Bought/Thought Star Wars Day Edition 5/4

That argument might make sense if Wolverine weren't also a very public part of the X-Men. And the Avengers. And the New Avengers. It's not like Wolverine's the only person capable of stealth.
But Wolverine is the one with the covert ops assassination squad. Magneto on the other hand, if people find out about him killing someone, will destroy the X-Men because people still don't trust him and would damage mutant/human relations way more if people found out if Wolverine had X-Force.
 
Moon Knight #1 vol I have no idea. Man, he gets a lot of series for someone not that popular: This book is a difficult beast for me. I loved it and kind of hated it at the same time. From my understand MK, as of last vol, is supposed to be going by his Jake Lockley alias. As soon as this book starts, in the fictual tv series, hs is going by that name, but in the real world he has returned to the Marc alias. So...Bendis got his continuity backwards. Jake is who he is supposed to be now, in the tv recap he was going my Marc even then, not donning Jake until he returned to the US.

Something strange I noticed is why isn't he going by the Steve Grant alias for the producing role on the show? Going by his real name isn't the brightest of ideas, and Grant would make sense, him being a known investor in things and all, and it wouldn't be strange for someone with his kind of bank account to move into Hollywood.
Another strange bit, and some might think it's a spoiler, but isn't since it was in the press release. Is that of the Avengers being there and then "shocking!" all being apart of his crazy mind in a last page twist. So, for 22, the avengers being there were written as if we already didn't know the twist, even though Marvel had already told us this was the whole point for the book.
Art is great, though, as is the wonderful coloring. I'm dabating on picking up #2 as I like MK but hate the fact that I can see that this is all going to somehow tie into the Ultron event that Bendis teased at the end of .1 Avengers. And I try my best to stay out of any books that tie into such nonsense.
I guess this is a 2.5/5
Read for the art, folks, face palm for the non-twist.

Oh and to the first poster, the bad guy was Mr. Hyde. And that's the wayt Maleev has always drawn him, and it's odd compared to others.
 
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yeah i got that part after rereading it a few time
 
Another big week, another wad of text and spoilers. Let's get it done.

DREAD'S BOUGHT/THOUGHT for 5/4/11: Part 1

BATMAN BEYOND #5: This is the start of a new arc from Adam Beechen, after last month's stand alone story. I think I understand the format; each arc may be 3 chapters, since that is how many issues artist Ryan Benjamin (alongside John Stanisci's inks and David Baron's colors) can handle without a lot of lead in time and meet schedule. This might make it difficult to include more than 4 issues in a trade collection, unless they want to collect trades of 8 issues instead. On the other hand, this means BATMAN BEYOND will avoid the format of 4-6 issues or bust per story, which will keep things moving a lot faster. Very few plots in comics are so dense that they cannot be told with a 3 part story, even with continuing subplots every issue. Eduardo Pansica drew issue four, and his pencils were much stronger than that of Benjamin (who is no slouch himself).

This issue feels very much like an extension of the cartoon. Paxton Powers has been sprung from prison by a mysterious figure, at the same time as a corporate shark encourages the workers' union at WAYNE POWERS to riot over wages. While this is a clear commentary at modern times (much less the fictional future of 2040-2050), it manages to avoid being bleak and pandering. Old Man Wayne does some investigating of his own, while a very familiar figure to BEYOND fans makes his triumphant return.

I suppose it is weird for DC fans to read anyone give a review of something Beechen writes and it sounds positive. I imagine someone who only read early GHOST RIDER comics from Howard Mackie would come off the same to Spider-Man fans. This was a very good kickoff to the next arc, and has me immediately interested in the rest.

ANNIHILATORS #3: This is the second "extra sized, extra priced" issue of something, with AVENGERS ACADEMY GIANT-SIZE #1 being the other; 42 pages for $4.99 actually is a bargain over two single issues, even if a larger chunk is misleading. Old fans of ROM should be pleased that the main ANNIHILATORS strip has basically been picking up where that series left off, complete with Brandy Clarke (as Queen of Galador) and villain Doctor Dredd. This month, the dreaded Wraith Queen is unleashed and battles the titular team of space heroes, which forces a mind-meld with Silver Surfer and a trip to Wraithworld. Unfortunately, the heroes have to actually bring Wraithworld back into Galador's orbit to prevent an even worse catastrophe from occurring. The rest of the surviving Dire Wraiths have been weakened from their time in limbo and actually see their Queen as a tyrant. The entire scheme stands revealed as a quest from a cabal of Skrulls to return to glory. The problem with this story, besides Tan Eng Huat's artwork not exactly being the best ever on a space book, is that Abnett & Lanning don't seem to be able to get much emotional beats or human connection with these characters. Even Quasar often seems to spend his time either whining that he isn't Nova or Star-Lord, or doing functional things. This team seems more like a collection of space action figures rather than a team that has memorable characters. There is always a lot of action and some memorable one-liners, but it doesn't seem to gell together as well as NOVA or GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY did. In a way it feels like ANNIHILATION CONQUEST did; a story from the POV of characters who were not DnA's strong suit.

The ROCKET RACCOON & GROOT strip continues to be the real cream of this double sized collection. Unlike the Annihilators, DnA manage to capture more or Raccoon's voice and wit - and his adventure is far from humorless. This issue goes through the task of merging Rocket's continuity from the 80's and 90's with his reappearance on the scene in Keith Giffen's original STAR-LORD, which had some modest continuity mix-ups (such as getting Deathcry's character mostly wrong). It turns out that Rocket's past from the 80's did happen, he just agreed to a mind wipe and an exile for the greater good. This issue has Timothy Green II drawing a lot of animal characters and weird things; if you're someone who whines about how artists on super hero books "take no risks", then Green II's art must be a godsend. This month's story is plagued by a lot of infodump moments of exposition, but it all flows together as a proper part in the story for this to happen. Unlike with ANNIHILATORS, Rocket is a lead DnA clearly understand and can portray in a dynamic, effective way. Groot remains there to grumble his POKEMON like catch phrase, but DnA work around that.

This double sized mini series continues to entertain me, but it is a shame when the lead story isn't it's highlight. The writers were on a better course with NOVA and GOTG material, and one hopes they will be allowed to revisit it sooner rather than later.

AVENGERS ACADEMY #13: This is a week in which Marvel have released a great deal of AVENGERS ACADEMY material; the next issue of the regular series shipping two weeks after the last, as well as a giant sized annual style crossover with the canceled YOUNG ALLIES (more on that below). This is in addition to the kids from the Academy guest starring in AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #661 and #662. To be honest it was a mighty struggle between this 13th issue and AVENGERS ACADEMY GIANT-SIZE for the title of Book Of The Week for me; it was even once considered to offer both as a tie. But this is America, where we like our sports to have definite winners and losers, not to end in ties - hockey games no longer can end in a tie, football games almost never, and soccer is still not big here. In the end, this regular issue won out because in it, writer Christos Gage and artist Sean Chen (alongside inker Scott Hanna and colorist Jeromy Cox) manage to accomplish something rare in superhero comics. They manage to have 22 pages of proper character development and culminations from the previous year of comics without one brawl with a villain or a bleak ending. The cover teases a "super hero prom" and that is exactly what happens, and it probably is a more interesting prom than many people have had. There are no rented limo's or cheap tuxedos, but more than enough characters and banter to go around.

At this point it is worth taking a moment to acknowledge the feat that this comic has accomplished - selling well enough to last past a full calendar year with no official word of cancellation looming. From 2009 to now, Marvel has had several new launches that have not lasted this long, such as S.W.O.R.D., DOCTOR VOODOO, and YOUNG ALLIES. Even some of their relaunches of older franchises, like VENGEANCE OF THE MOON KNIGHT, have not lasted twelve issues, much less more. Considering that AVENGERS ACADEMY is a book that stars mostly a cast of new or newer characters as well as B and C listers like Hank Pym, Tigra, Speedball and Justice in a market in which a secondary Iron Man comic can't even last a year (IRON MAN LEGACY), this is an incredible accomplishment by Gage and his stable of artists. The last issue ended a two issue story in which the Academy cadets had to prove their mettle against Korvac, one of the greatest villains in Avengers' history. This issue is a great breath of air after that high octane saga, where the characters can get a chance to stretch their limbs and forget being miserable or in danger for a bit.

Because six teenagers are too few for a proper prom, even with their adult teachers as chaperones, Gage has some left over cast members from AVENGERS: THE INITIATIVE show up to fill the dance floor, as well as the cast from the canceled YOUNG ALLIES book (which include Spider-Girl, who got to branch off into her own canceled book). This story takes place directly after the events of AVENGERS ACADEMY GIANT-SIZE, but those who read this first (or at all) should not be terribly confused. Every character from the students to their teachers get at least a page or two's worth of development. In the case of Justice, a scene between him, his ex, and his current girlfriend is a long time in coming (nearly three years). The dialogue is often crisp and there are many amusing exchanges and snappy one liners such as, "No fighting amongst yourselves. This isn't the X-Men". A development for Reptil that emerged in the previous issue has a satisfying conclusion, and in a way this is a satisfying conclusion to the previous year's worth of stories, and provides a proper book end for the second year's worth of stories. It is the sort of story that is simple to the point that a review of it without word for word summaries seems lazy, but once it has been read, it's readily appreciated.

The only downside is the cover by Billy Tan, which reveals the conclusion of one of the issue's most tender moments and subplots. Comics that treat revealing the scene on the cover as a surprise can be irritating, and many times that is due to a simplistic cover.

Fans of new and young Marvel characters as well as comics that don't take everything seriously while still having plenty of genuine human moments - serious, romantic, awkward and funny - should enjoy this issue immensely. The next issue promises a battle against the Sinister Six, and that is fine after a break. Between double shipping, AMAZING SPIDER-MAN guest appearances, the .1 issue next month and the GIANT-SIZE issue this month, Marvel is about to readily push the series about as hard as they were pushing AGENTS OF ATLAS. This is good, as it is a seriously underrated comic. Via a FEAR ITSELF tie in, Marvel has committed to this series until issue twenty, and hopefully it will survive beyond that. This issue is one of many examples as to why.

AVENGERS ACADEMY GIANT-SIZE #1: For the record, this massive one shot should be read before AVENGERS ACADEMY #13, as it sets up the "Super Hero Prom" properly. For those who don't like to see their teenage super heroes dance, this mega-issue has plenty of action for your eight dollars. This is a story that Marvel has attempted to package and sell twice before, to the point of releasing solicitations and paying Chris Samnee for three covers. First, this was meant to be a three part story that would run through the annual issues of Academy, YOUNG ALLIES and SPIDER-GIRL (much as Marvel is currently doing for their annuals for UNCANNY X-MEN, DEADPOOL, and CAPTAIN AMERICA); the dilemma came when the latter two series were canceled before issue nine. Then, it was meant to be sold as a three issue mini series called ARCADE: DEATH GAME which was to have begun in February. Marvel evidently realized that such a title would sell poorly. Thus, they have chosen to sell it as AVENGERS ACADEMY GIANT-SIZE and sell all three issues as one large chunk. Wouldn't it have been wiser to have simply sold it as AVENGERS ACADEMY: DEATH GAME in February? At any rate, while a $7.99 cover price is oppressive for fans and retailers alike, it does wind up being cheaper in total than three shorter issues would have been - albeit by 98 cents. Despite the cover Ed McGuiness cover, neither Steve Rogers, Spider-Man, and/or Iron Man do not appear in this issue (nor is there 80 pages of story content). The story is written by Paul Tobin, the regular writer of SPIDER-GIRL, and David Baldeon, who was the regular artist on YOUNG ALLIES (alongside Chris Sotomayor, who was the regular colorist of YOUNG ALLIES).

Most of the cadets of Avengers Academy - at least the ones who can safely venture outside - have a day off around the same time as 3/5ths of the unofficial team the Young Allies happen to be in the middle of a patrol. As one shuttled title implied, the unifying stimilus is Arcade, the infamous X-MEN villain who has made his living out of trapping heroes in "Murderworld" death traps and vaguely imitating DC's Joker (at least circa 1977). The gist is that Arcade is supposed to be a professional hit man, and made a very successful career out of killing normal civilians; he simply enjoys the challenge of super heroes, who routinely survive his attacks. Wanting to rebuild his reputation, he decides to take on novice heroes instead of experienced ones like Spider-Man, Human Torch, or the X-Men. This also provides an excuse for the casts from two teenager super hero comics to meet and unite against a common foe. Tobin manages to capture the voices of characters written by Christos Gage and Sean McKeever very well, and portrays an Arcade who is both hilarious and chilling. The art and colors match the tone of the story well, going for over the top action with robots and sharks one moment and showing Arcade looking sinister (via shadows) the next.

While there are segments in which it is obvious that this was intended to be released as three separate comics as well as one modestly annoying narration box error on page six, on the whole the product is an entertaining romp of a tale. While there may be characters who Tobin omitted that may be missed, but on the whole he is wise to choose a cast he can reasonably flesh out and play with for 66 pages. Given the high cost at the wholesale level, shops may not order many copies of this; make sure to nab it while you can.

Between this and AVENGERS ACADEMY #13, I basically got 4 issues worth of Academy/Young Allies/young heroes action this week, and that's overshadowed anything bleak and Fear related for my money.

HERC #2: This issue is running two weeks late, as the title was intended to double-ship in April; whether it will instead do so in May is unknown. Continuing from last issue's cliffhanger, the titular Hercules, who is no longer immortal or super-powered, must face off against the all new Hobgoblin. In a way, Hobgoblin is becoming one of those villains who is passed around several comics at once like a Canadian penny; he has already shown up in SPIDER-GIRL after being the antagonist of the kick off arc on BIG TIME (AMAZING SPIDER-MAN) late last year. Marvel has "spammed" villains in a similar fashion in the recent past, such as Nightmare, Griffen, and the Wrecking Crew, and it can grow irritating for those who read many titles. Beyond that, writers Greg Pak and Fred Van Lente alongside Neil Edward's pencils, Scott Hanna's inks and Jesus Aburtov's colors helm a great battle sequence between a depowered god and an insane, technologically empowered metahuman. While Herc may lack his godly strength and invulnerability, he has some mystical weapons and centuries of battle experience handy.

Pak and Van Lente straddle a fine line between doing "street crime" stories while also doing the mystical demigod stories that INCREDIBLE HERCULES was famous for. So many relaunches of ongoing titles are done simply to spike sales or fiddle with a number, yet this relaunch has managed to capture the idea of having a genuinely new idea or direction with the franchise. Hercules is no longer running with Amadeus Cho and his style of adventure as well as tactics have changed. While super heroes have been doing the "proving oneself without one's super powers, until they return" stories since the 50's (or earlier), this take on Herc manages to have more meat on it than it often has with other heroes. It is easy to settle into the idea of Hercules as a drunken brawler with Class 100 strength, and this premise forces both Herc and the reader to change that view. Plus, it is centered in Brooklyn, which does my heart proud. Maybe some local comic book shops can stage a promotional event with some of the artists or writers of this series? At any rate, Pak and Ven Lente continue their exceptional streak of great Hercules comics, and it is good to see Marvel tenaciously support a franchise with endless launches and relaunches besides BLACK PANTHER and MOON KNIGHT.
 
Part 2:

FEAR ITSELF #2: This is the issue in Marvel's latest annual "event" mini series in which Matt Fraction reveals the minions of his big villain, who are called "the Worthy". This would be an incredible surprise, had Marvel chosen not to reveal who all of them were two weeks ago across the Internet. If you have avoided the Internet for the past few weeks, then the revelations of this issue might be a surprise. If not, then the fact that Juggernaut, Hulk, Titania, and Attuma have become "Worthy" alongside Sin/Skadi will be old news. The Thing is set to become "Worthy" in the next issue, and subsequent cross overs with IRON MAN 2.0 and INVINCIBLE IRON MAN will have Absorbing Man and Grey Gargoyle step into their pre-determined, already-revealed roles. In the effort to promote their big stories, Marvel has decided to reveal critical details to them weeks in advance - therefore asking the reader to invest $3.99 in a story in which they already know the key details, which the issue will treat as a surprise. And Marvel wonder why internet piracy is a scourge?

While the last issue offered 44 pages of story for $3.99, this one manages only 23. The ancient Norse adversary - the former Highfather of the gods who Odin calls "the Serpent" - has thrown his hammers around the world to summon his "Worthy", who just so happen to all be established characters who mostly are either villains or have battled Thor before. Odin has ordered all of the Asgardians to march from Broxton, Oklahoma back to the realm of Asgard, with Thor in chains for disagreeing with abandoning humanity to the Serpent. No longer is Odin a wise and mysterious father figure - he is now an aggressive, petty, judging character who seems to have little regard for mortals. Odin's logic seems to be to abandon the Earth to the Serpent so that he may properly rebuild Asgard IN Asgard and ready his people for the inevitable war with it and the Worthy - however, even disregarding Odin's sudden transformation into a rampaging jerk, this is tactical lunacy. Odin himself states that "the earth shall be it's fuel", as in the panic and fear that the Serpent sows on earth will literally make it stronger once it gets to Asgard. So, wouldn't it make sound tactical judgment to fight it on earth and defend the mortals, like Thor suggests? Isn't it better to fight an enemy at it's weakest than wait for it to reach full strength and then be in awe about how powerful it is, which is the DRAGON BALL Z approach to fighting? Or does the Odinpower allow the Highfather to avoid the perils of Fractionplotholes? Is this the point Thor and the mortal heroes will eventually make, and we just have to wait five more issues for this to happen because Fraction paces like he's in a Writersleep?

In one fell swoop, the premise behind THUNDERBOLTS is ripped from it's writer (Jeff Parker) as Juggernaut's hammer causes an explosion that frees all of the criminals from the Raft. The Serpent continues to sow panic among the mortals with it's evil godly presence, and Fraction displays this by having snippets of news reports give vaguely disturbing sound bites about events - a narrative gimmick that Frank Miller ran into the ground in 1987. Steve Rogers orders the Avengers to split up across the globe to investigate the fallen hammers, but little of that actually happens in this issue. The Future Foundation come across one in New York that Thing is destined to wield. Becoming "Worthy" makes the subject a pawn of the Serpent, although certain figures seem to display more free will than others. Sin, as Skadi, has enough of her old self to assemble an army of Nazi robots (in her continuing quest to duplicate her father the Red Skull), while Hulk, as Nul, tries to warn Betty/Red She-Hulk to flee before his rampage. Juggernaut, as Kuurth, seems to be a slave to the Serpent and no longer needs eye holes to reign destruction. Given that "X-MEN 3" came out in 2006, the fact that Marvel waited at least 4 years to have Juggernaut duplicate his helmet's design from that film is either a case of sluggish momentum or genius beyond mortal reasoning.

The artwork by Stuart Immonen, Wade Von Grawbadger (inks) and Laura Martin (colors) is brilliant, with a sequence in which Odin literally remakes Asgard with every step of himself and the Asgardians being the highlight of the issue. The downfall remains Fraction's writing; it isn't that it is exceptionally horrendous, but is absurdly average. The summery is an ancient evil guy has awoken, is throwing down Mjolnir imitation hammers to earth to recruit minions for himself and sow chaos, and the heroes will have to fight him. That is literally it, dragged out to seven issues at $4 a pop. The similarities between this and DC's "throw Lantern rings around" events is uncanny - perhaps this is FEAR ITSELF because THOREST NIGHT or THOREST DAY would have been too obvious. Marvel's answer to every franchise that has experienced popularity in either comics, an upcoming film or both is to stretch it to it's breaking point and beat it flat. This has been done with Venom, Ghost Rider and Punisher in the 90's and has been done to Wolverine, Deadpool, and the Hulk recently. Is this a sign that it is now Thor's turn to be Thored out? Perhaps the biggest hurdle is this is a story that is fit for a Saturday morning cartoon that insists it be taken seriously because society is in a paranoid mood lately, thus "paranoid society" signs are stuck atop the script beats. It is akin to Skeletor unleashing a monster on Eternia and the audience of "HE-MAN" having to deal with seven episodes of woe because that made the Eternian stock market crash. The Achilles Heel of all of Marvel's line wide crossover events of recent years have been dodgy stories drawn by great artists, and so far FEAR ITSELF remains little exception.

FEAR ITSELF: THE HOME FRONT #2: This secondary spin off to the major event continues as an anthology and continues to be a mixed bag. In theory these stories are meant to showcase the fact that the presence of the Serpent is sowing fear and chaos in the world and making people panic. In practice, it seems like a return to a lot of the bleak tones from CIVIL WAR and DARK REIGN, which some readers (especially on the Internet) are clearly tired of.

The main strip is the Speedball one by Christos Gage (AVENGERS ACADEMY) and Mike Mayhew (who did the Justice/Firestar story in I AM AN AVENGER), with colors by Rain Beredo (not to be confused with the purple ninja Rain from MORTAL KOMBAT, who was himself inspired by "Purple Rain" from Prince). This strip seeks to make up for Speedball not usually getting much focus in ACADEMY by getting it here. However, in practice, this strip continues to cement the unintentional moral that the citizens of Stamford, Connecticut are not worth protecting. Not just now, but before. The true crime of Stamford wasn't the "reckless" New Warrior raid, but the fact that they were bothering to try to rid Stamford of four escaped cons on the run. The fictional Stamford would have been better off with Colbolt Man, Coldheart, Speed-Freak and Nitro living amongst them. In the last issue, we learned that Robbie Baldwin was seeking to make penance for that incident that parked CW by volunteering for the charity run by Miriam Sharpe. Unfortunately, he was ultimately recognized and attacked - which one could say was an inevitable conclusion, and he really should have picked another charity. Everything that Speedball does or doesn't do is misconstrued here. When he is laying on a street, being beaten by a mob, and one of the goons hits HIMSELF with HIS OWN CROWBAR because of Speedball's kinetic powers, that is somehow SPEEDBALL's fault and he takes, and acknowledges, blame for it. After the Raft is blown up and a group of super-villains ride through Stamford blasting everything in sight with their powers, including murdering at least two pedestrians (and threatening a few more), Speedball tries to defend them. After the villains beat him down in the street and flee, the mob comes back and tries to suffocate him with a plastic bag. I have literally seen mafia henchmen in comic books who were more merciful and less opportunistic, despite the penalty of murder by their boss, than the citizens of Marvel Stamford.

However, this story is perhaps an attempt to salvage the minor character of Miriam Sharpe. She was initially created as being inspired by Cindy Sheehan. But after CW she faded from view, and with the end of the SHRA one would think she had no reason to exist. While she still holds Speedball personally responsible for her son's death, and initially feels he is there to "con" them, she also sees that many of her fellow Stamford citizens are acting like "morons" - at least 5 out of every 6 of them. Part of me wonders if the end result of this strip is to have Baldwin and Sharpe come to an understanding and get some closure together, despite coming at each other from polar angles. On the plus side, I did like seeing newer villains like Aftershock and Ember from YOUNG ALLIES show up again, and the in-joke about fruit cakes and Icemaster (a villain originally made for Hostess ads until he turned up as an actual villain in THUNDERBOLTS).

My solution to this story is simple; Speedball explains how he is lynched by people he just saved to other heroes and the Avengers hold a press conference, calling the bluff that "Stamford doesn't need super heroes" by vowing never, under any circumstances, will any masked hero enter Stamford, Connecticut again. Then a week later when the town is ruled by the Wrecking Crew and the Sinister Six, I'd probably smile. But, Gage is a bigger man than me so I expect some eventual understanding and healing between Baldwin and Sharpe.

The other strips this week made less of an impression. Peter Milligan's JIMMY WOO & THE AGENTS OF ATLAS strip with Elia Bonetti with John Raunch on colors isn't clicking so well. It isn't terrible but he hasn't imitated Jeff Parker's voice. The Agents are investigating the Thrule Society, who hid Skadi's hammer for Red Skull. Jimmy stumbles upon evidence of Atlantians being tortured in the 40's and dreads having to tell Namora about it. His romance with her seems very random, yet Milligan treats it like kismet.

Howard Chaykin has another one page strip, this time showing Purple Man as one of the many villains escaping the Raft. Ho-hum.

The last story is about Liz Allen and Normie Osborn heading into NY from NJ and being caught up in the aftermath of a robbery by Tiger Shark below the NJT rail. It's by a creative team I have never heard of before, and wasn't as memorable as Jim McCann's story last month. It wasn't bad, but seemed a little random. I am looking forward to the next issue, which will have a Cardiac story. The dilemma will be the awkward Milligan story and the bleak Speedball story.

HEROES FOR HIRE #6: This is the start of the second story line from writers Dan Abnett and Andy Lanning, collectively called “DnA” (don’t ask). Unless the sales figures improve, it could also be their last; in March, sales were just under 22,000 copies sold, making this title one of Marvel’s lowest selling ongoing series that is not a literature adaptation, a kid’s comic, a Max title, or hasn’t already been announced as canceled. HEROES FOR HIRE will double ship this month, which hopefully will stem the bleeding. Perhaps as a sign of the bumpy road, Spider-Man is the guest star of the next two issues – as his franchise is healthier in terms of sales than Wolverine or Deadpool, he is now making the rounds as A-list guest star to try to boost a floundering title’s sales for a month. It hasn’t worked since the 90’s, but the people who run the comic industry are glacially slow with changing tactics, perhaps because they have no tactics to change to. Ironically, as Deadpool is a mercenary for hire, this is one series where his guest appearance would actually make sense.

At any rate, this issue continues the subplot from the opening arc, while also providing a fresh slate. The premise is that Misty Knight, as “Control”, is running a new version of the “business” initially launched by Luke Cage in the 70’s which has been expanded into full teams in the late 90’s and post-Civil War in 2007. Because she has to take things easy for medical reasons following a miscarriage, Misty instead steers other heroes that she “hires” with instructions for missions, which often involve tactical missions against organized crime (like the mob or drug cartels). Since very few heroes actually work for money, Misty instead offers things like information or a favor as “payment”. This premise was originally set up by the Puppet Master, the old Fantastic Four villain who has had a creepy streak of late and was manipulating Misty into gaining control of street heroes. The villain’s been defeated, and Misty is seeking to utilize that premise properly. Her only hero on staff is the mercenary Paladin, who actually does work for a fee. The catch is this time, Paladin has legitimate personal reasons for wanting to pursue this endeavor – he has fallen in love with Misty.

As such, this is a comic in which the only real starring characters are Misty Knight and Paladin, two C-List characters who have usually never starred for long, if ever, in their own titles. Misty Knight is one half of the Daughters Of The Dragon, who were usually hangers-on for Luke Cage and Iron Fist. Paladin is a character who often crosses paths with teams of characters, although he was in the last version of HEROES FOR HIRE as well as, going farther back, SILVER SABLE’s Wild Pack in the 90’s. The other characters who appear are guest heroes “hired” on a case by case basis. This is a format that would probably struggle to attract readers even in better times, but it has proven to be an interesting one.

In this issue, Paladin is the only “hero for hire” and is keeping an eye on a shipment of the Atlantian drug Hook, which was introduced back in HEROES FOR HIRE #1 last year. Unfortunately for him, a group of ninja and Spider-Man ultimately butt in, preventing him from easily tracking the truck. While Misty is eager to allow Spider-Man to help out, Paladin feels he is annoying and unprofessional – and he resents being seen as a super hero prostitute because he works for a fee. It actually is odd that Spider-Man gets high and mighty about it, since for most of his existence he has been paid to take photographs of his own battles and sell them to a newspaper or magazine. True, he is paid for the photographs, not for the act of crime fighting itself, and Peter usually rationalized it that if he didn’t get paid for Spider-photo’s, someone else would. But the line between that and being a mercenary isn’t as vast as it seems (especially since Peter had to routinely lie about how he got such great pictures). At any rate, another professional mercenary, Batroc the Leaper, appears. He is a villain who has been much maligned but has been the subject of some rehabilitation in some Ed Brubaker issues of CAPTAIN AMERICA and especially Kieron Gillen’s CAPTAIN AMERICA AND BATROC THE LEAPER one shot from a few weeks back. He may seem like a laughable villain with his costume and accent, but he is actually an exceptional fighter capable of challenging even super-soldiers, and that comes through in this issue.

Brad Walker returns on art after a two issue break, and is back to rare form. His panels seem to explode with detail, yet not too much that his work ever seems stiff or static. His expressions and mannerisms with Spider-Man are more dynamic than some artists who draw AMAZING SPIDER-MAN proper. He is naturally aided by top notch inks by Drew Hennessy and colors by Jay David Ramos. The fight sequences are kinetic, and DnA add a great flair for dialogue.

HEROES FOR HIRE has been a title that has struggled to connect with audiences or be relaunched properly, but this go of it has actually been very good. This is the best work DnA have done for Marvel that wasn’t a space book (and even ANNIHILATORS hasn’t met their high standards). Enjoy this while you can; it may not last much longer.
 
Like I've said many times, Dread, Batman Beyond is quite possibly the first thing in his mainstream DC work that Beechen has written that is pretty damn good. And the Batman Beyond ongoing is way better than the miniseries that preceded it IMO.
 
Like I've said many times, Dread, Batman Beyond is quite possibly the first thing in his mainstream DC work that Beechen has written that is pretty damn good. And the Batman Beyond ongoing is way better than the miniseries that preceded it IMO.

Agreed. The mini series was really DC's way of testing the waters for an ongoing, ten years after BEYOND was canceled. When it sold modestly well, DC gave it the light for an ongoing, and it's sold about where the mini did. Not bad. That's the way to do it, rather than spit out one ongoing after the next that dies in 10 issues or less, Marvel. :p

As for Beechen, I haven't read anything he's written but this, so my view of him is skewed. Much as, as stated in my review, if someone had only read Howard Mackie's early GHOST RIDER stuff without reading his later GHOST RIDER stuff, or his endless rubbish on AMAZING SPIDER-MAN. Or even BROTHERHOOD, in which "Writer X" was strongly suspected to have been Mackie.

I liked the return of that villain from BATMAN BEYOND #5. I thought the cartoon lost a little focus without him, so I am happy to see him here. BEYOND may also be one of the first comics where I look forward to the fill in guy more than the regular artist - and I don't dislike the style of the regular artist.
 
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But Wolverine is the one with the covert ops assassination squad. Magneto on the other hand, if people find out about him killing someone, will destroy the X-Men because people still don't trust him and would damage mutant/human relations way more if people found out if Wolverine had X-Force.
Well, yeah, I suppose it would damage mutant/human relations more... but knowledge of Wolverine and X-Force coming to light would still damage mutant/human relations a lot.

Actually, no, I take it back; I think Wolverine would damage mutant/human relations more. Magneto's a known terrorist. He claims he's reformed as of like a month ago (comic time) and the X-Men vouch for him, but I doubt anyone would be all that surprised to learn he's still got some side assassinations going on. Wolverine, on the other hand, is not viewed as anything but a hero thanks to his years-long association with the X-Men and now almost every incarnation of the Avengers, reappointed to the latter team(s) by America's sweetheart, Steve Rogers himself.

It's like finding out Ice T went back to pimping vs. finding out Elvis was secretly a pimp all along. One's made no bones about his checkered past and, while it'd be disappointing to see him fall off the bandwagon, it'd be way more shocking to learn that the other ever even knew about the bandwagon.
 
But you have the X-Men vouching for someone who most of the public believes destroyed most of New York City (they don't believe the Xorneto excuse). The slightest mistake from Magneto would destroy the X-Men's image with the public. Uncanny X-Men #534.1 really exemplifies the delicate PR situation Magneto being an X-Man has on the team. Great issue to boot as well.

Wolverine, while I agree that his underground X-Force squad will hurt the X-Men's image, I disagree that the exposure of X-Force will hurt the X-Men the way Magneto screwing up will. The public loves Wolverine and in the end most of any potential anger will come down on him. The X-Men and Avengers can distance themselves from X-Force. The public on the other hand, asides from San Fransisco, loathe Magneto. They still see him as a terrorist and mass murderer with no chance of redemption. They are waiting for him to screw up. And unlike X-Force, which they can instantly disavow, Cyclops and the X-Men will have to own up accepting Magneto into their ranks.
 
The Avengers, maybe. But the X-Men? No way they can distance themselves from Wolverine. "Oops, we employed this guy for like a decade without realizing he was actually a mass-murderer and assassin. Our bad. Seriously, that one's on us. But he's gone now, so we're okay." At best, that makes the X-Men look wildly incompetent, thereby shattering the perception of them as any kind of defense against the likes of Magneto or anyone else, and at worst, it makes them look complicit in whatever Wolverine--and by extension X-Force--did. This is the court of public opinion, after all; proof doesn't have to be all that compelling to convince a lot of people.
 
The Avengers, maybe. But the X-Men? No way they can distance themselves from Wolverine. "Oops, we employed this guy for like a decade without realizing he was actually a mass-murderer and assassin. Our bad. Seriously, that one's on us. But he's gone now, so we're okay." At best, that makes the X-Men look wildly incompetent, thereby shattering the perception of them as any kind of defense against the likes of Magneto or anyone else, and at worst, it makes them look complicit in whatever Wolverine--and by extension X-Force--did. This is the court of public opinion, after all; proof doesn't have to be all that compelling to convince a lot of people.
The X-Men can just say that Wolverine has gone rogue, which is the actual truth. You're right that it will make the X-Men look wildly incompetent, but they can move on.

Magneto is just a far tougher sell. He has already betrayed the X-Men before, then destroyed New York City, and yet they still let him back on! That just makes the X-Men look even stupider than not knowing about X-Force.
 
I thought UX9 was alright, but also felt something missing. I did find it interesting that Logan chose to use a katana rather than his claws; I guess he wanted not to leave 3 adamantium claw marks in the guy.
 
Couldn't he have just popped 1 claw, then? Or better yet, pop 2 and frame his *****ebag kid for it. :awesome:
 
Lol, that'd be hilarious. After the sad eyes, he leaves a note that says: "Daken did it! lulz"
 
The "magneto needed wolverine to do it cause he's more stealthy thing" makes no sense. Mags could just use the iron in someone's blood to give a dude a heart attack or something like that. Wolverine slashes things to death. Wolverine is not stealthy, he's messy, loud and typically charges into hails of bullets as an opening approach to a conflict.
 
I'll have to review later; but, I can't help reading Fear Itself and think, "Multicolored Hulks...Hulked Out Heroes...Numerous colored power rings...and, now, a bunch of Thor-ed out heroes and villians." It's not bad; but, it sure doesn't feel original in the slightest.


BTW, I just got back from seeing Thor. I was extremely impressed. My only complaint is that you don't have to bother seeing it in 3D. Save a few bucks, because it adds nothing to the film. (Oh, and naturally, stay for after the credits. It's probably one of the best end-of-credits scenes from one of these films.)
 
I'll have to review later; but, I can't help reading Fear Itself and think, "Multicolored Hulks...Hulked Out Heroes...Numerous colored power rings...and, now, a bunch of Thor-ed out heroes and villians." It's not bad; but, it sure doesn't feel original in the slightest.

Agreed. Marvel is just Thoring themselves out, much as they stretched Hulk and Wolverine out, and DC GL'd themselves out. If the industry is tanking in sales in the midst of such "sure fire" strategies, what will happen when the big two run out of 'em?
 
Yea, what are the sales for Fear Itself and War of the Green Lanterns?

I'm sure both will be fine...while the rest of the Top 100 continues to see losses. Despite some big sellers like the FF stuff, Q1 2011 isn't looking much better, overall sales wise, than Q4 2010 looked.

The problem with stunts are that the sales gains are short term, even in better years like 2006-2008. Simply stacking short term plans atop each other will ultimately cause it to have less impact every time. FINAL CRISIS and SIEGE sold quite poorly compared to prior events. April's sales data is not in end, and should start trickling down by next week or so.
 
I see. Thanks for the info.

And yea, pretty much everything the companies do is for the quick buck these days. I can sorta understand, seeing as how sales are just terrible all across the board.

But it'd be nice if they actually put some effort into these events.
 
Agreed. Marvel is just Thoring themselves out, much as they stretched Hulk and Wolverine out, and DC GL'd themselves out. If the industry is tanking in sales in the midst of such "sure fire" strategies, what will happen when the big two run out of 'em?

Except DC hasn't GL'd themselves out. The three GL books are in response to the success of the Green Lantern comics, and all three of them are successful due to them constantly interacting with one another. And at least the books star completely different characters.

With Wolverine, Iron Man, Thor, Captain America, and the Hulk on the other hand, they just constantly push out unwanted product to "promote" their respective movies. They have nothing at all to do what the current characterizations of those characters are doing.
 
Yea, what are the sales for Fear Itself and War of the Green Lanterns?

Fear Itself #1's data hasn't come out yet, but so far War of the Green Lanterns is doing well. Green Lantern #64 was the second highest selling comic of March 2011, with Green Lantern Corps #58 at #12, and Green Lantern: Emerald Warriors #8 at #22. It's no Blackest Night, but the Green Lantern books are still doing well. And re-orders of Green Lantern Corps and Green Lantern: Emerald Warriors will probably go up once people realize that all the issues are chapters of the story instead of each series doing it's own thing.
 
Except DC hasn't GL'd themselves out. The three GL books are in response to the success of the Green Lantern comics, and all three of them are successful due to them constantly interacting with one another. And at least the books star completely different characters.

With Wolverine, Iron Man, Thor, Captain America, and the Hulk on the other hand, they just constantly push out unwanted product to "promote" their respective movies. They have nothing at all to do what the current characterizations of those characters are doing.

You do have a point about GL, I guess. All 3 GL books currently sell in the Top 25 (with 2 often in the Top 15). The main GL book has often been a Top 10 staple for months now, sometimes snagging the #1 spot. And it can easily be said that DC invested years of effort into GL and Geoff Johns on it at the middle of the decade and is now reaping the fruit. Goes to show what can be accomplished with a combination of top talent, relentless promotion and a product that gets decent buzz for being, well...decent.

Batman, of course, has been relentlessly spammed for decades now; long before Wolverine was to a degree.

DC's problem, though, is beyond GL and Batman, the rest of their books are outsold by Marvel's. Marvel always wins the dollar and unit share because they release more books that always outsell DC's down the rest of the Top 100; even if many of those titles sink like a stone an get canceled or relaunched or replaced. If we're looking for metaphors, I see DC as the Tortoise; believing doing everything slow, steady, and old, will win in the end. Marvel's strategy, as a metaphor, is the Hydra; one comic dies, it is replaced with 2 more. You can never defeat it by slicing off heads or waiting for the heads to die. Both strategies have strengths and flaws. DC, for instance, has done a better job of keeping costs down - which was likely the true purpose for "Holding the line at $2.99".

Still, you can't say DC NEVER sells comics nobody asked for - the TEEN TITANS certainly can't support a spin off, yet DC sure tried recently. Not all the Bat-books are stable or high sellers, especially down the chain into BATGIRL territory. Superman is a weakened franchise, a shell of itself, yet DC still treats it like an A-Lister. And DC has had editorial blunders, and downright questionable moves. Creators who escape exclusive contracts can't seem to flee fast enough. Who would have imagined Greg Rucka at Marvel? DC also has had problems with some big sellers shipping late. Part of why sales for Jan. & Feb. 2011 looked bad was because a few big DC books didn't ship.

But, the overall market is weak. The Top 300 comics in March 2011 were down 4.28% since March 2010, which was in the midst of SIEGE which was itself drawing gasps for averaging only about 110-115k sales an issue or so, which was low by recent standards for an event mini. Note that March 2011's top book, FF #1, sold about 114k - maybe that's the new normal for "big event books"? Retailers have learned the hard way not to buy more than they think they can sell. Still, the start of 2010 was better for comic sales than the end of 2010, so how 2011 will look in comparison will be interesting.

Overall, comic sales are supposedly still stronger than they were in 2005 or 2001 to a degree...although back then, the universal price for all comics was not $2.99 yet. $3.99 is obviously the threshold for how much people will pay for a 22 page comic, and Marvel really can't expect more. A gradual price increase would have left some margin for further increases, rather than the limit at once. Now what? Toy with $4.25 for the next relaunch of NEW AVENGERS in 2013?

Of course, I've been wrong before - I have to admit I did not expect VENOM #1 to sell just shy of 54k within the Top 20.

Fear Itself #1's data hasn't come out yet, but so far War of the Green Lanterns is doing well. Green Lantern #64 was the second highest selling comic of March 2011, with Green Lantern Corps #58 at #12, and Green Lantern: Emerald Warriors #8 at #22. It's no Blackest Night, but the Green Lantern books are still doing well. And re-orders of Green Lantern Corps and Green Lantern: Emerald Warriors will probably go up once people realize that all the issues are chapters of the story instead of each series doing it's own thing.

While FEAR ITSELF #1 likely sold much better, the prelude, FEAR ITSELF: BOOK OF THE SKULL #1 sold in the Top 10 with over 62,700 copies. It was only the 3rd Marvel book that was in the Top 10, besides FF (at #1) and AVENGERS (at #8). I would imagine FEAR ITSELF #1 sold twice as well. Of course, that'd still put it at about 125,400 copies - roughly 10k lower than the debut to SIEGE #1 (albeit that was returnable). We'll find out in a week or so, but I am curious if FEAR ITSELF will outdo SIEGE or if SIEGE was the new bellweather for how well big events may sell in this "new economy".

GREEN LANTERN #64 was the second best seller in March 2011, selling over 76,800 copies - well below FF #1's haul of over 114,400 copies. The caveat, of course, is that sales for FF #2 will likely drop by at least 20% if not more, unless it REALLY bucks trends. Still, the top comic selling under 80k in a month without something big isn't healthy, and has been what caused Q4 2010 to look ugly.

Still, GREEN LANTERN is about 10k above where Bendis' top Avenger book for a given month usually has done lately. AVENGERS and NEW AVENGERS used to go back and forth, but AVENGERS seems to have a 6-7k lead on NEW AVENGERS lately.

The only thing many DC comics have over Marvel is lower diminishing returns; Marvel has more books bleeding above the "healthy" rate of 1-3% a month; some are still seeing 4-6% skids every month despite being around for years. But, again, that doesn't matter when Marvel relaunches or replaces anything that is canceled with two more.

Marvel also totally spams the variant cover thing. And that's one of Marvel's problems; if they find something that works, they run it into the ground in due course until it doesn't. In a way, that explains why Wolverine and Deadpool are fading now. Wolverine's more incredible because he was a Top 10-25 presence for so long. Now his top book struggles to place in the Top 30, and his secondary and spin-off titles fall even lower. We are now in a world where a JLA book that is FAR from it's prime and the C-List GL book outsell WOLVERINE by healthy margins.
 
I don't understand how the main GL title sells so well. It really is utter garbage. I'd say it's even worse than Bendis' Avengers.

Ugh, the masses annoy me sometimes.
 

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