Short week to kick off July - so much so that I tried two new Marvel releases, and am glad I did. Spoilers ahoy!
DREAD'S BOUGHT/THOUGHT FOR 7/3/13:
AVENGERS A.I. #1: Branching off of the finale of "Age of Ultron", a more accurate title might be, "Hank Pym & the Robot Avengers". Only two characters of the six featured on the cover are or were actual Avengers, but these days anyone at Marvel is or was or can be. Sam Humphries ("Uncanny X-Force", "The Ultimates") adds another Marvel title to his writer's bibliography and Andre Lima Araujo handles the art. Araujo also drew the prelude issue to this last week, "Age of Ultron #10AU". The gist is that in designing a computer virus across time to defeat Ultron, Hank Pym unwittingly unleashed a rogue artificial intelligence (named "Dimitrios") across cyber space. SHIELD division chief Monica Chang hauls Pym in for questioning about it when it begins to take over military drones and launch random attacks on the country. Pym then deputizes longtime Avenger Vision alongside Victor Mancha (of "Runaways", who's Vision's cybernetic "brother") and a reprogrammed Doombot (one of Dr. Doom's robotic duplicates) to stop an attack on a hospital in Atlanta. Araujo's artwork bares some similarities to Khoi Pham, and is excellently colored by Frank D'Armata. The tone of the series is fun, with Mancha proving to be a very optimistic young hero and having a good dynamic with Vision. The Doombot acts as one would expect, and it does seem to be a public relations snafu to dispatch a robot dressed as the world's top super villain as a first responder. This title is probably a sign that the "Avengers" brand is being stretched thin and is currently the sixth comic with the word "Avengers" in the title. While it features lesser tier characters, it is a perfectly fine and entertaining superhero effort, reasonably priced offering a mix of new and old characters.
IRON MAN #12: At the very least, "The Secret Origin of Tony Stark" now includes an organized military operation against alien gangsters in Vegas. Writer Kieron Gillin, artist Dale Eaglesham and colorist Guru eFX cover the events leading up to Tony's birth as revealed by the robot recorder 451. The robot ensured that Tony would be born in the first place by tending to Maria Stark's difficult pregnancy, but now Howard and his posse of allies have to take out "the grays", a cabal of aliens posing as sleazy casino mobsters. There is a lot of action in this issue as well as more instances of 451's duplicity, and the ultimate revelation of his true plan to make Howard's son Tony into the ultimate weapon against space gods. This arc has been a drastic and over the top addition to Tony's origin, but at least it is more entertaining and better than "the Crossing" of the mid-90's (which claimed that Tony had been Kang's agent all along). It will remain to be seen how long other writers and editors run with it, though. The clash of styles ("Ocean's 11" meets "Men in Black") shouldn't work, but the artwork is exceptional and Gillen seems to hit the right chords.
SUPERIOR FOES OF SPIDER-MAN #1: After several years of failures, Marvel Comics in general and senior editor Stephen Wacker in particular have proven successful in launching (or re-launching) spin-off titles for "Amazing Spider-Man". The first stab at "Venom" as an ongoing title was the subject of the first "Point One Initiative" issue and is now nearing a 40th issue (see below). The clone character once known as the 90's era villain Kaine is now headlining a new "Scarlet Spider" series which is also nearing two years in length. Such runs are becoming rare for new and old franchises, much less spin-off titles. On the other hand, "Morbius the Living Vampire" saw poor sales right out of the gate and has been canceled as of issue nine. Long term sales for both "Venom" and "Scarlet Spider" are slowly eroding, and it is possible that both could eventually end, albeit after healthy runs. Regardless, now that "Amazing Spider-Man" has been relaunched as "Superior Spider-Man", Wacker is rolling the dice again with a caper series featuring a squad of lesser known villains from the web-slinger's rogues gallery.
The title itself pays homage to the 1991 mini series "Deadly Foes of Spider-Man" and its sequel from 1993, "Lethal Foes of Spider-Man". It is written by Nick Spencer ("Morning Glories", "Secret Avengers") and drawn by Steve Lieber (creator of "Whiteout"), alongside coloring by Rachelle Rosenberg. While this debut issue doesn't flow well with the current arc of "Superior Spider-Man" (considering the star character is supposed to be a cyborg), it works well within its own terms, which is the water mark for a new series. The tone is established right off the bat; this is not a series which stars anti-heroes or villains trying to go straight, but is a caper title following a squad of costumed criminals who aspire to gain a score and occasionally avenge themselves on Spider-Man with no delusions of conquest or murder.
The star of this issue (at least) is Fred Myers, a.k.a. Boomerang. A creation from Stan Lee and Jack Kirby from 1966, he actually started out fighting the Hulk and Iron Fist before he became permanently linked to Spider-Man's comics. His origin is recapped for newer readers, as a disgraced baseball pitcher who fell into being a gimmick super villain based on a terrible stereotype about his country of origin and the "Secret Empire". The rest of his team is introduced as "Sinister Syndicate" allies Speed-Demon and Shocker, a new female incarnation of the Beetle and Overdrive, one of Spider-Man's newer villains (circa Marvel's "Free Comic Book Day 2007" issue). Currently in prison, Myers manages to convince Speed-Demon and Shocker to run an errand for him which turns out to be an organized crime gambit. While the duo succeed and the rest of the gang even successfully bail Myers out, it turns out their "leader" has just sold them out to another boss character - Spider-Man's first costumed nemesis, the Chameleon.
Despite the premise of the series, the tone and execution of it focuses more on comedy that some would expect. This is not a gritty crime tale but one which fully embraces the fact that the crooks dress in colorful costumes and have exaggerated gimmicks - and usually get beaten up by Spider-Man a lot. The Shocker is painted as the team punching bag and chump, which could offend some fans of the character. In fairness, the character has been plagued by chronic paranoia and anxiety from near-death experiences for which he was seeing a shrink for, so this depiction isn't without support. Beetle and Overdrive don't do much and could border on the tokens of the team (the only woman and person of color of the gang, respectively), and hopefully future issues correct this. Antics include successful robberies of a pet shop and a comic book store, and prison chatter about pirates. Leiber's artwork and in particular some symbols used within may remind some of Matt Fraction's "Hawkeye" series, which also features caper style stories.
While the characters on the cover are hardly big names (and neither is the creative team compared to others), this has turned out into being a very funny debut issue featuring some lesser known characters. Wisely priced at $2.99, fans growing disinterested with "Superior Spider-Man" or fans of some of Spider-Man's villains, or simply fans seeking a fun book which isn't about crime-fighters, should give it a look.
VENOM #37: A strong contender for my "book of the week", writer Cullen Bunn continues his successful run on what has been "the spin-off that Rick Remender" built. He's settled Flash Thompson/Agent Venom in a new city and established a reliable supporting cast for him, and things seem to be rolling along well as this series few expected to last long will probably reach beyond a 40th issue. Thompson has settled into a simple life of being a high school coach by day, symbiote vigilante at night and taking things a day at a time. Unfortunately, he's earned the ire of Philly based crime boss Lord Ogre, being tracked by journalist Katy Kiernan and may have revealed his identity to trouble student/neighbor Andi. This issue continues this story by noting the fact that Lord Ogre has put a contract on Venom's life, and costumed assassins are coming out of the wood work to kill him on his nightly patrol. Bunn earns major "fanboy" points by dusting off three lame students of Taskmaster who debuted in "Amazing Spider-Man #367", circa 1992. Further cameo appearances include Constrictor, Lord Deathstrike (not to be confused with Lady Deathstrike or Death-Strike), and even Foolkiller. Artwork for the issue is by Kim Jacinto with colors by Lee Loughridge, and while Jacinto's style suits the tone of the issue and series, it isn't quite up to the standards of previous artists during this run. As the "grandfather" of recent Spider-Man spin-offs, "Venom" continues to offer strong stories around its violent and deeply flawed hero.