Sunday, June 29, 2014

And the rest

Sorry for all of those days off this week. Sadly, I think it's probably set to be more the norm than the exception here. I'm likely going to change from a "Reviews all major Marvel releases" to a "Reads all major Marvel releases and tells you which ones to read" sort of thing.  So here's where the rest of this week's books landed themselves. Search out the pictures for the quick hits of the (admittedly predictable) top-rated in this group!

All-New Doop 3
Milligan (w) and Lafuente and Camagni (a) and L. Allred (c) and Cowles (l)

Doop keeps trying to help out in the Battle of the Atom but things aren't working so well. He can't out future Kitty as Raze because he fears Raze knows something about Doop's mother, who Doop fears. His only real help is temporarily taking Kitty and Bobby out of the fight so they can break up in peace. He then confronts his mother with the help of a couple X-Statix members. It continues to be hard to rate this book because I continue to not know exactly what it's hoping to accomplish so I can't rightly say if it's done so or not. 3/5


All-New Ghost Rider 4
F. Smith (w) and T. Moore (a) and Staples (c) and Caramagna (l)

Robbie, the new Ghost Rider, encounters and fights a Hyde-serum boosted Grumpy but has to flee the fight, promising to get stronger. Meanwhile, Dr. Zabu has decided Grumpy needs to be dealt with and, with a new and more powerful pill, begins recruiting an army, including Robbie's daytime nemesis Guero. This book continues to have a pretty strong through line and Tradd Moore's art continues to really fit the tone and action. Strong stuff. 5/5











All-New Ultimates
Fiffe (w) and Pinna (a) and Woodard (c) and Cowles (l)

It's beach day for the girls of the All-New Ultimates and they play in the arcade, tan, and gossip while Cloak works on his powers and Spider-Man asks Ganke about what his kiss with a villain means for his relationship with Kate Bishop. Also, Jessica Drew comes out as a lesbian and Bombshell's boyfriend is killed by Diamondback and her crew, luring Bombshell back to his place, where she's captured and drugged into subservience. It's too bad the reveal of a possibly strong gay character is buried by a book that's so boring and eye-rollingly uninteresting. 2/5


Amazing Spider-Man 3
Slott (w) and Ramos (p) and Olazaba (i) and Delgado (c) and Eliopoulos (l)

Peter is trying to get his workers to like him, now that he's removed from Doc Ock, but it doesn't quite work out. Still, his new aim to safely capture Electro and bid for a new prison contract is met with lukewarm response at best, even when he takes a few of his key scientists out to view a fire started by Electro. As Spider-Man has to scurry away to help deal with the fire, he determines that MJ's new boyfriend is a pretty good guy and runs afoul of a very angry Black Cat, who he confuses and evades for the moment by pretending he's still Doc Ock. She flees and finds Electro, with whom she teams. It's not a bad issue, per se, but if you read the entirety of the extra-long AMAZING SPIDER-MAN 1, you probably could skip this one. It's good for building more on these characters but it's not really enough to separate from the bones of that first issue. 3/5


Avengers Undercover 6
Hopeless (w) and Green II (p) and Gorder (i) and Beaulieu (c) and Caramagna (l)

It's time, after a few weeks settling in, for a couple of the Murderworld Bunch (I'll come up with a better name eventually) to go on an actual mission and earn their keep. Chase and Death Locket, accompanied by Death Locket's new romantic interest Excavator and others, jump into a battle on AIM Island in an attempt to steal some tech only to suddenly see Captain America entering the scene. Excavator encourages Death Locket to take the shot on Cap and to take him out, which she very slowly comes around to doing but Chase tackles her as she's shooting, sending the shot elsewhere. He tells her their plan of blending in for now while they find a way to restore hero creed, which leaves her confused when Excavator attacks Chase and the two fight, leaving Death Locket with a choice. She shoots Chase. Strong issue, plenty happening and a nice jump forward in time to let us see what's been going on. Good development for Death Locket too, who was too much a naive pawn in the last series to get a ton of characterization. 5/5


Deadpool vs. Carnage 4
Bunn (w) and Espin (a) and Gandini (c) and Sabino (l)

A newly en-symbioted Deadpool attacks Carnage, still trying to convince him that he's predictable, at least to Deadpool. The two fight and fight with Carnage refusing to believe Deadpool's claims, still believing himself to be his own man. However, when Deadpool tricks him into killing Shriek by understanding the way he thinks, Carnage has to reassess. He delivers himself to the police office in the hopes that his imprisonment will give him a chance to think some things over. Deadpool wins another one though this one really felt like it had lost its focus from the start. But maybe, given these two characters, that was the aim. 3/5


Fantastic Four 6
J. Robinson (w) and Kirk and Haspiel (p) and Kesel and Haspiel (i) and Aburtov, Gandini, and Woodard (c) and Cowles (l)

The kids have been taken away from the F4 and they return home to find that the courts have also refused them access to the Baxter Building. The Avengers are onsite to keep them out because this book just keeps getting more ridiculous. The kids have learned from a SHIELD agent that Dragon Man is to be deactivated and they appeal to fellow android Human Torch to help their friend. Meanwhile, as ORIGINAL SIN hits, Ben learns that Johnny may be responsible for sabotaging a device that would have reverted Thing back into human form for good. This book has shown again and again that it has a goal and it's willing to walk all over any logic that might stop it from getting to said goal. On top of the insane court case that the F4 and Jen Walters somehow lost, now the Avengers are hired security to ensure a smooth transition because apparently the whole hero community would INSTANTLY turn on the F4 (though, you know, they are pretty boring). 1/5


Guardians of the Galaxy 16
Bendis (w) and Bradshaw, Marquez, and Masters (a) and Ponsor, Delgado, and Villarrubia (c) and Petit (l)

Angela swoops in to save Gamora from the Badoon as Captain Marvel swoops in to save Star-Lord from leaping out of a building to his death. J-Son and Star-Lord have a verbal fight in front of all the cameras J-Son insisted on having to show his son's punishment and it turns many against J-Son as Star-Lord gives an impassioned speech about the role of the Guardians. It even convinces the Supreme Intelligence to release Rocket. Meanwhile, Skrulls try to use the Venom symbiote and fail, which results in their deaths as it reattaches to Flash and Drax is sentenced to death by Gladiator and given the chance to choose his means. He chooses a battle to the death with Gladiator, who accepts. Plenty still happening but I think that the slow issue 15 hurts this one a bit as this one feels very much like the last one but, you know, the opposite? It's kind of hard to explain, but it's a situation where everything is happening so exactly the way they'd want it to happen that it kind of negates any drama from last issue. 3/5


Ms. Marvel 5
G.W. Wilson (w) and Alphona (a) and Herring (c) and Caramagna (l)

Kamala is quickly overwhelmed by The Inventor's henchmen, led by punk scientist Doyle, and forced to flee. She manages it but gets in some trouble with her parents when she returns home less-than-stealthily. She enlists Bruno to help her up her game with training and a new costume. After a montage, she returns to Doyle's place and takes them apart, rescuing Bruno's brother Vick without too much trouble. However, now The Inventor and Doyle's gang are out for blood. Solid issue, complete with some good training for Kamala (and some training that makes a bit of sense, not just a leap to "I'm a superhero now!" status) and good characterization for everyone involved, including Bruno and Kamala's parents. Strong work continues and just look at that McKelvie cover. 5/5





New Warriors 6
Yost (w) and Roche and Baldeon (p) and Roche and Tarragona (i) and Redmond (c) and Caramagna (l)

Wundagore Mountain, thanks to a bit of confusion out of the dog and cat priests (Jake Waffles and Mr. Whiskers), has been transported right to the center of New York City. Fortunately, it's phased a bit out of place and therefore it doesn't actually affect anything around it, just confuses plenty of people, Avengers included. Captain America and Iron Man meet with Justice and Speedball while Thor sits in with the rest of the team (minus Nova, the only one with a connection to Thor, thanks to a previous engagement). While Justice argues with Cap over the meaning of the New Warriors, Water Snake starts to see more visions, eventually attacking Thor because of them. While a big fight breaks out in the middle of Wundagore Mountain, Hummingbird reveals the demon bothering Water Snake and settles everything down, the misunderstanding cleared up. Justice quits the Avengers and dedicates himself to the New Warriors in the face of scrutiny, mistrust, and condescension from Cap. Another strong issue for the young book as fun and energetic voices mix with dark memories and weighty issues. 5/5


Savage Hulk 1
A. Davis (w and p) and Farmer (i) and Hollingsworth (c) and Cowles (l)

In the midst of X-MEN 66, Bruce Banner and the X-Men try to find a way to help Xavier out of his coma. Though Banner's device helps them to do it, it opens up Xavier to realizing he needs to do what he can to help Hulk. He sends his team of X-Men to try and find Hulk and help him find a cure for his situation but Hulk has encountered problems of his own, as the army and the Leader descend on him and as Abomination descends on the X-Men. It's hard to know if a lack of familiarity with the source material is keeping this one confusing for me but it's hard to point to the source material for why this one is so slow. For all of the crossed paths and all the excitement this one feels it should have, it seems to actually carry none of that. It also may have to do with my own distaste for Davis' art. 2/5

Thursday, June 26, 2014

X-Force 9, Wolverine 9

X-Force 6
Spurrier (w) and J. Molina (p) and Yeung (i) and Rosenberg (c) and Petit (l)

Volga's thrown Cable out the window and subsequently exploded him and now has the team trapped and even MeMe, our narrator in this issue, rather trapped in a computer. She seems to be taking Cable's death particularly hard but takes the time to give us a brief rundown on what happened in Alexandria. She had been there, working for Volga, and saw the bomb explode, aiming for mutants, and had seen Cable and Hope affected. Back with Volga in the present, the villain prepares to start experimenting on the surviving team just as Cable and Dr. Nemesis teleport into the room, revealing that Cable has been sending copies of himself into fights as the real Cable, poisoned during the bomb, is in stasis and continually sends his copies out to die while receiving the memories and information they gain in his headband. They escape Volga's grasp and Psylocke again tells MeMe that she has to reveal to Cable who she really is...Hope, piggybacking on the real but brain dead MeMe's powers.

What do I have to tell you people to get you to read this book? Or are you all doing it already? Let me know, okay? Because seriously, it's so great. I explained this whole series to someone today and, even with my babbling summarization (familiar with those?), the book sounded AWESOME. To me, at least. I think the audience I was telling it to was genuinely interested but, you know, babbling. Really great issue and how crazy is it that the reveal of the bomb's real impact and that Cable's been sending copies of himself out into the world while he slowly dies at home AREN'T the biggest reveals. Check this series out.

Total Score: 5/5


Wolverine 9
Cornell (w) and Anka (a) and Curiel (c) and Petit (l)

Wolverine continues to chat with Death while Iron Fist and Shang-Chi fight the Hand outside. Wolverine learns from Death that he's still rather afraid of dying but that he also still has honor and pride and whatever else. He also learns that Sabretooth has Pinch, her daughter, and Lost Boy and he's ready for a rematch.

THE DEATH OF WOLVERINE is looking more and more like a rebranding than an actual, literal death. There's talk in this issue about what a name means and what his name is and other things of that vein. Death also scoffs at the idea she told him he'd die in three months. ANYWAY, I still can't get behind this book. The talk with Death as an actual person continues to not be that compelling to me, particularly as Death just espouses super basic psychology kind of stuff that should absolutely blow no one's mind. Also Rose makes another appearance and his dumb rose tattoo does the same. Hoping his healing power comes back just to get rid of that.

Total Score: 2/5

Wednesday, June 25, 2014

Original Sin 3.1 - Hulk vs. Iron Man, Original Sins 2

Original Sin 3.1 - Hulk vs. Iron Man
Waid and Gillen (s) and Waid (w) and Bagley (p) and Hennessey (i) and Kieth (c) and Petit (l)

The truth bomb has dropped and, among the many things it revealed, it switches Tony Stark and Bruce Banner's consciousness a bit, giving them both access to some of the other's memories. For Tony, it reminds him of a time when he had revealed to General Ross that Banner was limiting the effectiveness of the gamma bomb, the original Hulk-creating one, while for Bruce, it reveals that Tony later went in and tinkered with the bomb, potentially sabotaging it and, in essence, turning it into a Hulk-creating one. Now, here in the present, a much smarter Hulk, enhanced by the Extremis strand Arno has been working on, beats on Iron Man.

This book was advertised pretty heavily and I think it hurts this issue. Thanks to all of the hype, plenty of people (myself included) knew where this book was going and it therefore felt like it took a long while to get to it. Waid's in a difficult position as he has to tie up some loose ends (summarizing a bit of Gillen's IRON MAN and his own INDESTRUCTIBLE HULK and HULK and explaining what's happened since the last issue of those books) and has to show a relationship for these two and create a new story based on that relationship and on ORIGINAL SIN. As a result, the book moves a little slowly and, as I said above, it's slow when we already know the climax. I want to go on record saying that I don't think this means Waid is necessarily at fault. I think it's just a tough order, asking Waid to create a book wherein he has to do so much. Still, it's a little slow and Bagley's pencils have never really been my favorite anyway.

Total Score: 3/5


Original Sins 2
Black Knight: Tieri (w) and Ienco (a) and B. Anderson (c) and Cowles (l)
Young Avengers: North (w) and Villalobos (a) and J. Gibson (c) and Cowles (l)
Howard the Duck: Templeton (w and a) and Mounts (c) and Cowles (l)

In the first story, a Black Knight biographer/historian visits Dane Whitman to tell him that everyone who has ever used the Ebony Blade has succumbed to it and gone crazy and/or evil and/or killed him/herself. She believes he will be no different and the truth bomb told her that, in fact, he's probably not and that just recently he nearly killed a common criminal and seemingly couldn't stop himself. She wants to help him but he pushes her away, remaining almost naked locked in his room with the blade. The story is mildly interested, though it begs for more (there may even be more in ORIGINAL SINS to come but I can't recall right now). As such, it's a story with no end right now and the question of whether there will be one and, if not, why it went so dark here only to leave us with nothing more.

The Young Avengers return (or three of them do, anyway) as they catch up with the Hood, who had previously turned an entire building's worth of people invisible and knocked them unconscious. When Hulkling takes him down, he explains that he was trying to help these people. They're all addicts and the secrets from the truth bomb had a different effect on them, making them too full of knowledge and giving them too many secrets. Hood turned them invisible and knocked them out to ensure SHIELD wouldn't get its hands on them. His idea, then, to get their knowledge and to stop them from going totally crazy from all of this, is for Prodigy to build a Cerebro so he can read all their minds. The dialogue in this one continues to be fun and natural but the story feels like it's starting to slip a little bit, which is particularly tricky for a book where the art isn't really blowing me away. ORIGINAL SIN seems to be facing the slight problem that everyone is interpreting what the truth bomb can and can't do a little differently and it's conflating things for people who are reading all parts of the event (reviewers especially).

While the truth bomb showed revelations of varying degrees to various people, it tells Howard the Duck something he already knew: he's extraordinarily intelligent naturally. Unfortunately, he also knows that he stuffed that natural intelligence down because it had made him a target of bullying as a child so now he's spent his whole life fighting his nature and not being as smart as he could have been. He calls on his could-be intelligence as he hurtles through the air after a car accident and it saves his life in the moment, though it shows him his wasted potential all over again. Thanks, Watcher.

Total Score: 3/5

Uncanny Avengers 21, New Avengers 20, New Avengers Annual 1

Uncanny Avengers 21
Remender (w) and Acuña (a) and White (c) and Cowles (l)

The remaining members of the Unity Squad return to the past, to the moments before the Apocalypse Twins' plans have been set in motion, to warn everyone and prepare themselves. They explain everything to everyone around and everyone offers their powers to Rogue, who charges to stop Exitar the Executioner with the help of a marginally convinced (though totally crazy) Sentry while Wolverine, Sunfire, and Havok destroy the tachyon dam in the present, leaving Thor to use Jarnbjorn on Exitar. With everything coming up Avengers, Kang and his team descend and, of course, stab everyone in the back, with his team going to corral the powerless Avengers and with Kang himself throwing Thor into the dying Celestial while he drinks of the Celestial's blood and essence, deeming himself conqueror of the universe.

Here's the thing that you ALWAYS have to keep in mind about Kang: one of his very first appearances (as Kang, not Rama-Tut or whoever else he may have appeared as) found him locked into a deadly game with Grandmaster, an elder of the universe, where he convinced his enemies the Avengers to help him so he could save the life of his love Ravonna. When they helped him and eventually won, Grandmaster basically said "alright, well, you have the wish of life or death, do you want me to save that Princess that's totes locked in a jar?" and Kang, HOT ON THE HEELS OF THE AVENGERS RISKING THEIR LIVES TO HELP HIM, went "Actually, no, kill the Avengers for me, would you?" That's who Kang is. What Remender has done here is tell a really interesting story that, with the last second reveal, makes you understand just how long and risky of a con this was for Kang and also makes you remember that moment early in Kang's history and go "oh, that's right, no one should trust that guy EVER." This is a really enjoyable read, both for how quickly things seem to go right when the Avengers set their mind to it and for the fun dialogue (Wolverine's in particular, as he refers to Wonder Man as "Hollywood" and literally says the phrase "I ain't got no such compunction"). It also turns out to be quite a story and now, a book that has spent about 20 issues getting to this point, teases that the next issue is the conclusion of this arc, right as Kang takes the power of the gods and declares himself the conqueror of the universe.

Total Score: 5/5


New Avengers 20
Hickman (w) and Schiti (a) and F. Martin and Mounts (c) and Caramagna (l)

The Illuminati and the Great Society find themselves locked in combat with the Illuminati apparently at disadvantage. As Dr. Spectrum goes to find the bomb with Black Bolt in pursuit, the other Illuminati members fall one-by-one (except Black Panther, who is in a stalemate and is just AWESOME) until finally Dr. Strange reveals just how much he's let his soul go as he unleashes dark magic and singlehandedly stops the Great Society.

This issue moves really well and has the weight that we've come to expect from NEW AVENGERS throughout Hickman's run. Better still is how interestingly Hickman writes both Dr. Strange (who we haven't seen a TON from since the start of this series) and Black Panther (who we've seen enough from to know how well Hickman writes him). Also impressive is how well these Great Society characters seem to be fleshed out, even if their past isn't really seen in the comics. You actually believe that these people had lives before Hickman brought them into being just a few issues ago which is kind of rare for characters like them. They're well-developed and Hickman didn't even have to spend much time on exposition for them; instead, the book moves quickly and we understand the fight really well. Strong issue.

Total Score: 5/5


New Avengers Annual 1
Barbiere (w) and Rudy (a and c) and Caramagna (l)

In the time between, presumably, when Dr. Strange sold his soul for power and the NEW AVENGERS present, Strange was called to his Tibetan Mountains to help his old teachers rid a new and very powerful student of a demon who has latched on to her. As we get flashbacks from Strange to the first patient he lost thanks to his hubris, the doctor and the demon battle. Though the demon is immensely powerful, Strange uses dark magic to keep him down and brings the demon into himself rather than killing the girl to whom it's attached. The demon has no chance within Strange, which Strange knew when he took the demon in. The monks forbid him from returning, asking who he is now to which he replies that he is the doctor.

The story, particularly for an annual (the quality of which often varies), is very compelling and Marco Rudy's art, as it was in MARVEL KNIGHTS SPIDER-MAN, is just outstanding and absolutely perfect for this book. While Frank Barbiere tells an interesting story that weaves between the past and the present and reveals much about the proud Doctor Strange pre-Sorceror Supreme and post-Soul Seller, Marco Rudy illustrates incredible battles and emotions and even incredible still moments. Just wonderful, wonderful stuff. On the Nerdist Writer's Panel: Comics Edition podcast, I've heard plenty of times that everyone has a Dr. Strange pitch but almost no one has one that would work for Marvel in the longterm. I guess I can't speak for the longterm but this one worked really well for me on this issue. Check it out, you guys.

Total Score: 5/5

Tuesday, June 24, 2014

Comics this week

Hey bros and ladybros, we have a pretty big slate of comics this week because the universe hates me! Let's call out this week's top recommended books in our weekly pre-game.

Amazing Spider-Man 3
Slott has jumped right back into the swing of things (HA, how many times has that pun been used overall for Spider-Man or other superheroes, really, do we think? I'd put the over-under at 2,500) and this book feels rejuvenated for it. Been fun so far, looking for that fun to continue.

Ms. Marvel 5
If you're not reading this book yet, you should probably get on the bandwagon while there's still room. Seriously. Bandwagons aren't really known for their size, mostly for their propensity for heading towards things that people like. ANYWAY, it's been a fun book and, if Jamie McKelvie's covers are to be believed, young Kamala Khan is headed on a collision course with the rest of the Marvel Universe sooner rather than later.

New Warriors 6
This was VERY NEARLY replaced on this list by NEW AVENGERS 20 but I didn't want to have to write "SERIOUSLY, they're gonna fight those dudes at SOME POINT" a third time so instead, I'm choosing NEW WARRIORS, a book that deserves to have a little light shed on it. This book has had a really interesting mix of voices and I'm looking forward to seeing where these characters take us. So far, we have three choices that are a bit against the grain in that they're all what I'd describe as genuinely fun books. WILL THE TREND CONTINUE? NOPE.

Uncanny Avengers 21
Rick Remender's epic story continues as the remaining Unity Avengers prepare to "trust" Kang and travel back to the past to save the rest of their team. Can they manage it? What will become of the timeline they've grown to know and, perhaps most importantly, what will become of little Katie Summers? STORY ABOUND.

X-Force 6
If you even TRY to tell me you're not reading this book I'll be of a mind to slap you. Spurrier has brought his typical heady but extraordinarily fun style to this book about the world's covert mutant good guys and it's fired on every cylinder so far. Really enjoying this book. It's always refreshing to have a book for which you have high hopes actually meet or exceed those expectations. LOOK NO FURTHER, this book is GREAT.

Monday, June 23, 2014

An apology - and some reviews and picks

My friends, my followers, people who clicked on this link completely by accident (who even ARE you?): You are owed an apology. I missed a couple posts this week (as I've not so subtly been hinting, that may be happening more often lately as I'm away from my computer more and more often). I had been traveling to a wedding a ways away and spending some time with family which is NEVER AN EXCUSE FOR NOT REVIEWING COMICS. I'm kind of kidding. Those who understand blogs likely have guessed that I don't make money on this blog (not for lack of asking for money) and so it often has to take a backseat to actual life events. Still, this is something that I like to do and I've been astounded to find that some people even seem to like to read. As such, I'm going to continue to make a concerted effort to update as regularly as possible. There may be changes coming soon but for now, I'm going to try to keep running things as smoothly as I can. AS FOR THE MISSING REVIEWS...


Iron Patriot 4
Still moves pretty well, this issue finds Rhodey unable to fight back against his captor, determined to kill the ex-president, but Lila and Rhodey's father are still capable of retaliation and manage it somewhat nicely. 4/5

Nova 18
An ORIGINAL SIN tie-in finds Nova discovering his friend the Watcher has died and trying to seek his killer for revenge. His search brings him to New York and he (sort of) assists in the fight against Exterminatrix and The Orb, getting caught up in the truth bomb and learning that his dad maybe wasn't so righteous as he'd hoped. Lots of drama with Sam and some really fun writing as we see a few team-ups happening in the background. 5/5

Wolverine and the X-Men 5
I'll be honest (because I'm tired): I still rather don't know what's happening in this book. Quire doesn't believe he and Evan will be forced to kill each other some day, Fantomex protects the World from Honest John, and Storm returns to the school to stop John's attack dead. Moves rather well, seems pretty spirited even if it's a little hard to follow. 3/5

Ultimate FF 3
This book has been cancelled due to POOR SALES AND NOT AT ALL DUE TO SOME TERRIBLY STUPID RUMOR SPREAD AROUND BY BLEEDING COOL. It will end with issue six (sadly, due to a sickness, issue six wasn't even written by Fialkov). Anyway, this issue was okay, I think the book overall is trying really hard to be something but it's getting a little stalled and now, obviously, it won't have that chance to save itself. 3/5



THIS WEEK'S PICKS

Daredevil 5
This book is great, you guys. Get on board with it if you somehow haven't already. Nice look from Waid this time at some of the anger stored away in Matt and at how he's living his life these days. Plus, it's just a nice book to look at.

Elektra 3
Look, this book's real pretty. I think it's a really interesting story and there are nice looks here and there behind the curtain at Elektra (I was legitimately taken aback when she referred to Daredevil as "Matthew" in this issue) so the character and the story certainly isn't hurting this series but I really like this art, you guys.

Thunderbolts 27
I recognize that maybe I'm coming in with a bit of an Acker/Blacker bias here but this issue was really fun and refreshing, nice to see that the spirit of the book will carry even as the creative team changes. Edges out NOVA, which was also a heap of fun, and AVENGERS WORLD, which continues to be interesting.

Friday, June 20, 2014

Thunderbolts 27, Punisher 7

Thunderbolts 27
Acker and Blacker (w) and Barberi (p) and Cuevas (i) and Silva (c) and Sabino (l)

The Thunderbolts quietly take down a team of hitmen aiming to take down the Avengers while they battle downtown. The stealth team discovers that these hitmen were being led by someone operating out of a high school which, they soon discover, is full of dead children. The dead start to rise and begin attacking the Thunderbolts, overwhelming them before it's revealed that it was Captain America villain Dr. Faustus using a psychogenic gas to plant images in the heads of the T-Bolts. Deadpool, though, quickly detected the gas and kept himself from inhaling it, playing dead when Faustus arrived and taking the villain down himself. As the others come to, Punisher demands they kill Faustus but Red Hulk vetoes him, preferring to force Faustus to work for good. Punisher, unable to allow that, quits the team. As the team moves on, Punisher returns to a New Jersey safehouse and finds a bomb in his apartment (as it explodes) with a note apparently indicting the T-Bolts.

Acker and Blacker don't disappoint in their first time out with the THUNDERBOLTS main series (they wrote THUNDERBOLTS ANNUAL within the last year), bringing an interesting new vibe to the series. The team still sticks with the covert "doing the missions the Avengers can't" kind of idea but Red Hulk seems determined to live up to his realization from last issue and do more than just help out, indicating that he'd like the Thunderbolts to expand with more divisions, possibly comprised of captured villains (like Faustus) working against their will to make up for their sins. The voices are distinct and a lot of fun, just what we'd want to see from this team (it's what Soule did right during his time on the book that I felt Way missed in the first arc). Of course, the intrigue of a quitting and punished Punisher doesn't hurt either.

Total Score: 5/5


Punisher 7
Edmondson and Maurer (w) and Carnero (p) and Pallot (i) and Fabela (c) and Petit (l)

Wounded Punisher finds his way down to Mexico to recover and plot out his next move while he tries to figure out who attacked him. A back alley surgeon fixes him up, removing the bullet and closing the wound, though he also drugs him and sells him off to the highest bidder so it seems like they're even by the end. The highest bidder in this case is a Mexican gangster named Ortiz, AKA El Diablito. Ortiz and his men beat up Punisher a bit then sell him again to an unknown group (though probably Dos Soles, right?), who send Crossbones to pick Frank up. Not to be caught unaware again, Frank breaks out of his cell along with another captured vet, and the pair of them, with help from the vet's squad monitoring Ortiz, escape into the woods, where Punisher advises the other vet to move forward while he takes on the cartel.

PUNISHER 7 provides a nice respite from the story we've been dealing with since issue one, which is a good story but perhaps worth taking an interlude from here. Given Marvel's recent push for faster turnaround time on books, these sorts of issues seem to happen a little more frequently (particularly at this sort of issue number, where the main creative team gets a jumpstart on the book and getting about six issues in the can before issue one even goes to press) where a guest writer comes in (sometimes) along with a different artist (more frequently, as illustrating a book takes more time than writing it, typically). Still, the story is strong and fits in the same vein as the rest of the series, though it's hard not to miss Gerads' art on the book and I'm going to have to deduct a point here for how frequently a footnote tells us what an army code translates to. I'd rather have them say the actual words before going to acronyms, though I understand that's less realistic, or to simply say the code and allow readers who want to explore deeper to look it up themselves; the all-too present footnotes end up being distracting and breaking the flow. Also, I don't like that cover. Looks like Punisher's been stung by bees. Still, strong issue and certainly worth looking at if you've been enjoying this book.

Total Score: 4/5

Thor: God of Thunder 23, Silver Surfer 3

Thor: God of Thunder 23
Aaron (w) and Ribic (a) and Svorcina (c) and Sabino (l)

Thor fights the Minotaur, now fully transformed, and a legion of trolls with some help from Roz Solomon while, far into the future, King Thor teams with All-Black the Necrosword and, with the aid of his granddaughters, fights off Galactus. In the present, the more pressing storyline, Thor, able to unleash his true power on the Minotaur without the worry of Agger's lawyers or perception as a good guy, defeats Minotaur, though loses track of him, allowing Agger to return to human form and move on.

Strong issue for the book to pause on as THOR: GOD OF THUNDER and LOKI: AGENT OF ASGARD are put on hold to team together for THOR AND LOKI: THE TENTH REALM. Though Agger is not yet out of Thor's hair, it's a nice win for the thunder god as he realizes how hard corporations can be to beat. Some of the writing in this issue is exceptional, some is a little choppy at times, but it's overall certainly an easy and worthwhile read, not least because of Ribic and Svorcina.

Total Score: 4/5


Silver Surfer 3
Slott (w) and M. Allred (a) and L. Allred (c) and Cowles (l)

Dawn leads Silver Surfer to the Never Queen's heart and Silver Surfer uses the power cosmic to keep the Impericon together while the civilians and hostages therein flee. Dawn is tasked with bringing the heart back to the Never Queen and, with the help of some of the freed hostages, succeeds as Surfer bests the Incredulous Zed in combat, unintentionally killing him in the process. Eh, couldn't be helped, right? Anyhow, Surfer and Dawn set off to return to Earth as the Never Queen and her beloved Eternity are reunited.

In just its third issue, Slott and the Allreds continue to make a push to keep this book rather light and fun, even if there are dark moments or tones. It embraces the fantastical and demands the audience revel in it rather than be confused or overwhelmed by it. It's a book that knows itself and both wants to give the audience something worth reading but also not take itself too seriously (as such, you get nods to how crazy it is that the power cosmic ends up occasionally being some sort of undefined panacea). Sometimes the tone of, say, Silver Surfer gets a little muddled in this, unsure if he's that classic, seemingly cold character or if he has a sense of humor that rarely comes out, but I think that's something that will define itself more in time (though, you could also argue, it's already defined itself because the past doesn't matter, that what's in this book is the definition). Slott is very clearly having fun with this new series and the Allreds were a perfect team for this blend of fun and fantastical.

Total Score: 5/5

Thursday, June 19, 2014

Daredevil 4, Elektra 3

Daredevil 4
Waid (w) and Samnee (a) and Rodriguez (c) and Caramagna (l)

Despite his seeming betrayal, Shroud tosses Matt his telescoping cane, allowing him to save himself, and covers the area in shadow, giving Murdock the upper hand in the battle against Owl's henchmen, who he easily bests. Owl and Shroud have disappeared by the time the shadows lift and Matt reconvenes with Kirsten to discuss the next move. She informs him that Owl has become a big name in Silicon Valley and that only one substantial company hasn't fallen prey to him and that they have a big technological reveal to be announced soon. Daredevil stakes the place out and sure enough finds Shroud giving Owl access. As Matt enters to stop the pair, he realizes that Shroud wants to die and he's trying to die by Owl's hand, maybe taking the villain down with him. Suicide by supervillain. Daredevil refuses to let it happen, saving Shroud though leaving Owl behind to overload on the new technology (seems to still be alive and more powerful than ever but WHATEVER DEEDS, gotta check on that new guy I guess). DD lectures Shroud on how much tragedy he's been through and promises to help him find Julia, leaving Shroud to disappear on his own, though not to kill himself at least.

Some of the tech stuff involved here is a little confusing at its inception (though we're undoubtedly going to see more of it so it's not necessarily a big problem here. Meanwhile, the depression and desperation of Shroud is certainly compelling, even if it's not necessarily new ground for Waid, who explored something similar (though based more around a terminal diagnosis and an insurance scam than depression) in his INDESTRUCTIBLE HULK run. That doesn't make it any less jarring here nor any less meaningful. Plus, the way Bruce Banner deals with the problem of one of his employees going through this is going to be significantly different from the way Daredevil deals with a fellow superhero going through it. Samnee's art and Rodriguez's colors continue to be outstanding and lift this book above so many others.

Total Score: 5/5


Elektra 3
W.H. Blackman (w) and Del Mundo (a) and Del Mundo w/D'Alfonso (c) and Cowles (l)

Bloody Lips is stronger than ever and, thanks to the memories of the other assassins of whom he's tasted and of Kento, son of Cape Crow, whose blood he tasted on Lady Bullseye's sword, he has some idea where to go. Elektra and Kento go there first, though, the underwater city of Shicheng, to try to find Cape Crow. He's been there recently but isn't there now, to the chagrin of everyone, but before they can set off to a new location, Bloody Lips attacks. Elektra subdues him enough to try to give Kento a chance to escape but it leaves her open to Bloody Lips' attack. As he strangles her underwater, she stabs him in the chin with her sai. The two of them are guided through the Tiger's Gate together, a passageway in the now-flooded city that leads to the land of the dead for anyone who has been murdered. Both assassins are forced to cope with some hard truths as Bloody Lips sees his family, who he thought had died before he ate them only to find out that they were dying but it was his action that actually killed them and as Elektra sees her own mother, who she thought assassins killed but claims she died in childbirth.

This series has really gone for it in terms of its boldness and its darkness and its characterization. Elektra has been a character living rather on the outskirts of the Marvel Universe for some time now, getting characterization only insofar as it relates to those around her. More often it's characterization for Daredevil or Wolverine or someone but here Blackman is making a concerted effort to show us more inside her head, showing us what makes her her. There is, of course, still a hardness there and still an almost unwillingness to let the audience in but we're starting to see, bit by bit, a little more each issue. The same is true for Bloody Lips, who is a little more of an open book at this pint and who just keeps getting creepier (he's apparently Australian! Had we covered that yet? He is, it seems). Very strong series, really cool ideas and a very compelling read. Del Mundo continues to bring the seemingly perfect style to the book.

Total Score: 5/5

Uncanny X-Men 22, X-Men 15

Uncanny X-Men 22
Bendis (w) and Bachalo (p) and Townsend, Deering, Irwin, Mendoza, Vey, and Olazaba (i) and Bachalo and Villarrubia (c) and Caramagna (l)

The helicarrier continues to attack the X-Mansion while Hank brings Scott to the perpetrator and Magneto shows up with the drained Dazzler in tow. While Triage helps Dazzler, Hijack reappears, hoping to join up with the Jean Grey School, and manages to take control of the helicarriers again. Beast reveals to Cyclops that the person behind all of this is, in fact, Dark Beast, from the Age of Apocalypse timeline. Cyclops kind of inadvertently kills him when he blasts open his big suit that DB claimed was keeping him alive. Cyclops and Maria Hill have an argument on the front lawn and SHIELD and the X-Men's relationship gets a little rockier.

Things have ramped up quickly in the SHIELD Sentinels' attack on the X-Men as suddenly everything is converging on the Jean Grey School, just as Hijack deus ex machinas his way over to the campus. Overall, the action is pretty solid and the book reads a little faster for it though it's hard not to feel like simply too much happened. Between the attack and Magneto+Dazzler and SHIELD and Dark Beast, it feels like there was zero chance for the story to have meaningful impact because we're jumping too quickly from one thing to another. How can you worry about the implications of Dark Beast's actions when you're busy thinking about how SHIELD let this happen? How can you question the limits of Hijack's powers when you're busy trying to remember if there was some dumb subplot about Maria Hill being attracted to Cyclops in just another example of Hill's character being weakened by Bendis? How can you wonder about what Dazzler's going to do next when you're thinking about how terrible Maria Hill is? Too much happening, though it doesn't necessarily make the book unreadable, just smaller than it feels it should be.

Total Score: 3/5


X-Men 15
Wood (w) and Buffagni (a) and Mounts (c) and Caramagna (l)

The Future, who has trained for everything and who will, according to Kymera, manage to separate Jubilee and Shogo, is taken aback momentarily by the fact that someone in the X-Mansion killed one of his men. It doesn't line up with what he believes about the X-Men and it gives him pause about how to proceed, recognizing that there's at least one wild card out there. However, it doesn't give him much pause as he manages to take out Psylocke on the front lawn and proceed inside, where he finds Jubilee and shoots at her, grazing her head with the bullet and knocking her out to take her, though he doesn't quite take Shogo. MEANWHILE, the BROMO-SUPERIOR Wood/Briones mini-story wraps up as Psylocke saves her students by killing her danger room boyfriend (weird) in a big teaching moment.

The Future, though something of an inexplicable villain right now, becomes a little more interesting as he gets a bit of narration in this one. We don't necessarily get anything of his motive or his personality, but we start to see just how dangerous he is. He continues the theme that Arkea started, the idea that knowledge is real power and that his knowledge of a situation makes him a far more impressive villain than simply being a strong combatant. Wood also does a good job to settle out some of the team issues by having Ororo show a little more strength here, coming back to a place where the others respect her more. There's also a really nice moment in this issue where Jubilee, talking to Beast while he tries, perhaps ill-advisedly, to save Teon and Sprite with a bit of Arkea, boosts Beast up by talking about how much of a rock he is and how she knows he'll always be there to protect him. PERHAPS some ominous foreshadowing but, in the here and now, it's a nice win for Beast as a guy who hasn't had a lot of those recently.

Total Score: 4/5

Wednesday, June 18, 2014

Avengers World 8, Iron Man 28

Avengers World 8
Spencer (w) and Checchetto (a) and Mossa (c) and Caramagna (l)

In Velletri, Italy, Starbrand has wandered off to find the voices he's been hearing only to find Morgan Le Fay, the sorceress behind the dead rising again. While she captivates him, Spider-Woman, Hawkeye, and Nightmask continue to fight hordes of demons and the undead, eventually sealing off their entrance before they stumble on the Euroforce team that had gone missing, prompting the Avengers' appearance. The Euroforce team is led by none other than the Black Knight, who reveals Le Fay's involvement, to Spider-Woman's chagrin (they have a whole thing). Anyway, Le Fay is leading her armies of the dead to the world of the living. Problems!

I've really grown to like the conceit of this book. Where Hickman's AVENGERS, while very good, has focused on the huge team dealing with big, sweeping problems that never seem really solved, Spencer is taking smaller, dedicated teams to more classic style stories. I've liked Hickman's work a lot but it's nice to see stories that are a little more self-contained and feel big, but not so broad. Each of the three stories Spencer is juggling has proven itself interesting and compelling. This issue, particularly with its narration captions that speak often of death and how its what the people deserve, has a sort of EAST OF WEST feel, another Hickman book that is absolutely incredibly so forcing me to draw comparisons certainly isn't a drawback. I mean, this book isn't blowing me away like EAST OF WEST but that's a pretty tall order. Still, lot of fun here.

Total Score: 5/5


Iron Man 28
Gillen (w) and J. Bennett, C. Richards, and D. Santacruz (p) and Hanna and Magyar (i) and Guru eFX (c) and Caramagna (l)

With most of the rings neutralized, Red Peril takes down Alec Eiffel, Iron Patriot takes down the Influence ring, Arno takes down the Exile, and Iron Man realizes that Marc, who is doing this because he loves Pepper and hates that Tony has treated her so poorly over the years, wouldn't actually threaten Pepper and blasts through the Liar ring's projection to hit him. Mole Man, the last hold out, tosses his ring away to avoid persecution, and the Starks recover them all. With everything turning up Stark, they call the Rigellians to come pick up 451. The Rigellians, super nice dudes, explain to Tony that it was actually something in 451's programming that upgraded the Mandarin rings to act the way they did and a mixture of Tony's position in the world and the original Mandarin's hatred of him caused them to attack him specifically. Everything's wrapped up as Arno secretly sends Abigail Burns the Incandescence ring, allowing her to continue being Red Peril and as Pepper breaks up with Marc, repeating that she doesn't need saving.

Kieron Gillen isn't necessarily known for his happy endings (though it's been seen at times before) but this is about as big a win as Tony could have hoped for (particularly as it seems the rest of the Marvel Universe is crashing down around him). Pepper dumped her apparently crazy/overprotective fiancee, the Stark brothers are as good as ever, 451 is off-planet and the Rigellians were like, super nice, and they've captured all of the Mandarin's rings. Pretty solid day for Tony as Gillen ends his IRON MAN run (though he will team with HULK's Mark Waid for ORIGINAL SIN 3.1-3.4, which will pit Hulk against Iron Man). As I thought with the last couple issues, this series felt like it was starting to wind down really quickly by the end, often going the route of telling instead of showing (which is pretty rare for Gillen, who tends to be acutely aware of that). Still a very good series overall though it's hard not to feel like it peaked with 451.

Total Score: 4/5

Original Sin 4, Avengers 31

Original Sin 4
Aaron (w) and Deodato (a) and F. Martin (c) and Eliopoulos (l)

As the mysteriously led groups converge on a single location, led there by various data, each small group discovers it's part of a larger entity. They also find Bucky, the first one to arrive at the small station on the blue side of the moon. Though tempers flare (Gamora and Moon Knight aren't so pumped to have been ditched by Bucky and had to catch a ride with Rocket Raccoon), particularly as Bucky reveals the head of Nick Fury, things are explained a bit when Gamora stabs the head, shorting it out and proving it's a sophisticated LMD, and when an elderly Nick Fury emerges from a door in the station with several other LMDs.

The various groups have converged and are looking for answers, understanding now that maybe they've been lied to and suddenly they recognize how tenuous their groupings are and how distrustful they are of one another. There's a lot of sniping as everyone tries to feel each other out and tries to figure out his or her own role in this investigation. As such, the tension is written pretty well and Deodato's ability to draw just about any character in any situation pays off as he's forced to draw plenty of team scenes and fights and powers and so on and so forth. The book moves as fast as any of these issues have and Aaron's love of The Orb continues to shine through as he has the heroes bring the nonsensical root of all this along with them. Strong issue. Still unsure about the scale of this book (it doesn't feel like an event in a lot of ways, though so many are involved) but that's not a concern the book really needs to answer and, as such, doesn't affect an overall good performance.

Total Score: 5/5


Avengers 31
Hickman (w) and Yu (p) and Alanguilan (i) and Gho (c) and Petit (l)

The Avengers have been sent 500 years in the future now and Hawkeye, just as his future self predicted, won't go any further, falling away in the timestream and aging to dust. The Avengers aren't worried about him unduly, believing that this is what the Hawkeye they just met predicted. They're more worried, though, when they end up trapped in the future and when they learn that Ultron controls the planet with about 30 million humans surviving and future Thor working for the AI (who he claims is also the All-Father). The Ultrons take Cap and Black Widow away and plant a bomb in Cap while the future equivalent of Black Widow speaks in guarded language about wanting her own freedom. Enter time gem, sending Cap, Black Widow, and Starbrand (Thor and Hyperion fall away as Hawkeye did, ending back in Stark's lab with Clint) some five thousand years into the future.

The glimpses of the future continue to be interesting, if a little confusing. I think it's to Hickman's credit that we land in each future for less than an issue's length, just as it's to his credit that all of the future talk isn't winks and nods to the audience, as so many future time travel books are ("this event could happen!" or maybe "this Avenger has died!" or so forth; this book is doing a little of that by the way each future looks and occasionally a quick aside about, like future Thor saying he remembers when he was worthy of Mjolnir, but there are very few explicit, hitting you over the head kind of moments, which I appreciate). There's a lot to try and keep up with and it reads like a story that will make more sense in time, as is so often true with Hickman. Certainly more than readable now as is (and there are some good character moments, particularly as Cap is knocked out and dreams of the Illuminati, undoubtedly only enraging him further) but the true plot has yet to really come across.

Total Score: 4/5

Tuesday, June 17, 2014

Comics this week

Hey all my buddies, it's me, the typical Tuesday post. Ready for some new upcoming comics that I'd advise you look into?


Avengers 31
Oh no, the Avengers are hopping through time! In a book that ties to ORIGINAL SIN and no doubt connects to the recently announced TIME RUNS OUT storyline coming in September that will send the AVENGERS and NEW AVENGERS books about eight months into the future in a move many comic fans call "confusing."

Daredevil 4
This book is so fun, right guys? A much lighter tone to this series and its predecessor than everything that had come before for Daredevil since, I suppose, his Marvel Knights series (or maybe even since Frank Miller). There's just so much fun and such a light and breezy tone to be had here. Anyway, Daredevil's falling into a fire pit because his new ally betrayed him to one of his arch nemeses. So much fun!

Elektra 3
I'm really enjoying this series so far and I'm excited to see where this creative team goes. Also excited to see how this story shapes up. I'm just pretty into this book right now, you guys.

Original Sin 4
I continue not to be sure of this event but it'll keep breaching my list if only because I'm sure there are developments coming. After last issue's shocking end, hopefully this week we find out a little more about why a hero seems to have gone rogue.

Thunderbolts 27
Charles Soule is gone from the book that he nurtured into something really terrific and exciting. Taking his place are the ever delightful Ben Acker and Ben Blacker, creators and writers of the Thrilling Adventure Hour podcast and subsequent graphic novel from Archaia. I really like this book as is and I love these two writers so I'm hoping that the combination of the two will create something wonderful.


B-B-B-BONUS PICK OF THE WEEK
Wicked and the Divine 1
GUYS, I know, this isn't a Marvel pick so I had to send it down to the bonus picks section but I'm really excited about this book. Readers of this blog should be well aware by now of how much I love Kieron Gillen and Jamie McKelvie, both as separate entities and as a duo. They're going right back to their wheelhouse with WIC/DIV and Image comics as they show us a world of gods and pop stars (the two aren't mutually exclusive). The art of the book, as ever with McK, looks gorgeous and I'm sure the book will be phenomenal. Check it out, you guys.

Monday, June 16, 2014

SPEED ROUND: All-New Invaders 6, All-New Ultimates 3, Deadly Hands of Kung-Fu 2, She-Hulk 5

Sorry everyone, these should have come out last week (not helped by the fact that I only have busy weeks from here on out) but they didn't so here these reviews are, in all their glory. Except, in this case, "in all their glory" means "literally as short as I can make them."

All-New Invaders 6
J. Robinson (w) and Laming (a) and Guru eFX (c) and Petit (l)

Japanese-American superhero Radiance was in Manhattan for the ORIGINAL SIN truth bomb and learned that the Invaders had the power to stop the atom bomb in WWII but that they didn't. She demands a meeting with an Invader and gets Human Torch after taking some SHIELD agents hostage. He reveals it had to do with the second Golden Girl, Gwenny Lou Sabuki, grandmother to Radiance.

This book continues to move extraordinarily slowly as Robinson dispenses seemingly unending back-story, exposition, and clunky dialogue. I one hundred percent recommend this book if you're trying to find a comic that stumbles its way through 70 years of Human Torch history. But that's just about the only way that I would recommend this comic. I know, it breaks my heart too.

Total Score: 1/5


All-New Ultimates 3
Fiffe (w) and Pinna (a) and Woodard (c) and Cowles (l)

Jess is saved from her poisoning by her naturally produced antitoxins and some careful monitoring from doctors. Bombshell double-agents her way back into her drug dealer boyfriend's life to allow Spider-Man a chance to break up a powerful drug ring. Scourge appears on the scene and manages to evade all capture from the pursuing Spider-Woman, Kitty Pryde, Cloak, and Dagger.

If that summary made this book seem exciting or maybe even like it's on the right path after a shaky start, well, I'm sorry for misleading you. For all of the action of this issue that eventually comes, it's a crawl to get to just about anything meaningful. Meaningful's still kind of a stretch: there's a lot of cliche teenage emotion and hints that there's a bigger story that what our heroes have seen but there's not much more to it than that. And did i mention this story moves really slow for something that's trying so hard?

Total Score: 1/5


Deadly Hands of Kung Fu
Benson (w) and Huat (p) and Yeung (i) and Aburtov (c) and Sabino (l)

Shang-Chi has been asking around about the White Dragon, hoping to discover more about the death of his friend Leiko Wu but he's met at every turn by resistance. His digging brings out old enemy Skull Crusher, with whom he speaks about Leiko Wu and the changes in her over the years. He points Shang to a brothel owned by White Dragon where Shang subsequently is pointed to a nearby memorial where White Dragon sometimes hangs out where Shang meets up with Daughters of the Dragon Misty Knight and Colleen Wing, staking out the White Dragon themselves, before FINALLY being pointed to a nightclub White Dragon runs, where Shang comes face-to-face with White Dragon at last.

This story bounces from locale to locale as Shang-Chi traverses some seedy parts of London to try to find a lead on Leiko Wu, though it never feels particularly overloaded with new locations. There's more to the story of Leiko Wu than Shang wants to admit but still he proves an affable protagonist as he politely asks his questions and tries to remain above violence, though easily turns it on when he needs to. The addition of the Daughters of the Dragon is not unwelcome and I was glad to see Misty looking like regular Misty and not like she does on the cover, as I worried her two most recent appearances (here and in her inexplicable arc in DAREDEVIL: DARK NIGHTS) would both feature her in some sort of strange and underdressed love interest way. Nope, all good here and it's still good to see Huat and Yeung on art in this book. Nothing here that will blow readers away but still easily a readable book.

Total Score: 3/5


She-Hulk 5
Soule (w) and Wimberly (a) and Renzi (c) and Cowles (l)

She-Hulk and her team have set about researching the blue file, sending Hellcat to find Tigra, Angie Huang to a North Dakota courthouse, and She-Hulk to Shocker's apartment. After some understood fear out of Shocker, She-Hulk has a decent conversation with him and learns he doesn't know about the file, doesn't remember much of anything  because, apparently, his prolonged exposure to the vibrations make him super susceptible to concussions. She gets what she can out of him and heads home. Hellcat, though, ended up somehow triggering a response in Tigra, causing her to attack Hellcat when she brought up the file and to nearly kill herself. Meanwhile, Angie finds the files she needs in the ND courthouse but also finds herself at gunpoint from the office clerk. Hellcat tries to warn She-Hulk that the blue file seems to have a trigger word problem that makes those involved ready to kill themselves but Shulk doesn't get the message as she's busy telling a rock climbing Wyatt Wingfoot about his involvement.

Plenty happening in this book as it's an interesting story on three different fronts. Even the least action-filled section, She-Hulk's talk with Shocker, leads to some fun moments and some good characterization out of both characters. It's another strong entry into this series from Soule, though the art style of Ron Wimberly is decidedly different than, say, series regular Javier Pulido's. It's more than a little distracting at times and, while it does the job, I'm not sure it's totally for me. Still, solid book, solid series, interesting story.

Total Score: 4/5

Sunday, June 15, 2014

This week's picks* and apologies

Hey everyone, sorry the last few days have been a little busy and found me far from a computer or from some new comic releases. Though it's rare that this is the case, I actually couldn't get my hands on a few new books in time for my release schedule (SHE-HULK, DEADLY HANDS OF KUNG FU, and ALL-NEW ULTIMATES) so I ended up not reviewing them (or ALL-NEW INVADERS, because I didn't want to just have a standalone review for that one because I'm a little OCD). I'll get to them in the coming days. Therefore, this week's "this week's picks" is a little lackluster because we may have some additions once I've actually read them all and, you know, also because it's a gorgeous day outside and you should all go celebrate Father's Day or simply gorgeous days. Hopefully it's gorgeous where you are and you weren't banking on this being a giant post to really gorge yourself on (though it's certainly shaping up that way despite my intentions). ALSO, what's the deal with the page boost spike yesterday? I didn't post anything yesterday, you guys! I'm *this* close to being a little hurt by that.


Avengers Undercover 5
There are some GOOD Madam Masque's
being written these days.
I'm really liking the vibe of this book right now and I think Hopeless is setting it up well to really kill as we move forward.


















New Avengers 19
Why does my shortest post have full
page screen grabs? Because I'm GREAT
Just another classic NEW AVENGERS hard-to-read-because-who-is-really-in-the-right-in-this-book kind of issue. My love for this book has slowed somewhat from its crazy and cinematic start but it's still certainly a consistently fantastic book.
















Hawkeye 1-18
From my own collection!
AH HA, GOTCHA, in lieu of a third book (it probably would have just been CAPTAIN MARVEL anyway) I'm fully recommending you go out and read or re-read all of the current HAWKEYE series again. I did it over the last day and BOY it's well worth it. All of the praise you've read for this book is well-deserved.

Friday, June 13, 2014

Amazing Spider-Man 1.2, Deadpool 30

Amazing Spider-Man 1.2
Slott (w) and R. PĂ©rez (a) and Herring (c) and Caramagna (l)

With Peter still trying to attend counseling and maintain the busy Spider-Man schedule on the down-low, new possible hero Clash has his first outing, which goes rather unsuccessfully. Clayton Cole, though, unlike Peter Parker, comes from a wealthy family and is able to literally buy time with Spider-Man through his agent. Spidey, needing the money, shows up but is pretty quickly creeped out and webs Clash up and leaves, making himself a new enemy in the process.

There's a lot to this little limited tie-in series that could enrich a reader's understanding or view of Peter Parker at the start of his career, which is certainly a nice thing, but it also rather means that the story runs a little slowly as there's just maybe a little too much context, particularly for older readers. It is certainly still a valid Peter Parker story and does an interesting job weaving and winding between classic Spidey stories but it tends to move pretty slowly between those stories (seeing Peter Parker in counseling, it turns out, is maybe not so thrilling, partly because it's more Peter pretending not to be Spider-Man which wears a little thin after 50 years and partly because who would actually think that would be thrilling?). Still an entertaining enough story, even if Clash starts to sound a little like Max Dillon in Amazing Spider-Man 2, a villain I had a lot of trouble with (was he actually mentally handicapped? Should we be rooting for Spider-Man to defeat the mentally handicapped villain?).

Total Score: 3/5


Deadpool 30
Posehn and Duggan (w) and J. Lucas (a) and Staples (c) and Sabino (l)

While Deadpool and Dazzler, at the behest of Shiklah, seek out vampire nests all throughout New York, Preston and Adsit deal with what they saw in the ORIGINAL SIN explosion. Preston saw where she can find Eleanor and Adsit saw something horrible enough he's refusing to talk about it. Preston goes by herself to Chicago to visit Butler's brother. She finds Eleanor, hidden away in a doghouse and, back turned to the camera, Preston reacts to her visage.

Deadpool's plan to take down the vampires (a plan my girlfriend, not reading the series, referred to as "pretty funny, actually") is working pretty well, even if it's grossing Dazzler out. We get maybe a teensy bit too much of it here as things start to turn to obvious jokes and quips, making things a little cheesy to read at times. However, the plan remains an interesting one and the Deadpool-Dazzler team-up is fun and fresh. There are more hints to dire goings-on as Adsit remains silent on what he saw in the explosion, though hints that maybe he's not going to be so thrilled with Deadpool the next time they meet, and as Preston meets Eleanor only to be horrified by whatever she looks like or is or something. Plenty fun enough to read, slows down a little maybe midway through as we hit the point where they have to drag the issue on a little to leave the reveal for next time.

Total Score: 4/5

Wolverine 8, Savage Wolverine 20, Nightcrawler 3

Wolverine 8
Cornell (w) and Anka (a) and Curiel (c) and Petit (l)

Wolverine, guided by Shang-Chi and Iron Fist, visits a mystical temple where it is said that death takes a holiday. Offer comes to Sabretooth to, in theory, work out a way for him to free Pinch and her daughter Annie and Lost Boy. Of course, he doesn't really care about that and manages instead to offer up a way to track Wolverine in exchange for his services. Accepting, Sabretooth sends a team of ninjas to attack Wolverine.

With the much advertised DEATH OF WOLVERINE coming, Cornell kicks off his three part THREE MONTHS TO DIE run by sending Wolverine, still trying to rediscover himself in the new killable world, to meet Death and to work out with Shang-Chi and Iron Fist. I tend to be wary of the physical representation of Death whenever it appears in fiction, just as I'm still a little flummoxed by the physical Heaven that we saw in AMAZING X-MEN to bring back Nightcrawler (although, somehow, I'm past the point of quibbling over Hell existing in Marvel - maybe it's just time that these things need). I tend to believe that having a character who actually is Death is a little on the nose for my liking. Still, teaming Wolverine with Shang-Chi and Iron Fist isn't a bad thing so maybe this will all turn out okay. Still don't like businessman Sabretooth.

Total Score: 3/5


Savage Wolverine 20
Tieri (w) and F. Ruiz (a) and Brown (c) and Petit (l)

It's the roaring '20s (the roaring late '20s, to be exact) and prohibition is all over the place with Al Capone running the most successful bootlegging gig though it puts him at odds with Bugs Moran, a Canadian bootlegger who's enlisted Wolverine. When Wolverine's girlfriend turns up dead (fridging at its finest), he hunts down Capone, who gives him the name of the man who actually did it. Of course, that man is Sabretooth and Sabretooth enacts the St. Valentine's Day Massacre, of which Wolverine was a victim before healing.

The tone of this book is pretty dead on to where it needs to be and Felix Ruiz does a swell job making it feel like the '20s, making this another interesting enough installment of "how does Wolverine play into this time/this event?" a game that this series has been playing since the first couple of arcs passed. Still, the story isn't particularly compelling (which might be my own bias against gangster stuff, I just tend not to care unless it's really a different take on gangsters) and somehow businessman Sabretooth turns up again, albeit in a more questioning and mercenary sort of way. I wouldn't say that I'm burnt out on Wolverine, exactly, which is a credit because boy is he EVERYWHERE but I am certainly, at this point, well burnt out on Sabretooth.

Total Score: 3/5


Nightcrawler 3
Claremont (w) and Nauck (a) and Rosenberg (c) and Petit (l)

Trimega, showing up with three robots now, attacks the circus and immediately begins to show off how powerful he is, tearing through Kurt's friends and adopted family like nothing. Margali shows up just in time and easily overpowers them and Kurt decides, to keep the others safe and to get some back up, that he'll bring Amanda and Margali to the Jean Grey School, where they're greeted with suspicion and hostility. There are far deeper issues at play, though, as Margali and Amanda attack their interrogators behind closed doors and as a horde of Trimegas show up to attack the school.

While the story feels like it's moving a little too slowly to be particularly compelling, there's a bit more to like here. I want to clarify - the story itself isn't necessarily moving that slowly but the sheer amount of dialogue and exposition slows down the actual pacing of the book to a point where it's sometimes hard to get really drawn into the story itself. There is some decent characterization based on the way the X-Men react to Margali and to Kurt and the way Kurt has to continue to struggle with his return to life, leaving behind everything he'd lived his previous life working towards. Heaven is real, confirming all of his hope and faith, but he still rejected it, which is a compelling story but seems pretty well over by the time the issue's done with.

Total Score: 3/5

Thursday, June 12, 2014

Captain Marvel 4, Hulk 4

Captain Marvel 4
DeConnick (w) and D. Lopez (a) and Loughridge (c) and Caramagna (l)

With no easy solution in sight to the plight of the new Torfans, Captain Marvel tries to think up ways to transport everyone off the planet, as opposed to J-Son's offer of relocating the thousand strongest and leaving the others behind. While she bounces ideas off of Tic, Gil, a Sentimault named B-Bop, and chief engineer/defense minister Ja Kyee Lrurt (nicknamed Jackie), the Haffensye attack again. Captain Marvel and her new band set off after them to pillage them back, succeeding in at least one sector and hoping to salvage some more parts to make more ships.

Captain Marvel as a space pirate for righteousness? I'm not going to turn this idea down, you guys. My pre-game this week and my analysis last time out said that part of the fun of this new arc would be seeing Carol up against a problem she can't punch away. That problem and therefore that tension still remains in large part, particularly as she's got the shadowy dealings of J-Son to contend with, but this is, after all, still a superhero comic book and punching is rather the norm so DeConnick has found a way that allows Carol to punch and to problem solve. Still, for all the excitement of this book, if you're coming into this issue looking for some serious pirate action, there's not a lot to be had, with the book revolving mostly along dialogue and explanations and arguments. A times that slows things down but it's also a little necessary at this point as we get to know an entirely new cast of characters. Still solid stuff overall and certainly enough to get this series rolling.

Total Score: 4/5


Hulk 4
Waid (w) and Bagley (p) and Hennessy (i) and Keith (c) and Petit (l)

Maria Hill explains to the onsite Avengers what's happening with Banner and Hulk and they attempt to aid him in his fight against Abomination while Iron Man reconfigures a teleportation device Maria got off one of the crew sent to take her out. With some luck and plenty of skill, they manage to teleport Abomination pretty well away (Tony estimates Jupiter) and have time to deal with the situation. Stark takes Banner and brings him to Troy, where he and Arno plan to put a little extremis in him to help heal his brain. Meanwhile, Maria Hill is forced to tell Daredevil about Banner's condition, possibly compromising the information Banner had given to his lawyer in case he should ever wind up harmed at SHIELD's request.

There are plenty of plots swirling around (particularly interesting as I believe this is one of the books soon to go on a little break while ORIGINAL SIN mixes things up a bit, though I could be wrong) but sometimes it feels like they're not held together terribly well. The teleportation device feels like a deus ex machina, particularly when Tony is able to rejigger it to teleport on contact and they attach it to Cap's shield which Hulk is convinced to throw and still the shield doesn't teleport (as does, for that matter, the fact that it just so happened to be Sunspot and Captain Marvel, capable of absorbing Abomination's radioactivity, that Iron Man and Captain America brought with them on this mission). Still, as abruptly as the end of the fight came and as maybe conveniently as it came, there are plenty of good and interesting plot movements out there, ready to be expanded on. And guys, Hulk has an improved version of extremis? Who thought that was a good plan?

Total Score: 3/5

All-New X-Men 28, Uncanny X-Men Special 1

<Quick note at the top here: I know I've already said I'm going down to speed rounds as the main review style for now as things in my life get a bit busier but then, as always happens, I've ended up summarizing and breaking down every part of the book almost immediately. So here's the new attempt - I'm going to really speed up my summaries and hope that my analysis section, while obviously longer, will be shortened by how ridiculous it looks next to such a short summary paragraph>

All-New X-Men 28
Bendis (w) and S. Immonen (p) and Von Grawbadger (i) and Gracia (c) and Petit (l)

The future's Brotherhood is still attacking the ANXM with a battle plan this time that revolves around their last defeat, thanks to time travel. Members of their group are maybe not 100% on board with this but they're all being puppet'd by Xavier. Jean Grey uses her newfound power to hold people in place to hold Xavier, launching the immense psychic attack on the school, while X-23 dives at him.

I think the things that could be interesting about this series are dictated by whether or not you think the concept holds up. If you're totally onboard with the time-traveling X-Men stuck in the future and gaining new powers through shaky explanations and new alliances through shaky justifications, then I can see there being interest in a story that similarly bends the timeline and aligns people who maybe wouldn't align themselves and that's explained away by Raze saying that the mutant timeline is already so screwed up that it probably doesn't matter how often they go back in time to mess with things. I think I've said this before, even going so far as to using this same analogy before (possibly because I'm uncreative and possibly because once you've spent any amount of time grading high schoolers' papers you start to see this major flaw almost immediately), but it's like reading an essay where you don't buy the thesis or, worse still, where there is no clear thesis. Everything you write afterwards will fail to hold up because it's all just information and evidence that won't prove anything because there's nothing there to prove. Setting aside those issues, the book moves well enough and the colors and art help to accentuate the tension of the issue (though it wouldn't be so bad to break away from the reds and blacks for a little bit soon).

Total Score: 3/5


Uncanny X-Men Special 1
S. Ryan (w) and Ackins (p) and N. Lee, Poggi, and Pallot (i) and Redmond (c) and Cowles (l)

Scott's team stumbles across old pictures of Magik and are shocked to see how happy and young she looked. Then they're whisked away on flight training with Scott, where they're shot out of the sky and Scott is captured by Death's Head leaving the kids to try to figure out, along with the called-in Magik and Emma Frost, how to track a mercenary they can't even identify. Irma and Benjamin are sent to infiltrate SWORD as new recruits to figure out who the merc is and Benjamin runs afoul in his search of Iron Man, who identifies Death's Head and offers to help.

There are maybe a few incongruous plot points here, things that don't totally make sense or that don't link particularly well, but overall the book (part one of three, it claims) reads fairly well. Cyclops is taken to a man actually looking for Havok which leads to some interesting questions and decisions, Iron Man's involvement with a group he doesn't yet know is actually Scott's X-Men is a possibly fun touch, and the promise of Nova having something to do with this (per the cover) is a similarly interesting touch. Can't help noticing that the Death's Head in this issue looks rather like the original Death's Head and Tony's had dealings with Death's Head II in recent days but that's just nitpicky. Still a fairly fun book with a team that has some amount of potential, however it's meant to be used.

Total Score: 4/5

Wednesday, June 11, 2014

Mighty Avengers 11, Secret Avengers 4, Avengers Undercover 5

Mighty Avengers 11
Ewing (w) and Land (p) and Leisten (i) and D'Armata (c) and Petit (l)

Luke Cage (formerly Carl Lucas) has just found out from the Watcher that his dad, James Geary (formerly James Lucas), was part of some sort of super team back in 1972, a team he'd never told his son about, even going so far as to completely excuse himself from Luke's new life because he didn't want to be involved in anything super heroic. Cage interrogates his dad about the team and what they did. James tells his son about a time when a bat-man (but not that one) was found dead on the streets of his homicide beat and, in trying to learn more about it, James ended up working alongside reporter Constance Molina, dark sorcerer Kaluu, Blade, Blue Marvel, and the Bear (from Howard Stark's little super team back in Gillen's SECRET ORIGIN OF TONY STARK storyline for IRON MAN), who reveals that the bat-man is actually a Deathwalker. His dad is reluctant to tell the whole story but Luke informs him that Blade is part of their team now but is missing, seemingly taken by Deathwalkers, and now Constance Molina and Kaluu are apparently prepared to go up against the current Mighty Avengers.

There's a lot of exposition to get through here as Ewing has limited time to explain James Lucas' history in a book not about James Lucas. Of course, it ties to some of the prior events already in MIGHTY AVENGERS and seems like it will drive the series further, which is a benefit not always seen in tie-in books, but it's also hard to feel like this isn't a little bit slow. There's a lot of exposition and rather a lack of subtext in favor of simply text in the hopes of pushing the story forward. Still, it's a very nearly engaging story but I think the true story lies in the story of why the Bear's dogs are so big here and not, as I believe they originally were, corgis. Boy, that's a weird word and somehow looks weirder pluralized.

Total Score: 3/5


Secret Avengers 4
Kot (w) and Walsh (a) and Wilson (c) and Cowles (l)

While Coulson, Black Widow, and Spider-Woman are off disabling a poetry bomb, Fury and Hawkeye have been sent to Kowloon Walled City in China to capture The Fury, although the Kowloon Walled City no longer exists. MODOK speculates that the city was brought back in to China from another dimension, possibly as a place to trap The Fury. It's a bit of a crazy story but it's the best they can come up with for why a thought-gone city has reappeared and, frankly, it doesn't really matter because they just need to capture The Fury. Thanks to the help of a MODOK-made gun and a little theory about the way The Fury's brains work, Hawkeye and Fury are able to take the alien down and SHIELD is able to extract him. Meanwhile, though, MODOK starts to get under Hill's skin and the assassin who had tried to kill Hill winds up dead in his containment.

With a little less happening and a little less quipping and bantering, this issue leaps out as probably my favorite so far of the new series. It's not without its issues (most of which are convoluted-plot based) but it's certainly a step in the right direction as far as I'm concerned. The characters acted in a way that felt more within themselves and some of the interesting layout choices and unconventional pages worked in a way that I thought some of the attempts in previous issues hadn't (namely the weird text-adventure game that ran through Natasha's head at one point, which was kind of fun as an idea but didn't work for me because there's little doubt in my head that Natasha has never played nor thought about a text-adventure game so framing her thoughts as such seems like it's only there as a fun idea and not anything more substantial). Still, this issue largely works (though I still can't get a great read from a couple of characters, but that may be thanks to the nature of this team) and I think toning it down works to the advantage of the book (though, in this case, toning it down is a secret strike team capturing a deadly space alien in a city that shouldn't exist).

Total Score: 4/5


Avengers Undercover 5
Hopeless (w) and Walker (p) and Gorder (i) and Beaulieu (c) and Caramagna (l)

The group of kids (they really need a better collective name) are given the night to think over Zemo's offer of a place in his organization (which is pretty much the whole of Bagalia) or to return to their homes and likely go to jail for killing Arcade. Their split into three groups to tour the area with Nico and Cullen going with Daimon Hellstrom to see the magic part of town, Constrictor showing Chase and Death Locket the more group-themed entertainment (basketball court!), and Madam Masque quickly leaving the perceived remaining leaders of the group, Hazmat, Cammi, and Anachronism, behind as she goes to her own business, saying that she's told them they can have the world on a platter and that there's nothing more she can do to convince them than that. There are surprises all around as Hellstrom continues to sympathize with and help teach Nico before revealing none other than her thought-dead ex Alex Wilder (of RUNAWAYS fame), as Death Locket continues to hit it off with Excavator, and as Hazmat forms the idea of infiltrating Zemo's group to gain leverage in eventually becoming heroes again. When the group reconvenes, she and Anachronism reveal the plan and give everyone the chance to join, telling them they don't know where it will lead or when they'll back out, but it's a chance to eventually return to being heroes and to disconnecting themselves from Murder World. The next morning, everyone but Cammi tells Zemo they'll join with him while Cammi, flying away from the city to return home, is dragged out of the sky by Constrictor.

My official mantra should be "there's plenty happening in this book" and probably something to do with the word "interesting" but it's hard not to say here again, as overused as it is on this blog, that there's plenty happening in this book and it's already, even before we start moving towards the bulk of the plot, plenty interesting. Of course, Hopeless was lucky enough to take hold of all of these compelling characters with mostly rich personalities and backgrounds before he absolutely helped himself by writing a spectacular book in the form of AVENGERS ARENA and really helping to cement where those characters are at. Now he gets to take that experience and those well-developed characters and drop them into an all-new story with plenty of exciting roads to go down. For as great a character piece as AVENGERS ARENA was, it was a decidedly contained story, one that literally couldn't go outside the bounds of the island on which Arcade had trapped everyone. Here Hopeless expands the playground with even more fleshed out characters. It's exciting to see and I'm really looking forward to where it's going.

Total Score: 5/5