I’m so glad it’s Friday (as I write this)! It was a long week at work, but a productive
one. It’s also been extra busy around
the house with family in-town and more arriving tomorrow (today as you read
this). This means some cleaning around
the house after my afternoon (hopefully two hour) nap – I can feel it coming on
Even Now…when I have come so far….
Whoops, we have a habit around here of breaking into song whenever a
certain phrase comes to mind – maybe it’s a memory implant trigger. Speaking of memory implants, my enjoyment of Hawkeye has been marred since the
disappointing Secret Avengers
issue. All I can think about it is him
having more of a “Swiss-cheesed” memory than Sam Beckett. The issue was good,
but the problem (SPOILER
ALERT) of Clint reading his gangster love-toy’s comics was so
dumb. I liked the comic covers, but why
couldn’t “Cherry” have written down the issue numbers for the lock combination in
order on…you know… a piece of PAPER!
Honestly, I think Clint would have more sex in a monogamous marriage -- why
put up with this damage! Kate Bishop is
my favorite character in the book and there was way too little of her this time
around (Sorry Rusty [I know you’re not reading this], but it wasn’t Best of theWeek). What was the Best? I don’t know yet, because I’ve barely gotten through
a third of my pile. Fortunately, for my
reading public (of one or two – you know who you are), I did read the latest Avenging Spider-Man and I really liked
it.
Writer: Christopher
Yost
Artist: Paco Medina
Inker:
Juan Vlasco
Colorist:
Dave Curiel
Letterer:
VC’s Joe Caramagna
Publisher:
Marvel
Price:
$3.99 (including “FREE” digital code, which I sold on eBay for $3.25)
In the era of accelerated shipping schedules and bi-weekly
titles, it’s quite surprising that it has been SIX WEEKS since the last issue
of Avenging Spider-Man. I don’t know what caused the delay, but it
was worth the wait.
First, the Paolo Rivera cover is terrific (trying to unpack [my] adjectives this week)! Jim did a great cover post last Monday and
this one captures perfectly the essence of the story within. I even love the Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe vibe with characters
partially off panel, like this was part of a connecting series. The Future Foundation is a goofy bunch of (intelligent)
misfits and you see that clearly here. I’ve
got to hand it to Fraction for actually keeping these guys, gals, and Gonzos
around, rather than jettisoning them, as soon as he took over FF from Hickman. (Buy my eBay issues -- PLEASE! [shameful plug].) Having Spidey using his webs as a leash is
really funny. And check out Dragon Man’s
sneering stare! Boy, this is fun. Now I understand why our LCS’s Best Covers ofthe Day feature is so entertaining.
Second, the Paco Medina art is spectacular. NO ONE draws the Superior costume better than
he does. His She-Hulk looks
super-strong, which is good because she…is…super…strong. I guess the word I’m looking for is SOLID (Oh) solid as a rock. We get two incredible splash pages: one
similar to the cover theme and another with Potto® facing off against Death’s
Head (Google it). These aren’t like the
early days of Image pin-up pages either – they actually matter. The pacing, panel layouts, character
expressions (masked and unmasked), and body language are wonderful. Seriously, if it takes Paco six weeks to
draw each issue, then publish the book every six weeks. Maybe they can get away with it since it isn’t
the main title.
Third, the story by Christopher Yost was great. The FF need to go to the Microverse, so they
call Spidey for help. (He does his
wonderful Google-goggle character summaries with his pithy commentary again.) Only they don’t want help with the mission,
they want him to babysit the 17 odd found-ation-lings. And keeping up his Parker-loser appearance –
he agrees and it’s chaos. You learn
everything you need to know about these “kids” in one issue through his
interactions with them (it probably took Hickman a year’s worth of stories). The dialogue is perfect (which is what you’d
expect from the guy behind the lauded Avengers:
Earth’s Mightiest Heroes cartoon [R.I.P.]).
Bentley-23’s work on a time device catches Potto®’s eye. But it also catches the attention of the Time
Variance Authority (the suits from Walt Simonson’s somewhat confusing run on
the Fantastic Four). They’re the ones who send Death’s Head back
to kill them all before something catastrophic happens. The problem for Spidey is that they know who
he is now (wasn’t that going to happen last issue too). You also get an ominous reference for Potto®’s
future actions and the eventual end of his webspinning days: “Hey, is that Spider-Man? Is he still really…Why don’t we stop
it? We could stop all this from
happening, all the lives…” Spidey saves
the day like only he can by
threatening Bentley to destroy the time device plans, causing the little
super-villain to wet himself. Potto® does
a great job of telling the FF off when they return and at the very end you see
he’s up to some secret shenanigans surrounding Sandman!
GRADE A: This is a wonderful
series and the best “team-up” book in decades.
It’s the companion book that reads like a headliner -- if you’re
following Superior Spider-Man you can’t
miss these ESSENTIAL tales!
I tried Avenging Spider-Man, but even with my insane list I have to cut something and felt this book was one to bite the dust. Sadly your review makes me want to reconsider, but I will be strong.
ReplyDeleteYou're making a mistake on this one. Drop a disappointing DC title instead.
ReplyDelete