The "I Bought and I Thought" thread for Nov.1st

CaptainCanada said:
Vulcan can't withstand him (he loses an eye, in fact:wow: , which means that he now looks like Cable with his single glowing eye).



Is a new retcon coming in which Cable isnt Cyclops son from the future but his brother??????
 
I've never liked Cable, so if they ret-con his behind, I won't be too unhappy.
 
Uncanny X-Men #480--I like the way this arc is progressing. I like how the focus switches to Vulcan on occasion. It helps develop the X-Men and Vulcan.
 
BOUGHT:
52 #26
ARMY OF DARKNESS #11
AVENGERS NEXT #1
BEYOND #5
BLUE BEETLE #8
BIGGER: WORKING STIFF
CAG ANTHOLOGY #1-4
CIVIL WAR CHOOSING SIDES
DETECTIVE COMICS #825
FANTASTIC FOUR THE END #1
FANTASTIC FOUR THE END ROUGH CUT ED #1
INCREDIBLE HULK #100
IRREDEEMABLE ANT-MAN #2
JUSTICE LEAGUE OF AMERICA #3
MARVEL ADVENTURES SPIDER-MAN #21
NIGHTWING #126
RED PROPHET #3
SAVAGE RED SONJA #3
SHE-HULK #13
SPIDER-MAN & POWER PACK #1
SUPERMAN CONFIDENTIAL #1
UNCANNY X-MEN #480
WHAT IF AVENGERS DISASSEMBLED
X-MEN #192
X-MEN PHOENIX WARSONG #3
XENA #3

THOUGHT:
52 #26 - Not much happened in this one. More conflict between Steel and his niece, a new scientist joinng the island and dinner with the Marvels. I'd put this as the least interesting of the series thus far, but hey, they can't all be gold.

ARMY OF DARKNESS #11 - Speaking of non-gold... It's Ash and Frank...er, Michael vs. Dracula and his legions in what had to be an anti-climactic climax. Oh, and did I mention Evil Ash returned once again? AoD's really turning into a one-trick pony, which is sad considering the wealth of tales that COULD be told. The worst part of this issue was the rushed pace, in which the art really suffered. It was incoherent in many places, such as Evil Ash's using puppets of him and Ash to act out a derranged little play...you never even SAW the puppets until he already threw down the Ash one and held his up. And then, the chick Ash met in the past...she just disappeared. If there's a love for this franchise by the creators, they ain't showing it.

AVENGERS NEXT #1 - Now THIS is gold. A-Next returns in a new mini which makes it feel like they never left. Continuing on from Last Planet and Spider-Girl #100, the team finds themselves in doubt about their future and facing some big heavies even the originals had trouble against! If Tom D keeps to his SG guns, I KNOW this one's gonna be awesome.

BEYOND #5 - The calm before the storm as the characters get to know each other in different ways before a final confrontation with Venom, resulting in a betrayal most bitter! Wasn't a great issue, but it's got me wanting to see what happens next.

BIGGER: WORKING STIFF - Bigger is an indie title about teenaged Will Rison, who every time he gets turned on gets, well, bigger. And not just in the ways you'd think...his entire body litterally grows! This book's about Will's quest to land a job (preferably away from any hot women) so he can afford his own car and really impress his girlefriend, Weez. This was a funny, funny book. It's a mature reader's title, but it's not a porn book. It's got cartoony art, a funny premise, and is just an entertaining read. I'd recommend giving it a shot: www.freelunchcomics.com

CAG ANTHOLOGY #1-4 - Produced by the Comic Artists Guild (www.comicartguild.com), these are a collection of several short stories by CAG members, featuring all-new characters in various types of adventures. Some were good, and hopefully they get expanded on in the future.

CIVIL WAR CHOOSING SIDES - A collection of short tales that lead into current arc or upcoming series coming from Marvel, including Thunderbolts, Iron Fist, Daredevil and Alpha Flight. Oh, and even a special appearance by Howard the Duck. Why was he there? No clue, but he's Howard.

DETECTIVE COMICS #825 - A bit of a shock to the system compared to the Dini stories, and unfortunately it suffers a bit in comparison. Art was decent (characters seemed a bit stiff at times) and the story was fairly good, but not as good as what we've been treated to the last couple months. But as far as filler issues go, I've seen worse.

FANTASTIC FOUR THE END #1 - In a utopian future of Mr. Fantastic's creation, the FF are disbanded after Doom kills Reed's kids. We get a glimpse into life of the near future and how everyone is dealing in their own ways. But, of course, something big is on the horizon.

FANTASTIC FOUR THE END ROUGH CUT ED #1 - Pencils without inks and colors, plus a script. Not sure if it was worth an extra buck, but good for all up and comers to have for reference.

IRREDEEMABLE ANT-MAN #2 - And so the story of how Ant-Man came to be is concluded, but life is about to get rough for our...hero? Dunno what I think about this one yet. Gonna give it a few issues to decide.

JUSTICE LEAGUE OF AMERICA #3 - I'm not gonna even begin to analyze this one. The story moves ahead slowly, but it brings up so many twists, turns and questions along the way that only the writer himself would know where it's going. Or maybe big DC fans as well. Not sure on that one.

MARVEL ADVENTURES SPIDER-MAN #21 - I don't read this series much (mostly 'cause of crappy art) but I made an exception here based on the cover. Spidey gets his black costume in an all-new, non-convoluted way. Plus, the story was funny with a good choice of supporting villain cast. I think I'm gonna hafta go back and read the other issues if the quality is this good throughout the book.

NIGHTWING #126 - the bad guy is down, but the scientist has gone missing now. The first few issues of OYL drew me into this book, but that story ended up a flop. This one hasn't impressed me much either. Although this artist does have Dick looking like the Robin I used to know in some panels, so kudos for that. Otherwise, if things don't change on this book soon I might ditch it.

SHE-HULK #13 - Shulkie vs. Thanos! Sort of. Another twist by Slott as he ties up all the loose ends of his last arc and leads us into his next with a resolution between Shulkie and Jameson. Plus, Awesome Andy and his dealing with heartbreak! Great friggin' series. Just wish they kept a good artist on it longer than a couple issues.

SPIDER-MAN & POWER PACK #1 - Another cute kid-friendly mini with Power Pack that had quite a few laughs in it. I think they get better as they go, actually. Gonna love to read the rest of the series.

SUPERMAN CONFIDENTIAL #1 - Done in the tone of Spider-Man: Blue and Hulk: Gray, but without Loeb, this gives an inner look into the mind of the Man of Steel as he goes through a very early adventure. Just the first issue, gonna see how it goes without Loeb teaming with his usual partner.

UNCANNY X-MEN #480 - Meh. Another Vulcan-centric issue. Is it just me, or is there nothing remotely appealing about this character? Sorry, Bru...Vulcan's gotta go.

WHAT IF AVENGERS DISASSEMBLED - What if someone else was behind Disassembled? This was one of the better recent What Ifs that not only tied in great with the events of A, but also featured The Watcher! That's right, not Bendis in a Watcher shirt, not a kid surfing the internet, the actual bald-headed, skirt wearing Watcher! However, Beast in the tale looked a bit more like his old human self than his current cat self, but can let that pass for an interesting story.

X-MEN PHOENIX WARSONG #3 - What the hell is going on here? Seriously, this series is now officially overkill on the X-Men Phoenix line. Seuqels usually suck, and this is proof positive.

XENA #3 - Another meh book from Dynamite. It doesn't have the feel of the show, really, but this story did have it's funny moments. Not to mention it's the SECOND Bruce Campbell book to come out this week, and I'm a total Campbell & Co. ****e. But, if Dynamite doesn't get their acts together on these books, I'm gonna forget that little fact and ditch them. At least the art is better than AoD.
 
Bought:

Mouse Guard #5
Incredible Hulk #100
What If? featuring Avengers Disassembled #1
Agents of Atlas #4
Ant-Man #2
Avengers Next #1
Beyond #5
Criminal #2
Fantastic Four - The End #1
Red Prophet #3
She-Hulk #13
Marvel Adventures Spider-Man #21
Spider-Man/Power Pack #1
Uncanny X-Men #480
X-Men - Phoenix Warsong #3
52 - Week Twenty-Six
Jonah Hex #13
American Virgin #8
All New Atom #5
Blue Beetle #8
Detective Comics #825
Justice League Of America #3
Outsiders #42
Freshmen II #1
Mystery In Space #3
Superman Confidential #1
The Boys #3
The Boys #4

Thought:

Mouse Guard #5: Last issue, the traitor was finally revealed, and his reasons are finally explained. As the bad guys march on Lockhaven to overthrow the Mouse Guard, Saxon, Kenzie and Celenawe attempt to stop them.

This is a nice little book, but it's marketed as if it were a children's book. It's the same size as many kiddie books you'd find on a spinner rack of your local Barnes and Noble; but, clearly is meant for an older audience. The problem is that most people it's designed for won't discover it because of this way it's presented. And, each book is a very quick read. You can finish each issue in probably 3 minutes. 8/10

Incredible Hulk #100: Well, the actual Planet Hulk story is only 22 pages long, even though this issue is very thick. And, while the main story is nice, it's the second story focusing on Mastermind Excello that most will be impressed with.

I guess my problem with Planet Hulk is that they have a year to drag this out, and it kind of feels like that. Not much happens issue after issue to progress the storyline. But, with the Mastermind Excello story, we get excited, because we get a glimpse into things to come. It links in nicely to both the pre-Civil War story and what's currently happening, and I think many readers will be more excited about what's to come than what's happening currently.

The rest of the issue is a reprint of the classic "trial of the Hulk" from Hulk issues #152 and #153. While it's cool to see this story again, I guess I'm also getting tired of Marvel's new attempt at making a landmark issue contain a regular-sized story with some reprints. It used to be the landmark issue would be a double-sized story that usually concluded some really great story. You made sure you picked up issues #97-99, because issue #100 would be that payoff. Nowadays, we don't have that. We get a "part 1" of a four part story. Really, what's the big thrill in that? 8/10

What If? Featuring Avengers Disassembled #1: (SPOILERS!!!) FINALLY! Marvel gets it right after all this time. This is a story worthy of the What If? title. The art is great, and the story almost shouldn't even be a What If?, but become the true reason behind the whole Avengers Disassembled fiasco. Heck, I wouldn't be too shocked if the writer felt like he's sufficiently given Marvel a nice double-issue making sense out Bendis' debacle. I remember reading Captain America and The Falcon comics with Captain America seeming to go a bit crazy, and this comic explains all that perfectly. Plus, it gives Marvel an out at the end when the look at future outcomes explains that everything would have worked itself out. Anyway, it's a great comic, and fans of What If? should be happy with what came out. 10/10

Anyway, more reviews to come later. I was just so impressed with What If?, that I had to do a quick thoughts write up.
 
Bought-
JLA #3
Outsiders #42
Nightwing # 124
52
Mouse Guard #5

Okay, not that my opinion matters, but here we go:

JLA #3 – Okay give me a minute…






















One more….
















Dinah is in the building!

That’s right, Dinah totally owned this issue!

And for a fangirl like me, that means a lot.

It was amazing to see her in action, and for those of you complaining against Hal, give him and the others a break. Their the ‘small’ guys and while Hal could wipe out a city, my girl deserves to shine and she does. ^_^
In the time it took for Hal to scan the robots Dinah had already located it. It shows her training from Shiva’s teacher. I love the irony of the Roy, Dinah and Hal team up? Reminds me of another trio that’s only one character off.

I love how Those three are doing all the heavy lifting while the ‘big three’ shack up and decide who’s worthy to be in their exclusive little club.
The only thing that bothers me about this are is the inevitability that after Roy, Dinah and Hal do all the hard lifting Wondie, Bats and Supes are gonna swoop in and save the day.

I’m not bitter. But I do have to say that if Metzer can pull this arc off, and whatever other work he does on JLA without falling into the pit of characters like Roy and Dinah being background then I’ll do everything short of tattooing his name in big, bold letters across my breasts.

*if they're it big enough for that* :huh:




Outsiders #42 – Okay I’m a girl, and as such generally my ‘reviews’ are fluff compared to Dread’s deep thought filled posts about arcs and storylines going back years and years. Not to say all female reviews are fluff, just mine.

So naturally I’m focusing on one thing.

Katana’s new costume.
Yes, that’s right. Let me just say that I LOVE it. It’s cute, it’s feminine..maybe to feminine.

It doesn’t seem to fit her character in anyway. It’s distinctively ‘female’, the puffy sleeves are reminiscent of puffed sleeves wore on medieval and renaissance dresses, and it’s half skirt echoes bustles from the 18th-19th centuries.
This is the hard*** woman who wore bomber jackets over an unflattering one piece with a splash of color on one breast. She’s never exactly been ‘aware’ of her female figure. But better late than never I guess. They were however conscious of off-setting the female features of the costume with the short butch hair. Long hair would have made it to girly.

The sad thing is that this look will probably last a year before the other one is adopted again, which is a shame I really like it.

So there is another point…Thunder..Thunder…Thunder…will they just decide if she’ a hard-edged girl, or a valley girl? The hair part was sickening. They just can’t seem to mix the two well enough to my taste. It’s not forming cohesively into one character.

And Grace...mad scientists pose more threat to her sweetheart than Gorillas. But we won’t get into the weird ‘lesbian’ thing. :o





Mouse Guard #5 - LOVE this book. Yes, it’s a bit ‘kiddie’ looking but it has the same feel to it as a fine coffee table book. It’s an easy read but that leaves time to actually admire and study the artwork which itself tells the story wonderfully. It’s fantastic the artistry that goes into the book, and the fluid movement and storytelling of the art seems to compliment the sparse dialogue when it is used. Much like a single flower can change an entire floral arrangement so a single dialogue box can change the entire feel of this story and it is balanced to perfection.
 
Twy's reviews are FABULOUS!!!![/cantone]
 
twylight said:
Bought-
JLA #3
Outsiders #42
Nightwing # 124
52
Mouse Guard #5

Okay, not that my opinion matters, but here we go:

JLA #3 – Okay give me a minute…






















One more….
















Dinah is in the building!

That’s right, Dinah totally owned this issue!

And for a fangirl like me, that means a lot.

It was amazing to see her in action, and for those of you complaining against Hal, give him and the others a break. Their the ‘small’ guys and while Hal could wipe out a city, my girl deserves to shine and she does. ^_^
In the time it took for Hal to scan the robots Dinah had already located it. It shows her training from Shiva’s teacher. I love the irony of the Roy, Dinah and Hal team up? Reminds me of another trio that’s only one character off.

I love how Those three are doing all the heavy lifting while the ‘big three’ shack up and decide who’s worthy to be in their exclusive little club.
The only thing that bothers me about this are is the inevitability that after Roy, Dinah and Hal do all the hard lifting Wondie, Bats and Supes are gonna swoop in and save the day.

I’m not bitter. But I do have to say that if Metzer can pull this arc off, and whatever other work he does on JLA without falling into the pit of characters like Roy and Dinah being background then I’ll do everything short of tattooing his name in big, bold letters across my breasts.

*if they're it big enough for that* :huh:




Outsiders #42 – Okay I’m a girl, and as such generally my ‘reviews’ are fluff compared to Dread’s deep thought filled posts about arcs and storylines going back years and years. Not to say all female reviews are fluff, just mine.

So naturally I’m focusing on one thing.

Katana’s new costume.
Yes, that’s right. Let me just say that I LOVE it. It’s cute, it’s feminine..maybe to feminine.

It doesn’t seem to fit her character in anyway. It’s distinctively ‘female’, the puffy sleeves are reminiscent of puffed sleeves wore on medieval and renaissance dresses, and it’s half skirt echoes bustles from the 18th-19th centuries.
This is the hard*** woman who wore bomber jackets over an unflattering one piece with a splash of color on one breast. She’s never exactly been ‘aware’ of her female figure. But better late than never I guess. They were however conscious of off-setting the female features of the costume with the short butch hair. Long hair would have made it to girly.

The sad thing is that this look will probably last a year before the other one is adopted again, which is a shame I really like it.

So there is another point…Thunder..Thunder…Thunder…will they just decide if she’ a hard-edged girl, or a valley girl? The hair part was sickening. They just can’t seem to mix the two well enough to my taste. It’s not forming cohesively into one character.

And Grace...mad scientists pose more threat to her sweetheart than Gorillas. But we won’t get into the weird ‘lesbian’ thing. :o





Mouse Guard #5 - LOVE this book. Yes, it’s a bit ‘kiddie’ looking but it has the same feel to it as a fine coffee table book. It’s an easy read but that leaves time to actually admire and study the artwork which itself tells the story wonderfully. It’s fantastic the artistry that goes into the book, and the fluid movement and storytelling of the art seems to compliment the sparse dialogue when it is used. Much like a single flower can change an entire floral arrangement so a single dialogue box can change the entire feel of this story and it is balanced to perfection.

Totally agree about the Canary action in JLA #3.:yay:
 
*bows*

Thank you....despite my typo's I think I did well for my debut of 'being myself' reviews.
 
A decent, EVENT free week basically. There were some duds and some ho-hums, but also some books that kicked the rear.

As usual, this is the full spoiler section. Enjoy the swim.

DREAD'S BOUGHT/THOUGHT FOR 11/1/06:

52 WEEK #26:
Considering I cynically doubted a weekly series could be on time this long, it's a worthwhile accomplishment that DC's grand experiment post IC (and some would argue the best thing to come from DC after IC that is keyed to continuity) has made it this far and continues to be a Top seller. On the other hand, some of the writers on board naturally have had to choose this over some of their other work, hence some lateness from Morrison, et al. Now, this issue fundamentally has nothing wrong with it. It presents a story, continues the flow, and has pretty art. But it does feel like a bit of a slow, filler issue, and I agree with some who may claim that this issue drags. 52 has had it's periods of boom's and busts, where some weeks the adrenaline pumps high and others where it's just walking at a slow pace. This is one of the latter. The Black Marvel Family are quickly becoming the stars of the book while folks like Question & Steel get passing mentions. There is an interesting TV debate between Steel and his niece about Luthor's metagene program (on THE CREEPER's show no less), but as interesting a character conflict it is, nothing is resolved or learned that we didn't know before. Natasha is being stubbornly loyal to Luthor and equally stubborn against John. John and the readers know of Luthor's intentions but can't prove it. And when things come to a head and there could be hope of some new direction, it ends, and feels like tredding water. As an aside (perhaps to remind us they still exist after a month), the Black Marvel's drop off Montoya and "Charlie" in the Himilayas so Montoya can get some martial arts training from Richard Dragon, who taught Question. Pfft, as if she hasn't carried Question enough throughout the series, now she's set to become a Bendis-esque "Unbeata-fem"? We'll see, but, naturally, her "arc to find herself by being led by others" continues. Oolong Island gets a new scientist, who naturally is a hot babe, but this reaction was given away in WIZARD last week, so it felt moot to me. Was amusing. The last story has the Black Marvels have dinner with the Sivana's, and Osirus grows lonely and impatient with the routine...until he makes friends with Leatherhead. No, no, it's not a crossover, but the character is a straight rip of the Mirage version of Leatherhead (or the 2003 era cartoon). A mutated alligator who suffers from animal rage cravings but in reality is passive and gentle most other times, as well as intelligent. The gator also serves to replace Capt. Marvel's "obligatory talking animal friend", Tawny the Tiger (I think). I wonder if repeating this cycle really accomplishes something, as the world has enough talking animals, or if it's just another round of DC hopelessly repeating a pattern and going for "nostalgia", a card they may have played far too often. And Hawkman & Hawkwoman get an origin and it's still muddled and confusing; years later, DC's history still seems like an ungodly confusing nightmare. A few years back it was Hypertime and now it may be this. So, fundamentally, a fine issue, just not a rivetting one. With 52 weeks to tell a story, some drag was inevitable; few stories can really be sustained weekly for a year. Even 24 caps at, well, 24 episodes. Hopefully it picks up again soon. This is one book DC can nary afford to have slump for long.

BLUE BEETLE #8: Much like 52 #26, a fundamentally sound book. The hero is still likeable, the cast is mostly present, a fight is had, the art is nice, and there is some work to tie in Jamie to the Blue Beetle legacy (after going over IC #6 last issue and finding out that the scarab is alien in origin, not mystical). And Mr. Black continues to act to cliche as the "surly tattooed man with a gun". But also like 52, a book that feels like it is tredding water and starting to get aimless. Jamie's been reacting or looking for his origin for the entire series now and unlike, say, HEROES, not enough is revealed to justify dragging it on and on. 52 has the excuse of being a very long series, so drag is inevitable. BEETLE doesn't have that excuse. After a hectic first few issues it's taken the slow burn to oblivion. There's another fight with the Ogre and there is some amusing dialogue had, but by now it all seems more generic than it should before the first year is done. Danielle Garret and the "tying of the legacy" was fine, although the Ogre's gibberish got way too annoying (especially after Bendis' ULTIMATE CLONE SAGA where seemingly every clone talks like that; you could just type in wacky symbols like this ^%$#* and the story would read the same) and after reading INVINCIBLE, which had an inexperienced young hero who actually isn't incompetant in a fight, I lose patience with heroes who, well, are incompetant. Basically, I can forgive 52 for tredding water and going in cycles after 26 weeks. I can even understand Bendis losing steam on USM after about 3 or so years. But BLUE BEETLE seems to be doing it by the 8th issue, and that's unforgiveable. I spent a year waiting for THE INTIMATES to "go somewhere" and I dread doing the same with this book (which, admittedly, is superior). Considering this series usually comes in late to boot, I'm not sure how much longer I stick around. I may give it another issue...if that week happens to be slow.

DETECTIVE COMICS #825: Paul Dini apparently got too busy with LOST or something, so McGraw has the dubious task of writing a fill in issue on a book that Dini writes well, but unfortunately sells far worse than it deserves to (usually around the Top 40-45) and likely will be worse this month due to the fill in. If that happens, then all of Marvel's baloney about "better to have a late issue than a fill in" will be justified in sales figures. But actually, this issue wasn't too shabby; at least as good as Dini's Ivy issue from a few months ago. It has an F-List villian, Dr. Phosphorus, returning and getting a new schtick; revenge. Hey, it worked for Mr. Freeze in B:TAS, right? So the good doctor breaks out of containment and starts going after the men responsible for his state; some are merely corrupt, and others are Rupert Thorne, a jailed gangster. Naturally Batman is on the scene to help Gordon piece together the mystery and run into his old foe. A random comment from Alfred stirs Batman to use Junior High Chem Lab tricks to beat Phosphorus with Baking Soda. Some people may feel that "one shot formula" doesn't work, but I enjoy these stories because they're honest. I mean, really, can Batman's status quo really change? His villians are immortal, at least the ones that count. He is immortal and ageless, and so are most of his cast. Very little can change because the character as is has sold for DC for over 60 years. Therefore, better to stick with an amusing formula than to goad the fans into "shock and awe" when it all goes to soil in a year or the next writer shift anyway. It may not be as exciting as, say, attempting to give Batman a son ( as if THAT's going to last once Morrison leaves), but it's honest and it still works. Not every story warrents a 12 part arc. However, McGraw could have at least made a token use of Riddler to keep up some of Dini's loose continuity. Another solid, enjoyable Batman issue. Give it a chance.

FRESHMEN II #1: Sarah M. Geller's cover quote was actually funny. And Seth Green isn't given splashier billing than the actual writer, Sterbakov. Leonard Kirk's moved on from the last volume (and onto AGENTS OF ATLAS), but Will Conrad manages to capture enough of his "aura" that the shift doesn't seem noticeable. Top Cow seems to get what Marvel doesn't; getting a penciller who isn't DRAMATICALLY different from the last helps the book maintain it's continuity. Marvel would have traded Silvestri on HUNTER/KILLER for, say, Chris Bachelo. Top Cow instead picked a dude whose work flows well with Silvestri's and it works all the better. Anyway, onto the first issue. It starts off a bit slowly, but most first issues do. It reintroduces the cast and what they do, a luxury if you've forgotten some of 'em like me. The team's still together, although Wannabe's still trying to make up for being powerless by calling himself "Crimson Knight" and making data files on everyone. Unfortunately, he seems to be going insane and seeing this kiddie book character named Mr. Fiddlesticks, in sequences that made me think I'd missed an issue of THE MAXX. Everyone else is as they should be, raiding a teacher's files to alter a test in Intoxicator's favor, only for him to space on the answers. Puppeteer's father shows up to question Wannabe about the Ax-Cell-erator, as he invested in it. As an older rich man, he naturally is nefarious (honestly, if Western comics have taught me anything, if you singled out every wealthy person over 28 and killed them, you'd eliminate 78% of the world's villians apparently) and can see Mr. Fiddlesticks, who may be an attempt to get Wannabe to their side. If he is duped by the villian for a SECOND time in a row, I may lose my lunch. It's still amusing but not as intense as the last vol.'s issues. But, a worthy reintroduction, and for those interested, I'll get the rest.

AGENTS OF ATLAS #4: Parker & Kirk continue their trip on reinventing lost characters from Marvel's Golden Age, and it continues to a quirky, pulpy romp. The gang follows the lead of the mysterious Human Robot, who manages to revive the long-thought-deceased Namora (a female version of Namor, from heritage to powers). For the record, Namorita was her daughter via "cloning", and she was poisoned during the 70's and killed off. She makes her mighty reappearence as the gang is swarmed by massive sea monsters (Gorilla-Man's nags to Robot are priceless). Venus changes her hair color so "there aren't two blondes here" and the gang, fully assembled, starts to investigate various ATLAS business holdings, at each one finding and fighting wonky crap. Hiding out in a tropical local, they're again ambushed by Yellow Claw (or "Golden Claw" as he calls himself, claiming Westerners distorted his name), and Jimmy Woo suspects a double-agent; likely M-11, Namora, or both. Kirk's art maintains it's zest and the array of characters really mingle well together, and it's good to see Marvel honoring past characters and trying to make them work, rather than forgetting them or using them as canon fodder (or miswriting them). Plus, as a mini, we KNOW it has to go somewhere, and the plot is starting to hit it's head. I hope Namora gets to stick around for the rest of CW; if one pissed off super Atlantian mad about Namorita's death was bad news, imagine two! Kudos to the book for taking oddball characters and making them all work so well. This is the closest to the BPRD that you'll probably get from Marvel. Enjoy the pulpy madness.

THE IRREDEEMABLE ANT-MAN #2: Sure, the CHOOSING SIDES mini already gave away that Eric gets the suit, but that was obvious by issue #1 anyway. The series takes the naunced approach of intersplicing the present and the past of the characters involved (6 months ago for them, about 2 years for us), and Kirkman's command of continuity is a sight for sore eyes, writing this origin around the events of Millar's ENEMY OF THE STATE, a story that saw Wolverine damn near attack the President, SHIELD and countless heroes and getting little fallout from it. Kirkman turns the "new guy inheriting a legacy" angle on it's head by presenting Chris as your obligatory "noble everyman" type who usually gets this sort of thing, and Eric as the petulant jerk who doesn't really need added power. I wouldn't call him "irredeemable", because Eric never, say, cloned Thor and had him kill Goliath. And he does try to save people, if they happen to be in his path (or happen to be cute women he wants to date. And he exploits Chris' disappearence to horn in on his girl Veronica; when HYDRA attacks the helicarrier, Eric LITERALLY shoves his buddy out of the way to get behind some safe doors first, causing his death. He then dons the Ant-Man costume to survive the onslaught and flees the wreckage (after finally seeing that Nick Fury DOES exist). Hester's art is as good as usual, although he instisted on drawing black rectangles over some people's faces at odd times, which was jarring. Meanwhile, Eric milks the "saved your life" thing to get free dinner on his date AND he runs the tab high, too. At the end, his SHIELD C.O., a face lookin' like Harvey Dent, declares bloody revenge on Eric. I question whether Kirkman will overplay the "jerkbag" angle, as while a "jerk" character can thrill TV audiences, it may not be sustainable for a solo comic series about a character who is totally irredeemable. I mean, Batman's worst *****e moments usually weren't in his own book; and Dr. Doom never had an ongoing. I won't count IRON MAN's book because, again, his *****e moments have been outside of it for a while. By the time Wolverine hit his stride and got a solo, he was more "gritty and noble" than an outright scumbag. Still, Eric works because while he isn't totally heartless, he uses his powers for his own benefit shamelessly, which may be closer to what some folks would do with superpowers in reality to make him interesting. So long as Kirkman doesn't overplay his hand, it should work. Already I'm enjoying it; the new Ant-Man is nothing like the last two and nothing like some of Marvel's past "new heroes" (like Gravity, Arana, etc). And the new costume design rocks. Why should be look the same as the last two Ant-Men? Armor and ant-legs all the way. I hope this title fares better than MTU did, because after seeing Kirkman stumble with ULTIMATE X-MEN, it's good to see top notch Marvel work from him again.

BEYOND! #5: This underappreciated mini starring B and C listers hits it's "prenultimate" chapter as the characters interact a bit in Limbo; Al Kraven tries to secure Deathlok's movie rights, Hood and Gravity share an unlikely conversation about girlfriends, and Wasp & Pym have another quarrel, and while Janet struggles to come to terms with their post-divorce status quo, Hank seems to have having a tryst with Firebird. Cripes, she FINALLY does something noteworthy, and it's the "hot Latina other woman" cliche (even though, as they are divorced technically, Pym is legally free to date her). To be fair, though, Firebird at least is more "gentle" than Janet is and Janet seems unable to forgive Hank for his past crimes, and so thus as Medusa said, their relationship may have essentially run it's course. This series sells poorly, so I doubt any Marvel writer will treat the Hank/Firebird stuff seriously. But before this gets sorted out, Space Phantom returns and they force him to return them to Battleworld, just as Venom is begging for Beyonder to give him his prize. At that point, the book twists in an unexpected direction; Dr. Pym seemingly suckerpunches EVERYONE to win the game! Now, I'll admit to being a hypocrite here; if this were Bendis or Millar, I'd probably decry this as "character assassination" and all that, but as it's McDuffie, I'll give him the benefit of the doubt and wait until next issue until I reserve judgement. After all, maybe Pym shot them with some sort of blanks that only SIMULATE death, or maybe his "prize" from Beyonder is to "wish them all back" DBZ style. Surely Marvel wouldn't off Wasp in so minor a book as this, as good as it is, and Gargan/Venom is alive & well for CW. So, yes, I am giving one lessor named writer a chance whereas for others I would immediately jump to a conclusion. There it is, deal with it. Still, BEYOND! has been a top source for honest superhero thrills and chills with oft neglected characters, all while treating them seriously (loved Pym's 90's power levels), and fills that great void left from MTU. It wraps up next issue, and unless the finale seriously bombs, it's been a fun ride. MCDuffie's next gig is FF, and they'll need all his help they can get. Oh, and as usual, Kolins' art rocks. This is a must-read; I'd recommend it for trade when it's done.

X-MEN: PHOENIX: WARSONG #3: When people give their reasons for hating the X-Men, works like this may provide justification. Not only does it repeat a tedious X-Men plotline of the 1045th return of the Phoenix, but it also shoves a retcon down our neck in order to "justify" the presence of actual new characters by linking them forcefully to the old. This is a bit I always hate; why can't the X-Men ever meet anyone new? Have some balls, man. Inserting characters into the already backlogged histories of current X-Men is a cheap manuver that has been overplayed recently (especially with Vulcan). Apparently the Cuckoos and all of their Matrix-style cloned nekkid sisters were cloned from Emma Frost's egg cells, so thus they are all technically her daughters, explaining their connection and yada yada. No, it couldn't just be because they're fellow psychics. It always has to be some tedious overblown god damned crap with the X-Men. Every new character they meet who doesn't get erased after 5 months ultimately will turn out to be someone's cousin, clone, grandfather from the future, cyborg alternate reality duplicate, long lost sibling, mother, "brother's sister's uncle's nephew's former roommate" and all that garbage. Enought already! Let the X-Men meet some new character with a new history, for god's sakes! Can't a new character work without being tied to some A-lister or Magneto or even Squid Boy's semen or whatever else is next!? Anyway, so one Cuckoo begs the token SHIELD agent to kill her, but he doesn't and after a massive fight sequence, the Phoenix is reborn and the X-Men have to take her out, with Emma Frost ending on some ghetto filler line (seriously, it's worse than "Papa Spank"). Maybe I'm being hard on this, but the X-Men are the most overexposed franchise at Marvel second to Spider-Man & Wolverine, so I have the idea that you really shouldn't spit out yet another mini or series unless you really have a worthy idea. This ain't it. If I'm smart, I resist the temptation to finish the run and drop it here. It's just a pain to read. Even when some segments are interesting or cool, or the art is 90's Image-tastic, or whatnot, something else stupid will come in and make it all for naught. At least X-MEN: FIRST CLASS, which also seeks to drain more blood from the X-stone, is actually fun. This is just pointless retcon conveluted crap.

And now I'll tell you how I REALLY felt about Warsong #3. :rolleyes:

I like the X-Men, I really do, but this series all but symbolizes the garbage that keeps them down:
1). Convelution
2). Retcons
3). Recycled plots
4). Pretty art, little brains
5). Stories have nothing to do with their supposed premise to either be a sci-fi allegory about prejudice and "protecting a world that hates/fears" them.

Pak may have been able to make Endsong readable, but not so much with this one.

At least it didn't have MJ turn into a big red Sasquatch, though.
 
Dread said:
5). Stories have nothing to do with their supposed premise to either be a sci-fi allegory about prejudice and "protecting a world that hates/fears" them.
We've had this conversation before, but the X-Men are also superheroes who do a lot of standard superhero stuff. Of all the great X-Men stories, how many are really, fundamentally connected to the prejudice angle? There's "Days of Future Past," (and sequels) "God Loves, Man Kills," and a few others; but you also have all kinds of popular stories not related to being a mutant, including the two Phoenix Sagas, generally thought of as the greatest stories in the X-Men's history. The allegory is an important part of the X-Men, and it's a constant backdrop, but the X-Men started out as a standard superhero team with a different way of getting powers, and a huge portion of the classic Claremont run is about that (Claremont did a lot with the mutant allegory too, of course).
 
For the record, Detective Comics #825 was designed as a fill-in to give some time to have a more stable rotation of artists.
 
CaptainCanada said:
We've had this conversation before, but the X-Men are also superheroes who do a lot of standard superhero stuff. Of all the great X-Men stories, how many are really, fundamentally connected to the prejudice angle? There's "Days of Future Past," (and sequels) "God Loves, Man Kills," and a few others; but you also have all kinds of popular stories not related to being a mutant, including the two Phoenix Sagas, generally thought of as the greatest stories in the X-Men's history. The allegory is an important part of the X-Men, and it's a constant backdrop, but the X-Men started out as a standard superhero team with a different way of getting powers, and a huge portion of the classic Claremont run is about that (Claremont did a lot with the mutant allegory too, of course).
Fair point, I guess. Just the X-Men were usually the most boring as standard superheroes. And I feel that their "backdrop" premise could actually be interesting if played up more. I see a lot of the space/clone/retcon stuff to be distractions that have, through repetition, overwhelmed the X-Men franchise and now are the main plot. Besides, how many times do we have to retrend the Dark Phoenix Saga? How many times do the X-Men seem to meet some new mutants only for them to retroactively be connected to someone "established" to make them "worthy" or something.

Meh, just not liking WARSONG.

Darthphere said:
For the record, Detective Comics #825 was designed as a fill-in to give some time to have a more stable rotation of artists.
Fair enough. I just hope the sales for this issue don't drop, because McGraw was pretty good and because we know in some future JOE FRIDAY's Joe Q would use it as proof to "why fill-in's suck, so fans who are impatiently awaiting late books, like ULTIMATE WOLVERINE VS. HULK #3 or whatnot, should just shut up and wait until we decide to give it to you" and all that.
 
Dread said:
Besides, how many times do we have to retrend the Dark Phoenix Saga?
I don't disagree there.
Meh, just not liking WARSONG.
Hey, I'm not even buying it.

Regarding the aversion to fill-in writers, I think that's largely because the marketplace has shifted from being title-driven to being author-driven. While the big franchises have a certain core audience (if Chuck Austen didn't drive Uncanny X-Men into the ground, it'll never end), increasingly the emphasis is on writers (Brian Michael Bendis, Mark Millar, Ed Brubaker, etc.). A lot of fans have adopted the "auteur theory" regarding their books.
 
Dread said:
Fair enough. I just hope the sales for this issue don't drop, because McGraw was pretty good and because we know in some future JOE FRIDAY's Joe Q would use it as proof to "why fill-in's suck, so fans who are impatiently awaiting late books, like ULTIMATE WOLVERINE VS. HULK #3 or whatnot, should just shut up and wait until we decide to give it to you" and all that.


No doubt. I have a feeling a large number of the comic book audience dont even realize its a different writer this issue until they actually get it.
 
Glad to see I'm not the only one that is in a dislike state of Nightwing.
 
The art was great in Tec.Has this Marz guy done anything else before?
 
CaptainCanada said:
I don't disagree there.

Hey, I'm not even buying it.

Regarding the aversion to fill-in writers, I think that's largely because the marketplace has shifted from being title-driven to being author-driven. While the big franchises have a certain core audience (if Chuck Austen didn't drive Uncanny X-Men into the ground, it'll never end), increasingly the emphasis is on writers (Brian Michael Bendis, Mark Millar, Ed Brubaker, etc.). A lot of fans have adopted the "auteur theory" regarding their books.
Quite a good point. CAPTAIN AMERICA and UNCANNY have seen a jump in sales due to Brubaker's gaining steam. And Bendis' namepower is part of what made NEW AVENGERS Marvel's top selling ongoing.

Plus, Vaughan's decision to leave RUNAWAYS, a franchise he created, caught many fans in a tailspin and even Whedon may have his work cut out appeasing us. ;)
 
The new arc in Adjectiveless X-men being written by Carey deals with completely new villains that have so far not been connected to any established characters or past storylines and it has been quite good so far IMO. What is no one reading that?


it's also pretty much the only X title that recognizes that all the characters in the x-men books LIVE in the same MANSION. In Adjectiveless Cyclops, Emma, Beast, Wolvie, the New X-men kids, and O*N*E characters, all show up here and there and take part in the story. Unlike Astonishing which acts like the 6 main characters are THE only X-men there are.
 
Nobody's readin' it 'cause they got a crap artist on it. At least that's why I ain't.
 
I'm much too lazy to write full reviews as of now. so here goes some "leet" reviews mkay?

Nigtwing? *1337 approved

JLA? *1337 approved

Criminal? *Way to much 1337ness! supreme pwnage.

Detective? *passable

Supes Confidential? *Tim Sale is "teh Mast3rz".:o

Hulk? *1337 in space!

Ant-Man? *Kirkman's talking heads > Bendis's talking heads. 1337 approved!

52? *26 weeks of owinng noobs.


Yes, good week I say. [/1337]
 
Oh my, I almost forgot. Agents of Atlas's leetness was off the charts. Buy the book fellow believers.

And yes this deserved its on post. Agents of Atlas has been one of the best marvel minis as of late. :up:
 

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