snap judgments no, really, there are some comics you really should read

21Feb/071

You Mean There’s MORE? – Preview Reviews for 2/21

Well folks, here we are: Civil War #7 eve.  Can you sleep?

In just a few hours (hopefully less if UPS shows up at the store on time), we'll have the start to the end of the Marvel tent event of the summer.  Just this issue... then Civil War: The Confession, Civil War: Battle Damage Report, all the books that had been delayed from the delay on Civil War #7-  oh!  And Civil War fallout, like the Civil War: the Initiative, the two new Avengers books, all the ripples and shockwaves from The Big Death (you know, the one Marvel is caring about as opposed to wrapping up Bill Foster in a tarp in chains...) bound ot echo for a few issues, guaranteeing us Civil War until World War Hulk starts up its engines.

I am Civil War'd out.

Anyways, on to those OTHER books that are coming out today...

Cable & Deadpool #37
Okay, weird turn of event:  Deadpool is planning to become a super hero (stay with me) by capturing the Rhino and turning him into the SRA.  But first, Deadpool wakes up in maybe a lab but definitely at three inches high.  Apparently he was drugged at a bar and exposed to good ol' Pym Particles.  Rhino winds up finding him and wackiness ensues.  Believe it or not, Deadpool kicks ass at three inches tall and it turns out to be a big ol' plot to make Deadpool seem more bad ass than the issue before where he took on the Taskmaster single handedly.  Don't get me wrong, I adore madcap kooky Deadpool, but this seems strange somehow.  Perhaps because the name 'CABLE' is on the cover of a book he didn't even appear in.  Or the fact that a few issues ago things were pretty heavy and deep what with Cable having his own country and fighting in the Civil War and there was this huge rift personal beliefs and whatnot.  Now, we're fighting some pretty lame villains in a pretty lame bar and the Rhino is pretty impressed by DP's 'Foot of Doom'.  I think this is what happens when you have a central character shipped off to an X-Men book.

Immortal Iron Fist #3
Someone send David Aja a cookie bouquet.  The art work in this issue is gorgeous, fluid and striking.  More ruminations on past Iron Fists, giving us that sense of history while the book goes dreamily through its plot, where HYDRA schemes and the old and our Iron Fists meet face to face.  Good stuff, nothing cataclysmic, but mysterious and cool.  Yeah.

Legion of Monsters: Werewolf by Night #1
Oh boy.  Greg Land art.  Two stories: one a sexy werewolf story full of hot chicks and tarot cards and Lorenzo Lamas in Renegade.  Are we expecting dark horror?  No, just a hip little story about the beast within.  The second story is a Monster of Frankenstein tale with no credit for the artist or writer on the interior.  But it's fantastic!  Skottie Young (a personal fav) is expertly colored in that way that makes people like Humberto Ramos seem like manuscript and the story itself is short, sweet and deeper than the lead-in.  Not a bad book if you dig Marvel's more Midnight-y Suns side.

The New Avengers: Illuminati #2
Yeah, THE New Avengers.  Was that even on the cover of the first book?  Because I'm going to state right now that the 'The' in the title is ruining everything about what I had hoped was going to be a fun 'A-Team' styled book with the big brains of the MU kicking ass and chewing bubble gum as available.  But this pushes that 'don't take it all too seriously' standard I was giving the mini because here, that cover?  ACTUALLY IN THE BOOK (though Namor is not carrying Xavier is in his arms- but wouldn't it be funny if that was the book's gimmick?  Ever issue the chair was lost or tipped over and someone always wound up carrying the crippled guy?  I digress.)  We begin after the first 'season' of Dan Slott's She-Hulk, where Shulkie gave Reed Richards the Power Gem Titania tried to take he out with.  With an off the cuff slam regarding the caliber of villainy She-Hulk tangles with from Tony, Mr. Fantastic explains that the Infinity Gems are very very dangerous and that every time someone gets their hands on all of them only trouble follows.  So why doesn't the Illuminati... GO GET ALL THE GEMS!  The rest of the crew puts on their best 'Have you gone MAD?' faces as Reed announces that well, he didn't wait for the go head and already has two more gems and the Infinity Gauntlet.
Now this is the point at which someone should have punched him.  Or mentally checked to see if it was a doppelganger or ... something because this is huge.  This is not forming Voltron or summoning Captain Planet here.  The Infinity Gauntlet has no been held by very sane individuals and yes, you can debate me on that.  But no, Reed takes them on a little 'weirdness' thanks to using the gauntlet with just the three, finds out where two other gems are and says that the last one will just show up if you've gotten the others.  So, Dr. Strange and Professor Xavier head back to the X-Mansion with Namor, who Reed put on Team B to keep him away from his stuff and by stuff I mean wife.  Doctor Strange and Xavier realize that the Mind Gem is the collective consciousness of the universe and do a little philosophical interpretation on that and Namor fights a big sea monster.  Meanwhile, Tony and Reed put Black Bolt in a tube and have him scream at a fixed point, where the pure power is strong enough to rip a hole in reality itself.  Reed gets Iron Man to reach into that hole and pull out the Reality Gem, which promptly shuts down his armor, disintegrates his arm and turn him to ash.  Reed freaks out, uses the Infinity Gauntlet after a suggestion from Black Bolt and does... something.  Reality is righted.
Everyone gets back together and I want to say that the Infinity Watch shows up and takes off with the gems, but no.  Reed experiences the lure of power and his own pride at actually accomplishing all this and it takes Uatu showing up to SHAME Reed for wanting to pull off such a lousy idea that gets him to take off the freakin' glove.  Each of the Illuminati get a gem for safe keeping and Xavier's eyeballing Reed pretty heavily there at the last panel.
Oh man.  This would have been such a cool idea a year and a half ago.

She-Hulk #16
So, She-Hulk goes to capture the Wendigo, which is silly because Wolverine's already hunting him because.. he just is.  With a rare bright move by SHIELD (really, these guys have been the Keystone Cops in nearly every other book!), they've set up a perimeter for the 'Superhero Conflict in Progress' and are waiting it all out.  During the fight, Shulkie takes a pretty bad wound to the gut and has a bit of an out of body experience as her 'Jen Walters' side shows up to quote Star Wars and tell herself that this whole SHIELD thing isn't as cool as her first premise for the book.  Odd, but personally appreciated.  Elizabeth Twoyoungmen shows up to try and cure the Wendigo curse, but SHIELD declines the offer preferring capture.  Which they do, thanks to a funny and gruesome Fastball Special from Jen and Wolverine.  Wolverine has his doubts about all of this and even more doubts about She-Hulk hitting on him after their team up, citing 'Juggernaut's sloppy seconds'.  Ouch.  Apparently, all of this is working towards some 'Project: Achilles' by SHIELD.  It sounds nefarious and deceitful, making me wonder:  when did SHIELD become the bad guys?

Silent War #2
Taking a stretch through the Inhuman's motivations from the point of view of Luna (who's now six years old!) watching the monarchy turn around her.  There's a war on, you know and we're reminded of that twice in the book as a way to excuse a lot of strong actions.  You'd think there'd be more negotiation going on, Black Bolt and Medusa going to see the Fantastic Four to talk this all out, maybe even Reed realizing that the Inhuman's advanced crystal technology shouldn't be given to unprepared humans... it just feels like the premise of the book would normally be handled without th use of a mini-series, maybe an issue or two.  Maybe I'm expecting my heroes to be a bit smarter.  Maybe I'm saying maybe a lot today.  Anyhow, the Inhumans try and get the Terrigen Crystals back, are deflected, and wind up somewhere distant and cold where the Sentry is told to meet them.  Continuing his streak of acting like a nerdy teenager, he talks at Black Bolt, swearing he totally understands his pain and instantly comparing himself to someone cooler in order to look cooler.  (I know, and I'm a big fan of the Sentry too; the guy should obviously be left to Paul Jenkins).  The Inhumans go home before SHIELD can start more active hostilities and Luna's big secret about her dad having Terrigen crystals is revealed, leading to another trip to see Quicksilver who's got the crystals embedded like buckshot in his chest.  Good ideas, a little shaky on the execution.

X-Men: First Class #6 (of 8)
Skrulls!  Skrulls show up, impersonate the X-Men to do harm to them and wind up sympathizing with their targets instead, earning them a boot off the assignment and a trip home.  The X-Men ponder over the mysterious impersonations, fight a bug, pass out and miss the whole explanation.  Life goes on.  These have all been short, sweet little stories that are more fight and fun than anything deeper or character driven.  I continue to enjoy the book as much as one would enjoy a bag of Peanut M&Ms on a break, especially with Mini Marvels and Franklin Richards: Son of a Genius backups.  Make sure these guys are getting shelved in whatever kids section your local store has...

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