All-New X-Factor 9
David (w) and Di Giandomenico (a) and Loughridge (c) and Petit (l)
It's rather a rest day to start for X-Factor as the team returns home from their perhaps ill-thought-out mission to rescue Georgia Dakei with young Georgia in tow. She blames Cypher for the problems but seems onboard with Gambit, to Cypher's chagrin. Gambit is having his usual troubles with the team and its mission, troubles that will no doubt be exacerbated by the fact that he just unknowingly slept with Harrison Snow's wife Angela, as discovered by Harrison's assistant and secret lover Linda. Meanwhile, resident mad scientist Doctor Wexler DNA tests Georgia (pretty much just for fun) and reveals that Scott Dakei isn't her father and her deceased mother isn't actually her mother. Instead, her birth mother, Dakota Bennett, lives in Minneapolis and her birth father is unknown. Quicksilver argues on Georgia's behalf that she ought to be able to meet her birth mother and X-Factor brings her to Minneapolis, where she's greeted happily by her mother. Unfortunately, her birth father is apparently a supervillain named Memento Mori and he's been watching the house for a long time waiting for Georgia to return.
For a rest issue, there's plenty happening here. One of the good things about an issue like this, one that removes them from immediate action, is that we can get a sense of where the team is and how everyone stands with everyone else and what's happening in everyone's life. In many ways, the rest issues are some of Peter David's strongest because he understands the way a team works and knows that the important part of a team book is making sure they feel like a team. That was one of the strengths of his previous long-running X-FACTOR title and it's clearly at play here. There are certainly parts of this issue that drag a little and I'm still finding it a little hard to get behind the Georgia stuff (I'm not really compelled by her character as yet, but it's still obviously an early issue for her). Worth looking at in this book is a nice two page sequence where Georgia talks to Cypher and, when he leaves, she talks to Danger. The two pages are near-mirror images of each other with a few of the panels set exactly the same way and with Gerogia in the same position. Big shout-out to colorist Lee Loughridge on that one because he does pretty spectacular things with the very slightly different light on each page as time has passed a bit. I read it on my computer and could easily flip back and forth between the pages and it was pretty neat, you guys.
Total Score: 4/5
Amazing X-Men 8
Kyle and Yost (w) and McGuinness (p) and Farmer (i) and Rosenberg (c) and Caramagna (l)
It's important to note before I start this review and summary that Wendigos, the incredibly powerful, nigh-unstoppable Canadian murder machines that every so often run into Hulk or Wolverine, are created, thanks to a curse on the land, whenever anyone eats human meat. Anyway, two guys in Canada at a meat processing plant get into a scuffle and one accidentally shoves the other into a table at just the wrong angle, snapping his neck. To protect himself, the murderer shoves the victim into the meat grinder. Do you see where I'm going with this? Wolverine, kind of sick of being cooped up in the school and seemingly invited away, pays a visit to old friend Heather MacNeil Hudson (though she's labeled as Heather McDonald here so maybe I missed something?), AKA Vindicator of Alpha Flight. Heather tells him that her husband James Hudson, AKA Guardian, has been missing for some time and she's worried about him (they've also been fighting a lot lately, as they did the last time we saw either of them in FEAR ITSELF). She and Wolverine go to try to find him as back home Ororo worries about where the healing factorless Wolverine has gotten off to now. Wolverine and Heather quickly learn that Guardian was attacked by a Wendigo and immediately try to call in backup but they may be too late, as they're set upon by a whole slew of the creatures just as Ororo, with the help of Rachel Grey and Cerebro, calls an X-team to Canada.
AMAZING X-MEN so far has been an okay book, one that seemed to take the place of Jason Aaron's WOLVERINE AND THE X-MEN in its lightheartedness and its near whimsicality. Now Craig Kyle and Chris Yost take over and immediately throw it into a much darker place, though the art of Ed McGuinness and colors of Rachelle Rosenberg still rather keep it a little lighter than most books. It's an immediately interesting story which will pit the X-Men, including, presumably, reintroduced Colossus, Nightcrawler, and Northstar, as well as a non-healing Wolverine, up against a ton of extremely powerful Wendigos. It immediately gets dark to the point where there was a legitimate chance that Heather was about to be torn in half by Wendigos. So bit of a different tone here but I certainly don't think it's the wrong way to go on this book right now. I also like the addition of Mark Farmer's inks on Ed McGuinness' pencils since McGuinness tends to draw action and certain people very well but sometimes makes people look a little too young for my liking and Farmer's inks seem to balance that a little. Overall, very good start to a new look AMAZING X-MEN.
Total Score: 5/5
Amazing X-Men Annual 1
Nero (w) and Larroca (a) and Oback (c) and Caramagna (l)
A new villain, who seems to be Inhuman though his origins are rather unknown and, presumably, will stay that way, named Meruda has been attacking and brutally killing members of Ororo's old tribe in Africa and has now targeted her cousin Abuya. Ororo rallies the X-Men and they set off to Africa, where they find Meruda is using Abuya's soul to power a dark and evil force. While the rest of the X-Men fight the beast, Ororo fights fellow elemental Meruda, who explains that Ororo killed his family and his tribe when she was a child with a sandstorm she could not control. Though all of this hurts Ororo and brings up some past doubts about what happened that day, she manages to fight Meruda down, destroying him in the process. Meanwhile, the X-Men manage to take down the beast and save Abuya. Ororo discovers, thanks to a spirit on the plains, that she was not responsible for the death of Meruda's tribe, that it was an unrelated sandstorm that killed them. There's a backup story in here by Marguerite Bennett that focuses on Firestar, too.
It's not an awful one-shot sort of story, focusing on Ororo and her past in Africa and that questions what could have happened thanks to a young girl who could control the weather but couldn't, you know, really control the weather. The story is a bit bogged down, though, by lengthy exposition and overlong dialogue. The art is alright but loses some points as well for one of the weirdest shots to end the story as we see Ororo from the back, butt clearly defined past her cape(?) looking out onto her team. Geez, egregious butt-use there, Larroca.
Total Score: 3/5
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