It is good that Marvel seems to have finally picked a regular writer for the long haul on SECRET AVENGERS, after basically going with fill-in's for 9-10 issues (which include #14.1). The dilemma will be convincing people who have left that the series has a direction and voice without Brubaker, who launched it and had a very specific subplot that was promptly dropped by Spencer and, I presume, Ellis. I like Remender on VENOM so this is a temptation for me. Having his Flash Thompson Venom join a team is pretty much so he can write him in two books, but he's hardly the only writer who does that. Brubaker had this series revolve around Cap, and brought in John Amon from IMMORTAL IRON FIST for similar reasons.
Hawkeye gaining a movie-esque costume is a bit tacky, but Marvel has been doing that for years, and in fairness, I understand the theory of wanting to make characters look like they do in film to attract new readers. That never, EVER works, as no new readers tend to stick for long, but it's all they can do.
The dilemma for me is that I skipped the Ellis run, so any subplots from that may be mysteries to me. I also didn't miss having one less $3.99 on my pull list.
SECRET AVENGERS needs a real reason to exist. The Bendis Avengers titles are the top Marvel Universe books, so their reason is obvious. AVENGERS ACADEMY is the place about training the Avengers of next generation, as well as redeeming tormented superhuman kids. That's a concept. But what of SECRET AVENGERS? It's initial purpose was obvious - give hit writer Ed Brubaker an Avengers book to play with and do spy adventures with. The problem is he left after a year, but the series has sold well enough since to keep around, so Marvel has. When Marvel essentially planned to have two writers combine for 10 issues of material, and both writers seemed to imply that they'd be one shot, aimless adventures, I saw the title as existing only to be an additional $4 Avengers book on the roster, and left. Ellis not usually thrilling me was just the extra boost. In theory the SECRET AVENGERS still do "spy missions", but they also go on general superhero team missions like adventures on Mars or stopping terrorist strikes in China in broad daylight. The X-Men titles often struggled for purpose once the core books went from 2 to 4 to however many dozen, and Avengers books may be similar. It'll be interesting to see what Marvel does when Bendis finally decides to call it a run on Avengers material. I mean, everyone leaves eventually. Even Claremont left UXM after 19 years and Marvel had to fiddle without him for a while.
Anyway, Rick Remender on SECRET AVENGERS makes it a maybe purchase again. I shouldn't, but I may.