Captain Marvel 8
Chewie has had a number of Flerken babies and Captain Marvel's ship is being attacked by some aliens who want them all dead. Rocket Raccoon, feeling a kinship with Chewie upon learning that she's the last of her kind, helps defend Chewie on the ship from one such alien who has made its way onboard while Tic takes the shuttle off the ship full of Flerken younglings and Carol attacks the invading ship from the outside. Together, they all manage to ward off the aliens and Rocket learns that Chewie is actually pretty alright. They drop the Flerken kittens off at a refugee planet but Tic and Chewie refuse to leave Carol, preferring to stay on as part of her team.
It's not a bad issue and it moves pretty well. Marcio Takara does a pretty great job on the art duties of this one (as does Lee Loughridge on colors). I'm feeling less of an attraction to this series than I did with its predecessor. I'm still not convinced Captain Marvel's place is in space. We've spent so much time with new characters lately that it's taken Carol sort of out of the spotlight and swapped in a handful of characters I don't care so much about. It's a delicate line to walk with a solo book, leaving the focus on your protagonist and building up her support characters. One of the best parts of DeConnick's first volume on CAPTAIN MARVEL was that she seemingly easily navigated that line, creating a whole world in which Carol could comfortably live all while never forgetting that she was the focus of the book. One of the problems, too, with space books at current are that most books have to spend so much time establishing who the threats are that we have less time for the heroes we're ostensibly there to see. DeConnick has certainly built up more than enough good will that I'm still looking forward to seeing where everything is going to go next.
Total Score: 3/5
Rocket Raccoon 4
The other mysterious raccoon has captured Groot and sends away Rocket's backup with a bigger payoff offering than Rocket had. Finally alone, the other raccoon pokes and prods at Rocket, berating him for being alone in the universe before revealing that he himself is not similar to Rocket at all, unzipping his costume and revealing himself to be mercenary Blackjack O'Hare. He tells Rocket that this has been a plan years in the making, concocted after Rocket ruined his chance at assassinating Princess Amalya and making enough money to happily retire on. Rocket's two storylines intersect at just the right moment, though, as Amalya bursts in with her cadre of Rocket's ex-girlfriends to exact their revenge on Rocket, who had a habit of seducing them and stealing their goods. The ensuing fight leaves Rocket the last one standing, though certainly exhausting and worse for wear, before the Guardians show up to pick him up. He celebrates with them but goes to bed early, depressed still that he's the only one out there. HOWEVER, that still may not be true, as we see a raccoon-esque captain leading her ship to find the book Rocket was so desperate to hear more about.
I very nearly didn't include this book as one of the ones I did a longer review for (reverse-spoiler: I'm running really late on reviews this week so this many long ones certainly seems counter-intuitive) because, though the issue was excellent, I wasn't sure I'd have more to say than I've been saying. For those who haven't been paying attention, I've been saying that this book is the most fun book Marvel is putting out right now, with Young really knocking it out of the park in the tone, the story, the art (my god, the art), the dialogue, and really, everything. I'm not sure I have more to add to that but I decided to still shine a light on this book because not having much to add doesn't mean I shouldn't still do a little more to recommend it. For real, it's a great book, you guys. It's the perfect marriage between art and writing, between character and tone. This one even shows that the book can go further than just wild and crazy hijinks, delving here into Rocket's sadness and loneliness. Excellent stuff.
Total Score: 5/5
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