Was bored for a while at work today; started wiki-ing stuff, including Brian's bio, leading to Excalibur/TJ/Wisdom etc. As a result, some things dawned on me that are now making me seriously question it as a series worth reading.
Largely it revolves around dangling plot lines and jumpy stories. Bascially the whole series is "we did this, this happened, we did the next thing":
1) Psylocke returns from the dead much to Brian's joy, which was never touched upon after she died the first time. She dies again while teaming up with Brian (but really joins the Exiles), and he just assumes she's dead and starts the next adventure.
2) The Merlin who gave Brian his powers has been claimed to be the Arthurian Merlin - but during the Arthurian story with Dane, he doesnt even converse with the wizard, let alone anything else. The arc ends, nothing more is said.
Merlin is known for being duplicitous and is not above using mind control. Is it just so difficult to accept he was mind controlling Brian not to pry into his whereabouts? Besides, if that Merlin is truly Merlyn-Roma's dad (which was never truly confirmed), is he not his past self? Why would the past self of Merlyn know what's going on on present day Otherworld? There is also the distinct possibility Merlyn made everyone forget about his ressurrection, seeing as Brian never asked for him ever ever again not even when he was King of Otherworld.
3) TJ inexplicably has a stroke, spends an issue semi-recovering, and the whole team tells her she's part of the family/team. The arc ends, she's left in bed while they just get on with things without even a brief panel of her being visited or something. No one calls Kurt.
False, Sage calls the Institute and Emma tells her Kurt is in space. Check issue 16.
4) Juggernaut learns the truth of his origins and is given an ultimatum. He refuses to be what Cytorrak wants him to be, the team goes home and moves on; Cain retains his power despite Cytorrak being able to remove it just like that for disobeying.
Did we see him take the Gem? No. He could've said "well all right, I'll do your work, but I'll do it my way"
5) Roma promises she will rectify the mistake her father made with Albion - the old man aint around anymore but she's not even told anyone about the guy? Brian was ruler of Otherworld for crying out loud - bring the man up to speed when his arse hits the throne next time will ya!
I don't know if you noticed, but Roma doesn't tend to share her plans and goals with other people. She does what she must, and it is a burden she chooses to bear alone. If she didn't tell Brian about him there must be a reason. Wait until the story actually unfolds to complain about this.
6) Meggan's gone, Brian barely mourns; he moves on and doesnt bother making getting back to Otherworld any kind of priority.
Roma could easily "hex" Brian to not want to return, in order to keep him and Excalibur as reinforcements when the time is right. Wouldn't be the first time she did something like that.
7) Brian gives Lionheart her power, but appears to have lost any of his kingly powers so can't remove them to prevent her being a threat.
Brian gave Kelsey the chance to become Captain Britain because that was his job as King of Otherworld. No longer King, no longer has the job to empower or depower Captain Britains.
And my personal pet peeve:
8) There is still absolutely no clarification on Brian being a mutant, what powers are inherrent or purely suit or amplified by suit. No development or clarification of his powers other than rather lame and overused strength, speed, flight, durability (or is that forcefield, or a forcefield in addition to natural resilience, or a suit forcefield, or a mental forcefield? Who ever bloody knows!). Thats the best Merlin could come up with? A flying Juggernaut?
Notice that all Captain Britains share the same or very similar powers. If a Captain Britain has no powers of his own then he receives those granted by the suit, speed, flight, durability and strength. Linda McQuillan, Lionheart, Albion, all the Captains have that power. And if memory serves me right those are the powers of a certain "super"man from the distinguished competency.
I love having an English team. I love the whole premise behind Captain Britain, with its mythology ties and corps side story. The time travel arc could have been so massively well done and really opened up the background of the team and Otherworld's role in the Arthurian legend, but instead it was a fun little jaunt to fight dragons, have a feast and go home...
As I said, love the idea of Captain Britain, but the Captain himself really needs explaining once and for all. Instead of arcs for stories making up new stuff about thoroughly well rounded characters, how about taking the wishy washy ones and defining them? We dont need to know it was Charles who was sposed to be Juggernaut; it does nothing for Charles himself, and clearly it changes nothing about Cain's role in the grand scheme of things.
Have in mind that the Time Travel/Cyttorakk stories were fill ins and not planned by Claremont, who is the writer of the book and who, along with Alan Davis, better defined the Otherworld concepts first introduced by Alan Moore. I have faith that Claremont, now writing both Exiles and Excalibur will explain everything about Otherworld in the upcoming limited series that links both teams.