Comics The TB (X-Men style) (Spoiler Warning)

DC is the only ones that do that now:( Identity Crisis will have cross overs in many books. Flash and Teen Titans are some of the best pure Superhero titles on the market. If you haven't tried them....please do. Geoff Johns is the master of modern comics IMO. His work on JSA is awesome as well. It's a shame he doesn't write X-men. He's probably the only modern writer that LOVES continuity and uses it in a way it doesn't confuse readers.
 
Originally posted by Dwarf lord
thank you, Gandalf (this is you right?)

yes, well of course you already know that by now :) :o :p
 
Over at DC, I'm reading Teen Titans, The Outsiders, Green Arrow, Aquaman and Superman/Batman - all good reads. I also just started reading the three main Superman titles again to get up to speed for the big "revision" that's coming. These have all been pretty damn entertaing too. I tend to do that with Supes...i'll collect all the main titles for a while and really enjoy them, then get bored after a couple of years and drop them, then come back into the fold again a couple of years later. Love the character but unless there is a major change in the works or an earth shattering story line, he gets boring. Can't wait to read the Return of supergirl by Turner in Superman/Batman. i used to collect The Flash but stopped around issue 50. I'll have to give it a shot again as I hear nothing but good things. i agree, Geoff Johns is one heck of a writer!
 
Originally posted by Lord Blackbolt
It was this commercial necessity that almost brought comics to their doom in the 90's. The silver-folded, multiple covers and tons of new and useless relaunches is what caused comics to LOSE readership. One of those readers included me. Then years later....they actually decided to put Quality into books again... It was the quality that brought me back. I feel the needless gimmicks are what Marvel is ALL about now IMO. I feel they should think quality first and then money second. This is the only way you will keep readers. This kind of additude is what failed the early Image comics as well. Every few years they relaunched their books too. Now....most of those books have all been forgotten.

And come on. Marvel is a multi-million dollar company now. They own Toy Biz, which is one of the top selling toy companys out there. Also a production company "Marvel Films," That brings in millions. As well as their Theme Park at Universal. Not to mention video games and all those T-shirts, mugs, and other products.

Their current business structure at the comics side is too short sided IMO and it doesn't seem to focus more on the long term.

For instance. What do relaunches accomplish? Look at the Wolverine relaunch. Sure when it was relaunched it raised sales........for the first few issues. Look at the sales now....roughly it's the same as it was before the relaunch. All relaunches do the same thing. You don't NEED a new number one issue to help a comic. Batman proved that. Issue 502 or 705 was like the number 1 comic of that month.

Marvel's thinking is just too illogical to me.

I have to agree with you there, it's all about the money for marvel, saying there isn't enough so they have to jack prices of certain titles, or relaunch there comics for more profit, I only wish that there title prices would go down :(, that's what really infuriates me :mad:

btw: Lord Blackbolt, your Batman 2 wallpaper from page32 kicks some serious ass! :cool: :up:
 
At DC I get:
Batman
Superman
Flash
Green Arrow
Teen Titans (Starting this week)
Green Lantern
JLA

And what is it with Marvel re launches. Look at Batman and the Adventures of Superman. They are at issue 600+. And I am pissed about Avengers going back to #1 again.
 
i have the batman/superman issues and the teen titans, and i just got the new arc with the JLA and i do enjoy them. i may sound ignorant but these titles seem to be not as confusing as the marvel ones
 
Those are some pretty low continuity titles. There are others that are harder to understand. I recomend Green Arrow to everyone
 
Originally posted by Slipstream
Over at DC, I'm reading Teen Titans, The Outsiders, Green Arrow, Aquaman and Superman/Batman - all good reads. I also just started reading the three main Superman titles again to get up to speed for the big "revision" that's coming. These have all been pretty damn entertaing too. I tend to do that with Supes...i'll collect all the main titles for a while and really enjoy them, then get bored after a couple of years and drop them, then come back into the fold again a couple of years later. Love the character but unless there is a major change in the works or an earth shattering story line, he gets boring. Can't wait to read the Return of supergirl by Turner in Superman/Batman. i used to collect The Flash but stopped around issue 50. I'll have to give it a shot again as I hear nothing but good things. i agree, Geoff Johns is one heck of a writer!

Damn good. If you want to get into John's Flash....try and find issue 207. It's a start of a new arc and a jumping on point for new readers. When the Blitz arc comes out in trade....grab it. It was voted the best arc for 2003 by many sites and magazines
 
Originally posted by Erundur
I have to agree with you there, it's all about the money for marvel, saying there isn't enough so they have to jack prices of certain titles, or relaunch there comics for more profit, I only wish that there title prices would go down :(, that's what really infuriates me :mad:

btw: Lord Blackbolt, your Batman 2 wallpaper from page32 kicks some serious ass! :cool: :up:

Thanks. You are our 100 memeber.:D
 
I can't believe Avengers is getting relaunched! And of all people Bendis gets it. I just hate him.
 
If Stan Lee is the father of the X-Men, then Chris Claremont must be the Don Vito Corleone of Marvel’s mutants.

Claremont first wrote the adventures of Marvel’s merry band of mutants in the pages of X-Men #94 (now known as Uncanny X-Men) in 1975. Over the years, his stories such as God Loves, Man Kills (which originally appeared in Marvel Graphic Novel #5), “The Dark Phoenix Saga”, “Days of Future Past”, “Mutant Massacre”, “Inferno”, “X-Tinction Agenda” and others have been cult favorites among fans of the X.

Not to mention over twenty years’ worth of monthly stories.

During the 1980s, the creator also introduced the New Mutants in Marvel Graphic Novel #4: The New Mutants in 1982 and subsequently wrote the New Mutants series for 54 consecutive issues from 1983 to 1987, including a few Annuals, a Special Edition and a return to the series on two occasions later on. His four-issue Wolverine limited series with artist Frank Miller became such a phenomenon, it's fame continuing even to this day.

In 1987, Claremont and Davis collaborated on Excalibur Special Edition and later on, the both of them worked on the new Excalibur series that further chronicled the adventures of Captain Britain, Meggan, Nightcrawler, Phoenix (Rachel Summers), Shadowcat and a few additions along the way.

X-Men fever peaked in 1991 when Claremont and super-hot artist Jim Lee launched a brand-new X-Men #1. However, the era of Chris Claremont’s X-Men ended when the writer left the series (and his mutants) after just three issues.

His return to the world of the X-Men began with Wolverine #125, where Wolverine and Viper married in the four-part arc in 1998. A year later, in X-Men #95, he was a part of the Revolution event that ran through all of Marvel’s X-titles.

2001 saw the writer and artist Salvador Larroca launch a new X-Men series, X-Treme X-Men. With the already announced cancellation of X-Treme in April’s issue #46, Claremont is once again involved in the X-event of the year.

This May, as part of May’s Reload of the X-Men titles, Claremont is once again back on board Uncanny X-Men, this time with Marvel exclusive artist and former Excalibur collaborator Alan Davis. The veteran X-scribe is also relaunching Excalibur with artist Aaron Lopresti.

We spoke with Claremont about both.

Uncanny X-Men

“What goes around comes around,” Claremont told Newsarama. “It’s bittersweet to bring X-Treme to an end, when it feels like the series was only just getting started and we were in the process of building our momentum through a really exciting series of stories.

“On the other hand, only an idiot would complain about (a) the opportunity to work with Alan Davis and (b) work with him on what I’ve always considered the flagship book of the X-Canon, especially since it appears I’m coming onto the title 350 issues after I took it over for the first time,way back in the day!”

Apart from the fact that it’s 350 issues after his first love, what does he have in mind for Uncanny this time? “By surprising the readers — in a good way. I’m older, I’m – hopefully - wiser, I’m - even more hopefully - better at my craft.

The first arc of his return to Uncanny runs for four issues, Claremont said. “It establishes the status quo and mission statement of the series, introduces the characters and some potential conflicts and sends them up against a number of adversaries, all of whom will have significance down the road, culminating in an encounter with a significantly major villain who in the past has proved to be well-nigh unstoppable - but only because he was written back in the day by Alan Moore. There’s also some equally significant quiet time, hopefully containing some delightful surprises in terms of character interaction. And a surprise guest-star who has nothing to do with the X-Canon but has major past connections with a number of the characters.

”Then, with the second arc, we up the ante big-time, in preparation for the upcoming Uncanny #450!”

As for his roster, “the only ones I’m prepared - or allowed - to confirm at this time are Storm, Bishop and Sage.

“In one sense, one might view this trio of characters, Storm, Bishop and Sage, as representing the three major eras of Uncanny, post #94: Storm, of course, dates from the very beginning, Bishop represents the era after I left the series, and Marvel, in 1991, while Sage came into the team with the 21st century. Storm represents Xavier’s Dream from the perspective of elemental passion, as an evocation and personification of the planetary life-force, while Bishop is an inheritor of it, having come from a somewhat dystopic future wherein the Dream remains as-yet unfulfilled. Sage represents the passion of intellect. She is someone who embraced the Dream early on, it’s as seminal a defining force in her life as the other X-Men’s, but has — through force of circumstance and necessity — chosen to stand apart from it for most of her adult life, to the point of standing alongside some of the team’s most formidable adversaries, the Hellfire Club, for much of that time. They each speak to different aspects of the theme of the series and to me as the writer. For anything more than that, I’m afraid you’ll have to read the books.

As for a list of characters or possibilities for filling out his roster or storylines, we ran some ideas by Claremont:

Nightcrawler — “spoken for”

Colossus -- “isn’t he dead?”

Banshee — “always interested”

Wolverine — “always interested, but spoken for at least four times over!”

Dazzler — “always interested”

Longshot — “always interested”

Shadowcat – “incredibly silly question, but also incredibly and proprietarily spoken for”

Rogue — “equally silly question but also incredibly spoken for”

Gambit — “equally silly question but also incredibly spoken for”

Psylocke — “isn’t she dead???”

Forge — “spoken for”

Jubilee — “spoken for”

Cable — “spoken for”

Cannonball — “always interested, but spoken for”

Sunspot — “always interested”

Dani — “always interested, but spoken for”

Karma – “likewise”

Rahne – “likewise”

Lifeguard — “always interested”

Neal — “always interested”

Juggernaut — “spoken for”

Sinister — “spoken for all over the place, yes?”

Starjammers — “spoken for, big-time”

The Shi’ar — “always interested”

The Brood — “always interested”

The Hellfire Club — “always interested”

”The problem here is that I have a structural plan in place that will take Uncanny up to around #470, which is easily the middle of next year, depending on how the bi-weekly formula is applied,” Claremont said. “I have stories and characters all lined up. But the same held true for X-Treme, from the very beginning — Editor Matt Hicks and I spend the better part of six months building the first couple of years of the series, and me writing the first dozen issues — only to have the whole structure totally crashed before the first issue was even finished. Fortunately, thank Heaven, it looks highly unlikely that history will repeat itself. We’re off to a great start and hope to remain on-track throughout.

“The point I’m making is this — comics are a periodical medium. We have to plan ahead but at the same time remain totally receptive to changes in the publishing environment, publishing philosophy and policy, what works in the market place, what does not. A character might catch fire and move from the crowd to center-stage, as Wolverine did, as Sage appears to be doing, resulting in a reorientation of stories to reflect that. A character may abruptly vanish, as Beast did. A character may crash and burn, as Neal Shaara did, suggesting we not emphasize him, unduly in future.

”Or, goodness gracious, I - or my editor, or my penciller - may just come up with a better idea. You adapt to the world around you and the circumstances, as a major league baseball manager does when structuring his daily line-up. I could tell you just about anything right about now, secure in the knowledge that in the normal course of events those plans will end up changing pretty much beyond all recognition. That’s why the creative process and the X-Men have so much in common — they’re all about the ongoing process of evolution.

”By the way, did I mention that my debut issue this time around marks 350 issues since I first started writing Uncanny - or ‘All-New, All-Different’ as it was known then? How time flies!”

Excalibur

While the original Excalibur formed in the wake of “Fall of the Mutants” and brought together X-characters Nightcrawler, Kitty Pryde, Rachel Summers, Lockheed and teamed them up with Captain Britain, Meggan and later on, Widget, the new Excalibur is the sole responsibility of the man who started it all back in the 1960s: Professor X himself.

“With the announcement that X-Treme would be cancelled, Igor [Kordey] and I were kicking around the idea of what to do next. I had some thoughts that had been percolating for some time, that I’d been planning for X-Treme, that synergized with the news that Charley [i.e. Professor Xavier] would be leaving Uncanny after Grant’s run. I pitched Editor Mike Marts, who pitched Editor-in-Chief Joe Quesada, and we got a green light for the book. In and around finishing ‘Storm: Arena’ and then ‘Bogan,’ Igor and I began constructing the world we wanted to create on Genosha, the visual feel for the book, the type of characters who’d live there and the stories we’d tell. We were going great guns. Now, due to circumstances wholly beyond his control, Aaron Lopresti has to play six months worth of pre-production catch-up in half as many weeks, which is a challenge I wouldn’t wish on anyone but one which he’s embraced enthusiastically. So, despite all the speed-bumps, I think the book will be off to a great start.”

After being under the X-Men umbrella on and off all these years, the time has come for Xavier to really let loose and take control amidst the Genoshan ruins. What brought him to the Genoshan Ground Zero, the place where 16 million of the population was killed in Morrison's “E is for Extinction” arc? How has his ideals and visions changed, if at all? Is there still a dream to fight for?

“I suspect he has a far more graphic and literal sense of the consequences of failure, which in turn leaves him that much more committed to the ideals of his dream,” Claremont said. “To my eye, this is Xavier very much as an active, action hero, regardless of the fact that he’s a functional paraplegic. This is - I hope - where we get to see the reason why teenagers were willing to commit to him, and his dream, so wholeheartedly that he became, and remains, the defining thrust of their lives. What is there about him that makes him so irresistibly charismatic and admirable? But at the same time what aspect of him allows him to place children in positions of such ongoing peril? To me, these are questions that have never been addressed much less answered. This is where I’d like to start.

“Read the next couple of issues of X-Men and Uncanny. They’ll answer part of the question far better than I. As for the rest of the answer, read Excalibur!”

[Newsarama note: In April’s “Of Darkest Nights” two-parter in Uncanny X-Men #442 and #443, writer Chuck Austen brings Professor X to Genosha “to memorialize his greatest foe and oldest friend [Magneto].”]

The first Excalibur arc is currently slated for four issues, although that may change as Claremont and Lopresti “get more in sync. Basically, it deals with Charley’s first days on the island, introducing the setting, certain characters, certain adversaries, stuff like that. There’s a moment with Unus the Untouchable that I really can’t wait to see. There’ll be some surprises - I hope - and, a real treat for me, the opportunity to once more work regularly with my favorite letterer - and in my eyes the best in the business, Tom Orzechowski. Greedy sod that I am, if I could get him assigned to all my books, it would be a happy, happy day. But I’ll settle for the one we’ve got. For the moment.”
 
Originally posted by Dwarf lord
I can't believe Avengers is getting relaunched! And of all people Bendis gets it. I just hate him.

I don't hate him....I just don't want to read anything he writes....lol;)
 
Originally posted by Lord Blackbolt
I don't hate him....I just don't want to read anything he writes....lol;)

I like bendis, but his dialogue can get kind of annoying, adding every single word :mad:

"are you sure?"
"yeah"
"really?"
"yeah"
"really, really?"
"dude"
"okay, as long as your sure"
"dude stop"

it gets annoying after a while :o :mad:
 
Originally posted by Dwarf lord
If Stan Lee is the father of the X-Men, then Chris Claremont must be the Don Vito Corleone of Marvel’s mutants.

Claremont first wrote the adventures of Marvel’s merry band of mutants in the pages of X-Men #94 (now known as Uncanny X-Men) in 1975. Over the years, his stories such as God Loves, Man Kills (which originally appeared in Marvel Graphic Novel #5), “The Dark Phoenix Saga”, “Days of Future Past”, “Mutant Massacre”, “Inferno”, “X-Tinction Agenda” and others have been cult favorites among fans of the X.

Not to mention over twenty years’ worth of monthly stories.

During the 1980s, the creator also introduced the New Mutants in Marvel Graphic Novel #4: The New Mutants in 1982 and subsequently wrote the New Mutants series for 54 consecutive issues from 1983 to 1987, including a few Annuals, a Special Edition and a return to the series on two occasions later on. His four-issue Wolverine limited series with artist Frank Miller became such a phenomenon, it's fame continuing even to this day.

In 1987, Claremont and Davis collaborated on Excalibur Special Edition and later on, the both of them worked on the new Excalibur series that further chronicled the adventures of Captain Britain, Meggan, Nightcrawler, Phoenix (Rachel Summers), Shadowcat and a few additions along the way.

X-Men fever peaked in 1991 when Claremont and super-hot artist Jim Lee launched a brand-new X-Men #1. However, the era of Chris Claremont’s X-Men ended when the writer left the series (and his mutants) after just three issues.

His return to the world of the X-Men began with Wolverine #125, where Wolverine and Viper married in the four-part arc in 1998. A year later, in X-Men #95, he was a part of the Revolution event that ran through all of Marvel’s X-titles.

2001 saw the writer and artist Salvador Larroca launch a new X-Men series, X-Treme X-Men. With the already announced cancellation of X-Treme in April’s issue #46, Claremont is once again involved in the X-event of the year.

This May, as part of May’s Reload of the X-Men titles, Claremont is once again back on board Uncanny X-Men, this time with Marvel exclusive artist and former Excalibur collaborator Alan Davis. The veteran X-scribe is also relaunching Excalibur with artist Aaron Lopresti.

We spoke with Claremont about both.

Uncanny X-Men

“What goes around comes around,” Claremont told Newsarama. “It’s bittersweet to bring X-Treme to an end, when it feels like the series was only just getting started and we were in the process of building our momentum through a really exciting series of stories.

“On the other hand, only an idiot would complain about (a) the opportunity to work with Alan Davis and (b) work with him on what I’ve always considered the flagship book of the X-Canon, especially since it appears I’m coming onto the title 350 issues after I took it over for the first time,way back in the day!”

Apart from the fact that it’s 350 issues after his first love, what does he have in mind for Uncanny this time? “By surprising the readers — in a good way. I’m older, I’m – hopefully - wiser, I’m - even more hopefully - better at my craft.

The first arc of his return to Uncanny runs for four issues, Claremont said. “It establishes the status quo and mission statement of the series, introduces the characters and some potential conflicts and sends them up against a number of adversaries, all of whom will have significance down the road, culminating in an encounter with a significantly major villain who in the past has proved to be well-nigh unstoppable - but only because he was written back in the day by Alan Moore. There’s also some equally significant quiet time, hopefully containing some delightful surprises in terms of character interaction. And a surprise guest-star who has nothing to do with the X-Canon but has major past connections with a number of the characters.

”Then, with the second arc, we up the ante big-time, in preparation for the upcoming Uncanny #450!”

As for his roster, “the only ones I’m prepared - or allowed - to confirm at this time are Storm, Bishop and Sage.

“In one sense, one might view this trio of characters, Storm, Bishop and Sage, as representing the three major eras of Uncanny, post #94: Storm, of course, dates from the very beginning, Bishop represents the era after I left the series, and Marvel, in 1991, while Sage came into the team with the 21st century. Storm represents Xavier’s Dream from the perspective of elemental passion, as an evocation and personification of the planetary life-force, while Bishop is an inheritor of it, having come from a somewhat dystopic future wherein the Dream remains as-yet unfulfilled. Sage represents the passion of intellect. She is someone who embraced the Dream early on, it’s as seminal a defining force in her life as the other X-Men’s, but has — through force of circumstance and necessity — chosen to stand apart from it for most of her adult life, to the point of standing alongside some of the team’s most formidable adversaries, the Hellfire Club, for much of that time. They each speak to different aspects of the theme of the series and to me as the writer. For anything more than that, I’m afraid you’ll have to read the books.

As for a list of characters or possibilities for filling out his roster or storylines, we ran some ideas by Claremont:

Nightcrawler — “spoken for”

Colossus -- “isn’t he dead?”

Banshee — “always interested”

Wolverine — “always interested, but spoken for at least four times over!”

Dazzler — “always interested”

Longshot — “always interested”

Shadowcat – “incredibly silly question, but also incredibly and proprietarily spoken for”

Rogue — “equally silly question but also incredibly spoken for”

Gambit — “equally silly question but also incredibly spoken for”

Psylocke — “isn’t she dead???”

Forge — “spoken for”

Jubilee — “spoken for”

Cable — “spoken for”

Cannonball — “always interested, but spoken for”

Sunspot — “always interested”

Dani — “always interested, but spoken for”

Karma – “likewise”

Rahne – “likewise”

Lifeguard — “always interested”

Neal — “always interested”

Juggernaut — “spoken for”

Sinister — “spoken for all over the place, yes?”

Starjammers — “spoken for, big-time”

The Shi’ar — “always interested”

The Brood — “always interested”

The Hellfire Club — “always interested”

”The problem here is that I have a structural plan in place that will take Uncanny up to around #470, which is easily the middle of next year, depending on how the bi-weekly formula is applied,” Claremont said. “I have stories and characters all lined up. But the same held true for X-Treme, from the very beginning — Editor Matt Hicks and I spend the better part of six months building the first couple of years of the series, and me writing the first dozen issues — only to have the whole structure totally crashed before the first issue was even finished. Fortunately, thank Heaven, it looks highly unlikely that history will repeat itself. We’re off to a great start and hope to remain on-track throughout.

“The point I’m making is this — comics are a periodical medium. We have to plan ahead but at the same time remain totally receptive to changes in the publishing environment, publishing philosophy and policy, what works in the market place, what does not. A character might catch fire and move from the crowd to center-stage, as Wolverine did, as Sage appears to be doing, resulting in a reorientation of stories to reflect that. A character may abruptly vanish, as Beast did. A character may crash and burn, as Neal Shaara did, suggesting we not emphasize him, unduly in future.

”Or, goodness gracious, I - or my editor, or my penciller - may just come up with a better idea. You adapt to the world around you and the circumstances, as a major league baseball manager does when structuring his daily line-up. I could tell you just about anything right about now, secure in the knowledge that in the normal course of events those plans will end up changing pretty much beyond all recognition. That’s why the creative process and the X-Men have so much in common — they’re all about the ongoing process of evolution.

”By the way, did I mention that my debut issue this time around marks 350 issues since I first started writing Uncanny - or ‘All-New, All-Different’ as it was known then? How time flies!”

Excalibur

While the original Excalibur formed in the wake of “Fall of the Mutants” and brought together X-characters Nightcrawler, Kitty Pryde, Rachel Summers, Lockheed and teamed them up with Captain Britain, Meggan and later on, Widget, the new Excalibur is the sole responsibility of the man who started it all back in the 1960s: Professor X himself.

“With the announcement that X-Treme would be cancelled, Igor [Kordey] and I were kicking around the idea of what to do next. I had some thoughts that had been percolating for some time, that I’d been planning for X-Treme, that synergized with the news that Charley [i.e. Professor Xavier] would be leaving Uncanny after Grant’s run. I pitched Editor Mike Marts, who pitched Editor-in-Chief Joe Quesada, and we got a green light for the book. In and around finishing ‘Storm: Arena’ and then ‘Bogan,’ Igor and I began constructing the world we wanted to create on Genosha, the visual feel for the book, the type of characters who’d live there and the stories we’d tell. We were going great guns. Now, due to circumstances wholly beyond his control, Aaron Lopresti has to play six months worth of pre-production catch-up in half as many weeks, which is a challenge I wouldn’t wish on anyone but one which he’s embraced enthusiastically. So, despite all the speed-bumps, I think the book will be off to a great start.”

After being under the X-Men umbrella on and off all these years, the time has come for Xavier to really let loose and take control amidst the Genoshan ruins. What brought him to the Genoshan Ground Zero, the place where 16 million of the population was killed in Morrison's “E is for Extinction” arc? How has his ideals and visions changed, if at all? Is there still a dream to fight for?

“I suspect he has a far more graphic and literal sense of the consequences of failure, which in turn leaves him that much more committed to the ideals of his dream,” Claremont said. “To my eye, this is Xavier very much as an active, action hero, regardless of the fact that he’s a functional paraplegic. This is - I hope - where we get to see the reason why teenagers were willing to commit to him, and his dream, so wholeheartedly that he became, and remains, the defining thrust of their lives. What is there about him that makes him so irresistibly charismatic and admirable? But at the same time what aspect of him allows him to place children in positions of such ongoing peril? To me, these are questions that have never been addressed much less answered. This is where I’d like to start.

“Read the next couple of issues of X-Men and Uncanny. They’ll answer part of the question far better than I. As for the rest of the answer, read Excalibur!”

[Newsarama note: In April’s “Of Darkest Nights” two-parter in Uncanny X-Men #442 and #443, writer Chuck Austen brings Professor X to Genosha “to memorialize his greatest foe and oldest friend [Magneto].”]

The first Excalibur arc is currently slated for four issues, although that may change as Claremont and Lopresti “get more in sync. Basically, it deals with Charley’s first days on the island, introducing the setting, certain characters, certain adversaries, stuff like that. There’s a moment with Unus the Untouchable that I really can’t wait to see. There’ll be some surprises - I hope - and, a real treat for me, the opportunity to once more work regularly with my favorite letterer - and in my eyes the best in the business, Tom Orzechowski. Greedy sod that I am, if I could get him assigned to all my books, it would be a happy, happy day. But I’ll settle for the one we’ve got. For the moment.”

Dwarfy, there is already a thread I started concerning this called "Claremont Speaks". Please post your comments there.

Thanks :D
 
Hey, there's some real attitude for a "newbie". My guess is you're one of the regular jackasses with a new screen name.
 
Originally posted by Slipstream
Dwarfy, there is already a thread I started concerning this called "Claremont Speaks". Please post your comments there.

Thanks :D

Sorry, Fellow Claremont fan. I ussally only go to this page on the X-boards but some times go to find some info that i cannot get on Newsrama.
 
Startjammers - Spoken For, Big Time.




Sweeeeeeeeet. The Starjammers are the freeking best.

Anyone know where they are going to be showing up?
 
UNCX445_covcol.jpg

Uncanny

XM158crx_col.jpg

X-Men
 
This Makes the teams
Uncanny
Storm
Bishop
Cannonball
Sage
Nightcrawler
Wolverine
Marvel Girl (Rachel Summers)

X-Men
Wolverine
Polaris
Havok
Juggernaut
Iceman
Gambit
Rogue

Astonishing X-Men
Cyclops
Beast
Shadowcat
White Queen
Wolverine

(I hope they explain where Husk, Jubilee, and Northstar ran off too.)
 
Originally posted by Dwarf lord
UNCX445_covcol.jpg

Uncanny

XM158crx_col.jpg

X-Men

I like the art in the second pic. Are there any X-men comics coming out soon that will start a new arc?
 
Originally posted by Lord Blackbolt
Erundur. I had no idea you were also Gandalf...lol.

yup, I'm Erundur and Gandalf, but no one else know's that I'm Istari Wizard :)
 

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