Harlekin said:
Which seemed ridiculous to me anyway, since if I recall correctly, it was Firestar that asked Justice to marry her. It was Firestar that initiated the relationship in the first place. All of that, and then she suddenly flakes out. Didn't sound right to me.
To be fair, most "relationships" in comics end via far more melodramatic ends. The lady dies, is cloned, gets stuck in an alternate dimension/timeline, or whatever. In a technical logical sense it did seem weird that Firestar would react that way, but it happens. People change their minds. She'd been a superhero so long that she rarely got to have a "normal" college life and now her marriage was coming up. How many 19 year olds do YOU know who get married? At least in NYC and not in "hicks in the sticks" areas (and if anyone is in those areas, sorry). I bought it. Although I suppose if Slott wanted to reunite them, he could simply claim that "Angelica had jitters" and work through it. Now THAT would be a twist; the
lady having jitters about an engagement!
Justice has had a considerable amount of development for a "B-Lister", but that naturally comes from being on a team title for a good 6+ years, plus a few years of Busiek/Perez Avengers. He's been sporatic since that time, though, but he definately has been seen at least twice amung the Secret Avengers (alongside another New Warrior, Ultra Girl). As for why he would be on AVENGERS: THE INITIATIVE, we don't know how CW ends. I do see it being possible that either:
1). The Secret Avengers lose, and Cap possibly dies (others have theorized this bit)
2). The victory is highly Pyric (see above)
3). The SHRA remains, although hopefully in some editted version that is not as extreme
4). The act is repealed, but registered heroes learn that they can't "undo" it and they still are in government employ, like Wonder Man (who somehow was nearly killed by a Pumpkin Bomb).
iloveclones said:
This pic (along with a tag of Coming in...) was in a full page of most Marvel comics that I pick up (Which is a fair amount). I think they also used that pic of Ben in a top-hat (but I may be thinking of some solicitations I saw in that case) I remember specifically, because my girl-friend's then 12-yr old daughter loved yelling "It's Clobberin' Time", and every time I saw the ad, I would show it to her to get her to do it. You probably didn't notice it because you ignore the ads like I do and only really notice the ones that annoy you (Howling Commandoes being a good example). While not perfect (see Howling Commandoes), Marvel's ad efforts aren't nearly as bad as you make them out to be. (imho, of course) What Elijya said was spot-on. I liked Thing, but it got off to a slow start. And for a new series, you really need those first issues to be spectacular.
The Thing-Tophat ad was for FANTASTIC FOUR.
And that was before Marvel started putting 20+ ads in books for months and making them IMPOSSIBLE to ignore. And anyone who claims that "it doesn't matter how many ads there are", I defy you to support ads and buy WHITE TIGER #2, which has 5 pages of ads, then 1 of story, then another ad. Fortunately, Marvel is toning it down; GHOST RIDER had a mere 17 ads before the last story page, which is a bit but nothing worth whining about. When it's past 20 ads and beyond story pages, then it's noticeable. And Marvel at least has tried pushing some small books now; I've seen ads for IMMORTAL IRON FIST, which has gotten off to a shakey start (#1 sold at #56, and any book that debuts past the Top 50 usually sinks like a stone); although seeing an ad in IRON FIST #1 that is FOR Iron Fist #1 is more annoying than life itself.
I guess part of the anger for THE THING is that all of Marvel's bungles aside, they can't do everything and the fans just didn't support it. It was a fun, feel good book and the fanbase doesn't go nuts for that. Had Alicia been gang-raped and murdered in issue #1, it would have sold 100,000 copies and whatnot, and that's just sad. Because it simply reinforces that Marvel mindset that "pleasing fans does nothing, we have to incite them, anger them, shock and surprise them, even if it makes no sense in terms of story and makes comics into a perennial trip down depression and despair". Least I enjoyed it while it lasted, even if according to sales, I was one of the few. The fact that NO WRITER seems to bother noting that Ben & Alicia got back together elsewhere just makes it feel more like a waste, which it didn't deserve.
That aside...anyone else think Gauntlet may be connected to Southpaw?
And technically, this is Gauntlet II. The first Gauntlet was some lame Night-Watch/Blood Rose villian from mid 90's issues of WEB OF SPIDER-MAN.