A bit of housekeeping, I have decided to do the week in
review as a series of posts over Monday and Tuesday. I want to do a few more in
depth reviews of some books and then do a post that will wrap up the whole
thing. Be aware many of these reviews may have SPOILERS, so turn away now.
This idea eliminates the What I’m Getting Post, but I will still provide this link or this link for you
to see the entire list of what is coming out. For my own list next week Before Watchmen Minutemen by Darwyn Cooke,
Wonder Woman, Hawkeye, Walking Dead, Peter Cannon Thunderbolt and Godzilla Half Century Wars have to be
the most anticipated books.
The big book and what has to be considered Marvel’s new flagship
title is Uncanny Avengers. Issue #1
by Rick Remender
and John
Cassaday was an uneven start at best. Cassaday’s artwork is very
strong but I believe that he leaves most of the art direction and layouts to
the writer as he shines more with certain writers. Regardless for all the flaws
in this book, the art is not one of them. The story involves Captain America
trying to put together a team of Avengers that combines both mutants and other
heroes. Captain America at least agrees with Cyclops on one thing that the
Avengers never did enough to help mutants. The idea is to make sure that we
keep up the analogy that mutants are an oppressed minority and hated and feared
by the rest of the world. I know in the sixties when Stan Lee came upon that
formula he hammered it into the ground. That was of course of the same time as
the Civil Rights Act and it resonated with the times. That time has passed and
the fact that most super powered people can be lauded as heroes, but a mutant
is hated befuddles me. How does a regular person discern the super powered
Thing as human but Colossus as a mutant? Both should be accepted inside the MU
or hated. The book itself skips around giving us a taste of the various players
but we never actually make it to a team forming.
The first of two major elements is that Cyclops is now the
most hated person in the MU. When other heroes go nuts due to something
overtaking them, all is forgiven, not so with Scott. Heck Wolverine now is the
soft hearted heroic type waxing philosophically about how much me misses
Professor X and all that he was trying to do. It all rings hollow and false
because no one has even mention Professor X for years and second they have
changed Wolverine from what he was into an almost totally different character.
He is now the headmaster of the mutant school and of course he hates Cyclops.
Cyclops now plays the role of Magneto as the powerful mutant who was doing what
he thinks is right. It is assumed from how it is being handled that Cyclops is
responsible for all his actions while under the influence of the Phoenix, yet
everyone acknowledges that it is a power that should not be possessed by anyone
and would corrupt anyone. There was no true organic path to make over the
personalities of these characters but since Marvel will never replace
characters one of the way to effect change is to make a character into
something they are not. What this does is change the status quo, but it also
undermines the character. I think well done characters write themselves, poor
writers cast characters into roles irrespective of who they have been
established to be. If done right you just throw situations at them and watch
them react. Marvel lives and breathes the illusion of change and this is an
effective method to shake things up.
The second point is the buildup of a menace. A good group
needs to have a good villain. The major reveal and shock ending, is the big bad
is the Red Skull and he has a band of super powered bad guys. First we see
someone (later revealed to be the Red Skull) perform major surgery on
Avalanche. He promptly goes out and is a mutant menace and appears to off
himself as Captain America, Thor and Havok (Havok?) try to stop him Later the
super powered henchmen beat out Scarlet Witch and Rogue and take Professor X’s
body so the Red Skull can take out his brain for nefarious purposes.
A lot of set up and the team chemistry can’t be formed until
we get a team. I will give it time as Remender has been doing great work with
Uncanny X-Force and Secret Avengers. Rick has done some great long term stories
that still manage to work as shorter arcs. Plus Cassady’s art makes this an eye
pleasing read. It is not a home run, it did not deserve 18 covers and it did
not re-set the Marvel Universe. It did start a premise and it was well done.
The other Avenger type books were AvX Consequences #1, Secret Avengers #23, and Avengers #31. I’m getting the Avengers book to read Bendis final
arc on both Avengers and New Avengers called end times. We start with a Star
Wars cycle chase and then switch back to Avengers towers where Captain America
is talking to Wonder Man who attacked both group of Avengers and trashed a lot
of stuff with some other super powered people a few months back. Of course
while Cyclops is hated, Cap is trying to help Wonder Man because, you know he
was just having a bad day of something. Again this is the first issue and we
are just setting up some storylines that Bendis wants to close out before
moving on. AvX Consequences just
finds us talking about why we hate Scott Summers so much and we get to see
Wolverine go talk to Summers, but told Cap he may kill him. Two points the
depiction of Captain America in three books has no consistency in the uniform
he wears and the constant portrayal of Scott as the most hated man just never
rings true. In the MU we have seen time and time again (heck see Wonder Man) where
a hero goes bad due to some reason and afterwards all is forgiven. AvX
Consequences is at least telling us what is happening with the major players
from the cross-over and it is weekly so we will wrap it up quick. Secret Avengers wrapped up the Null story
line in short order and moved back to the other major story line very fast. I
get the feeling that Remender needed to end this series quickly as it does not
fit inside the new status quo Marvel is setting. Still I loved this book as it
is fast paced and tightly plotted. It felt a little rushed and the ending a
little anti-climatic, but it works.
Check back later today for the next segment.
I think you're looking at the persecuted mutants analogy too narrowly. Sure, it was originally oppresion of blacks in the US, but it's equally applicable to the second class citizen (or forbidding from having the opportunity to be a citizen) status of gays and immigrants. Gays even fit the mold of not being obviously mutant or non-mutant in your Thing/Colossus example. Immigrants, too, come to think of it. No telling which ones are legal and which aren't on surface appearance. Both groups are hated and persecuted by large segments of the the US population.
ReplyDeleteNot that I'm reading any of this drivel from Marvel. I'll leave that flushing of perfectly good money to you.