The Ongoing Bought/Thought! 2013

Yeah, I thought this was the best we've seen Hellion in years. He was my favorite New X-Man through that title, but then he just fell by the wayside. I liked that Coipel drew him looking like he used to in his old suit and short hair as apposed to the long haired jerk.

I'd love to see Wood writing a New X-Men book.
I agree, I like that look too. I was excited to see more of him after he lost his hands, but unfortunately he has been neglected the past couple of years. Wolverine and the X-men has been a poor substitute for a student book imo.
 
Oh, God yes. People keep calling Wolverine & the X-Men a student book but it isn't. It's a faculty book plus Quentin Quire and Idie. Everyone else are background characters.
 
it started out strong on the students, with Broo, Idie, Genesis, Kid Gladiator, and Quentin
they have taken a bit of a backseat though
and they never focused on the last generation of students at all, ie Hellion, Rockslide, Anole, etc

Really hoping Kid Gladiator comes back soon, he was fun
 
The series I'm enjoying the most right now is Legacy. Loving the new Thor run and the new Hulk is fantastic.
 
Kid Gladiator was he best! :D

Now for something that's not the best: Indestructible Hulk. I was psyched for this book when I heard Waid talk about it at a con last year but it's been boring as heck lately. I skipped the last 2 issues b/c Daredevil was in them(no DD for me please) and this week's issue kicks off some dumb time-travel arc. Zzzzzzzzz
 
The last week of July is a solid week overall. Onward with some spoilers!

DREAD'S BOUGHT/THOUGHT FOR 7/31/13:

TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES #24: "City Fall" enters its third chapter as writers Tom Waltz, Bobby Curnow, and Kevin Eastman alongside artist Mateus Santolouco (with longtime colorist Ronda Pattison) continue to build a tale of the epic rise of the Foot Clan. Dangerous when introduced during the first year of this great IDW Comics revival of the classic franchise, they've regrouped and become twice as dangerous as this series officially ends its second year. While Casey Jones recovers from his near mortal wounds, the Ninja Turtles (and Splinter) form an uneasy alliance with their enemies Old Hob and Slash to try to rescue Leonardo from the Shredder. Unfortunately, the feudal era warlord sees the young turtle (and not his granddaughter Karai) as a worthy heir, and has twisted him into our heroes' worst nightmare. Various seeds and characters introduced in previous arcs are sown for great effect in this affair. Highlights include Leonardo's great new design and Michelangelo's innocent attempt to befriend the beastly Slash - which actually pays off! In two years of stories, Waltz and Eastman have recreated a universe with ninjas, mutants, and reincarnated characters dueling in the streets of New York (with ties to alien empires) and it has all flowed together seamlessly. While the story has a lot of violent and grim moments, there are also always moments of levity to keep things from getting too bleak to bare. Viacom has a new TMNT cartoon on Nick and Michael Bay produces a new TMNT film to everyone's chagrin, but this fan's money, it is this IDW series which offers true TMNT enjoyment.

For the record, I think this issue ran about a week late since both Diamond and Comic Book Resources thought it was coming out last week. The 6 page preview was also available last week. But, so long as it ships the month it's supposed to, I don't usually care.

DAREDEVIL #29: Marvel Comics offers up a rare treat for the fifth Wednesday of July; a second issue of the Mark Waid written "Daredevil" which is up to snuff to usual issues. Usual colorist Javier Rodriguez fills in his second issue for Chris Samnee, and his artwork is up to the same standard as Samnee or some of the other great artist the series has been privy to. Having wrapped up a long running story line which led back to his first issue on this relaunched series, Waid has the task of trucking forward without making it seem as if he's making things up as he goes along. Thankfully, Waid is a master at making every page count and building stories which are simple on the surface but become more complex as one delves into them.

Matt Murdock was tasked with representing one of the most difficult clients of his legal career - the grown up bully who used to torment him as a child. Unfortunately, the creep was a former flunky of the white supremacist super villain organization "the Sons of the Serpent", who Daredevil last battled in issues of "Defenders" from 1975. Fighting a false arrest charge, Murdock soon finds that the evil group have infiltrated a Manhattan court-house when a number of the guards and police officers and even the judge prove to be members (or paid off flunkies) of the group. Very quickly, Daredevil is trapped in a court-house with a mortally wounded client and no where to turn - with a bomb ticking away as well! If there are any clues who to trust, Daredevil quickly realizes a weakness with dealing with white supremacist fanatics - they rarely accept minority flunkies.

Flanked by inks by Alvaro Lopez, the artwork by Rodriguez works incredibly well with pacing the action and suspense within the issue. Waid has often forged a close union with his artists on this series in terms of portraying Daredevil's radar powers as well as the general tone of the series, and Rodriguez is able to continue in that vein well. Considering there have been two regular artists before Samnee within two years, one wonders if Rodriguez may be being groomed to be the secondary artist on a regular basis. While the story may not be of the epic level as a crossover event, Waid works well with the more subtle suspense of being trapped in a building with enemies around every corner. The mystery unravels into something larger, which will lead to more exciting stories ahead.

It gets repetitive, but that doesn't stop it from being true. "Daredevil: The Man Without Fear" as relaunched and written by Mark Waid has become a shining example of Marvel superhero comics done right. Even with minor crossovers with other books here and there, the narrative quality never wavers and it often features some of the best artwork available for three dollars an issue. This is a seminal run unraveling before us, one which will stand on its own for years to come.

FEARLESS DEFENDERS #7: A fortnight ago, the previous issue of this plucky ladies themed "Defenders" relaunch seemed to strike a nerve with fans online due to killing off one of its new heroines. This issue written by Cullen Bunn picks up right after that controversial one, with beautiful fill in art by Stephanie Hans. It also will be the last issue priced at $2.99 as Marvel's editorial board seeks to hike the price to continue to print the book due to low sales. Unlike "Morbius the Living Vampire" or "Gambit", this book has gained some cult status despite its poor sales overall, and Marvel has responded. Rising the price a dollar won't extend the life of this book much (unless the upcoming "Infinity" crossover delivers a spike in sales), but it will increase the profits enough that this series may limp to a twelfth issue instead of being axed at a ninth. At any rate, this issue takes place in Valhalla, the mythical land of the dead for the Norse pantheon where archeologist Annabelle Riggs finds herself after a very noble sacrifice. Guilt-ridden, Valkyrie ventures into such lands to resurrect her, teaming up with fellow classic Defenders member Clea and ultimate reuniting Misty Knight with her friend. There is always a price for such things, which may remind some of the dynamic which used to exist between Rick Jones and Mar-Vell. Bunn writes an interesting take on Valhalla and how it may not be "heaven" for Riggs, but it is easy for Hans' artwork to steal the issue with its stunning beauty. So many people seemed to only notice this book when it did something controversial; will these same audiences pay attention when it's not?

INDESTRUCTIBLE HULK #11: A second dose of Mark Waid from Marvel this week as the latest arc of the solo Hulk title charges forward from the ashes of "Age of Ultron". While there is no team-up with Daredevil this time, the "Sons of the Serpent" show up to offer some cohesiveness with Waid's other major series. The finale of "Age of Ultron" suggested that the entire space/time continuum was collapsing due to far too many time-travel quests by various characters, and it seems Waid has picked up that ball to roll with. Bruce Banner discovers yet another hidden wing of SHIELD which is focuses entirely on attempting to manage time-travel affairs. A spare Thor villain is dusted off as aircraft and structures seem to be vanishing and reappearing in alternate time periods. This leads to a near suicide mission for the Hulk which ends with one of the most fun cliffhangers in ages. In three words: cowboys and dinosaurs. Artist Matteo Scalera and colorist Val Staples continue on the series from the last two issues, and they seem to be a good fit; Scalera seems to have a style which reads well alongside Lenil Yu, who helped launch this volume. This series still may not be as good a read as Waid's "Daredevil", it has managed to create a new status quo for the Hulk which capitalizes on "The Avengers" film without it being pandering - a notable feat.

VENOM #38: Yet another "double ship" month for one of "Amazing Spider-Man"'s longest running spin-offs in recent history, Cullen Bunn and artist Kim Jacinto with colorist Lee Loughridge continue on the uphill run on a book built by Rick Remender and Tom Fowler. Flash Thompson/Agent Venom has settled into Philly with a new job and a stable supporting cast, but still retains the same problems he usually always had. The local crime boss has declared open season on the vigilante, and costumed mercenaries are coming out of the wood work to slay him and cause trouble. Thompson is forced to accept aid from the shifty tabloid reporter Katy Kiernan to assemble a support team of his own. Unfortunately, it isn't in time to spare his trouble student (and neighbor) Andi from being stalked by his arch nemesis, Jack O'Lantern. The finale reveals that Agent Venom may be getting a new teenage partner; while "Amazing Spider-Man" attempted this last year with Alpha, it may work out better here since it has been built up for a longer period of time. Sales for this series are slipping dangerous close to cancelation territory, but this series seems set to hit a 45th issue, which is a more than worthy run for a bold take on an old character. Enjoy it while it lasts.

I also think, due to the trend of relaunches and reboots, this is one of the longest numbered volumes of a mainstream Marvel comics in print. 20k seems to be the mark for either cancellation, relaunch, or a price hike and this series is nearing that.
 
Colossal Spoons said:
Stuff Spoons said.

Daredevil rocks :(

I loved the first two issues of Indestructible Hulk, but then I heard the artst (who I love) was switching to another artist (who I don't love), so I dropped it. If Yu would have stayed on, I'd likely still be buying it.
 
Oh, God yes. People keep calling Wolverine & the X-Men a student book but it isn't. It's a faculty book plus Quentin Quire and Idie. Everyone else are background characters.
That's why Aaron is going to be writing Amazing X-Men as well to allow the faculty to be X-Men while allowing Wolverine & the X-Men to be a school book about the faculty and students.
 
Yeah, because that's what we need... another book about the faculty (as apposed to All New X-Men, Astonishing X-Men, or adjectiveless X-Men). We have Wolverine & the X-Men with some faculty and certain students, then All New X-Men with the same faculty and different students, and then Uncanny X-Men with different faculty and different students.

How about just giving us a student book? Or better yet, move some older students away from the X-Men to become their own thing i.e. New Mutants/X-Force. The New X-Men students are just wasting away and have been for years. Hellion, Rockslide, Anole, etc. Put the old band back together.
 
I really love All New X-Men and the new X-Men title. I do hope after this Hellfire club arc is over in Wolverine and the X-Men that it moves to a more student school based book again since Amazing X-Men will be taking over Astonishing X-Men as the Marvel NOW Wolverine team book.

On another note I love the new Nova and Guardians books. I know everyone loves Rider (I found him cool in the few things I've read) but I take the new Nova for what it is: a book about a new, different teenage Nova. Plus I just find the book to be light teenage fun. In a time where almost all of Marvel's books are darker and grittier (I mean, a mutant revolutionist Cyclops, a mutant hating world, a young hero battle royal style book, Hickman's run on Avengers and New Avengers) it's nice to get a light fun read in Nova.

Even though I'm a new reader (since Bendis' Avengers Disassembled storyline) I think it's a great time to be a Marvel reader.
 
Yeah, because that's what we need... another book about the faculty (as apposed to All New X-Men, Astonishing X-Men, or adjectiveless X-Men). We have Wolverine & the X-Men with some faculty and certain students, then All New X-Men with the same faculty and different students, and then Uncanny X-Men with different faculty and different students.

How about just giving us a student book? Or better yet, move some older students away from the X-Men to become their own thing i.e. New Mutants/X-Force. The New X-Men students are just wasting away and have been for years. Hellion, Rockslide, Anole, etc. Put the old band back together.

Marvel probably thinks we should be thankful those students are still alive :o

I'm sure the trigger finger in the x-office is getting itchy for another mass X-kids massacre.
 
Marvel probably thinks we should be thankful those students are still alive :o

I'm sure the trigger finger in the x-office is getting itchy for another mass X-kids massacre.
I'm sure not everyone is going to survive the Hellfire Club arc in WatXM. And have you read Avengers Arena? I think Marvel has a thing against teen heroes lol.
 
How about they just make a new X-book called Generation X.

Bring back Jubilee, M, Chamber, and resurrect Synch all as mentors.

Then add in a mixture of newer students and the X-Men Academy crew.

I miss Generation X. :(
 
Daredevil rocks :(

I loved the first two issues of Indestructible Hulk, but then I heard the artst (who I love) was switching to another artist (who I don't love), so I dropped it. If Yu would have stayed on, I'd likely still be buying it.

Daredevil does rock. It's consistently one of the if not THE best Marvel Comic I read. Waid's having a yeoman, franchise run on it, and it needed that investment and talent badly.

Indestructible Hulk isn't as good, and it has switched artists a few times. I still enjoy it, although it's very much "Waid's OTHER Marvel book" to me.
 
Most guys can't write more than one thing at a time without one of them taking a hit in quality. It seems like nobody at Marvel has the stones to tell them that. So for every great book at Marvel, there's a mediocre one.
 
Most guys can't write more than one thing at a time without one of them taking a hit in quality. It seems like nobody at Marvel has the stones to tell them that. So for every great book at Marvel, there's a mediocre one.
I hear people getting on Fraction now but he definitely was able to write Iron Man and Uncanny X-Men, two totally separate books, and they were both still great books. Especially his run on Iron Man.
 
I wouldn't be so sure about Fraction's Uncanny run. A lot of people felt it was substandard.
 
I wouldn't be so sure about Fraction's Uncanny run. A lot of people felt it was substandard.
I guess since I was only introduced to the book during his run I can't really say much lol. But I did enjoy it. Though I do think Bendis' run on both X books right now are better so far. I love how All New X-Men and Uncanny X-Men are basically two sides to the same coin (I wouldn't call WatXM the flip side to Uncanny personally). It's interesting to see both sides of the story.
 
Last edited:
How about they just make a new X-book called Generation X.

Bring back Jubilee, M, Chamber, and resurrect Synch all as mentors.

Then add in a mixture of newer students and the X-Men Academy crew.

I miss Generation X. :(

I would love that but I think Marvel hates Gen X. That generation of X-Men are not held in as high regard as the New Mutants were.
 
How about they just make a new X-book called Generation X.

Bring back Jubilee, M, Chamber, and resurrect Synch all as mentors.

Then add in a mixture of newer students and the X-Men Academy crew.

I miss Generation X. :(

I'd be all for that. Chamber has teaching experience. M's cockiness could be fun to see with students. Jubilee's developing maternal instincts. Synch (or better yet, Skin due to his personality) could be interesting when facing the dilemma of teaching kids to be heroes when the same path led to their deaths. Then again, he'd relate to them with what they've been through.

Dread said:
Daredevil does rock. It's consistently one of the if not THE best Marvel Comic I read. Waid's having a yeoman, franchise run on it, and it needed that investment and talent badly.

Indestructible Hulk isn't as good, and it has switched artists a few times. I still enjoy it, although it's very much "Waid's OTHER Marvel book" to me.

I actually prefer Bendis, Brubaker, and Diggle's runs over Waid's. It's still good, just a different kind of good.
 
really getting miffed with Marvel. EVERY time there's a big crossover, Thor books suffer in some way. Now J.I.M. is being cancled because of the next danged crossover
 
I'm sure not everyone is going to survive the Hellfire Club arc in WatXM. And have you read Avengers Arena? I think Marvel has a thing against teen heroes lol.

I'd love it if Idie and pretty much all Gen Hope kids bit the bullet.
 
I don't mind Idie but the Gen Hope kids can definitely eat a sentinel fist.
 
Idie is a Gen Hope kid... so yeah, kill 'em all. The only one I found interesting was Zero and he's not around anymore.
 
Dang, I actually liked the Gen Hope kids. Idie is an interesting case. While I hate her self loathing with a passion, it's interesting to see just where they take her character. With the push she's getting I think she'll be the most developed out of all the Gen Hope kids.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Members online

Latest posts

Forum statistics

Threads
202,268
Messages
22,077,215
Members
45,876
Latest member
Crazygamer3011
Back
Top
monitoring_string = "afb8e5d7348ab9e99f73cba908f10802"