Saturday, April 13, 2013

Uncanny X-Men 4, Fearless Defenders 3

Uncanny X-Men 4
Bendis (w) and Bachalo, Townsend, Mendoza, Vey, and Olazaba (a) and Bachalo (c)

In my last All-New X-Men review, I speculated that the original X-Man who was going to go with Scott's crew was Jean. It made sense to me, even if it was a little formulaic, because she had heard the Jean Grey School faculty talking about how useful it would be to have a mole in the school and she's the most capable and the most gung-ho about this "staying in the future" business. Instead, it was Angel. I'm going to decide that this is a machination of Jean's and not Angel going of his own free will, which is better than what I had decided during that issue anyway. If Angel is there of his own free will, I'm having some troubles. Yes, Jean psychically made him change his mind about leaving just before all this happened (again leaning into the theory that Jean sent Angel there) but Angel is skeptical of this whole future and why they're here anyway. So how would he be the one to willingly go off with a team that featured Magneto? And, as was true last All-New X-Men issue, the Stepford Cuckoos also go with Scott's new X-Men team.
If it seems like I'm retreading a lot of ANXM ground with this issue's recap, it's because this issue was the last issue of ANXM, by and large. There are some things happening between the Cuckoos and Emma, as they talk to her psychically while Scott's at the school and discover that she's without powers but by and large, a third of this book or so is literally the same meeting from ANXM. You have to assume, of course, that not everyone who reads Uncanny X-Men will be reading All-New X-Men and you have to give some sort of recap to explain how the Cuckoos and Angel ended up with Scott and his team, but I'm not sure you have to take up a third of the issue copying down the majority of a different issue. I think the Emma and the Cuckoos stuff is worthwhile and fits in this book but the book is so insistent with showing us what's happening between Scott and everyone else and I'd say that's not necessary here. Again, though, this comes from someone who read both books. Maybe someone who's just reading Uncanny X-Men really profits from getting that whole talk. I'm not sure I profited from it when it was only in All-New X-Men so I'm particularly against it now. It's the same general problem I tend to have with Bendis' books, all boiled down; I feel like we have a lot of wasted space in this issue. But again, that's coming from someone who knows the full story going in. Meanwhile, the other new recruits continue to be somewhat uninteresting and make me sigh when I see blocks of text coming out of them and something is happening with Magik's powers. I need to give more time for the new recruits, obviously, who have no training and are just learning about what it is to be mutant, but it's that back-and-forth dialogue every time they show up that makes me cringe a bit. Magik will likely be explored next issue.

Fearless Defenders 3
Bunn (w) and Sliney (a) and Gandini (c)

Alright, now the book's starting to jump into it a little bit. We're starting to understand a little bit more of the threat that's been presented to us. The Doom Maidens are a dangerous and formidable bunch who are being raised by Caroline Le Fey and her assistant Mr. Raven. We still don't know what their goals are, aside from "end of the world" kind of talk, but we've at least seen, from Hela's description, how brutal they can be. Hela has then raised Hippolyta by calling in many favors and promising many more to different death lords and has chosen her to fight for Asgardia. She doesn't want Valkyrie in on this because she fears that Valkyrie could be turned against them. When asked what her motivation is in trying to stop the Doom Maidens from wiping out the gods and humans and what not, who, Valkyrie points out, would only strengthen Hela's army, Hela responds that the Doom Maidens would then tear from the lands of the living to her lands and have already captured Dani Moonstar, shieldmaiden to Hel, to open up a path. So the pieces are mostly in place here, which helps open some things up for the audience. The All-Mothers accept Hippolyta but also overrule Hela, saying that the three who just came to Asgardia (Valkyrie, Misty, and Annabelle Riggs) will go with Hippolyta to fight the Doom Maidens. Honestly, not that I'm trying to badmouth these three, this seems a little ill-prepared from the All-Mothers. They know Valkyrie is good for this kind of fight and it's her fault that it's happening (though they should consider Hela's warning about turning Valkyrie against them), but they don't know much about Misty Knight and Annabelle Riggs is a non-powered archaeologist. Yes, yes, teamwork and overcoming odds and all, but it REALLY seems like if this threat is so big they're willing to work alongside Hela, who was willing to raise the ruler of the Amazons for the task, they should maybe vet their candidates a little better.
So the new team heads to Harrowpoint Island in Washington, where Hela tracked the resonances of the Doom Maidens, and sets off on their search. Valkyrie is drawn to a spot in the little abandoned town under a church, where they find some groggy Doom Maidens and the rock-encased Dani Moonstar. Hippolyta quickly begins to fight and finds herself doing pretty well, though the other three are a little more taken aback. Riggs rescues Dani, though Le Fey, from her monitoring station, says that the ritual was near complete anyway so losing Moonstar isn't a huge problem. She also says that the Doom Maidens have just woken up after sleeping for a few thousand years, so they probably just have to shake off the cobwebs. Once they do, the maiden of seduction slows Hippolyta and Valkyrie, still fighting, realizes that something seems to be awakening in her. The Doom Maidens stop fighting her and call her their sister as the issue ends. So this book seems to be going places after a couple set-up issues that seem necessary, especially in retrospect. There's still only a little bit connecting these heroes, so it'll be important to see those connections and ties grow as the book continues, meaning that we'll have to get some more character focus in coming issues. Still, I'm more optimistic about this book after this issue than I had been after a somewhat slow, if necessary, start.

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