I love Romita he's a great artist.
Mighty Avengers 1 - I honestly didn't plan on getting this but my love of Luke Cage clouded my judgement. Fortunately, the comic was actually pretty good. Like with the few other times I've read him, SpOck brought the story down some (I mean really... what the heck is there about this guy that people like? I'm convinced it's not him but the characters that Slott surrounds him with... because he's honestly the worst character of the year for me. Annoying). Fortunately, I get the impression that he's only an Infinity tie-in guest star that's being promoted as a team member for sales purposes... and I hope that's the case.
As for the book itself, I like what Luke's doing here. He's running a smaller Heros 4 Hire so he can still help the world while being with his family, but not on a large scale like when he led the Avengers. He's pulled in two Avengers Academy graduates to work with him: Power-Man and White Tiger. The problem though is that he's had a taste of the big time and feels like he should be doing more. Then Infinity happens, SpOck and Spectrum show up (with a mysterious hero wearing a Spidey outfit), and he declares them Avengers, since the world needs an Avengers.
The story was actually pretty good for an introduction, though it'd have been better without SpOck. Greg Land's art was tolerable (though I'm pretty sure I saw a few Whitney Houston faces on Spectrum) and I might even come back for the next issue. I'm just hoping SpOck leaves soon and Luke brings Danny in.
Disagree 100% with your views. Spock might have been the BEST thing about Mighty Avengers (Luke Cage was pretty cool too this issue) and Infinity has been fantastic so far.
I know everyone has different opinions and all that stuff but I'll never understand some people.
EDIT: While it makes sense to add Iron Fist because of Cage, that's just one more character on the team whose power is martial arts, the power to hit really hard, and/or agility. If they bring in Fist, they need to dump Power Man (who already brings the least to the team and is one of the most uninspired creations of the last decade). As it stands, the team needs to diversify it's power sets. Cage and She-Hulk? White Tiger, Spock, and Power Man? The team has at least two characters filling the "strong guy" role and at least three fulfilling the mandatory "agile character" position. Spectrum and Blue Marvel are unique. Falcon is ... well, Falcon. How about some Magic users, tech guys, or energy projecting mutants? I complain abou the current roster being boring not because of the characters themselves but because the power sets are so limited and interchangable. It'd be like having Spider-Man and Daredevil on the same team - why do you need both?
Here's the thing about Superior Spider-Man:
People like the concept #1, because it's working and working well. Because of that is #2, it makes people like the character.
JH just hates Doc Ock. He lets that cloud his judgement and doesn't approach things with an open mind. I was the same way with The Hood. I thought the character was stupid and I hated him. But then Rick Remender put him into a good story involving The Punisher and I loved him. So now, it makes me willing to read a story with the guy (depending on who's writing it). You gotta take chances sometimes or you're gonna miss out...
The Hood was a short-time villain. I've had decades of disliking Doc Ock. In fact, I can safely say that in my 22 years of reading Spidey comics there has never once been a Doc Ock story that I liked... ever. Add that to the fact that Dan's rendition of Spider-Man does little for me. His rendition of Doc Ock isn't going to do it for me either... or obviously, will do less for me than his Spidey... which I did kinda enjoy for a few months when Big Time started.
And to be fair, I've read SpOck in at least 3 issues. I hated him in all of them. And I've skimmed nearly every issue of Superior Spider-Man. The only things that ever caught my eye as interesting were Cardiac and Spider-Man 2099.
Norrin Parker said:wow I seriously consider Doc Ock to be one of Spider-Man's greatest foes more so than Venom or the snoozefest that is Carnage. But seeing as JewishHobbit hasn't liked Ock since his creation its no wonder he's not a fan of superior spider-man.
StreetWarrior said:Did you read "Ends of the Earth" in ASM a year or two back? It has a dying Doc Ock holding the Earth hostage with a series of Satellites capable of destroying the ozone layer. It was like 8 issues, involved the Avengers pretty heavily, and felt way more like an event than a simple arc. I didn't really care for Octavius much either until that story - maybe you'd like it.
JewishHobbit said:I can safely say that in my 22 years of reading Spidey comics there has never once been a Doc Ock story that I liked... ever.
I'm going to correct myself here. For nostalgic purposes I do sorta like Doc Ock in Revenge of the Sinister Six. I was a brand new reader when that was coming out and everything was magical in the eyes of a 10-year old. So I'll give you that one... but it's pretty much 100% nostalgia and not quality of story or character.
Personally, I wanted a book with Luke Cage, Jessica Jones, Danny Rand, and Squirrel Girl based around Luke's family. This is what I got instead![]()
Wow, I'm having the opposite reaction. Battle is definitely getting me invested in the X-Books. I'll finish collecting the crossover, and depending on what happens after I'll decide if I want to start picking up Uncanny and All New.