist as some Agatha Christy style ****ing masterpiece (all while writing characters poorly and killing off ones he doesn't like for shock value). Mark Millar waxes and wanes between "fun popcorn blockbuster" to "overrated preachy explosive Socialist drivel". Finally, JMS, who is DC's problem now, still has quite a lot of talent and a flair for dialogue and scene writing, but he drags things out too bloody long and then fails to really deliver the goods when it counts. THOR should have been a big event style book, but instead it was an over-budget high school play that took entirely too long to get to a middling conclusion. Not only is INCREDIBLE HERCULES a better Marvel god title, but THOR offers it little competition. I'll be fair and give Gillen a chance to wrap things up, but the writer after him may have to be terrific for me to remain. I've "fallen out of love" with this book a great deal within the last year.

A reprint of Thor's debut story and a 5 page preview that could easily be found on the internet are needed to pad out the price to $4. The next issue of THOR returns to $3, because apparently Gillen isn't worth the extra buck, or Marvel knows they can't suck an extra dollar from his readers. At any rate, JMS leaves the title he relaunched, and I won't miss him. Or at least, I hope I don't. Don't screw up, Gillen.

GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY #20: Continuing with more REALM OF KINGS hyjinks, it turns out that the cast members offed by Magus last issue are, sniffle still dead. Even if Gamora's death makes no bloody sense. The woman survived being on a planet being blown up by a sun! How in the hell does Magus kill her just by snapping her neck? That's like Wolverine surviving an atomic bomb to the forehead, only to be killed by razor wire. At any rate, this leaves Moondragon as not only the resident psychic of the team, but also in the exact same place that Phyla was in at the end of ANNIHILATION CONQUEST. Before she can have time to mourn, she is tested by having to psychically relay thoughts from Drax and Rocket as they investigate the Fault, and end up bringing one of their LOVECRAFT-style monsters back to Knowhere. Just as they manage to defeat that monster, Peter Quill asks Moondragon to aid him in a council meeting where the other residents of Knowhere basically want to be kept in the loop of how things are run.

Cosmo isn't there to keep the peace as well as advocate for the Guardians anymore, and some of the Magus-worshipping Priests of Pama are rooming at Knowhere. The Luminals continue on their quest to beat the Shi'ar in the realm of alien dipstickery, and one of them goes beserk after being infested by another crittter from the Fault.

Moondragon ends her issue by having a vision about something being reborn from one of Adam Warlock's coccoons. That guy resurrects himself more often than Jean Grey does.

Brad Walker returns to pencils, and he was missed a bit. The story moves along rather well as a beginning chapter to greater stuff. Yes, Groot's slogan gets old, but it's been old for about two years now, and at least Abnett & Lanning are sticking to their story. The cast needed to be trimmed down; Major Victory really wasn't needed by the end, but it is a shame to have lost Mantis and Cosmo. Then again, Moondragon was dead for a while only to come back, so never say never with "DnA". Future solicitations seem to claim that Magus will return, so there is some hope for the rest of the crew. It will also mean that the remaining members will have to step up more like Moondragon tried to, and it should be interesting seeing how that occurs, especially for Jack Flag, who still dislikes "cosmic stuff" and offers great deadpan punchlines.

Not the best issue of the series, but still quite good as usual for GOTG and continues their realm of excellence. I know, that was bad. But the book sure isn't.
 
BOUGHT/THOUGHT Seconds:

IMMORTAL WEAPONS #5: Say this for this mini series, supposedly out to appease readers of IMMORTAL IRON FIST in between launches; it ended with a bang. This issue, which stars John Aman and Danny Rand taking care of a dragon and a vengeful ghost army in China, is one of the best issues of the series. In some ways it might actually be the best, since the FAT COBRA issue was semi-comedy. Rather than doing John's origin, which I believe was hinted at before, it tells a far better modern story than the back-up strip has. David Lapham has a good voice for the characters; while some of Rand's quips seemed a bit immature, he still manages to defeat the dragon competently at the end. As for Aman, he is something akin to a cross between a kung fu fighter and a grim reaper, off to appease the angry souls of the dead warriors, led by the ghost of a warlord whose blood thirst has no end. The artwork by Arturo Lozzi is effective and quite thrilling to look at. It isn't the boldest or best story in the universe, but it is a solid tale that fits the framework of the series that is executed quite well. It easily could have served as an annual for IMMORTAL IRON FIST and been worth the money. There isn't much to say about it, but that's part of the charm of it. A solid adventure story, told and drawn well. That's the stuff.

The former regular writer of IIF, Duane Swiercynski, who has been writing the back-up strip with Rand for the last five issues (the last 2-3 having been drawn by Hatuey Diaz, who is alright for something like TALES OF THE TMNT but doesn't follow from Aja well), wraps it up this issue, and it is less effective than the lead story. It has been a tale of Iron Fist trying to amend not doing well by a crook he and Luke Cage arrested by mentoring his daughter, and ultimately helping her find her lost little brother after he goes on the run to flee some gang bangers. It isn't a terrible story, but it seems very mundane for Iron Fist and the only way a mundane adventure story works is if you nail the "poignant" key just right, and Swiercynski fails here. He tries, but it doesn't work and you could almost insert any other superhero into the story with only a modest rewrite to the first few pages of it. Iron Fist has risen too high for stuff like finding some lost kid or fighting off a street gang should really take so long for him to do. It's akin to a story across five issues of MARVEL COMICS PRESENTS featuring Spider-Man vs. a purse snatcher that is not played for laughs nor does it strike a major dramtic key; it just is there. I would have rather not had the back-up strip and only paid $2.99 an issue.

I hope that IRON FIST gets another relaunch from the strong foundation of his last 27 issue series, but I do not know if this mini helped any. Sales for it have been dire. Not as bad as AGENTS FOR ATLAS, which Marvel is still pushing, but hardly at INCREDIBLE HERCULES levels either. Still, saving your best stuff for the finale isn't bad at all.

INCREDIBLE HERCULES #138: Continuing right where "ASSAULT ON NEW OLYMPUS #1" left off (that seriously should have just been an issue of IH as well; why has Marvel abandoned the one good idea Bill Jemas ever had, but has stuck with all of his crap ones, such as stock pose covers?), INCREDIBLE HERCULES has had such a long run of excellence that I felt I all but had to defend the predictability of an issue of it being "book of the week" at least once a month over at Examiner. Buchemi continues his excellent art run, Pak and Van Lente are at the top of their game, and there's almost little else to say every month beyond that those who read it know what I mean, and those who don't are poor, unfortunate souls with some trades to catch up on.

Hera is about to unleash her Maguffin death plot, "Continuum", to wipe the slate clean of life on Earth, and has staffed the Olympus group with no end of flunkies and monsters under her thrall, including Delphyne, Huntsman and Typhon. Hercules and Cho have reunited as well as assembling the entire cast of Mighty Avengers as well as Spider-Man, Wolverine, and Spider-Woman from New Avengers. While it is organic for the Mighty team to be there, since they are the team Herc and Cho are actually a part of, the latter three from NA just seem there for recognition and wise-cracks, even if they are good wise cracks. I mean if Hercules had to pick an X-Man, he'd have been better off with Colossus than Wolverine for a fight against gods, but whatever. The issue is a mix of trademark adventure and humor, but also has some real heart beneath the surface. Cho has learned yet another deadly secret that Athena has kept from him for a while; not only is he due to replace Hercules as her "mortal champion", but that Hercules is fated to die in this adventure. Since Cho was unable to save his family or find his sister yet, he vows not to fail Hercules as well. Hebe even offers to act as a "foster mother" for him. Least all the Greek gods aren't jerks. That is part of what makes IH a great book. It is easy to dismiss it as simply a "fun" book, but it also has genuine drama and pathos beneath it; it simply isn't drowning in grim, preachy angst like so many other titles are. Mel Brooks for his commentary for YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN sometimes stated that comedy has to have some real emotion to it somewhere in the story, otherwise it is just a lifeless sketch, and no title better symbolizes that then INCREDIBLE HERCULES.

Cho and the rest of the Avengers come up with a clever plan to breach the Olympus Group headquarters to face down Hera's hordes and put a stop to her weapon, and as the issue ends, the battle gets underway. I could have done without the declaration of "one of you will die!" at the climax, as that just seems like a typical solicitation for an event story, but beyond that everything was gravy. Buchemi's artwork is amazing for this story thus far, and here I thought no one would top Clayton Henry. Buchemi has some little tweaks of his own to some of the costume designs, turning Pym's visor into a bit of a "non-mask" like Gambit and eliminating some of the details to Quicksilver's Khoi Pham outfit, but they still look fine. His Spider-Man almost looks right out of the Romita Sr. era. The idea that Athena accepts modern superheroes as being on par with 21st century gods and her mother Hera is unable to flex with that change is also put across well.

A notable subplot to the issue is Aphrodite taking a break from tormenting the AGENTS OF ATLAS to try to "distract" Ares, which at least works for the time being. A short but effective sequence.

Speaking of the Agents, Jeff Parker and Gabe Hardman continue the adventure of that titular series in the 6 issue back-up strip. It's short but still solid stuff. Venus is freed from her tentacle sea monster god by the Agents, and they decide to tie into the lead story by investigating the Olympus Group building as well, only to run into monsters in an underground cavern. Hardman's a great artist, and while it's only a back-up, the strip has moved at a faster pace than, say, the back up of IMMORTAL WEAPONS did within two installments. I do wonder if they'll get to meet some of the folks upstairs; the time seems to be right for Namora to run across Hercules again, now that he's trying to reconcile with Hebe (who is actually very sweet, and not in an annoying way).

Part of me wonders if the solo Cho issues were a test run to see if he could carry the title for a full few months or longer without Hercules; sales wise, that would not be good. Cho's issues always sold worse than Herc's issues, and many readers that left during his issues never returned. And while, yes, the cover is one of those "stock pose" covers, it is a very good fold out cover, one I'd buy in a heartbeat if sold on a poster. Make it happen, Marvel!

As usual, epic issue, and always a comic to be thankful for.

INVINCIBLE IRON MAN #20: An odd, but effective issue. In theory it sounds like an issue Bendis would have pitched to an editor; nothing actually happens inside the issue besides a static hologram making a long speech, and a few pages of mind-games. Yet Matt Fraction is not Bendis, and actually makes a good issue of it. Execution, my friends, is truly everything. Loeb, JMS, Bendis, Millar, they're the overrated hacks they are because all of them in their own ways pooch the execution. Fraction at least still knows how to make it work for him, at least more often than not.

It turns out that Stark did more than lobotomize himself out of guilt and to protect his superhero friends from Osborn. He tasked Maria Hill with stealing a hard-drive, which has a message from him on how, basically, to restart Stark's brain. Before that detail, though, Stark lays out in detail why he has done what he has done, from Civil War until now. He doesn't quite apologize for much, nor does he come off as unsympathetic; now if only Stark was written this well actually DURING Civil War, maybe it would have been a story rather than a checklist of fights. At any rate, everyone in the room (Donald Blake, Black Widow, Pepper Potts, and Maria Hill) agree to restart him, aside for Potts. She needs a moment to consider why Stark gets a second chance at life when others, including her husband, are not so lucky. Of course, she mentions Steve Rogers, who fans all know will be back any moment now. But, Bill Foster and Happy Hogun are still dead, so it works. I was wondering why Potts didn't seem to have missed Happy much lately.

Meanwhile, Stark is trapped in an endless loop inside his own head, trying to dig out his armor with his parents. This bit seemed like page filler, but hopefully will become more key to the story rather than being metaphysical fluff.

Sal Larroca continues his run of 20 straight issues without one real delay. Yes, Frank D'Armata's color work is also key, but c'mon, it isn't like this is Greg Land. The days when any artist could manage 20 timely issues of anything that wasn't a one page strip are almost over at Marvel, so Larroca deserves credit where it is due. The cover, at least the "direct edition", is actually one of the series' better ones.

WORLD'S MOST WANTED drug on a bit long, but hopefully Tony Stark will be back on his feet and in his armor soon enough. I mean, at least for SIEGE. Or IRON MAN 2 in May. Right? Unlike THOR, INVINCIBLE IRON MAN is a book that may have it's share of decompression and flaws, but in the end is executed well and usually delivers when it counts.
 
the time seems to be right for Namora to run across Hercules again, now that he's trying to reconcile with Hebe (who is actually very sweet, and not in an annoying way).
I was going to say, Venus definitely seems to be unintentionally setting Namora up for disappointment.
 
I was looking forward to Dread's reviews! :)

I am deeply disappointed and saddened to find myself largely agreeing with you about Thor Giant Sized Finale. I really, really loved this title when I first got into it about a year ago, and though I still like it, my interest soured a good deal with all the ridiculous delays, and now the anti-climactic end of JMS' run. Though I'm kinda hoping now that Kieth Gillen shocks everyone and really knocks his 6 issues out of the park, and manages to upstage JMS, all while STICKING TO A MONTHLY SCHEDULE.

As I grew disenfranchised with Thor, I found myself becoming more and more fond of Invincible Iron Man as "World's Most Wanted" progressed. Good old reliable Invincible Iron Man, always there for me month in and month out with it's consistent storytelling and steadily-improving art. I think this book has quietly become one of the best in Marvel's line, and deserves more readers than it's getting. And I'm glad to see you also enjoyed #20 this week. That 6-page Stark monologue was a ballsy move by Fraction, but not only did he pull it off, it managed to be the highlight of an already all-round strong issue. I also like the shift in dynamic from being a "Dark Reign story" to being very much an "Iron Man story", with Osborn exiting stage-left and letting classic Iron Man baddies Madame Masque and Ghost transition into the primary antagonist roles. Rather than simply being "World's Most Wanted chapter 13-17" as I feared it might be, "Stark Disassembled" seems to be shaping up to be very much it's own story.
 
I really think the event and the Green Lantern titles have been great. The core event did drag a little, but if you ignore the other tie-ins, the story doesn't feel as stale. It's the Character A's book vs Character A's dead villains/family over and over and over again that gets boring. This was done just a bit too much in the main mini, but once you move beyond that the story has been pretty good.

And yeah, I think this was probably the best issue of the mini thus far.

Yeah, I think one of the nice things about Sinestro War was that it didn't really go outside the Green Lantern titles. But, the tie-ins have been pretty worthless. I just finished reading this week's, and the only one worth getting is Green Lantern. (Although, I noticed in my copy it says "This takes place before Blackest Night #6." Shouldn't it have said before #5? I wish I would have read it before reading #5, because by then, this gang is all-together.)

Green Lantern #48: Good tie-in! We see how all the leaders of the respective colors finally come together for the greater good of defeating the Black Lanterns. I really like that Orange Lantern...he cracks me up, even if he'll kill ya to get what he wants.

Justice League Of America #39: Just another tie-in that does nothing to enhance the main Blackest Night story. You read one of these tie-ins, you've read them all. What I will say is this is one of the better issues of Justice League. Usually, it's all whining and moaning about how the team isn't getting along or have split up or been disbanded...at least we didn't have to read that again.

Teen Titans #77: Ok, this is a very misleading cover. Don't expect to really see the Teen Titans or that horde of Black Ring baddies attacking them. This is a story only involving Slade and Rose Wilson and those people from their past who could be brought to life by the Black Rings. Like with the previous reviewed issue, it's much better than the usual Teen Titans comic...but, still just another worthless tie-in that does nothing original.


And, with a few exceptions, I think I'm pretty much ready to finally start reading some Marvel Comics.
 
Uncanny 517. It sucks that I am a completist because this book hasn't wowed me in a long while. I think I really need to drop it but I have the whole run, you know? There's not many X-men featured in this book that I care about and the ones I do care about seem to be way underused. So I just keep holding on, waiting for the creative team to change. I hope it's soon. :(
 
Dark Wolverine #80. Not missing Wolverine in this book at all as Daken continues to amuse. I love how he and Osborn push against each other, each one having plans within plans. Still a great read and I love the art. The credit goes to Stephen Segovia and Paco Diaz Luque, but it looks like Lienel Yu to me which I don't mind one bit. :D
 
Giant-Size Thor Finale was terrible, and made me realize that JMS' Thor run is essentially the same as his Supreme Power: a great foundation of characters and ideas that ultimately amounted to nothing. And it has the same lack of closure that Supreme did too!

(Though in his defense, JMS does finish this issue with "The End," and not "To be continued" like with Squadron Supreme...)
 
I was going to say, Venus definitely seems to be unintentionally setting Namora up for disappointment.

Indeed, it's solid soap opera drama, isn't it? Way back during "LOVE AND WAR", Hercules was the one wanting to make longer term plans, to go steady as it were, while Namora declined because of his rep and because she gets mushy over Namor. Now, at least Venus believes Namora misses Hercules and he would be good for her, while at least at the moment Hercules is paying attention to Hebe (instead of, say, falling prey to Spider-Woman's mojo). It's romantic pulp in the making!

I was looking forward to Dread's reviews! :)

I am deeply disappointed and saddened to find myself largely agreeing with you about Thor Giant Sized Finale. I really, really loved this title when I first got into it about a year ago, and though I still like it, my interest soured a good deal with all the ridiculous delays, and now the anti-climactic end of JMS' run. Though I'm kinda hoping now that Kieth Gillen shocks everyone and really knocks his 6 issues out of the park, and manages to upstage JMS, all while STICKING TO A MONTHLY SCHEDULE.

As I grew disenfranchised with Thor, I found myself becoming more and more fond of Invincible Iron Man as "World's Most Wanted" progressed. Good old reliable Invincible Iron Man, always there for me month in and month out with it's consistent storytelling and steadily-improving art. I think this book has quietly become one of the best in Marvel's line, and deserves more readers than it's getting. And I'm glad to see you also enjoyed #20 this week. That 6-page Stark monologue was a ballsy move by Fraction, but not only did he pull it off, it managed to be the highlight of an already all-round strong issue. I also like the shift in dynamic from being a "Dark Reign story" to being very much an "Iron Man story", with Osborn exiting stage-left and letting classic Iron Man baddies Madame Masque and Ghost transition into the primary antagonist roles. Rather than simply being "World's Most Wanted chapter 13-17" as I feared it might be, "Stark Disassembled" seems to be shaping up to be very much it's own story.

If you look forward to my reviews, I certainly hope you click on my Examiner link in my sig. I could use all the hits I can get. November's been a down month for 'em. :(

At any rate, glad you enjoyed. Yeah, JMS' THOR run started strong and has ended rather middling. Kind of like his run on ASM. Or RISING STARS. Or his unfinished TWELVE. There's a pattern here, but neither Marvel or DC see it.

Fraction's INVINCIBLE IRON MAN has gotten quite good within the past 12 issues, and out of any title, the Dark Reign subplot really gave that book a spark. The Zeke Stane story was fun but hardly stellar, and the Spidey issue between that and World's Most Wanted was easy to forget. Yes, World's Most Wanted was maybe 2-3 issues too long, but it was great stuff, and this next story looks to continue. Matt Fraction wrote some Thor one-shots during the JMS run and some people were hoping he'd be the one to take over long term after JMS. Gillen at least punts that problem until May.

Hurray... :word: :word: :word:

I hope you get Pet Avengers TPB in your X-Mas stocking this year... :up:

:yay:

Doubtful. I'd be more likely to get SCOTT PILGRIM than that. :p
 
More quicky reviews:

The Dark Tower-The Fall Of Gilead #6: I keep thinking of all the people, like me, who were disappointed with the first Dark Tower comic mini, not realizing that the ones to follow would be so much better, giving Dark Tower fans stuff they'd never read before. This fall of Gilead is one such story that Stephen King never really went into. It was only briefly touched upon, and there is really so much of Roland's youth that we have never known. Peter David has done a good job filling in those holes, and this final issue lets us know of Gilead's last stand.

Halo-Helljumper #5: Another mini-series that comes to an end, and one that is nowhere as good as Dark Tower. (And, one that is also written by Peter David.) That's one thing about David nowadays...it's either hit or miss.

Now, this isn't a bad comic; it's just that you care not a whit about the characters. They are very generic, and besides defeating the enemy in one battle...or stopping them from achieving one goal in this huge war...it doesn't feel like it means much. Another mini starts next month, and I only hope that eventually Marvel realizes that this comic needs more than showing us battle after battle. I am happy that Van Lente takes the reigns next; but, I just don't see it being anything beyond what we've seen before.

Ender's Shadow-Command School #3: I keep saying it: "This is one of the best books being put out by Marvel right now!!!" Mike Carey has me so into his Ender series, it overshadows every other book Marvel puts out. It's based on a children's book by Orson Scott Card; but, it's so much more than that. Now, you have to read the two Battle School minis before getting into the two Command School titles; because those first two minis set up much of what is currently going on.

This issue is a perfect compliment to Ender's Game #3. We find out what Bean had been up to before the attack on Ender in the boy's shower, plus one of the main battles before Ender's group gets disbanded is nicely explained here. Plus, the final scene of this issue is one that's been teased since Bean's first mini ended. OH, man, I cannot wait for the next issue!!!!

I really, really hope someone else gives this title a try. I'm not sure if they've put the first two minis in trade format yet; but, I know they are coming soon. In a world where we have comics, like Halo, with absolutely no character development, this comic does it perfectly. Before either Ender or Bean see any true battles with these mysterious aliens, Mike Carey is really getting us involved and making us care for each of them.

I cannot wait until March. Mike Carey is going to be at the Comicon, and I cannot wait to thank him so much for this series. It's been one of the biggest surprises I've ever had, and is definitely in my top 10 comics of the year.

Dark Wolverine #80: As another review said, I'm not missing Wolverine in this title, as Daken is a much more interesting character; and, these stories are always pretty interesting. Amazing how much I change my feelings for a character; because, when Daken was first introduced, I hated him, thinking, "Just what we need...another off-shoot of Wolverine."

Guardians Of The Galaxy #20: Thank GOD, we are done with the bad art of the previous two issues. I still haven't forgiven Abnett for killing off so many of the Guardians; but, this was a good issue. I just hope the fizzure story eventually gets put to a rest. I'm going to eventually get bored with it; and, hope when Realm of Kings ends, that will be resolved. I am glad we have Moondragon back; I just wish it didn't come at such a price. I'd sooner wished they would have killed off Groot. (Sorry, Groot fans...I am not a fan.)

Project Superpowers-Chapter 2 #4: I've finally caught up on this series, and it was kind of nice to have a bunch to read together. Most times, not a whole lot happens in every issue, and this series is much better when read together. The thing is, while the story doesn't advance a lot from issue to issue, quite a bit is going on. There are so many characters, and the reader keeps going from scene to scene. Just when I'm getting into something happening with one group of characters, I'm being taken away to another group.

As JH keeps spouting, this is a great title; but, I would recommend trades even more than single issues, I think.

X-Men Legacy #229: The Emplate storyline continues, and all I can think about is how much more I enjoyed this title before Nation X started. I loved those Charles Xavier centered stories. Now, we just have another X-team...and, really, most of these characters are pretty lame. The story kind of bored me, even though I was originally excited to see Emplate return to comics. I miss my old X-men...which takes me to the next comic...

X-Men Forever #12: This is definitely the best storyline we've had, and I'm having new hope for this series. Young Illyana has been kidnapped, and this classic team of X-Men are helping Colossus and Black Widow find her. We know what it's all leading to, and that payoff comes at the end of this issue.

I think that's why I'm enjoying this title more than a few others. How great to see a classic X-Men team. How great to see classic Beast!!! Claremont is having fun with these old characters, and anything goes. I love that he killed off Wolverine; and, even if he brings Logan back, he's in no hurry to do that. Sure, this title did seem like it might not last long; but, I say give these last two issues a look. You might be surprised how much you enjoy it, too.

Powers Encyclopedia: This actually came out last week, and just gives us fans a resource to all the characters we've met in the past, as Powers starts up again this week. (Review to come later...it's the next comic I'm going to read after finishing this post.) I'm glad to have this, as Powers came out so few and far between, I'd often forget what I read before. It looks like Powers will come out more monthly...at least for the first few issues. I hope so, because it's one of my favorite series Bendis puts out.
 
One good comic, two that were only ok, and one that is STILL truly awful.

Wolverine First Class #21: This is probably the best Wolverine title someone could buy. Kitty and Logan are a great team-up...much better than what came later, Wolverine and Jubilee...and, even though Wolverine is always the name on the title, Kitty Pryde is always the other focal character. I kind of knew the twist at the end long before it was revealed...but, the writing and art is very cute. This, like X-Men First Class, is always a fun read.

Ultimate Avengers #4: I didn't enjoy this issue as much as the previous three. Yeah, it's kind of nice to see how Cap can take out the other Avengers...but, it just felt like we were wasting time. (I did like how Cap took down Nerd Hulk.) One problem is this issue was a touch too corny, too. I'm still interested in this story; just hope we get a little more Red Skull action next issue.

Powers #1: This first issue was alright; but, sometimes it takes Bendis a couple issues in a Powers storyline before I get really interested in it. Parts of this comic were confusing, especially the sex scene..I wasn't quite sure who was who and what the hell was happening...and, part of the problem is we meet new characters every new storyline who've we have never heard about before...so, it takes a bit before we get invested in these characters. (Such is the case with the murder victim, who has a past with Walker for the hey-day of the Rat Pack.) It's still good stuff...but, I was hoping for even more.

Hulk #17: Not hard to guess this is the "utter crap" comic in this bunch. Oh, boy...it was so bad, I have to call it the worst of the series. Much of the time, I was wondering, "What the hell is going on in this issue?" Loeb is so concerned with keeping these characters a mystery, that the writing is seriously suffering. Plus, the constant narration becomes very annoying. It's one long monologue...but, it gets lost in all the talking throughout the book. (And, there is a lot of talk. Not only do we have a very out-of-character Doc Samson, but we also have ANOTHER appearance by Deadpool in ANOTHER Marvel comic.) Too many characters...too many Hulks...and, I really don't care what happens, just that it comes to an end. I really, really hate to be negative; but, seriously, this is the worst Hulk story I've ever read in my entire life....and, that's a pretty long life!
 
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Thor: Giant-Sized Finale was okay, but it was the unfortunate victim of false advertising, since it was neither particularly giant-sized (22 pages for the main story without ads), nor did it really give us much of a finale. As the preview after the main story states, "the story continues in Thor #604, and it's not like Gillen is starting something particularly new there; he's continuing the same main plot thread of Thor's exile and Doom/Loki's sins against the Asgardians. So our fears have been realized: JMS started Thor off strong and then petered out to a weak 'finish,' just as he's done with Supreme Power/Squadron Supreme and Amazing Spider-Man. Although, I suppose we should count ourselves lucky that we actually got some kind of ending, as opposed to fans of The Twelve.

Anyway, the story was a big letdown as a finale but decent as another link in the ongoing chain. Bill's dead, Balder's finally got some political footing to stand on in leading the other Asgardians against Loki and returning Thor to the fold, Thor's got his first indication that leaving Loki and Doom alone with the Asgardians in Latveria was a bad idea, and we can finally get some forward momentum building on the plot. I was glad to see that Kelda's death will be one of the first orders of business on Gillen's run; she was fine as the character who bridges the gap between man and god most intimately by falling in love with a mortal, but Bill's dead, the story's served its purpose, and JMS made her way too much like "chick-Thor" toward the end of this issue.

The stuff in Broxton was my favorite part of the issue, since we got to see Sif and the Warriors Three be totally badass. I'm not really sure why JMS felt such a need to reinstate Blake's limp, but I suppose it's nice for him to actually have a reason to use the cane again beyond pure *****ey affectation.

Really, there's not much to say about this issue because the main plot only just started creeping forward again in it. I'm mostly looking forward to Gillen's turn on the series, and I hope his pacing is faster than JMS'.

Also, Djurdjevic's pencils felt a little weak on this issue. There was one panel with Sif's face that looked all kinds of screwy. All things considered, I'm hoping he sticks to covers from now on. He's great as a cover artist, but I don't think he's anywhere near as strong on interiors as Coipel, which made his fill-in issues a bit of a drag.
 
Those first few pages with Gillen was the highlight for me. Seeing Doom being his usual evil self was a real treat.
 
Yeah, I'm super-excited for Gillen's run. He's 3 for 3 with Godhunter, Dark Avengers: Ares, and SWORD. :up:
 
Spider-Man Clone Saga #3: Part 3 of this cliff notes version of the original massive story. I guess if you were always wondering what the Clone Saga was about, it's alright; but, I find something severely lacking in the interpretation. Plus, I'm not wild about the art. Just looking at this version of the Jackel makes me like the original much, much more.

Black Terror #5: Eh. I love Project Superpowers; but, the solo adventures do nothing for me. With this new Black Terror storyarc, it's back to the same generic story, with absolutely very little characterization. (Maybe that's a complaint about this series...we don't know these characters much beyond their costume personas. It's as if they don't have a regular life; but, it's all about their superhero lives.)

Bring On The Bad Guys #1: I liked this first issue very much! Unlike other Project Superpower stories, this is a self-contained, one-issue story. I think I'm going to like this series a hole lot more than the solo minis I've read.

Iron Man #20: Blah, blah, blah, blah. That pretty much describes this issue. Tony Stark rambles on about why the heroes should bring him back to life...the heroes debate whether to bring him back to life...Norman gloats about his victory over Iron Man...and, nothing gets resolved in the end. Sheesh, it should take about 3 pages for Tony Stark to be given back his memories...but, we get nothing but talk, talk, talk. (Not to mention that the bonus story is just Marvel's latest rehashing of what's gone on before with Tony Stark in Iron Man Saga.)

New Avengers #59: The New Avengers must decide how to save Luke Cage from the clutches of Norman Osborn. The ending is totally expected...and, this same old story of the New Avengers being hunted is getting very, very old. (First Civil War and now with Norman Osborn....man, I miss an old fashion Avengers vs. bad guy(s) story.)

This was not really a very good issue. It was predictable, and all of Bendis' usually dialogue was rather corny to me.
 
The Dark Tower-The Fall Of Gilead #6: Like the fellow above me, I thought this too was wonderful. Unlike him, I have enjoyed this title from the beginning. I consider it a must for any Dark Tower fan and I think this run is way better than the one for The Stand which I dropped after only a coupla arcs.
 
NO WAY!!! You dropped The Stand??!!?? OH, man, I'm enjoying that title even more than Dark Tower. (Although, I do have to give props for Dark Tower giving us new material never before seen.) I've always been a humongous Stand fan; and, I love that this comic is giving it the treatment it deserves.

Ok, onto two more comics.

Amazing Spider-Man #613: Ok, let's get the bad part out of the way....the art isn't that good;..BUT, the story is nicely done. While Electro comes across as more of a *****e in this issue, you still have to feel for him a bit. The dude is going to die. Waid does a good job with this story, and it's nice to see a classic Spidey villian getting a decent storyline. (Especially when you consider how his Ultimate counterpart gets trounced so easily.) Another good issue...made only better with the lasting taste of the Ben Reilly story still in my mouth.

Web Of Spider-Man #2: If it wasn't for the fact this comic had Spider-Girl...or that I buy every Marvel comic that comes out...I probably wouldn't bother much with this title. The Electro story was only ok, and the last story featuring JJ Jameson was the same. It's Spider-Girl that is the real feature here. We get another amazing chapter, we get equal parts drama, humor, and action, and we end it with another good cliffhanger.
 
More quicky reviews:

Ender's Shadow-Command School #3: I keep saying it: "This is one of the best books being put out by Marvel right now!!!" Mike Carey has me so into his Ender series, it overshadows every other book Marvel puts out. It's based on a children's book by Orson Scott Card;

I take issue with that. The OSC Ender books are not children's books in any shape or form.
 
NO WAY!!! You dropped The Stand??!!?? OH, man, I'm enjoying that title even more than Dark Tower. (Although, I do have to give props for Dark Tower giving us new material never before seen.) I've always been a humongous Stand fan; and, I love that this comic is giving it the treatment it deserves.
It felt rushed to me, like even though they were spreading the story along, I wasn't really getting to know the characters as well as I was in Dark Tower. Of course Dark Tower has a much smaller cast, it's like reading SpiderMan vrs X-men. One hero makes it easier for you to get a good idea of who he is. I kept thinking that the book was so much better. I am glad you like it though, it does look like they put a good effort into it.
 
I take issue with that. The OSC Ender books are not children's books in any shape or form.

If there is an adult copy of this title, then I just don't know about it. As I'm always in the kid's section of Barnes and Noble with my kid, I keep seeing the book there.
 
Yeah, thanks for that head's up. I looked up Ender's Game, and yep, it's originally came out in the late 70's. Later, he took those Novellas and expanded on some of those things he originally wrote, turning it into a novel in the 80's.

"Ender's Game won the 1985 Nebula Award for best novel and the 1986 Hugo Award for best novel."

Like I said, now it's found in the Children's section of many bookstores.
 
GIANT SIZE THOR FINALE #1: Or, essentially, THOR #603 A. Considering than next week's issue of THOR technically ships in December, for the life of me I don't know why this couldn't have shipped as an issue of THOR. Was editorial that fearful that it would miss this ship date? Did they seek to avoid another fiasco like issues of WOLVERINE shipping out of order? At any rate, Marvel has risked this finale of the JMS run selling lower than usual because one-shots of ongoings haven't sold as well as regular issues in, oh, about 10 years. But the great thing about the Joe Q era is that simple realities of the business that are obvious to any pedestrian who examines the biz for five minutes are akin to superhuman ephiphanies for editorial. What any layman could figure out usually takes Marvel 2-4 years to execute, at swiftest. And this is a company that would publish comics criticizing slow politicians.

At any rate, this is the 17th issue of the JMS launch of THOR that now concludes, after about two years. I suppose that's fine in terms of Joss Whedon publishing standards, but surely Marvel expected this to be a faster book. JMS only agreed because he wanted at least 8 issues on his own without crossover tie-in's, and by and large Marvel more than doubled his request. When JMS leaves a book, he usually leaves it in three ways: hanging without a conclusion, in utter shambles, or unfinished. While such practices would have gotten him fired in the TV biz, Marvel editorial is a desperate sucker, willing to be endlessly stood up on proms by Allen Heinberg, so JMS has nothing to fear - and to be fair, DC is little better. For THOR, JMS delivers an exciting final issue for his run, which in usual fashion casts Thor as a supporting guest character, and has a lot of action. But it is not a conclusion. It merely sets up the next chap, K. Gillen, to maybe get around to a conclusion. It passes the buck, which for an A-List writer is not the best finale. The art is done by Djurdevic, who has proven slightly more reliable than the old regular artist, Oliver Coipel. He will be drawing SIEGE, and if Marvel editorial seriously believes that they can get 4 monthly issues out of him without one delay, then they either have given him considerable lead in time (like about a quarter of a year) or they're delusional beyond all hope of therapy. Every regular assignment he has had that was beyond one issue has run late after a while, two issues max.

"William the Warrior" becomes "William the Corpse" in a few pages (within the 5-6 page online preview of the issue, in fact), and while it is a powerful sequence and send-off for Bill, it comes with the idea that Balder the Brave needs the help of a half-dead mortal with a magical sword in order to defend himself from three random Asgardians. He also needs Bill to literally tell him what the plot of this series has so obviously been for 12 issues now under his dying breath. Balder, at best, has been a chump in this run, and this issue does nothing to change that. Balder declares that he'll actually, maybe, almost do something, while Kelda grows some stones and declares revenge against Loki for Bill's death. Her fate, which is revealed in the 5 page preview for THOR #604, is hardly pretty (Doom basically kills her in a few pages). There's a nice send-off for Bill, but if you read THOR for Thor and not the adventures of a fry-cook, you might grow impatient.

The climax of the issue are the attack squad of "Anti-Thor Doombots" flying into Oklahoma in Loki's desperate attempt to kill Donald Blake to eliminate any threat of Thor messing with his plans. Because lord knows if I was the God of Lies and was able to easily trick Thor into handing his entire kingdom into my hands, moving it into the lair of the worst villain Midguard has ever had, and successfully walked around in the corpse of his beloved for about a year, I CERTAINLY would reveal my hand in so crude a fashion as to send a fleet of ****ing robots to kill him. And in due fashion, Thor barely shows up in the fight. The man of the hour is Valstagg, who finally does something besides be the butt of fat jokes. It's an epic moment for ol' Valstagg the Mighty and he probably hasn't had a moment that cool in, well, ever. The art for this moment is well paced and it was executed well. It was the highlight of the $4 issue.

The rest, though, is a bit middling. Blake is blasted by the robots before he can summon Thor, and, hey, turns out his mortal form is crippled again and needs the "staff" to walk. Wow, that was worth four bucks. And nothing has been resolved. Thor is still exiled. Asgard in Oklahoma is still empty, and Sif and the Warrior's Three are still working in the diner. Doom and Loki are still laughing it up in Latveria, chopping up Asgardians for experimental purposes. I suppose with SIEGE what it is, there was no way JMS could have done a proper finale, and to be fair this issue was better than some of his last. But a run has to seem like it accomplished something, and outside of the first few issues, it accomplished little besides make Thor a guest star in his own book, make Balder look like a gutless, clueless putz, and make Loki even more invincible and unbeatable than the Joker in THE DARK KNIGHT. There were many solid and even epic moments, but even the worst issue of the Pak & Van Lente HERCULES outdoes this run by a mile. JMS stretched an 8-9 issue story way too far and than has left a proper resolution to the next guy; passing the buck as it were. The fact that Gillen is willing to gracelessly kill off Kelda in his first issue perhaps vents the frustration of being tasked by some hot shot writer to finish HIS story for him. I tear into Joss Whedon a lot for his slow-shipping runs on RUNAWAYS and ASTONISHING X-MEN, but to give credit, he always finished his runs.

THOR's an alright book. Nothing in it is unreadable or horrendous. But it will likely become very overrated, and it proves that the only A-List writer that Marvel has that actually delivers A-grade work on a regular basis is Ed Brubaker. Jeph Loeb has quickly devolved into a clueless hack who seems to care more about a monthly deadline than writing a cohesive, readable story, and monthly produces overpriced work that flat-out insults the intelligence of the fans. Bendis has been an overrated hack for several years now, incapable of writing any character differently from the next and needing 7 issues to make the most mundane event happen, and treating every mundane, no brainer story twist as some Agatha Christy style ****ing masterpiece (all while writing characters poorly and killing off ones he doesn't like for shock value). Mark Millar waxes and wanes between "fun popcorn blockbuster" to "overrated preachy explosive Socialist drivel". Finally, JMS, who is DC's problem now, still has quite a lot of talent and a flair for dialogue and scene writing, but he drags things out too bloody long and then fails to really deliver the goods when it counts. THOR should have been a big event style book, but instead it was an over-budget high school play that took entirely too long to get to a middling conclusion. Not only is INCREDIBLE HERCULES a better Marvel god title, but THOR offers it little competition. I'll be fair and give Gillen a chance to wrap things up, but the writer after him may have to be terrific for me to remain. I've "fallen out of love" with this book a great deal within the last year.

A reprint of Thor's debut story and a 5 page preview that could easily be found on the internet are needed to pad out the price to $4. The next issue of THOR returns to $3, because apparently Gillen isn't worth the extra buck, or Marvel knows they can't suck an extra dollar from his readers. At any rate, JMS leaves the title he relaunched, and I won't miss him. Or at least, I hope I don't. Don't screw up, Gillen.
I still rather enjoyed this -- maybe because, as a newbie, I don't recognize if things are off about our heroes. I am not a purist by any means. I still thought it was a great tale (though I was bummed to see see Bill get killed off) and I am sad to see the creative change. I can only hope that the next arc will as good, or beter yet, come out on time. This book is still better than some of the others I read, including Uncanny X-Men which is currently boring me to tears.
 

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