• The upgrade to XenForo 2.3.7 has now been completed. Please report any issues to our administrators.

Bought/Thought Thread 11-14-2007 SPOILER ALERT!

Part II:

CAPTAIN MARVEL #1: About a year and change after the fictional dud that was CW: THE RETURN, and after his cameo in CW #7 that, I was told, the editors kept Millar from trying to treat as something other than a royal rumble appearance, Marvel has decided to pursue Capt. Marvel as a franchise. He died over 20 years ago, so many of Marvel's current readers really never knew him, beyond reprints of various AVENGERS sagas. There's no movie in sight and he's had three kids pop up without him to claim his legacy in some manner. I seriously question why Marvel seems so interested in reviving a character that at least a chunk of their audience either never knew or cared about, and doing so literally over a year after their first stab at it was met with near universal gripes. The idea of it, plucking Capt. Marvel from the past via some cosmic/N-Zone hiccup to a time when he has been dead for at least 5 years of "Marvel time" where he will eventually have to go back to die, lest he either ruin time or create some alternate reality of nightmares, seems a bit daft to me. I fail to see any point at all, other than to dazzle people with yet another revival. Yes, there is a reason why I have begun my review by bashing the idea itself, and that is because the second issue of the execution, from Brian Reed & Lee Weeks, is actually quite good. By reminding some posters how utterly stupid the idea is, I can hopefully call attention to the skill of the execution, because that is actually critical. A poor execution can ruin a good idea, and make a mediocre or bad one seem even worse (see: every Bendis written 616 Marvel comic, aside for Daredevil, much of Illuminati, and some random NA & MA issues, or a lot of CW). A good execution can not only elevate a great idea, but make an idea that has been botched from inception worth something. I really don't care about Capt. Marvel at all, and I only gave the issue/mini a try because of the good impression I got from Reed from, literally, his 2-3 issues of MS. MARVEL that tied into CW, which were better than they had any right to be. Part of this execution is that Reed is writing Capt. Marvel as a Superman-ish character, an alien from another world who grew to love the Earth's people and culture enough to defend them and embody their ideals. Also like Superman, he has seemingly risen from the dead, and like in 52, he has amassed a cult of followers who worship him as a god. The media apparently caught a glimpse off him during the final SHRA showdown, which depicted him seeming to immediately be disgusted with the present situation and fly off, a statement unto itself. As the world questions whether the once mighty, U.S. defending Capt. Marvel has returned, especially in a time when Capt. America is dead and Thor spent a while taking a dirt nap, Mar-Vell himself is in France, studying both art and humanity's treasure of it as he tries to peg down his time and fate. He only ran the N-Zone prison because Stark kept him in the dark and they needed his help, and now he has taken time to re-evaluate things, from his Kree past to the fact that he pretty much knows that he dies, when, and how, and is distressed that it isn't becoming of a soldier. That ties into his Kree past and culture, but many people would like to envision their demise as being for some noble purpose, or a sacrifice, and not dying in bed from cancer (or age). Especially men. In-between his contemplation, he performs random feats of heroism without being seen, like kicking the tar out of a new (and short lived) Cyclone. SHIELD agent Heather Sante is tasked with finding Capt. Marvel and getting him back on the grid before he dies too soon and messes up the time-space continuum thing. Which Stark would care about, having battled Kang so many times (especially during the most recent YOUNG AVENGERS, like, 2 years ago). Heather naturally fulfills the role of "quirky supporting female" rather nicely, and the issue ends with Capt. Marvel coming out of hiding to save the Mighty Avengers from a giant robot (which in no way looked like Ultimo). Meanwhile, the one woman Marvel talked to during that final CW battle has become Mother Star and leaders an Earth sect of the Brotherhood of Hala, who see Mar-Vell as a Christ like figure. 52 did this recently with Superman/Superboy in 52 but I have faith in Reed playing with it in a different and unique way. Apparently any Marvel book whose title begins with "Captain" these days ends up being good, because I was completely against the idea yet the execution of the issue won me over, and I'll be getting the rest. Lee Weeks, naturally, does some great art that is iconic and noble, with excellent inks and colors to go with it. The creative team has convinced me there is a story to be salvaged from the Mess of 2006, and while it may not explore every angle that fans could come up with (Phyla is across the universe, Rick Jones is "busy", Hulking has to wait for his mini, and Genis is in limbo), I get the impression that it will be good and work anyway. This book proves that you can go into something with a certain attitude and be won over despite that, which shows my Bendis-Bias would end if he could stop sucking for a length of time. Rambled a bit; a solid first issue of five, and worth a look, even to the most jaded RETURN reader.

GHOST RIDER #17 & GHOST RIDER ANNUAL #1: May as well cover both in one section, although they are not connected. Brubaker & Fraction showed the best way to make an annual count these days, and few other franchises have followed suit. GR #17 has Ghost Rider confront another avatar of Lucifer to discover where the Little League team that has been taken hostage is, and it is revealed that every "avatar" of Lucifer seems to have some sort of distinction, and each wants to be "the final one" left with all his power. Ghost Rider rides in for the rescue, but would have botched it without the arrival of those two angels, out to seek Ghost Rider's aid. His GF is also still baby-sitting that demon-corpse and awaiting Blaze's call, which the angels provide. It is another cog in the story and while I find it unoffensive and sometimes fun, I am losing interest and am glad this will be Way's last arc. Saltares' art is always cool, though. The annual has a story by Stuart Moore with art from Ben Oliver, last seen ruining action sequences in Ultimate X-Men. Oliver is actually better here; did he change inker, colorist, or just had more time? Or did Moore pace things better for him? In any case, the annual deals mostly with Mammon, a.k.a. Mr. Eleven, a demon from hell that winds up in a bar where one of Lucifer's avatars tears through. Apparently Mr. Eleven is a sort of double agent, serving both Heaven and Hell, but has been at it for so many eons he has forgotten who he originally was, angel or demon? For that he hangs around Lucifer enough for Ghost Rider to show up, and employs his "Penance Stare" to peel through the magic layers to find out who he actually was (an angel, I guess; but weren't many of "the fallen" originally angels?). It had a slow pace but it wasn't a bad read. Way has left things to the Marvel Zombies Handbook to clear things revolving GR's origin. The story now? Most of the Hell-Lords, including Satan (Marduk Karios), Lucifer, Mephisto, etc. have all claimed to be "Satan" at some points and even merged into a combined form on occasion, so all and none of them are responsible. What is this, DC? GHOST RIDER isn't as exciting now that he has been back over a year and a half and the buzz has died along with Nick Cage's hairline, but it usually amuses me enough that I enjoy every issue. Still, I look forward to seeing what another creative team does in Way's place.

MARVEL COMICS PRESENTS #3: The three stories from the prior installments lurch on, with one short one-shot of Magneto and the original Brotherhood meeting a like minded mutant master named Whisper, who can absorb all knowledge. When Magneto recognizes his name as a former Nazi soldier, however, he kills him, in the philosophy of "anyone who kills the innocent is unworthy of the cause", which almost seems laughable when you consider how many sociopaths Magneto has let into the Brotherhood. Still, Aushwitz was a critical juncture for Magnus so him lashing out against any Nazi's when he finds them is accurate. And it is good seeing Suayan do other stuff besides MOON KNIGHT. The Vanguard story continues along and it is interesting (the very dead Yelena Belonova has her prints found around the murder scene, and Stacy Dolan connects it to a Muslim terrorist she busted trying to get MGH back in issue #1, but the format of the anthology just seems to be taking a toll. Faring better is the Weapon Omega story, which has Arana and Sasquatch bust some perps and Pointer continue to be conflicted by his guilt, the suit, and his massive power. He is starting to remind me of Sentry, though, a character who is a walking mound of phobias, but DiVito naturally draws great stuff and it makes sense for Pointer to be reacting this way. The Immonen Couple's Hellcat story moves along as Isaac Christians, Hellcat's old teammate Gargoyle shows it, and her split forms are actually magical manifestations of all her fantasies, regardless of whether she actually lived them. The story itself seems aimless, but it is zany and madcap enough that it is fun to read so I don't care so much. Still, MCP at once a month vs. two is a slower method to the old format and the market hasn't been able to support an anthology Marvel comic for, oh, the past decade, so I am not surprised that many aren't biting. For fans of OMEGA FLIGHT, this is the best place to get your fix; the Hellcat story isn't bad and the obligatory 1-2 one shot side stories have usually been good. I don't see it lasting past issue #12 though. Enjoy it while you can.

NEW AVENGERS #36: Y'know, it seems especially frustrating that my main complaints about this title, Marvel's best selling, with their #1 writer, which is the #1 ongoing title of the entire comic biz now, have been virtually the same for over 3 years now. Bendis' sense of continuity is astonishingly poor, making errors that even fair weather fans wouldn't miss. He sometimes has random adventures with threats that just seem more like gimmicks than stories; first ninja, now symbiotes. Dude, you missed the boat on symbiote popularity by about 11 years; way to be "hip". And Bendis' "realistic" dialogue is among some of the most annoying lines you will ever read; contrary to Bendis' statements, not only do real people NOT talk like he writes them, but if I found someone who did, I would immediately want them sterialized. The fact that any message board complainer can imitate and mock his dialogue style with 100% accuracy proves how robotic and annoying it has become. Finally, he writes superheroes as spazzing, immature children in adults' bodies, to the point where you wonder why the hell the villains haven't won already. And his new phrase is, "oh c'mon!", or "oh, come on!" which he feels the need to state about 24 times an issue, along with lines that just repeat the line beforehand, like everyone has a hearing aid. Like everyone has a hearing aid? Like everyone has a hearing aid, yes. See how easy it is? And how annoying!? Made harder is this issue was meant to tie into the symbiote issues of MA, which are at least 2-3 months behind thanks to Cho. Yu struggles with it, sometimes drawing manic chaos and other times sketches that the colorist saves. The story is mainly Luke Cage taking to Jessica Jones about the event, where a "symbiote bomb" explodes in NYC and anyone who doesn't have a physical super-power is mutated. Cage is safe, because of his dense skin. But Logan has issues with his healing factor. But Black Widow is somehow safe. Spider-Man, who has had the most experience with symbiotes and their weaknesses, offers ZERO to the event, leaving Iron Man to save the day. Neither the magic of Dr. Strange nor the chi of Iron Fist are worth much. Turns out the bomb was seemingly sent by Dr. Doom, which the Mighty Avengers storm off to apprehend without consulting with the Fantastic Four for back-up or experience, while Cage spazzes some with his wife, and acts all "skrully". The team also unites against the threat by The Hood and his cabal, which exploited this event, and attacks. And then, hell, you have heroes who would never unite showing up; who cares if Thor and Iron Man were enemies, or Punisher is a fugitive, or Silver Surfer on Earth soil, or Mr. Fantastic helping to fight mobsters when the Mighty Avengers need any help against Dr. Doom, or Angel in a new costume, or Howard the Duck, as drawn by a 5 year old with one finger. There also is a shower scene with Logan questioning Drew, which Yu almost makes as disgusting looking as Quietly would have. Yu also has a thing for pointy nipples on women, it seems. But mostly it was the stupidity of the symbiote invasion and Bendis' annoying, incessant and overbearing lines and speaking patterns that drove me crazy. It is more of the same. I hate this book. Any improvement or promise is undone by heaping mountains of suckitude. If Marvel wasn't springboarding events out of this book (oh, boy, SECRET INVASION is coming! More Bendis retcons! More talky bull****! More butchered characters and histories! More underachievement! Why, for F's sake, WHY!?), or if this wasn't the most promoted book in the universe, I'd have abandoned it, and instantly been a happier man for it. But when bad stuff is about to happen to the MU, I like warning shot, and NA has always provided that. A warning shot of crap to come. And why is Yu beautiful on covers and near garbage for some panels inside? Ugh! I hate this book, and I hate buying it, and I hate most anything Bendis does. The reason people give up comics? Trash like New Avengers, and selfish hacks like Bendis with a me-first attitude.

I also bought NOVA #8, PUNISHER WAR JOURNAL #13, THOR #4, & ULTIMATE FANTASTIC FOUR #48. But I'll post those after I get my stomach to stop spitting bile from New Avengers.
 
World War Hulk #5

Big anti-climax that I mostly predicted, with the one unknown, the outcome of the Hulk vs. Sentry fight, left largely unexplained (okay, entirely unexplained), and the Illuminati somehow, in a few minutes, devising a more effective anti-Hulk weapon than they’d been able to do in the preceding 24 hours they were granted. The question of who really blew up Sakaar is resolved, but those responsible are the height of unmentioned, with secondary blame being accorded to Miek (who, within the actual WWH miniseries, hasn’t really had any time). I prefer Civil War, for all its flaws.

:wow:
 
Why all the hate on Civil War? I really enjoyed Civil War. I thought Millar wrote it out of the park. Okay, there were one or two slow issues, but it was excellent. I'm upset Marvel hasn't announced a hard-cover for it. I think the ending to WWH was bad, and I think it show-cased why, if you plan on keeping the characters involved around, you can't end with a fight. You have to end with some sort of moral resolution like Civil War. The first thing I thought when I read the "end" of WWH was, "Civil War didn't just have a good ending, it had a great ending."
 
Somewhere along the way,Marvel got too busy planning the new landscape of the MU.Instead of making CW a compelling story,it became more of a series of events that would act as a transition to get all the characters to their post CW starting points,and because of that,the story suffered in my opinion.
 
And then, hell, you have heroes who would never unite showing up; who cares if Thor and Iron Man were enemies, or Punisher is a fugitive, or Silver Surfer on Earth soil, or Mr. Fantastic helping to fight mobsters when the Mighty Avengers need any help against Dr. Doom, or Angel in a new costume, or Howard the Duck, as drawn by a 5 year old with one finger.

Holy **** people, IT WAS AN ILLUSION. NOT REAL. FAKE.
 
WWH #5: A good ending, really. This needed to end with Hulk ready for a brand-new chapter in his life, one which would have to be without the Warbound. I am happy they'll be getting their own title, though (or at least a mini). Don't want 'em to fade into limbo just yet. The Hulk/Sentry slugfest was done decently (though too much yellow), and it actually made Sentry look more like the villain (what with attacking Hulk after he'd let Stark live). Still, it ended the way it should, with Hulk finally defeated, and everybody else basically feeling like ****.

8/10


Thor #4: Yeah, it's slow, but let's just take in the story while we can. Eventually, Thor will get thrown back into mainstream Marvel, and he won't be able to show off so damn much. While I like seeing how he found the Warriors Three, I can't help but feel that it wasn't as good as last issue's reveal. When he found Heimdall in #3, it felt BIG. Yeah, it was the first Aesir he'd found, but it was just really well written. This was like, "Oh, hey, guess what, dudes: you're the Warriors Three!".

But oh well. Is that Sif or Valkyrie he's going to be finding next issue? And, since it was made clear that that will be the focus of some arc sometime soon, when will he find Loki, and what silly method other than Thor releasing him will bring the God of Mischief back into the world?

7/10
 
Somewhere along the way,Marvel got too busy planning the new landscape of the MU.Instead of making CW a compelling story,it became more of a series of events that would act as a transition to get all the characters to their post CW starting points,and because of that,the story suffered in my opinion.

I agree.

WWH had a slugfest ending, but it has always been about a slugfest. It was Hulk vs. The World. The Hulk wanted revenge and the heroes had some payback coming, but they didn't cause the massacre at Sakaar, and the ones who did were revealed. It didn't seek to change Marvel's landscape and it wasn't some whole moral conflict thing. Even if you related to the Hulk, you couldn't feel that he'd earned the right to destroy Manhattan Island, or pummel every hero into a coma who crossed him. Sure, he didn't want to hurt innocent civilians, but did they deserve to get their homes and property smashed, like Hulk wanted? WWH was like TRANSFORMERS.

CIVIL WAR chose to be a story that tried to straddle that line of depth, but Millar is best at actioners, not depth. It also had a checklist of events to rattle off, rather than being a story that had the beginning lead to the middle, and the middle lead to the end. Cap's surrender at the end in no way related to Spider-Man unmasking, or Clor. It wasn't built up because the writers overplayed their hand making the SHRA seem so vile to throw the audience as to the victors. CW was written like a dumb action movie, but it had delusions of granduer. WWH didn't, and worked on that simplier level.

Holy **** people, IT WAS AN ILLUSION. NOT REAL. FAKE.

So it was a Dr. Strange illusion? The same mage who can't stop falling planes?
 
Last four reviews. Big week, eh?

NOVA #8: The first issue in a while that doesn't tie into some larger event, like INITIATIVE or ANNIHILATION CONQUEST. Nova finds himself across the universe, and in fact at the very edge of the universe after last issue, in his attempt to flee Kree Space where the Phalanx had trapped him (and with a Phalanx controlled Gamora & Drax chasing him). He winds up in a barren place with alien technology and graffitti, and Worldmind using over 80% of his power to keep the transmode virus in check. Alves comes in on art for Chen, and his stuff is great to look at; even before the inks and colors, it looked great in previews, and it fits perfectly in tone with Chen's work, appearing near seemless. The pace and tone of the issue is different, and as Rich notes, it plays out like a horror movie, meeting a woman who turns into a zombie and then seems to combust with one blast, and then battling her space-hero friends. Richard meets a psychic space dog named Cosmo, who almost feels like a Grant Morrison idea left behind, who explains everything, including that they're in the head of a Celestial, and a dark force is inside, turning things into space zombies. It certainly is different than the last few issues, and that is good, getting some range from Abnett & Lanning. Exploration has been a tried and true theme of space epics, and it looks like Nova will have to go through some of that as he makes his way around without Worldmind to navigate. It is more than time for this series to stand on its own without crossover tie-in's, and Abnett & Lanning look to be on sure footing here. Another rock solid issue to a one of Marvel's good relaunches.

PUNISHER WAR JOURNAL #13: Not as manic as last issue's Venture Bros. esque WWH tie-in, but still a lot more fun than some may expect from a Punisher book. Fresh off a stint on IRREDEEMABLE ANT-MAN is Cory Walker, who delivers some sweet art to this issue and likely the next. The Rhino's been having a bad few months, but when he takes part in a bank robbery that ends in the accidental death of a guard, he attracts the Punisher's full attention. I liked the touches that Walker added to Rhino, including that his armor had seen "Battle Damage" over the past few months and had chunks missing (as well as half a horn). Naturally, Fraction remembers that while Rhino is a thug, he isn't usually a killer so the lug actually feels remourse for the guard's death, but that doesn't help him when Castle wastes his partners and then sets his scope on Rhino. It ends up into a four-way brawl with Spider-Man and later Kraven (Al, his second, crazier son). It seems Kraven is collecting all animal themed villians, as well as some random animal critters like Black Knight's winged steed, in this "zoo". Continuity buff's may jeer that Frog-Man appears in a cell when he is supposed to be part of the Kentucky Action Pack in A:TI #7, but No-Prize viewers could claim, at least for now, that it could also be his father, Leap-Frog, who was a former criminal. Or even Lange, from DD #16 (relaunched #16), who donned the Leap-Frog costume before being defeated by his autistic kid. In any event, the next chapter looks to be a bit of fun. Once the overlong Hate-Monger arc ended, this book has found better footing with mixing Punisher with some laughs, and different sorts of laughs than Ennis uses in the MAX title. I've been enjoying it quite a bit, and Walker's art was a treat this time around, with great coloring by Stewart.

THOR #4: A bit delayed, but with art as good as this from Coipel it can be forgiven for now. The main drag of JMS/Coipel's run & relaunch so far has been the slow pace; Thor "reactivating" Asgardiand one by one, and facing no real villains. But this isn't really a problem because JMS knows how to construct a story, and by depicting Thor interacting with mostly mortal, civilian issues, he helped place Thor into the real world. Now, that happened before, but it HAS been 4 years in real time (perhaps even 1 year in Marvel time), so getting Thor out into the world makes for some interesting situations, and this issue manages to beat out #3 for me. Donald Blake is invited by Doctors Without Borders to take part in helping an African nation torn apart by genocidal war; basically, JMS is tapping headlines about Darfur and playing off of that. The Ngare tribe is doing ethnic cleansing and Omem Mungu Refugee Camp is in need of constant doctors, as well as some protecting by three conspicious soldiers of fortune from Germany. When a suicide bomber (likely coerced into that role against her will) starts the salvo, Blake finds himself on the wrong end of the fight and feels the time to truly unleash an "act of god" against the conflict. There may be some who want to see Thor battle some other threats besides Iron Man or a few dozen gunmen, but JMS and Coipel pace it so well that I really didn't care. Thor's friggin' HUGE, like the size of 6 Africans in one, and the way Thor just stood there and took assault weapons fire puts Superman to shame. In fact, this issue reminded me of WIZARD's thoughts about Thor in one article, seeing him as "Marvel's answer to Superman" of 1962 (least in terms of design). He unleashes his hammer, the Warriors Three and then parts the earth to give the tribes time to settle their conflict in a very godly sequence. I felt the story was very relevant to the times and fight right by Thor, as well as showcasing his effect on people outside of America. Heimdall uses his power to speed up the search for the Asgardians, as the others note that Thor is being slow and deliberate in his search, trying to revive only those of his rank who were noble, and ones such as, well, Loki. And that makes sense; why WOULD Thor want to revive Loki? That would be like Capt. America reviving Red Skull. This was an issue with a fair point to it and while the pace seems slow, JMS truly accept Thor as a god and not merely a cape wearing superhero, and that is very good. Not all good rides are fast rides. So long as you get to where you're going, does it matter?

ULTIMATE FANTASTIC FOUR #48: The lowest selling Ultimate title, and ironically, it has become the best. Carey's playing with the UFF along the classic, if updated, themes of heroism, exploration, and facing wonky sci-fi threats, and Mark Brooks' art is great. Reed's hold over building the Cosmic Cube via Thanos is finally over, but unfortunately he caused Sue to go into a mission where she has been shot down by Ultimate Red Ghost and his crueller assistant, and Human Torch is all but promising a mortal showdown with Reed if his sister ends up dead, which is an appropriate sentiment. The trio lock up with a Crimson Dynamo, but end up teaming up with him to battle Igor Kragoff's robotic minions, who are utilizing stolen Dynamo tech. Meanwhile, Kragoff is attempting to utilize N-Zone technology to "merge" two people into one, and he wishes to merge Invisible Woman with his dead wife to revive her; alas, he is backstabbed (literally) by his assistant Rutskaya, who has more diabolical plans for a merger. Sue manages to escape, but the lab experiment creates a monstrous new threat for her. It is basic superheroics for the Four with good art and dialogue. It isn't burrying them in feces like USM's stories, or heaping on elements that didn't work in 616, like Kirkman is doing in Ultimate X-Men. It is playing with the concept with modern terminology and sci-fi, and it works. It took Carey a while to hit his prime but his stumbles weren't as bad as Kirkman's initial ones on Ult. XM and he has recovered at a faster rate (under 2 years). It doesn't answer the lingering question for Ultimate, it is that they are books without real purpose that sell too well to cancel, but it is entertaining.
 
Got my comics this week. I have thoughts...

John Woo's 7 Brothers (Series 2) #3
The Brothers are taken in by the Chinese monks, and are being taught to use their powers more... delicately. Meanwhile, some stupid scientists catalyzed Ron's dragon transformation in an attempt to gather some DNA. All in all, a great issue. I'm glad I picked this book up.
Random Dialogue Highlight
Ronald's Dragon Form: "Ain't no mutha****a can control me! And it's on now, b****!"

Thor #4
You know what would be cool? If this book wasn't delayed. But delays never stopped me from picking up books I've liked in the past, so why start now? I mean, I read Astonishing X-Men.
Anyway, I totally dig JMS taking the effort to characterize Don Blake. He could've just as easily become an unused plot device for bringing Thor back to life, but JMS took the time to remind us that Don is a character in this book, and a man trained to save lives. This was Don's issue, up until the 5 Asgardians held their meeting at the end.
Random Dialogue Highlight
Thor: "Stand behind me, and no power on Earth can harm you."

X-Factor #25 / Messiah Complex #3
Oh, Peter David. You never disappoint. Okay, fine, rarely. But this issue rocked. Layla remains badass. I'm sure the Jamie she grabbed onto was the evil Jamie from way back. It was a little F'd up what Forge did-- Sending Jamie's dupes on a one-way, and instructing them to kill themselves once they've gathered information? You know those Dupes are people too, right?
By the way, any day is a good day when Cyclops shoots Santo's pompous ass through a wall.
Random Dialogue Highlight
Layla: "You could've shared my umbrella, you know."
Jamie: "Yeah, I'm not standing under a 'Hello Kitty' umbrella, okay? I've got an image to protect."
Layla: "From whom?"

Green Arrow/Black Canary #2
This book would be great if it wasn't contradicting some major continuity. It's almost like this was meant to be an Amazons Attack tie-in, only the amazons in this issue weren't *quite* crazy enough. Aside from that, this was a decent issue. I love that Chiang is one of the few artists that draws Connor in a way that says "yeah, he's basically a blonde Tiger Woods." He's one of DC's very few Asian superheroes, and ranks in my top 3 favorite black DC heroes (the other two being John Stewart and Mr. Terrific).
Random Dialogue Highlight
Ollie: "You came all this way to rescue me from the home base of a warrior nation that makes the Israeli army look like Civil War reenactors? The three of you."

Booster Gold #4
The guy at the comic shop forgot to put this with my pull list items. I almost missed the Boostery goodness. I have to admit, I'm really surprised to have so many mysteries solved within only a few issues. Who is Supernova? Answered in 4 issues. Not only that, but we know his motivations. Sure, there are more layers to this mystery, but Johns really isn't screwing around or dragging this stuff out. I love it. Also, this issue had multiple little nuggets of joy. I can't help but wonder what's up with all the Blue Beetles, though.
Random Dialogue Highlight
Maximillion: "You are the last of your model, 2.0. I shall assimilate your circuitry as a trophy. And I shall brag to all my robot friends."

World War Hulk #5 of 5
Hm. Almost forgot about this miniseries. Nice all-fighting mini. I really felt Hulk's pain and struggle and all that. Decent ending. Really, I just stopped caring 2 months ago. I don't even have a dialogue highlight.

Wonder Girl #3 of 6
Still liking Cassie's new costume, and hope it carries over to other books. The acknowledgment of her former Young Justice teammates is great. But... why the hell do the Female Furies want Wonder Girl? I mean... really? Wonder Girl? She's more essential to their cause than any other superhero on Earth? This had better be good. Dazzle me with #4, Torres. Dazzle me.
No dialogue highlight.

Wonder Woman #14
I love Gail Simone. It's no secret. I un-dropped this book for her, and I don't regret it. None of that "I don't know who I am" crap, in Simone's Wonder Woman! No "how do I pump gas" bull****. We got some of Simone's patented "WTF" humor, gorilla fights, Nazi fights and OH MY GOD when did Etta Candy become badass? I like that, while Sarge Steel may be stupid enough not to notice Diana Prince and Princess Diana are the same woman, he's not stupid enough to miss that Agent Price is clearly hiding something about herself. I wonder what will happen when Lt. Colonel Candy discovers the agent she's spying on is really her old pal, Wonder Woman.
Random Internal Monologue Highlight
"He uses C-4 to blow a reinforced lock that, if I retained my powers in this form, I could've obliterated with my smallest toe. My respect for actors has increased dramatically."
 
Thor #4: Yeah, it's slow, but let's just take in the story while we can. Eventually, Thor will get thrown back into mainstream Marvel, and he won't be able to show off so damn much. While I like seeing how he found the Warriors Three, I can't help but feel that it wasn't as good as last issue's reveal. When he found Heimdall in #3, it felt BIG. Yeah, it was the first Aesir he'd found, but it was just really well written. This was like, "Oh, hey, guess what, dudes: you're the Warriors Three!".

But oh well. Is that Sif or Valkyrie he's going to be finding next issue? And, since it was made clear that that will be the focus of some arc sometime soon, when will he find Loki, and what silly method other than Thor releasing him will bring the God of Mischief back into the world?

7/10
It's gotta be Sif. Black hair, red and white clothing, and Sif is a hell of a lot more important to Thor than Valkyrie, whom he hasn't really spent much time with past their childhood.
 
I agree.

WWH had a slugfest ending, but it has always been about a slugfest. It was Hulk vs. The World. The Hulk wanted revenge and the heroes had some payback coming, but they didn't cause the massacre at Sakaar, and the ones who did were revealed. It didn't seek to change Marvel's landscape and it wasn't some whole moral conflict thing. Even if you related to the Hulk, you couldn't feel that he'd earned the right to destroy Manhattan Island, or pummel every hero into a coma who crossed him. Sure, he didn't want to hurt innocent civilians, but did they deserve to get their homes and property smashed, like Hulk wanted? WWH was like TRANSFORMERS.

CIVIL WAR chose to be a story that tried to straddle that line of depth, but Millar is best at actioners, not depth. It also had a checklist of events to rattle off, rather than being a story that had the beginning lead to the middle, and the middle lead to the end. Cap's surrender at the end in no way related to Spider-Man unmasking, or Clor. It wasn't built up because the writers overplayed their hand making the SHRA seem so vile to throw the audience as to the victors. CW was written like a dumb action movie, but it had delusions of granduer. WWH didn't, and worked on that simplier level.

If there is a better sum up of the pros of cons of WWH vs civil war I ain't read it. (though transformers wasn't as smartly written as WWH)


So it was a Dr. Strange illusion? The same mage who can't stop falling planes?

You really can't admit you might be wrong when it comes to bendis can you?
Seriously when a comic book literally effects your judgement it's time to drop it. It's not as if you'll enjoy secret invasion anyway.
 
maybe because bendis can't write:huh: the dude is a hack he writes whatever fits his story or plot. if he wants to depict strange's as a incompetent mage then he does it despite continuity.
 
Don't sweat it...gildea telling people they can't admit when they are wrong is hysterically ironic.
 
Don't sweat it...gildea telling people they can't admit when they are wrong is hysterically ironic.

Find me one example where I haven't that doesn't come down to a difference of tastes.

Either that or learn the meaning of irony.
 
maybe because bendis can't write:huh: the dude is a hack he writes whatever fits his story or plot. if he wants to depict strange's as a incompetent mage then he does it despite continuity.

It's in continuity (and was before bendis) that stranges powers are currently unreliable.
 
That's kind of ridiculous either way. At least half a decade of wonky powers with no explanation given? Did everyone just forget Dr. Strange existed or something? Vaughan needs to write another mini and explain that junk. Or just write another mini featuring Dr. Strange doing anything, really.
 
That's kind of ridiculous either way. At least half a decade of wonky powers with no explanation given? Did everyone just forget Dr. Strange existed or something? Vaughan needs to write another mini and explain that junk. Or just write another mini featuring Dr. Strange doing anything, really.

If smiths run is the source then yes it is ridiculous and get BKV on the job whilst he's on strike!!

But there maybe be an explanation predating this i'm unaware of. Any strange fans out there?
 
All Star Superman #9 - A great done in one.Superman breaking the moon was awesome.The idea of lost kryptonian astronauts was cool.I thought their intentions were more vile,trying to get into the PZ to break everyone out,but once again Superman saves the day and we get a damn good issue out of it.

Thor #4 - As I said before,I love the whole gods among men angle JMS is pulling here.It's not entirely new,but it really works in this book.Having Thor observe the problems of the world and offering a helping hand rather than have him smash giants and trolls is fresh.I can't wait to see how the Asgardians will interact with the new MU and the roles they will play in stories to come.I don't find the pace slow at all.

Punisher War Journal #13 - After a roadtrip that took us from NY,to Mexico,to Washington and back to NY,Fraction finally gets back to NY where he can finally tell insane stories of Punisher fighting supervillains again.This was one of the finest issues of the series so far.Lots of action,wise cracks and fine art as well.I hope this issue is a sign of things to come in this second year of PWJ.Fraction had to bring back Frank thru CW,take him out of his usual setting of NY to fight neo nazis,and fight aliens from Sakaar.Now that it's all out of the way,I look forward to a faster paced second year and more issues like this.
 
I don't know of many writers who have wanted you to not care about a character

Bill Willingham. If you care about anything that happens in his books you're a ***** and liberal, and he'll fight you to prove it.
 
World War Hulk #5

World War Hulk comes to an end this month. I'm not usually one to complain about delays but in this case it really did hurt the book. The rest of the Marvel universe trucked right along while WWH got stalled.

Anyway, the Sentry vs. Hulk main event plays out this month. Basically, they wail on each other until they drain themselves out of power and Bruce finishes off Robert one-on-one. The Sentry seems to go a little crazy during their fight, I guess they should have played up the Void a bit more here because as it was written it came off a tad strange.

Miek is unveiled as the traitor, which pretty much anyone who had read Planet Hulk could have guessed was coming.

At least this had a genuine conclusion as opposed to the last major event Civil War. It wasn't perfect but it was still engaging even if we all pretty much had the story figured out a month or two into the event.

Oh and Tony Stark saves the Earth. :D

3.5/5

Black Adam #4

I absolutely loved this issue. We start with Black Adam being sliced apart by Osiris, Isis and others in what turns out to be a nightmare. It was definitely creepy and an effective opening. Adam wakes up and he's in a predicament. To survive the assassin's bullets from last month he needs to transform again further weakening Isis' remains. I think we can all see what kind of ending we're headed to. For what its worth, Adam is aware of it too, but facing down certain death at every turn he doesn't have an option.

The bit with the animal hospital really made the book for me this month. Adam coming back and saving the doctor's was cool and I honestly didn't expect it. I find myself rooting for Adam at moments like these, much to shame considering he's a genocidal maniac :( , ah well.

Can't wait to see what he's facing down next month.

5/5

Still have to get around to Nova, Thor, the Initiative and a few others iirc.
 
Why all the hate on Civil War?

It took a risible premise explored and answered decades prior by better writers and wrapped around it a collection of cliches, non-sequitors, fait accomplis and inexplicably poor characterizations to no good effect for anyone or anything involved.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top
monitoring_string = "afb8e5d7348ab9e99f73cba908f10802"