Writer: Dan Slott
Penciler: Humberto Ramos
Inker: Victor Olazaba
Color Art: Edgar
Delgado
Letterer: VC’s Chris
Eliopoulos
Publisher: Marvel
Price: $3.99
(including “FREE” digital copy which I sold on eBay for $3.00)
Troubled Mind Part Two: Proof Positive
didn’t “WOW” me very much, but honestly it could have just been me. Reading comics is sometimes like entering the
Dagobah Tree, what you find inside is related to what you bring with you. For me, I was bringing extreme fatigue and
was hurrying to finish reading it, so I really didn’t get the opportunity to
savor the story. Still it did have its
moments.
Remember how we had the big promise of
the Spidey versus Avengers confrontation two issues ago and how the whole thing
was delayed for the Cardiac subplot last time?
Well, we jump right into the long-awaited action and it’s over by the
FOURTH PANEL!!! Seriously, I thought
Spidey would be much more formidable than that.
His contest was more pathetic than Spider-Girl losing to Spider-Woman in
the Cosmic Madness tournament. They didn’t
even fire him ; he’s only on probation.
The Avengers’ conclusion that Potto®
wasn’t a Skrull was funny, but asinine at the same time. And the heart to heart with Black Widow was infuriating. I LOVED the Avengers movie and the scene
where Scarlett Johansson interrogates Loki
was brilliant. But the “RED in my ledger” quote is being used way Way WAY too
often! Does Josh Weadon get royalties
every time someone uses it? I hope
so. The doodle bit was clever
though. Ghost-Spidey forces Potto® to
leave a picture message indicating that Doc Ock is controlling his mind and she
just thinks he draws a “lousy spider”.
Did I
mention how the Avengers totally violated all of Spidey’s rights by examining
him? Well, he certainly took advantage
of the situation and gathered some stellar data on his body, including a
glimpse at a brain wave anomaly. This
leads him to confront Cardiac to get back his Neurolitic Scanner. The two duke it out in the underground secret
hospital, but stop when Spidey realizes that a little girl needs it. This girl’s medical condition was worsened
due to Ock’s Global Warming scheme.
Feeling the guilt, Potto® and Cardiac perform brain surgery on her and
become best buds in the process.
In thanks
she gives him her favorite stuffed animal, “Mr. Pinky Penguin” and Potto® is
truly touched by the gesture. He also
now has his “magic helmet” device and surprise surprise can clearly hear
Ghost-Peter. The best part of the entire
issue was this final page and the teaser that he’s going to use the Living
Brain (old-fashioned green robot) to perform a “Parker-ectomy”. If you’ve seen the solicitations, you know it’s
not going to end well, because the promos are all saying “Superior No More”.
Has my
enthusiasm for this storyline faltered?
Not really, I think I just had an off week. Three issues in a row and Slott has left us
with an outstanding cliffhanger. That
sets expectations really high, and it’s a major feat to deliver month after
month. If this issue was a little “off”
and it wasn’t just me, then he’s succeeded in easily 7 out of the last 8, not
counting Dying Wish. That’s really
impressive and this storyline is still going into interesting directions and is
FAR from over.
Grade B:
Not every issue is a homerun, but this one is easily “double”. Buy It!
It won’t read as well in collected form.
The episodic rollercoaster ride into the unknown is a blast that can
only be fully enjoyed the first time around.
Storytellers: Mark Waid & Chris Samnee
Color Art: Javier Rodriguez
Letterer: VC’s Joe Caramagna
Publisher:
Marvel
Price: $2.99
The book
that really excited me this week, despite an unexplained foot swelling malady
(gout?) was Daredevil. It’s amazing that Mark Waid has been turning
out stellar issues for over two years now.
Some are better than others, as we witnessed in this week’s Superior, but this one was really really
good. First off, this isn’t part A of
Z. There is no named soon-to-be
collected story arc. It’s just another
installment in what will go down as one of the all-time greatest DD runs.
I may be
mistaken, but I think this is the first time that Mark and Chris are jointly
listed as the storytellers. Could this
be a return to the Marvel method of plot-art-script? Probably not.
It’s just so well structured. Still
the collaboration is exceptional no matter how they’re accomplishing it.
Daredevil
has been approached by a man who has all the answers to the recent attack by
people with similar heightened senses.
Matt’s suspicious, but his heart-beat lie-detector checks out. One nauseating (well it would have been for
me) swing ride over to Brooklyn later, and DD tells his informer to get to the
hospital. He’s no dummy and has realized
that the guy has been implanted with a pacemaker to fool him (what a cool
concept). Unfortunately, whoever is
controlling the guy stops it and his heart.
The four panel senses layout was wonderful where a single image of DD
was subdivided to highlight his eyes, ears, nose, and mouth.
After
crashing through the skylight of an abandoned warehouse, DD is confronted by a
mysterious man, wearing his father’s boxing robe, who actually survived the
chemical bath to give him a radar sense too.
He calls himself “Ikari”, which is Japanese for “Fury”. The costume is outstanding. It’s an amalgamation of the DD’s original
yellow and red suit (my favorite), with boxing tape on the hands and ninja
trimmings. It even has a yellow hoodie
over the DD red suit half-mask.
Emblazoned on the black tunic is a “D” like symbol that I assume is the
actual Japanese character for the name: in
his hands -- two Kusurigama blades.
The dude
is formidable and goes toe-to-toe and hand-to-hand with DD in diverse settings:
tightrope wire, fire escape ladder, roof tops, and sporting goods store. Matt erroneously assumes he’s the better
fighter and it consistently upstaged by Ikari.
The ninja-DD even cuts him to the bone on his forearm, leaving him
dangling from a fire escape. Waid uses
this almost blackout moment to insert a Stick flashback (haven’t seen him in
years). When DD comes to, he turns the
tables by making his billy club into a Bo staff. Ikari shatters it.
Now weaponless,
Matt leads him to a place where he can dampen his radar sense. Inside the store, he sets of the sprinklers
and crouches behind some boxes waiting for a chance to reach for a baseball bat
and strike during the confusion. I won’t
give away the AWESOME sequence that follows, but it doesn’t go as planned.
Grade A+:
The pacing is phenomenal and the story is intense. I don’t know who the mastermind is behind all
of DD’s troubles (it can’t be the Kingpin or Bullseye – too obvious), but I can’t
wait to find out, even if it takes another two years.
Buy It and keep it forever!
There’s
more I could comment on like how Captain America put me to sleep and that
Wolverine and the X-Men was actually a worthwhile AU tie-in. Age of Ultron #006 was the best issue to date
(at least the scenes in the past) and Nova was flat-out fun. A great week for comics and I hope you all
have a good and RESTFUL weekend!
I agree, reading a book you do bring in your own feeling. My week in review will prove that point. Superior was a "B" book though and a huge set up for issue #9. Where Potto will get rid of Jimney Parker.
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