In Defense Of… the Sentry

I like the Sentry.

WAIT WAIT- give me a moment here. I don’t like the New Avengers Sentry. I don’t like the fact he’s on a team and poorly thoughtout and kind of ignored despite having this big goddamned thing on to over Stark’s tower.

I liked the original miniseries a lot. I like the lie behind it. And I think the Sentry, at heart, encapsulates everything I love about Marvel and their style.

I’m gonna get it, aren’t I?

the real SentryLet me explain: Robert ‘Bob’ Reynolds is a loser. Let’s face it, he’s no square-jawed, barrel-chested man of action. He’s an agoraphobe if I remember right, a suspected alcoholic that thinks he gets superpowers when he drinks. It just so happened he was right, thanks to a special serum. He was a middle aged man going to some of the world’s greatest heroes and saying ‘Hey, I know you and we’re really cool friends.’

He should be laughed out of the room. But it’s all true, he is a great hero, his dreams are reality. I know people who still live in their high school years and think back to when they were the Big Man on Campus who let themselves go as years went by, only thinking about the Good Ol’ Days.

how can you not love Jae Lee art?Not only could he be completely delusional or the greatest hero ever known, but he’s also his own worse enemy. I hate overpowered characters with no serious drawbacks and this is probably the most poetic and probable drawback yet. You wanna be Superman? You want to be the greatest force for Good? Well, there’s an equal and oposite reaction to everything and the Sentry creates just as much Evil in the world as he does good just by being there. He’s his own worst enemy and, in a way, aren’t we all?

The end of his first miniseries had him realize all this, the fact that he might be insane, the fact he could never get a chance to be that hero he used to be without bringing about just as much destruction. The greatest power and the greatest amount of responcibility, Robert Reynolds has to forsake his heroic rights and be that middle aged loser in order to save the world. In a day and age where Peter Parker loses his sense of responciblity to his family and toes Tony’s party line for a better suit and a nice place to live, the idea that a man who has no life and no future could turn his back on glory and fame and purpose even to ensure he does the Right Thing(tm) and keep the Void from this world is just awesome in story and scope.

I like the Sentry. I like the ordinary man given extrodinary powers and abilities who has to struggle with being human first, and a hero second. I like seeing how the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few or the one. I would have loved to see Bob show up in books as this lonely man looking up to the sky, watching the heroes overhead and knowing that could have been him again. I like my character’s flaws to be central to their everyday life. Why we don’t see more of the Sentry’s wife having to cope with her broken husband, I don’t know. Why he has to be this throwaway idea in the New Avengers that can be simply defeated by logic loops, I don’t know that either.

Sentry and the Void 'chat'Paul Jenkins came back to sort of explain the Sentry in a second mini, and for the most part, I loved it. It was more of a character study than the first and, in his gut-wrenching origin, it was all hammered home when the Void tells him flat out ‘You could have been anyone’. Peter Parker, all Spider Totem BS aside, could have been anyone. Anyone can be a mutant. Any soldier could have been super, he just had to be at the test at the right time and really want it. There is nothing particularly special about a Marvel character for the most part, they are written with everyone in mind. And that’s why I will always be a Marvel fan. While I will never be a girl made of clay, or a billionare playboy or a lost alien, I could be a kid on a field trip.

I could go on and on about the mini, how John Romita Jr. came a long way to show us how off his rocker the Sentry was in simple facial tiks and stances, how the Sentry threw a part of himself into the sun to escape Bob’s inadequacies, how the Void’s last words were that he loved him and how much just a tiny well placed word bubble can speak volumes, but… I’m a sucker for Jenkins so much it would just come off as fangirling.

The next New Avengers has him in it, but not really. The Sentry, my The Sentry, forfitted his position to keep me safe and went back to being just a guy and that’s where I will keep him.

6 Comments

  1. Posted September 14, 2006 at 6:31 pm | Permalink

    YOU LIKE THE SENTRY!!!??? THAT’S THE MOST HORRIFFIC THING I’VE EVER HEARD, AND I THINK. . .

    Hold on let me read the rest of the post.

    Hmm, OK the character you describe is. . . acceptable. I think my problem with the Sentry has always been that he’s too blasted powerful. I couldn’t stand Silver Age Superman when reading my dad’s DC comics from the ’60s, where he actually fit, so I was less than pleased to see him show up at Marvel, where he just seems too blamed strong. Heck, he takes out Attuma AND Terrax in one issue, why do you need any other heroes?

    Then i find out that every good deed he does, he later balances with evil. That alters it, because now I guess he has to weigh when to act more carefully. Though it raises the question of how he could act at all, knowing that the lives he saves here will cost other people somewhere else their lives. It seems he’d have no choice but to be the fellow you suggested, looking wistfully on from the sidelines.

    So, i can see why you like him. That said, that recent mini-series left me completely befuddled, and I still think the Sentry is too strong to be on Earth. Maybe he could go help Nova in Annihilation? Against Annihilus, Thanos, Tenebrous, Aegis, he’d be pushed to the limits.

    Of course, saving lives on that level would lead to a Dark Phoenix level of destruction by the Void later, right? Maybe that’s not such a good idea. . .

  2. Posted September 14, 2006 at 7:19 pm | Permalink

    Didn’t say he was everyone’s cup of tea, I just think Jenkins hit all my buttons with the first series. There, it shows he shouldn’t act, that he had to have his glory days wiped from all of his friends’s memories for the betterment of mankind. That’s BAD ASS.
    And I liked v.2, if only for the really dark and twisted way the Sentry came about, how truely messed up this guy is, and I’m not talking ‘oh ho, lookit me, I so crazy’ but ‘HOLY SHIT THIS GUY IS SUPPOSED TO BE ON OUR SIDE?!?’ kind of crazy. Certifiable. Medicatable. CRAZY.

    The Void isn’t gone, he’s going to come back and make the Dark Phoenix look like a stomach cramp. Or at least… I can only dream.

  3. Posted September 15, 2006 at 12:10 pm | Permalink

    I like The Sentry, too, and like you I loved the first mini, enjoyed the second mini, and don’t have a lot of interest in New Avengers (although I buy it, sort of like watching a car wreck in slow motion).

    As I recall, The Sentry was originally supposed to be “Superman in the Marvel Universe”, and more specifically an exploration of why Superman in the Marvel Universe wouldn’t really work: He’s too powerful, his enemies are too powerful, and he basically ends up dwarfing all the other Marvel heroes by his stature.  Which is exactly what the first mini does.

    In a way, he’s the dark side of The Samaritan from Astro City.

  4. Posted September 16, 2006 at 8:45 pm | Permalink

    The problem is that The Sentry is essential Marvelman/Miracleman dropped into the Marvel U without very much in the way of obfuscation. I’ve read Moore’s stories, and it’s really hard for me to enjoy the original Sentry series for very long without going “Hey…wait a minute!”

    It is beautifully drawn, however, and has a few genuinely great moments, but it still comes up sort of hollow for me.

  5. Posted September 18, 2006 at 9:39 am | Permalink

    The first Sentry mini was a great meta-commentary on Superman and the Marvel universe. To be honest, I haven’t been as thrilled with him as a member of the MU proper.

    For my money, the Superman role has always been filled by Thor - not that he’s acting particularly heroic right now.

  6. Posted September 18, 2006 at 12:19 pm | Permalink

    Michael Rawdon: Hoorah! I agree wholeheartedly (though I’m not up on my Astro City) and know that he was very much pegged as ‘Superman in the Marvel Universe’ when they put him into the New Avengers. The thing is, we’d been doing just fine without a ‘Superman-esque’ character in the MU, why would we need one now? And, as said below, what was wrong with Thor?

    BeaucoupKevin: I’ve never had the opportunity to read Miracle/Marvelman and while I do see a lot of design parallels, I’m not up on my big glaring rip offs. Maybe this is another way to introduce the same concept to people like me?

    Fortress Keeper: It makes no sense to have the Sentry in the MU. He becomes really cheap and shallow on a regular team that doesn’t really care if he’s there or not. The Avengers, before at least, always seemed like guys who could hang out with one another, but I mean… Bob doesn’t want to even hang out with himself.
    My money’s still on that’s not Thor, but this maybe just wishful thinking.

2 Trackbacks

  1. By Blog@Newsarama » Meanwhile… on September 18, 2006 at 11:27 pm

    [...] Our own Carla Hewitt defends the Sentry: I like the Sentry. I like the ordinary man given extrodinary powers and abilities who has to struggle with being human first, and a hero second. I like seeing how the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few or the one. I would have loved to see Bob show up in books as this lonely man looking up to the sky, watching the heroes overhead and knowing that could have been him again. I like my character’s flaws to be central to their everyday life. [...]

  2. [...] me just a moment to just… remember why I liked the Sentry. Because this issue is trying to convince me [...]

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