The Ongoing Bought/Thought! 2013

Hickman probably just likes Shang-Chi more. Creators play favorites all the time.

(I'm trying really hard right now not to mention Luke Cage and Bendis. You should be proud of me, JewHobs. ;))
 
Thanks, Corp :up:

I appreciate the effort.

But honestly, that wouldn't have bothered me because it's obviously true and he's done wonders for the character. So no biggie. There's nothing wrong with a writer playing with favored characters if they do a good job with them.
 
Yeah, plenty of them do it. Kieron Gillen loves Death's Head and has given him at least a cameo in almost everything he's written for Marvel so far.
 
All I can think of is SWORD and the new issue of Iron Man. Has he written him in more?

And has anyone read the old Death Head comics? I loved Death's Head II, and I've had portions of the old Incomplete Death's Head series that reprinted some of the old Death's Head stories framed by a new Death's Head II story... but I never read it because I was waiting to get ahold of them all and just never got around to it. I eventually sold them when money was tight.
 
I never got to read more than an issue or two that my uncle had picked up while he was overseas with the Marines. I didn't really know what Marvel UK was back then, let alone how to get comics they published.

And those are the only things I can recall now too. Maybe I'm mixing Gillen and Cornell up. I'm pretty sure Cornell used him in something as well.
 
I think Cornell had Death's Head II show up in the final issue of Captain Britain and MI:13. I only skimmed it so I don't know the story, but I saw him in a splash of characters.
 
Yeah Im a big Death's Head fan. Got into him way back at the start when he was in the UK Transformers comics which left quite an impression. He killed Shockwave and Lazerbeak and brutalised Cyclonus and Scourge. He's pretty charismatic and a pretty great design. Simonson had DH appear in his FF run. There was also another DH appearance in the recent Avenging Spider-man FF issue. Really cool to have him back thanks Gillen! :woot:
 
Bought/Thought for May 15, 2013

Light week preceeding next week's wopper of a week. In addition to the 3 issues I did buy, I also picked up the new My Little Pony comic for my girls. I love that they're so into a comicbook. That's my girls!


Wolverine & the X-Men 29 - This was a decent issue that didn't really feel necessary. It's essentially an aftermath to the Dog/Savage Land arc while also serving as a lead-in to the Hellfire Club Saga starting next issue, and I'm thinking it might have also dropped hints at the upcoming X-Men event.

Honestly though, it felt like filler. It was entertaining filler, yes, but filler nonetheless. It starts in the modern time with Logan and crew burying a time capsole and then jumps ahead 25 years to when Logan is digging it up. It reignites some memories and he tries to travel back in time to warn himself of what is coming (Hellfire Club Saga and X-Men Event) but is convinced not to by a pretty cool, fully grown Eye Boy (now called Eye Man). He ultimately conceeds to Eye Boy's warning and merely sends a key to a box that he and Beast found in Dog's cottage.

The only real semi-important stuff that happens here is that Dog kills his older self and joins the Hellfire Club, and Idie leaves to join the Hellfire Academy (the second student to defect after Glob Herman). Those two things were interesting, but the rest was filler and I never like pointless filler.

This title has been treading water since AvX, and I've nearly dropped it multiple times, but I've been holding out for the Hellfire Club Saga. Well, that starts later this month with the next issue... and it's about time. The Saga will be immediately followed by the big Event that's coming, crossing over with All New, Uncanny, and X-Men. I can't help but wonder if that event will lead to a shift in the X-Verse, part of that being the end of this title. Aaron seems to be wrapping up all the plots that he's been working on since Schism, and the Hellfire Club Saga seems to be the place where it all comes to a head. Then there's the crossover... and what next? I'm thinking either Aaron's leaving or the book's ending. I picked up a little promo card thing today about the Hellfire Club Saga and it had some text that read "Will it mean the end of Wolverine & the X-Men?" I can't help but think the answer will be yes... in some way.

And with the "commissioned" Clay Man image of the New X-Men students with a logo featuring "Bendis and Mann", it could be that a new "graduating class" could be coming (at least, that's what this X-Men conspiracy theorist is hoping for). And if it is, then this title could potentially be ending to make room for that.

Bendis does tend to spread like a disease once he takes over a franchise, and with how good he's been on the X-Men books... here's hoping.

Nightwing 20 - This was a fun book. I didn't enjoy new artist Brett Booth's pencils here as much as I did the previous issue, but the story was good. I liked the Prankster, and while I didn't care at first, I'm sorta curious about ths Zucco plot that's starting up. While I really enjoy Nightwing's character, I can't help but place this book toward the bottom of my stack in regards to my enjoyment level. That is to say, it's not that I'm NOT enjoying the book, but it's toward the lower rungs. I think I'm decent on my buy list right now, though I could maybe cut one or two more, but this book is remaining on my "watch" list. I like it, but if I feel like I absolutely need to make more cuts, it might be on the block.

Batwoman - This is consistently one of the best books I buy month in and month out. It hit a long lull in the middle, but the past five or six issues have been top notch. I love that Williams is getting back to the Alice character and the intrigue of D.O.A.'s hopes to cash in on Kate by turning her against Batman. With this issue's ending, showing Kate accepting the task so that her and her family can go free... and her family all teaming up with her to make Batman's identity public to the D.O.A... well, it's just getting exciting. Williams started with this level of excitement for the first 4 or 5 issues, then had a LONG run of a mediocre story told horribly (though it ended awesomely). I'm glad he's back to it now, and I can't wait to see what comes next.


Best and Worst of the Week

Best: Batwoman - No surprise here. It was a stellar issue and deserves this spot. It's definately been the best issue of the past two weeks for me, maybe more, but I don't recall what came out two weeks ago.

Wolverine & the X-Men - While it wasn't a bad issue, it wasn't particularly good either. Sadly, that's pretty much been par the course for this book since AvX. Last issue was a step up, this one was somewhere in the middle of last issue and what came before it. Hopefully it'll up it's game next issue with the Hellfire Club Saga.
 
Ultimate Spider-Man - Very strong issue considering the change up in the creative team and the one year time jump (are all Ultimate Universe books going to do this?). Loved the opening interaction with Ganke, Miles and Kate. Bendis is on form as usual

Green Hornet (Mark Waid) - Delightful. Mark Waid is one of my favourite writers and I'm loving this so far. It's not too often I'm kept that overly enthused for a series that I wish I had the next issue right now...but this is it :). Art is great and loving Kato's attitude towards Britt

That's what I've read so far from my haul
 
Avengers: The Enemy Within #1 was good. Carol started drifting into whiny territory now and then, but DeConnick seemed to know exactly where the line between sympathetic and irritating was and had Spider-Woman step in a couple times to pep-talk Carol back to her normal self. Thor showed up, hit a dinosaur in the face, and looked after an old lady. I still don't know why this is a crossover thing instead of just a Captain Marvel story, but it is what it is.

Nova #4 was all right. Sam was more of a cocky jerkface in it, which I hear is closer to his Ultimate Spider-Man cartoon characterization--a characterization I very, very much dislike. I hope Loeb reins it in and has Sam realize that he's still got a lot to learn. The second half of this issue seemed to be doing just that, which was good. The surprise villain wasn't especially surprising to me; he also seemed to turn on a dime from his previous characterization, which felt a little ham-fisted. McGuinness' art was gorgeous, as always.

Wolverine and the X-Men #29 was a pretty good follow-up to the ordeal with Dog. Wolverine gets a bit introspective and gives a nice speech, although I still find it pretty hard not to laugh when he's trying to be inspirational, knowing that his actions have proven him to be pretty much the lowest kind of human scum imaginable (I'm exaggerating... a little). Eye-Guy of the future seems cool; I hope Aaron starts pushing his present counterpart in that direction over coming issues. The art was okay but it didn't really stand out to me. I hope Aaron fixes Broo soon too. The book's been a lot less fun since he got lobotomized.

Bonus super-late review: Avengers #11 was a very mixed bag. I have pretty much zero interest in Shang-Chi, but despite the cover, he wasn't really the focus of this issue anyway. Given the Avengers' massive roster, which includes plenty of covert ops specialists, the team chosen for this mission seems kind of weird aside from Spider-Woman and the Black Widow. That said, Hickman seemed to distill everything awful about the Black Widow into this issue. Seriously, I've never really liked that they have an assassin on the Avengers (let alone numerous ones at this point), but at least she used to play by the Avengers' rules; this issue she barely, grudgingly goes along with Captain Marvel's plan, which she deems unnecessarily complex because it doesn't involve gleefully prying a man's fingernails out of his hands. Ugh. The rest of the issue was cool, though. Everything with Sam and Bobby was great. I'm glad they've moved up to the big leagues but are still basically their usual selves. Mike Deodato's art was nails in my eyes, as usual, but he doesn't seem to be going away, so I'm learning to live with it.
 
Avengers: The Enemy Within #1 was good. Carol started drifting into whiny territory now and then, but DeConnick seemed to know exactly where the line between sympathetic and irritating was and had Spider-Woman step in a couple times to pep-talk Carol back to her normal self. Thor showed up, hit a dinosaur in the face, and looked after an old lady. I still don't know why this is a crossover thing instead of just a Captain Marvel story, but it is what it is.

To bring up sales of one of those books (most likely CM)?
 
Wolverine and the X-Men #29 was a pretty good follow-up to the ordeal with Dog. Wolverine gets a bit introspective and gives a nice speech, although I still find it pretty hard not to laugh when he's trying to be inspirational, knowing that his actions have proven him to be pretty much the lowest kind of human scum imaginable (I'm exaggerating... a little). Eye-Guy of the future seems cool; I hope Aaron starts pushing his present counterpart in that direction over coming issues. The art was okay but it didn't really stand out to me. I hope Aaron fixes Broo soon too. The book's been a lot less fun since he got lobotomized.

See, and this is why only Aaron and Remender should be allowed to touch Wolverine.
For every good bit of growth they give him, you have crap like Age of Ultron and AvX that makes him look like a total dumbass and a hypocrite
 
Nova #4- Again , just an "ok" issue. Good art, action issue, dialogue was especially juvenile. Stephen Whacker has said befor the book was intended for a teenage audience, but I'm wondering now if he meant a 6 year old audience.. because thats about the level we are on. It's a fairly basic and generic story that really is not dreadful, but really has nothing going for it that makes it memorable or worthy of looking forward to each month. I'm contemplating dropping the book at this point, especially with an upcoming preview of a "spiderman" cross over in issue #7. Not that i hate spiderman, cause i dont, but really getting away from that stigma and the kind of character who needs "spiderman crossovers" to "sell" Nova was everything Richard Rider stood for...and frankly everything the "Nova" franchise had built up to.

I'm not saying conceptually Loeb screwed up by creating a young legacy hero to fill Rider's shoes...he's just screwed up becuase he has literally made no effort to include the back history, supporting characters or even any slight sense that this is in any way connected to anything past Nova fans have read...and this by it's boldness,and frankly poor and disjointed execution is actually quite insulting. That and just plain Lazy continuity that we all know wont be explained or ever add up...it's for kids after all.

Case in point : The Chitauri, really not a horrible idea to put them in the 616...but really lazy in execution just some "cosmic bandits" never encountered before eh? Sloppy and Lazy.

A book for 8 year olds is a bad idea...Marvel adventures books sell 8k per week. You need something that appeals to all your fans and you never look a fanbase and take them for granted of a hero who has been around for almost 40 years now.

I've frankly gotten tired of the whole thing and basically I'm wondering why I'm reading this book every month.
 
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To bring up sales of one of those books (most likely CM)?
Probably. I hope it works, if that's the case. DeConnick's doing good work on that series.

See, and this is why only Aaron and Remender should be allowed to touch Wolverine.
For every good bit of growth they give him, you have crap like Age of Ultron and AvX that makes him look like a total dumbass and a hypocrite
Yeah, for Wolverine's WatXM characterization to actually work, he would need to stop making "kill [insert name here]!" his first solution to every problem. As it stands, I can't really take him seriously when he's trying to inspire kids in WatXM and murdering entire tribes of cavemen in Savage Wolverine in the same damn month.
 
Wolverine can't have his cake and eat it too.

But the problem is that people don't want this new Wolverine. He became popular because he was against the "man" and lived by his own rules. Now he is the "man." He's headmaster and practically best friends with Captain friggin' America. He's the authority now, not a rebel, but people still write him like it's the 80s.
 
That also puts a bit of a stain on Captain America, which irritates me. Obviously, different people write the characters differently, but taken as a whole it seems like Cap just lives in denial about who Wolverine is because Wolverine stays on his best behavior around Cap.
 
Just saw Star Trek Into Darkness. Great summer film that kicked Iron Man's butt! Don't wait for crowds to die down, because you won't want anyone to give away some of the really nice secrets that JJ kept hidden.
 
I'll probably go on Monday to see it. I'm glad it's good. I wasn't actually excited for it until the most recent trailer, which really focused on the exploration of Kirk's character flaws. Before that it seemed like more of the same from the first movie: a pretty but dumb generic sci fi movie whose only distinguishing characteristic was the Star Trek title.
 
As a Star Trek fan I hated it. Performances were fine but the story and script are a mess
 
Probably. I hope it works, if that's the case. DeConnick's doing good work on that series.

I like DeConnick though admittedy I'm not reading CM or AA...but I picked up the tie in....that's how they get you
 
Short week, but I guess those happen in months with 5 Wednesdays like this one. Spoilers ahoy.

DREAD'S BOUGHT/THOUGHT FOR 5/15/13:

AGE OF ULTRON #8: Marvel Comics' first of two crossover events for 2013 continues to peter out into realms of the absurd and convoluted from writer Brian Bendis, artist Brandon Peterson and colorist Paul Mounts. This event used to be about the robot Ultron who finally succeeded in taking over the world via launching an attack from the far future. While most of the heroes tried to fight the robot there (and failed), Wolverine and Invisible Woman traveled into the past to kill Ultron's creator, Hank Pym, before the robot was made. Figuring whatever happened to the time stream couldn't be as bad as rule under Ultron, the two have found a world ravaged by wars with Skrulls and a current campaign against Morgana Le Fay. One gets a glimpse of the new Defenders team of this world, the issue spends much of its time showcasing how badly Wolverine has screwed up.

Much like previous issues, much time is made trying to establish yet another parallel reality which is set to be undone by the conclusion of the series. Originally a series sold as the ultimate showdown against an evil robot, it's become a half hearted and poorly written time paradox story. Despite the idea of the universe punishing Wolverine for a drastic moral choice he made, he still has to sell lunchboxes so expect ramifications for him to be minor. In the end, it remains a lot of sound and fury, signifying nothing.

IRON MAN #10: By default, because this week's pull list was light, this installment of Kieron Gillen's relaunch of the main "Iron Man" comic book series is the best of the week for me in terms of content. It is the second issue of Gillen's "Iron Man" series to ship this month and also the second drawn by artist Dale Eaglesham and colorist Guru eFX (which is presumably a pen name). With the absence of regular artist (and the term is used loosely) Greg Land aside for covers, the quality of this series immediately improves. With the previous issue being a prelude, this issue kicks off the latest arc, "The Secret Origin of Tony Stark". As a disclaimer, this arc will essentially be a dose of "retroactive continuity" (or "retcon") which serves to not only capitalize on the popularity of the third film in theaters as well as the current push at Marvel to enhance their space franchises to lead up to "Guardians of the Galaxy" film next year. Thus, Gillen is mingling both by doing an "important" Iron Man story which also mingles him with the space elements of Marvel more so than simply making him a member of the "Guardians of the Galaxy" comic book team.

Iron Man is hardly new to drastic revelations regarding a "secret origin". Back in 1995, an Avengers crossover events called "The Crossing" seemingly revealed that the villain Kang the Conqueror had been manipulating Iron Man since his inception to utilize as a mole, which resulted in him being replaced by a teenage version from an alternate reality (seriously). By 1997, after more crossover events, Tony was sorted out back to his usual status quo. While it is doubtful that Gillen would do such a drastic thing to Iron Man, this story inserts some drastic revelations in regards to some affiliations that Tony's father Howard had, and the events leading up to his birth "half a lifetime ago". Under normal circumstances, this might be offensive to hardcore fans. However, under Gillen's pen, it becomes a caper story involving a team of experts that Howard Stark organizes dubbed the "the Stark 7" undergoing a heist at a Las Vegas casino run by alien mobsters.

Eaglesham has done work for Marvel Comics before, such as runs on "Fantastic Four" or "Steve Rogers: Super-Soldier", and continues on his stride here. There is a dilemma in that three of the major male characters in the story have mustaches, but aside for that, he manages to work with some complicated designs in terms of armor or some advanced technology as well as some grimy scenes in the casino. The mingling of the sci-fi elements with standard heist elements which were old hat even when the original "Ocean's 11" hit theaters shouldn't work, but it does in an entertaining fashion. In the end, this arc seems to be about a brilliant but desperate father making some strange allies in his attempt to save his son, and now the son is learning of those aforementioned deeds. This also seeks to add some weight to Stark's new enemy, the recorder robot 451, via using a "retcon", which has become a trend with many newer villains in comics.

The jury may still be out as to how well this story sorts out and how much its revelations help or hinder the overall narrative of Iron Man. For the moment, however, it is an interesting and entertaining ride, which is about all one could expect of an opening chapter. A long flashback story could be a bit absurd for a long arc, but it could work for a short one.
 
Dread... if a Bendis book is so bad that even I'VE dropped it... why in the world are YOU still buying it?! I thought you'd have been gone about the same time I was.
 
As a Star Trek fan I hated it. Performances were fine but the story and script are a mess
Interesting. As a Star Trek fan, I loved it. It delved much more into what makes Star Trek what it is than the previous Abrams movie.
 
Yeah, I've seen that and Star Trek, so I'm two for two with great movies. Looks like it's going to be a great summer if the trend continues. Hope Superman is just as good. :)
 

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