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Posted by Stealth on :
 
First of all, credit where it's due: this thread is inspired by Cobalt Kid's wonderful The All Spider-Man Thread.

I have more issues of Avengers than any other comic in my collection. That's because I believe that, for its first 30 years at least, no comic succeeded like Avengers in re-inventing itself into something more exciting and innovative each time. Which isn't to say that there weren't long stretches of mediocre stories in between the brilliant runs, but that only makes the brilliant runs shine even brighter (although there are certain issues I refuse to read on principle). There's also the way in which the book was blessed by one excellent artist after another, from John Buscema to Dave Cockrum to George Perez to John Byrne to Steve Epting; often the art kept the book (barely) afloat when the writing wasn't good -- and opinons differ considerably about when the writing was good and when it wasn't. Avengers may not be the most successful or the most well-known team book of all time, but in terms of a rich creative legacy and epic scope of mythos, Avengers is IMO untouchable.

But here is where I must admit that I'm not particularly pleased with the past 12 years of Avengers permutations. Avengers Volume One ended badly thanks to Marvel's catering to the speculator's market; Volume Two, the year-long Heroes Reborn phase, I've never even read and never intend to; Volume Three either revitalized the book or turned it into a sad oldies revue, depending on who you ask, and I'm of the latter opinion; Ultimates is wildly popular, but not to my taste; New Avengers is a travesty that would be pitiful rather than frustrating, if only it wasn't so commerically successful. Ironically, I do see some hope in the recent announcement that there will be a second Avengers comic by the same writer; this seems to me like it's all of a piece with the hubris that Marvel has been showing lately with their Civil War delays, etc. I think critical mass is fast approaching, and when the smoke clears, the current editor-in-chief and his pet writers will be nothing more than a bad memory. Then Avengers will evolve yet again, hopefully into something better.

No matter what happens from here, I'm still proud to say that I love Avengers, because it's greatest moments transcend the inevitable peaks and valleys of a comic that has run, in one form or another, for over forty years.

In this thread, I'll be posting reviews of each Avengers phase whose issues I own, but more than anything, I want to hear from other Avengers fans.

So the only thing left to say is -- Avengers fans assemble!!

[ December 07, 2006, 01:31 PM: Message edited by: Stealth ]
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Great, great idea for a thread Stealth! I've often thought of a similar thread for the Avengers because of our past conversations and am thrilled that you'll be doing reviews of Avenger's periods!

Can't wait to read them and I will definately be participating! Avengers is one of those rare comic book runs where I actually have read every single issue of the Avengers ever published--in the exact order from #1 - onwards.

Avengers fans assemble indeed! Can't wait to see more of your posts and other Avenger's fans participating.
 
Posted by Spellbinder on :
 
I've been an Avengers fan for 30 years, and am greatly hoping that one day Marvel will start printing Avengers comics again [Big Grin]
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
As with almost everything else in the Marvel Universe, my first glimpse of The Avengers in comics was in FF ANNUAL #3. Quicksilver took out The Human Top, Captain America took on The Cobra, Mr. Hyde and The Enchantress, Iron Man tackled The Mad Thinker's Android. If memory serves, my NEXT exposure to the group was in NOT BRAND ECCH #11, the story "King Konk '68". The most memorable moment was the full-page action shot where Konk has reached the top of the Empire State Building. Elsewhere, in the background, we see Giant-Man, who says... "And some nut told me Konk was climbin' the CHRYSLER Building! Ever since I lost my own series, I get nothing but bum steers."

The 1st issue of THE AVENGERS I actually got ahold of was #79-- "Lo! The Lethal Legion!" I finally got to see a "real" story featuring some of that characters from NBE, like The Vision. This issue was a mind-blower-- it was my 1st exposure to John Buscema AND Tom Palmer! WHOA!!! Recently, while buying the ESSENTIAL books to fill the huge, gaping holes in my collection, I was finally able to read thru this entire era. What a surprise to find that John MISSED so many issues (apparently, because Stan kept yanking him away to do other things). This particular issue struck me as somehow MUCH better than those that surrounded it-- or could that just be familiarity and "nostalgia" coloring my views? Anyway, what a place to drop in (if only for one issue). 5 super-villains I'd never laid eyes on, several Avengers, and everything played so DEADLY "straight" and serious (let's face it, Roy's better off when he's not trying to have a sense of humor).

But the comic that really made me an Avengers fan was AVENGERS ANNUAL #3-- which reprinted "Captain America Joins The Avengers!" If the Thomas-Buscema issue seemed like it almost took place in an alternate universe from the other Marvels I'd read, this looked like the real thing. And what a GREAT place to drop in! I still barely had any inkling of who Captain America was, so this story was perhaps the BEST-possible intro. I think I've read it at least a dozen times over the years. Looking back, it seems to me the inks tried to MURDER the artwork (George Roussos doing Stan a favor by inking an entire book over the weekend for half-rates), but Jack Kirby must have been REALLY inspired. EVERY panel feels like a pin-up! This story really introduced me to Iron Man, Thor, Giant-Man, Wasp, Cap, and was my 1st view of Rick Jones. I'd seen Sub-Mariner before, but he was much more a villain here than in the reprint of FF #6.

The "back-up" reprints consisted of 3 consecutive Captain America episodes from TALES OF SUSPENSE #66-68, starting off with what these days I consider one of the GREATEST of all Cap stories from TOS-- "The Fantastic Origin Of The Red Skull!" Kirby & Chic Stone remain in my eyes one of the greatest art teams ever, and perhaps never better than here. (When I re-read the story recently, I loved it so much I wound up scanning EVERY PAGE of it into my computer for easy future reference!) The other 2 episodes were not quite as good, if only because of different inks (Frank Giacoia got the credit, but I suspect, based on a recent interview, that Joe Giella did a LOT of the work on those. They don't really look the same as a lot of other Giacoia ink jobs.)

It took quite a while for me to get into buying THE AVENGERS regularly, and the quality of the book was seriously up and down (often down and down) but these earliest encounters will always have a special place in my comics-loving heart.
 
Posted by Tamper Lad on :
 
Yeah Stealth the New Avengers line up and the constant air of conspiracy isn't doing it for me either and I generally like BMB's writing.

Here's hoping that Mighty Avengers will be more what I'm looking for. I'm a little wary though because it looks sort of like the two Avengers books' line ups are divided by their stand in Civil War.

At least it'll have Frank Cho drawing Ms. Marvel.
 
Posted by DrakeB3004 on :
 
Avengers is one of those titles I always keep an eye on to see if the current incarnation is something I want to pick up. I loved the team back in the day when Buscema and Perez was on the book. I've popped in and out since then (especially Busiek's run) and while I like the "New Avengers", I'm eagerly awaiting the new New Avengers and "the Mighty Avengers"
 
Posted by Ultra Jorge on :
 
Avengers is my first love. Legion is a close second.

I've been a huge fan since about age 6 of the Avengers.

Stealth is right I can't think of any other book that has had so many good runs. Lee/Kirby, Lee/Ditko (and now the really good stuff) Thomas/Buscema, Thomas/Adams, Engleheart/Perez, Stern/Buscema, Harras/Eptig, Busiek/Perez.

Heck even in the medicore periods we got good stuff it just wasn't consistent. Guys like Shooter, Michelene, Steven Grant, Byrne, etc.

My fave run is Stern/Buscema. As for Busiek/Perez? I loved it but it did seem too old school.

I was waiting for them to reinvent themselves yet again. New Avengers wasn't it! [Frown]
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
Love the Avengers-- though perhaps not as much as others here. It's definitely up to who is on the team. That's true of other team books, too-- LSH, JLA, JSA, Titans, X-Men-- but *those* teams have never had a period when there wasn't at least one character that I really liked/was curious about/saw great potential in. The Avengers have had such periods, as I'm not a huge fan of Cap or Iron Man (though I'm liking the former more and more as I get older, for some reason-- and the latter less and less).

I began reading AVENGERS during the Mantis/Vision/Scarlet Witch/Swordsman period, which was a great time to get hooked. Marvel printed quite a few reprints during the 70's (as did DC) and I really think that that cemented my interest in this title, as well as FANTASTIC FOUR and X-MEN. (LSH, JUSTICE LEAGUE, SUPERMAN and BATMAN families for DC).
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
That's Lee/DON HECK (not Ditko)!!! (Some guys get no respect...)

Sad story about Don Heck-- Don took time off from the regular book to do the 1st ANNUAL. While he was at it, Roy got John Buscema to "fill in". But then, Roy liked Buscema so much, he made him the regular artist, pushing Heck aside, at which point Don kept moving from series to series to series without a steady home. In recent years, Roy admitted that HE was part of a problem he himself has lamented about editors in the years since-- shoving aside the older artists in favor of the "hot" new guys. (I know, hard to think of Buscema that way, but still...)

I loved Don's work on AVENGERS when inked by Wally Wood, John Romita (ONE glorious issue!!!) and Frank Giacoia. Dick Ayers-- EHH! Don himself-- DOUBLE-EHH! (But that's me...)


Englehart-Perez only lasted about 6 months! Steve Englehart's entire run is pretty fantastic, although he went through virtually an ARMY of artists of varying talents-- Buscema, Buckler, Cockrum, Heck, Brown, Esposito, Sal Buscema, Joe Staton, Tuska, Colletta, Tartaglione (GAG!!), Perez, Grainger...

And to think, Steve might have stuck around a LOT longer, if it hadn't been for Gerry Conway being such a colossal pain during his absurdly-brief run as editor.

George had a long run on the book... but it was CONSTANTLY being interrupted by months and months of fill-ins, over and over again, due to George's habit of working on 4 projects at the same time and blowing deadlines on ALL of them. It eventually led to his being fired, and when he landed at DC, he "fixed" his problem. (Witness his LONNNNNNNNG, almost-unbroken run on THE NEW TEEN TITANS.) I liked Perez' on FANTASTIC FOUR, but always felt he was born to draw THE AVENGERS, of all the books he ever did. Imagine if he'd been able to do what Buscema-Palmer did in the 80's...!!! (I never realized that in the late 60's, John Buscema was MISSING from SO MANY issues-- because Stan kept yanking him off the book to do other projects, making a farce of the fact that Don Heck had been pushed off the book to make room for Buscema!)
 
Posted by Set on :
 
I was a big fan of Busiek's recent run, recapturing some of my favorite themes (although for me, it will never be a true Avengers team without Wonder Man and the Beast playing Ted and Booster).

Right now the only remotely decent Avengers book out is Young Avengers, IMO. This current Wolverine / Ronin / Sentry / Spider-Woman / Luke Cage / Spider-Man line-up just doesn't cut it. A potentially interesting team that could be called 'Iron Man and his dysfunctional super-friends?' Perhaps. Avengers? Not even close.

I end up liking secondary 'Lower Decks' characters more than core members, it seems, no matter the group. While I love the Legion, I also have a serious love for the Subs and Cadet trainees as well, and wish we could have seen more of them.

With the Avengers, I find myself wanting to see more of characters like USAgent, Stingray, Moondragon, Tigra, Living Lightning, She-Hulk, the Beast, Silverclaw, etc. and less of Iron Man, Captain America, Thor, etc.

Of those considered founding members, Pym (whatever the heck super-name he's using this week) and the Wasp are my favorites, with the Scarlet Witch and Hawkeye being the next two in line from the second line-up. (Sadly Wanda has been mangled beyond recognition, and I don't think is really recoverable, as a character.)

I didn't realize until I got older how unique it was for the Wasp to be constantly changing costumes, because she was written as a character, and not as an iconic property. Spider-Man and Superman can't ever make a permanant change to their costume. No matter how many times they try, it always 'reboots' back to the 'classic' look, because they've ceased becoming living growing characters and become brands, and changing their look is screwing with their brand identity or some such garbage. They've become so successful, with quarterly earnings reports and many people's jobs tied to them, that meaningful stories really can't be written about them, IMO.

Hank Pym gets my respect for not only pulling a Brainiac 5 and constantly accidentally creating villains for the team to fight, but also being the incidental origin for a half-dozen or more heroes! Two different other Ant-Men have existed, one other Giant-Man, a Black Goliath, Atlas, Stature, Jocasta, Victor Mancha (of the Runaways) and Yellowjacket II are all heroes derived from his research (or created by Ultron, whom he created).

If only Brainy could pump out a half-dozen heroes for every Computo!
 
Posted by Ultra Jorge on :
 
prof, my bad on Heck. I always get him and Ditko confused.

And yeah while I know Engleheart/Perez only did six issues...I mentioned them anyways.

While it was erratic that run with so many different writers and artists...is a fave of mine. I think while it seemed a bit(I don't know) generic it really captured what the Avengers were about.

Those Perez Grim Reaper-AntMan-Ultron covers. Then the Byrne issues. Yeah I love that era. Heck I'm even a big fan of...Bloodhawk. heh.
 
Posted by Ultra Jorge on :
 
Set, Young Avengers is certainly THE Avengers now.

Also West Coast Avengers was excellent (until Roy Thomas that is). I noticed you've mentioned quite a few characters from WCA/AWC.
 
Posted by doublechinner on :
 
Great thread, Stealth, and a great opportunity to explore why/why not to like the Avengers.

I've always preferred DC characters to Marvel characters, mainly because of the influence that DC's truly iconic heroes have on the entire DCU. When you manage to make iconic characters interesting, you've really accomplished something. But, even you when an icon's own books aren't that great, his/her interraction with "second tier" characters can still be great. That is what the Legion is to me, in many respects--Kids from the future literally yearning and learning how to be Superman, with Superman/Boy/Girl often there for mentoring and/or reality check. Same goes for JLA and JSA. The icons are the inspirations and the other characters are there for development and enrichment, since there is only so much you can do to the icons before they lose their iconness.

To me, Avengers was always about the icon, Captain America, mentoring a group of non-iconic heroes, whether they were big guns (Iron Man, Thor) or wonderful supporting cast (Scarlet Witch, Hawkeye). It's like you transported a DC-type icon character into the iconoclastic Marvel universe and watch the fireworks ensue.

None of Marvel's few other true icons (Spiderman, the Thing, Mr. Fantastic, Namor, Hulk, Wolverine, Phoenix, Dr. Strange, Silver Surfer) really work in the Avengers or have no reason to since they are already part of a team. Yes, I know Spidey and Wolvie have been put in New Avengers. I just think it's inappropriate and/or redundant.

I really liked the Avengers because of their atmosphere as both stylish and swanky but also rogueish. Many of the best characters -- Scarlet Witch, Quicksilver, Hawkeye, Vision, Wonder Man -- were bad guys. It was like you had a reform school on 5th Avenue. I guess that was a very 60s/70s thing, the stylish, jet-setting, heroic anti-hero, with Captain America always there to keep a lid on the antisocial tendencies. Like the 1970s JLA, the JSA and the Legion, the Avengers were the place the B-list characters went to shine and gain respectability by saving the world.

It's funny, because I think Bendis feels this way too, but New Avengers just hasn't worked, even when their are aspects about it that are really, really good. Maybe all the SHIELD/Civil War stuff has hampered it. I don't know. But if I compare and contrast the following, I begin to see the problem:

Batman is a loner, even though he has partners/surrogates/agents, etc. But, he is committed to the JLA because 1) he doesn't want them out of control and 2) he knows they need his intellect, his resources, his detective skills and 3) he leverages his talents to benefit the world on a massive scale, more than he could do solely by himself. And, he is conscious of all this. He makes the bargain, even though he is not really a joiner.

Contrast with Spidey in the New Avengers. Why is he there, really, other than the fact that he coincidentally needed a home and Iron Man wanted to exploit him? He is a very smart fellow, science-wise, but he's certainly no Richards or Pym, or even Stark, by his own admission. So, why is he on the team? Same with Wolvie. He's an X-Man out of loyalty, gratitude and even love, even though he's a thoroughly irrascible old curmudgeon. None of that applies to the Avengers.

I've gone on too long, and I suspect I'm bitching to the choir about New Avengers. The Old Avengers were always at their best pressing the boundaries and opening new horizons in superhero books, from Black Panter to Vision to Kree/Skrull War to Mantis/Cosmic Madonna to Thanos/Captain Marvel/Warlock to Hank Pym's breakdown. And, they had a LOT of fun along the way, thanks to Hawkeye, Beast, Hercules, Tigra, Sersi, She-Hulk, Eros, Wasp, Jarvis, and lot's of others I have unjustly forgotten.

[ December 07, 2006, 12:00 PM: Message edited by: doublechinner ]
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Avengers Volume One # 1 - 48

As much as I love Avengers, I've always felt that the first 48 issues are mostly setup for better things to come.

Stan Lee & Jack Kirby, the Marvel Universe's founding fathers, did the first 8 issues and shortly after did three more before Kirby left for good after #16. The stories are fun in that early/mid-Silver Age way, but I don't think they compare to Lee & Kirby's cosmic/mythical epics in Fantastic Four and Thor circa 1966-68. On the other hand, there's no denying the academic value of their Avengers issues: the first Avengers lineup (Thor, Iron Man, Ant-Man/Giant-Man, Wasp, Hulk); the first superhero team to have a member (the Hulk) quit after only 2 issues, then come back quickly as a villain (alongside the morally ambiguous Sub-Mariner); the return of Captain America, the explanation of his dissapearance, his vendetta against the original Baron Zemo, who killed Cap's WWII sidekick Bucky, the final battle between the two, with Zemo accidentally killing himself; the original Masters of Evil (Zemo I, Radioactive Man, Melter, Black Knight II); Asgardian villainess the Enchantress bringing her schemes to the world of mortals; the first appearance of Kang; and finally, "The Old Order Changeth", establishing a uniquely fluid membership in the Avengers as all the remaning fouding members exit the team, leaving Captain America and three reformed villains (Scarlet Witch, Quicksilver, and Hawkeye).

The next creative team, Lee & Don Heck, were no slouches themselves, although their stories were more hit-and-miss. But they introduced Wonder Man, Immortus, Count Nefaria, Swordsman I, and Power Man I (later Goliath III, and still later Atlas). Plus they brought the Black Widow into the Avengers' circle, and they showed us the first glimpse of Kang's future world. The latter is, IMO, the best Avengers story Lee ever wrote -- not only is it the first Avengers story with a scope befitting a superhero team, it also brings out surprising shades of grey in Kang. The first of these two issues -- # 23 -- is gorgeously inked by John Romita (one of the prides of my collection is an original-printing copy of # 23 with Romita's autograph; it's the earliest original-printing copy Avengers issue I have). Regarding Heck's art, I feel that he was much better suited to more down-to-earth material, such as Iron Man's solo adventures. While Heck's work could be very attractive with the right kind of inker, he never quite developed the larger-than-life dynamics and the flair for group scenes that were absolutely essential for Avengers.

Lee left the book halfway through his last story (#34-35), with Roy Thomas scripting the second half over Lee's plot. Thomas did not exactly hit the ground running on Avengers -- the first story he fully plotted himself turned out to be the first and last appearance of a forgettable race of alien androids named the Ultroids. Then, in # 38, Thomas turned around and came up with a very good issue, with Hercules making his entrance into the Avengers circle (albeit under the manipulations of the Enchantress, which resulted in his father Zeus exiling him to Earth). Thomas did not come up with anything as good for a while, and it didn't help that Heck's work was looking increasingly tired and sloppy. Heck's last issue as regular penciler was # 40, although he made several brief returns over the next several years, including Avengers Annual # 1, a fast-moving but overcrowded romp written by Thomas and featuring almost every Avenger to date.

Big John Buscema, the artist who succeeded Heck, did have the dynamics and the flair for group scenes -- and how! Even though his first few issues had their awkward moments (he was, after all, still adjusting to the superhero genre) and bad inking (from the likes of George Roussos, Vince Colletta, and George Tuska), there were still extremely impressive moments -- the full-page splash in # 43 of Hercules hallucinating the mythical many-headed monster Hydra; the cover of # 44, with Buscema's peerless choreography of a crowded battle. And from the start, Buscema drew better faces than any Marvel artist of his generation (with John Romita a close second).

But Thomas still hadn't quite hit his stride. Things picked up somewhat in #47, although the main plot, involving Magneto, was far less interesting than the subplots -- one involving Hercules returning to Olympus to find it deserted, the other involving Thomas's first significant creation in the pages of Avengers: Dane Whitman, scientist nephew of the villainous Black Knight II, who made a promise on his uncle's deathbed to redeem the name of the Black Knight. In #48, Dane made his debut as Black Knight III; unfortunately, the story was blandly drawn by George Tuska. The good news is that John Buscema used this one-issue break to do both pencils and inks on issues # 49 and # 50. And that, IMO, is where the Avengers got really good. Much more on that in my next review.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Stealth, I’m going to follow along and post some of my own thoughts of the Avengers over the years, although probably less detailed than your own. Funny story: the first comics I ever read as a kid were original copies of Avengers #1-16 (my Dad has a duplicate run of Avengers #1-60). So I really started at the beginning. And I loved it. In brief:

Please note, I love ALL eras of the Avengers (almost), so most criticisms are slightly tongue in cheek
Avengers #1-16
To me, this is sacrosanct, and that’s a feeling I’ve inherited from my Dad. But these comics are beyond brilliant and showcase Silver Age Marvel at its best. The sense of wonder and awe is so potent that I feel its never been recreated ever since. Everything is beautiful, from the villains to the art to the covers to the camaraderie (Iron Man calling Hank “High Pockets”, etc.). The early Masters of Evil stories were totally awesome. Cap’s return and the powerful Stan Lee moments of his being a man out of time and still reeling from Bucky’s death are emotional boxing matches. The Hulk and the Sub-Mariner in the very early issues are just so damn perfect. My father still thinks after all these years that the Avengers line-up should be Cap, Thor, Iron Man, Giant-Man and the Wasp. I prefer that all five, or most of them ALWAYS be in an Avengers line-up.

Avengers #16-30: Cap’s Cooky Quartet
A funny story I’ve told on this board before is that when #16 came out, comic book fandom was OUTRAGED. I’m telling you, OUTRAGED. My father told me his friends all quit reading Avengers, half quiet reading all Marvel comics and some even quit reading comics! It amuses me to no end, knowing what spoiled internet comic book fan babies are out there, to know that in the mid-60’s that comic book fandom was outraged at the change of the line-up of the Avengers. A couple of second stringer villains? Of course, as the years have gone on, I’ve grown to love Hawkeye, Wanda and Pietro to the point where they too are my favorites and I grow angry at even thinking of their treatment in recent years. It wasn’t until the Kang story that Stealth mentions and the Power Man story where he’s punching Cap’s shield on the cover (“the Long Road Home” I think its called?) that this began to feel like the Avengers. And little by little it did, and Wanda and Pietro shined, and Hawkeye became a star, and his and Cap’s banter was plain fun to read. BTW, Stealth that’s awesome to have that story signed!

Avengers #30 - #49
What saved Avengers fandom in the mid to late 60’s according to my Dad, then a wee lad, was the return of Giant-Man, now known as Goliath! Seeing the Wasp on the cover of #28 and then Hank’s AWESOME return in #30 as Goliath really marked a turning point in getting this back to being ‘The Avengers’. Following that were some great stories, and although sometimes the main stories or art suffered, the subplots are what made this run such a classic Marvel run. Goliath was definitely the star now, and Hawkeye was a close second and things continued to pick up with Herc joining, Bill Foster being part of the cast (one of my all-time favorite Marvel supporting characters), the Black Widow and some interesting villains (Living Laser, Whirlwind, etc.). And then once again the team began to change, and in a very good way. The Black Knight is by far one of my favorite Marvel heroes of all, and he was welcome here. And the way the exited Hercules, Cap, Scarlet Witch and Quicksilver was done really well, in a way leaving them open for future stories.

I agree that at this point, the Avengers got really, really good. In fact, this coming up is one of my favorite Avengers periods ever, if not my absolute favorite. John Buscema’s artwork was phenomenal and at this point Roy Thomas came into his own. If #1-16 was the golden age of great Avengers stories, at this point we are on the cusp of its Silver Age with the Buscema giving us the best artwork since Kirby and Thomas channeling everything good about Stan’s Silver Age Marvel.

Writing this was a lot of fun. Stealth, you rock for starting this thread [Smile] My insight will be less wordy in future eras, but I know #1 – 100 very well as I spent many a night in my comic book basement as an Avengers-reading wee lad.
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
A funny story I’ve told on this board before is that when #16 came out, comic book fandom was OUTRAGED. I’m telling you, OUTRAGED. My father told me his friends all quit reading Avengers, half quiet reading all Marvel comics and some even quit reading comics! It amuses me to no end, knowing what spoiled internet comic book fan babies are out there, to know that in the mid-60’s that comic book fandom was outraged at the change of the line-up of the Avengers.

Omg, that's a great story. So Avengers has courted controversy almost from the very start? I love it! [Big Grin]

quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
the Power Man story where he’s punching Cap’s shield on the cover (“the Long Road Home” I think its called?)

Issue # 22, "The Road Back".

quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
Writing this was a lot of fun. Stealth, you rock for starting this thread [Smile]

Awwww. Thank you, Cobie. [Smile]
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
Way back in the early 70's, I only had the odd reprint here and there... but getting the Masterworks in the late 80's finally allowed me to experience the early issues in a manner that made sense. The first 5 or 6 issues feel more like a "company-wide crossover mini-series" than anything else in the 60's. Suddenly, a separate comic featuring (more or less) ALL the "big guns" at the same time-- Iron Man, Thor, Hulk, Giant-Man & Wasp (HUH?), Sub-Mariner, Captain America (where'd HE come from??) and of course #4 leads DIRECTLY into the 2-part FF-HULK story which features The Avengers. That last page of #4 where Rick wonders "What'll happen when The Hulk finds out?" made me think months probably went by... but NO! More like a couple days at most. For someone so anti-social doesn't it seem odd Hulk would get pissed that someone DOESN'T want to hang out with him anymore? (Or, maybe when you've only GOT one friend...) Kirby-Roussos did AVENGERS #4 and the 2 FF issues, but while in AVENGERS #4 it feels like every panel is a classic, the FF issues looked rushed and sloppy. (Yeah, I know George inked them over a weekend, but Jack's work on those 2 FF issues doesn't look inspired, either.)

Chic Stone-- WHOA! if only he'd been onboard from the beginning and inked the entire Kirby run. Can you imagine?

Stan slips up with his over-emphasis on "tight continuity" when, in the middle of a plane-flight (and between issues) Iron Man's armor changes completely. If you "read" the splash page of that issue without the naration or dialogue, it makes a lot more sense, as OBVIOUSLY there's at least one episode from TALES OF SUSPENSE that took place in the meantime. Noticing stuff like this when I re-read a pile of comics all in chronological sequence can be kinda funny.

The KANG story is one of my favorites, although Stone's SLICKNESS is replaced with Ayer's "real-world grittiness". When the group shows up for the emergency meeting on the splash page, it doesn't look like a cartoon anymore, instead, you feel you're watching a newsreal documentary. (This is really happening-- as you read it!) Somehow I managed to read Rama-Tut's cameo in a reprint of FF ANNUAL #2 shortly before reading a reprint of Kang's debut, so for once, even in the 70's, I got a small sense of that "continuity".

Incidentally, if you re-read the Doom-Tut scene in that annual, the DIALOGUE Stan wrote on JUST those few pages makes absolutely NO F***ing SENSE at all!!! I love Stan's work, but every so often he really slips a gear. Must be working 2 jobs (editor AND chief writer). Hey, even geniuses have "off" days. (The SAD thing is, every obsessive fanboy writer from Roy Thomas on down (but ESPECIALLY Roy, of course, he never lets anything go) KEEPS refering back to that one completely absurd conversation.)

While Kirby-Ayers packed a punch, Heck-Ayers really DRAGGED the book down, I'm afraid. When Ayers was replaced, the art really improved a hundredfold. Yes, Heck does "real world" real good, so him doing 4 "down-to-Earth" heroes was SORT of a good match. I'd love to see an original printing of that Heck-Romita issue some day. 2 artists FIGHTING for attention, and the results-- WOW!!! It's like Kirby-Wood on SKY MASTERS. Makes me wish Romita had stuck to his guns and done more INKING, instead of all the pain he says he went thru having to do layouts and pencils on SPIDER-MAN. (The biggest mis-matched WASTE of talent had to be the 8 months on ASM when they had Romita on layouts, HECK on pencils, and Esposito on inks. Had it been Heck on layouts, Romita on pencils, Espo on inks, or Heck on pencils & Romita on inks... WOW.)

Heck doing full art on Iron Man could be hit-and-miss, depending on the deadlines. I have almost every original issue, and they're SO much better-looking than reprints it's criminal. But on AVENGERS, full Heck art, to me, is just something that never should have been allowed. The book NEEDED a slicker finished look.

Something that really surprised me when I re-read Roy's debut on the book was just how MUCH his influences stood out. I forget which issues, but Roy did an entire story that feels like a Gardner Fox JLA epic! For 2 issues, it doesn't feel like Marvel at ALL!

It was pretty much hit-and-miss for a long time after that... I'll just finish by saying it struck me that MOMENT Roy FINALLY "got good"-- when the entire book suddenly felt "RIGHT"-- was the issue that introduced... The VISION. (Curse you, Stan Lee, for not leaving John Buscema alone and letting him do a long, unbroken run on THE AVENGERS!)

: )
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
(Curse you, Stan Lee, for not leaving John Buscema alone and letting him do a long, unbroken run on THE AVENGERS!)

: )

I used to feel the same way, but then I realized that if things had happened that way, Buscema might have burned out on the book and never done his brilliant long 80s run with Roger Stern and Tom Palmer.

[ December 08, 2006, 12:59 PM: Message edited by: Stealth ]
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Avengers Volume One # 49-60

After months of bad inking from others, John Buscema picked up the brush himself and showed how to do it right. The opening pages of # 49 are absolutely stunning, the Olympian setting and Hercules' encounter with Typhon, the evil titan almost leaping off the page. Towards the end, the issue returns to this plot thread, which I find more engaging than the main plot thread involving Magneto using manipulations to get Quicksilver and the Scarlet Witch back on his side. Then in issue # 50, the Hercules plot takes over the book and is jaw-droppingly powerful from start to finish. Hercules is very well-written here, a ferocious fighter who wins back his place among the gods by defeating Typhon. And when the readers are let into his private thoughts, it's one of my favorite Avengers panels: "Yet, in all the endless cosmos, mine eyes did ne'er behold warriors more valiant -- nor friends more faithful. In sooth, though I undertake a thousand thousan quests...though I try to drown my memories in the heady nectar of adventure...a part of Hercules shall ever be...an Avenger!"

In # 51, Thor and Iron Man are temporarily thrown together with Hawkeye, Goliath and Wasp thanks to the schemes of the Collector; Goliath saves the day by smashing the Collector's giant robot and wrecking the Collector's ship. Buscema is inked by Tuska here, yet the inks mostly recall Buscema's own style, and the book is so much the better for it. Buscema comes up with some amazing designs for the Collector's menagerie of otherworldly creatures.

Making a 180 degree turn, the inking in # 52 is by Colletta, who does one of his worst jobs I've ever seen (and that's saying a lot). Still, this issue is important as the Black Panther joins the Avengers and a new villain, the Grim Reaper (Wonder Man's crazy, vindictive brother) debuts.

# 53, a crossover with X-Men, finally resolves the dangling Magneto/Quicksilver/Scarlet Witch thread, as Magneto's much-abused sidekick the Toad betrays him and lets him fall to his apparent death. Quicksilver and Scarlet Witch flee with the Toad, not to be seen again for more than twenty issues. The story's average, but it's great to see Buscema draw the X-Men (even though Tuska's inking again, and this time he's just as bad as before).

And then...the Masters of Evil return, in a story that would be second only to Roger Stern's Masters of Evil story as the best story with the villainous team. # 54 and # 55 find the mysterious Crimson Cowl leading previous members Radioactive Man and Melter, and new members Klaw, Whirlwind, and the Black Knight (who only joins so that he can betray the villains to the Avengers). In a clever twist, it appears that the Cowl is the Avengers butler, Jarvis, but instead the Cowl is a creepy-looking robot named Ultron-5 (the panel of Ultron removing his hood and saying, "What makes you think that I am human?" never fails to scare me, no matter how many times I re-read this story). Art-wise, # 54 is, thankfully, Tuska's last Buscema issue; in # 55, the new inker is George Klein, a DC veteran distinguished for his inking over Curt Swan on Legion of Super-Heroes; Klein inking Buscema rivals Tom Palmer as the most perfect fit for Buscema -- Klein's smooth lines, liquid shadows and perfect balance of detail result in a feast for the eyes.

Next, in # 56, the Avengers help Captain America come to terms with Bucky's death by time-travelling with him to that fateful day in 1945. The story continues in Avengers Annual # 2, where they Avengers discover that history has been changed, and this reality's Avengers (the founding members) are pawn of the evil Scarlet Centurion; Thomas's script is powerful, but the art damages it severely -- Don Heck on breakdowns and Werner Roth on pencils and merely miscast, but Vince Colletta on inks is the nail in the coffin.

The cover to Avengers # 57 is one of the greatest of all time: a dark, atmospheric scene, colored in monochromatic red, of the Avengers dwarfed by a new creation -- as the lettering indicates, "Behold...the Vision!" Though the synthethic robot-man would become arguably the cornerstone of the Avengers, he debuts as a villain, but at the end redeems himself by destroying his creator: Ultron-5! The next issue cleared up the mystery of Ultron-5's creation (he was an experiment of Hank "Goliath" Pym's gone horribly wrong), and found the Vision inducted into the Avengers, proving, in its powerful final splash-page, that "even an android can cry."

Rounding out the "new" creations is the cocky costumed anti-hero Yellowjacket, introduced in # 59, at the end of which the Wasp shocks the other Avengers by agreeing to marry him. The marriage issue, # 60 (inked not by Klein but by Mike Esposito), allows Buscema to draw just about every Marvel superhero at the time, and has a more light-hearted tone (the Circus of Crime crashes the wedding) than the intensely dark last few issues. Yellowjacket turns out to be Hank Pym, who assumed a new personality after a lab accident. I'm generally not a fan other light-hearted superheroics, but this issue works for me.

And all of this happened in only one year's worth of issues! Roy Thomas continued to write the Avengers for a long time, but IMO was never more consistenly good in Avengers than issues # 49-60.
 
Posted by ActorLad on :
 
OK, I know most of you aren't a fan of the "New Avengers" lineup but I suggest reading Power Pack/Avengers (which I coincidently bought the digest of today). It's got good humor and quite a bit of action.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"I used to feel the same way, but then I realized that if things had happened that way, Buscema might have burned out on the book and never done his brilliant long 80s run with Roger Stern and Tom Palmer."

WHAAAAAAAT?

John Buscema HATED doing super-heroes! There was more than 10 years between his 2 runs. I suspect the reason he did the 2nd run was because CONAN had gone to hell...
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
"I used to feel the same way, but then I realized that if things had happened that way, Buscema might have burned out on the book and never done his brilliant long 80s run with Roger Stern and Tom Palmer."

WHAAAAAAAT?

John Buscema HATED doing super-heroes! There was more than 10 years between his 2 runs. I suspect the reason he did the 2nd run was because CONAN had gone to hell...

I know he would always talk about how much he hated superheroes, but I take that with a grain of salt -- I suspect that, while he probably did hate working on most superhero books, he secretly enjoyed drawing Avengers. Maybe it was the challenge of the group scenes, maybe it was the quality of the scripts (notice that after Stern was fired, Buscema only stayed on a little over one year), maybe it was a little of both.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
It still amazes me to think how long Roger Stern did manage to stay on the book, considering the problems the series had after Englehart left Marvel (than YOU, Gerry Conway!). It seemed from the moment Stern came aboard, things settled down on both the writing and art fronts, and they even had a steady, stable art team for the first time in ages. That team, of course, moved over to WEST COAST AVENGERS, but who could have envisioned "the" classic team of the late 60's returning, and for a LONGER and more stable run the 2nd time out? It put a really black mark in my book as far as Mark Gruenwald is concerned when he let his ego get in the way of simply doing his job and letting the WRITERS do their's. (The parallel with what happened on GREEN LANTERN a few years later is inescapable...)
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Avengers #49-60

This is definitely one of the best eras ever in the Avengers. One of the cool aspects of it was the transitional feel to a group of issues where Quicksilver and Wanda make their exit, Hercules has his own adventurous exit and the Black Panther shows up, all coupled with Goliath not being able to grow anymore, only shrink for a few issues. It makes for one funny scene where Hawkeye jokes about how between the three active Avengers, there’s only an archer and two super-heroes who can shrink—not exactly the World’s Mightiest Heroes. And then in one issue Goliath’s powers are restored and the Black Panther joins (via a last page panel), coupled with a great guest appearance by Iron Man and Thor, two of Marvel’s biggest stars and ‘the old guard’ of Avengers.

The Black Panther is one of my favorite Marvel heroes, and the Grim Reaper is one of my favorite Marvel villains, so the next issue is one of my favorites. At this point every single person in the series, whether hero, supporting character or villain is fun to read.

The Masters of Evil story is one of the best Avengers stories ever, and does so much in terms of character advancement and story-telling. We see the Black Knight in all his glory and see why for decades and decades certain writers and artists have had a soft spot for him. Great scenes with Jarvis and the Panther showing his metal. We also pick back up the plot that Whirlwind is posing as the Wasp’s chauffer which is a pretty creepy subplot in and of itself. At this point in Avengers history, the truest ‘cornerstone Avengers’ where definitely Hank & Jan and Hawkeye and that is seen so well here. The Masters of Evil themselves are really great, with the return of former Masters Radioactive Man and the Melter and the addition of Klaw, a great Silver Age Marvel villain, and Whirlwind. The Crimson Cowl twist is excellent and the addition of Ultron to the Avenger’s mythos sparks the beginning of the Avengers other great nemesis (the first being Kang IMO).

The Vision story is so classic that you can’t help but love it. The Vision is definitely the cornerstone of the Avengers in later years as you say Stealth, which will later be evidenced by him appearing on all the covers in the upper left hand corner by the logo. He’s such a dynamic character and just fits so perfectly into the ‘Marvel style’. I love the issue where Cap, Iron Man and Thor stop by to figure out his origin with them, making it such a jam-packed cool issue, and the final panel is perhaps tied for Marvel’s most famous panel in its entire history—‘Even an Android can cry’ and ‘face it tiger—you just hit the jackpot’ are probably the most recognizable.

Although the change to Yellowjacket is not one I’m found of, I don’t mind it *too* much. I prefer Goliath as the codename/costume that Hank Pym should be in, and the change to Yellowjacket marks the beginning of years and years of writers referring to Hank Pym’s personality problems, etc. Even though his creating Ultron was a few issues before, this really does it. Still, the wedding issue is fun, and seeing all the heroes together is great.

Looking forward to more reviews. I always enjoyed the next two issues that take place when Jan and Hank are on their honey-moon, especially the one with Dr. Strange and the Black Knight.
 
Posted by Outdoor Miner on :
 
This period in Avengers history seems to me like an early example of "breaking something down in order to build it up again" syndrome. It works here, though. With most of the lineup out of the picture, it makes it easier to spotlight the newcomers.
 
Posted by Vee on :
 
This was a fun time to be an Avengers fan. Great stories and lots of great interaction among the members. I always liked Black Panther and the Black Knight as well and Hawkeye was always a favorite (as were Black Widow and the Swordsman who would come along shortly)
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:

It put a really black mark in my book as far as Mark Gruenwald is concerned when he let his ego get in the way of simply doing his job and letting the WRITERS do their's. (The parallel with what happened on GREEN LANTERN a few years later is inescapable...)

How did the Green Lantern feud play itself out, and who were the writer and editor involved?

quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:

Although the change to Yellowjacket is not one I’m found of, I don’t mind it *too* much. I prefer Goliath as the codename/costume that Hank Pym should be in, and the change to Yellowjacket marks the beginning of years and years of writers referring to Hank Pym’s personality problems, etc. Even though his creating Ultron was a few issues before, this really does it.

I think Englehart, in the one Yellowjacket story he was able to write before he quit Avengers, had a good handle on Hank, and if he had stayed he would have found a way to make Yellowjacket work. Claremont wrote both Yellowjacket and Wasp very well in Marvel Team-Up. It's really Shooter's fault for hijacking the character and using him to deal with his own demons (IMO, Shooter is the godfather of the Chuck Austen school of superhero writing). Gruenwald made things even worse when he ordered Englehart to turn Hank into the WCA's non-superpowered mascot. Stern's morally ambiguous female Yellowjacket II had the potential to develop into yet another reformed villain if only Stern hadn't been fired from Avengers and black-balled at Marvel for almost 10 years. Harras did a fantastic job of bringing Hank back to superheroics as Giant-Man (the Avengers had a major crisis and needed all the help they could get, so Hank suited up and drank down the giant juice -- simple but brilliant). But when Busiek put the character through an endless series of contortions to bring him back to Yellowjacket, it only proved that Yellowjacket's moment had passed. In an Englehart chat I participated in last year, he said that a few years ago, he submitted a proposal to Marvel for a mini-series that would have given Hank a brand-new superhero identity. Marvel, in their "infinite wisdom" (HA HA) never even responded. I'm holding out for Hank to survive Civil War and to eventually -- finally -- have his day of glory.

quote:
Originally posted by Outdoor Miner:

This period in Avengers history seems to me like an early example of "breaking something down in order to build it up again" syndrome. It works here, though.

It's sad that none of the young-ish hot-shot writers of today seem to have a clue on how to do it right.

[ December 11, 2006, 11:33 PM: Message edited by: Stealth ]
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Avengers Volume One # 61-88

With Janet and Hank on their honeymoon, the remaining three members -- Vision, Black Panther, and Hawkeye -- spent their time helping Dr. Strange battle the forces of nature (literally) in # 61 and foil an attempted coup in the Panther's kingdom of Wakanda in # 62. These would be John Buscema's last issues for a year, and sadly they would also be the last time Buscema was inked by Klein, who died not long after.

In # 63, Thomas brought back Janet and Hank, but the focus of the new story arc was squarely on Hawkeye, who decided that the team needed muscle and he should be it -- so he became Goliath II. IMO, this was one of the worst decisions Thomas ever made, because it completely took away the character's everyman appeal. But that's only one reason I'm not fond of this story -- there's also the matter of Gene Colan's art (he was perfect for Dr. Strange, but completely wrong for Avengers).

The next story (# 66-68) was better -- Vision was revealed to have a pre-programmed command to rebuild his evil creator into Ultron-6. The first two parts were drawn by Barry Windsor-Smith, and as heavy as the Kirby and Steranko influences are, I personally like this early work much better than his more celebrated art of the 1970s (I do like the X-Men stories that he did in the 1980s). The artist on the finale (who would also draw the next four issues) was Sal Buscema, younger brother of John Buscema. Sal lacked John's draftsmanship and was better at drawing monsters than people; his real strength was energetic storytelling, but that showed up more in later work, such as Defenders and Hulk.

Thomas then came up with one of his most epic stories (# 69-71), as the Avengers became caught up in a time-space adventure involving Kang and a new villain, the Grandmaster. The story heavily featured the Black Knight, which is always good.

I don't much care for most of the stories that followed -- after introducing Zodiac (one of my least favorite villain teams), Thomas pulled a Denny O'Neil and started addressing "relevant topics" such as racism, feminism, and others. Still later, he introduced the Squadron Supreme, and my opinion of Marvel's JLA analogs is the opposite of my opinion of Marvel's LSH analogs, the Imperial Guard (in other words, I don't like them). The only issues between # 72 and # 87 that I like are # 75, # 76, and # 84 -- all three featuring Arkon, the interdimensional barbarian warlord. Thomas & John Buscema always had a flair for this sort of character. As added bonuses, # 75-76 bring back Quicksilver and Scarlet Witch, while # 84 features the Black Knight and has my favorite Avengers appearance of the Enchantress.

# 88, a Hulk crossover co-plotted by SF writer Harlan Ellison, was a step back in the right direction. But Thomas was just getting his second wind, and the real event was just around the corner -- the Kree-Skrull War!

[ December 12, 2006, 12:33 AM: Message edited by: Stealth ]
 
Posted by Ultra Jorge on :
 
Re: Buscema hating doing superheroes.

I wonder if that is why half the team on his 2nd run looked like Conan characters? [Wink]

Hercules, Namor, and the Black Knight. And then Thor ofcourse. And also one of my favorite arcs (if not my fave) Assault on Olympus. There was like 2 or 3 costumed superheroes in that...the rest seemed to be out of a sword & sorcery type book.
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ultra Jorge:
Re: Buscema hating doing superheroes.

I wonder if that is why half the team on his 2nd run looked like Conan characters? [Wink]

Hercules, Namor, and the Black Knight. And then Thor ofcourse. And also one of my favorite arcs (if not my fave) Assault on Olympus. There was like 2 or 3 costumed superheroes in that...the rest seemed to be out of a sword & sorcery type book.

Assault on Olympus is a favorite of mine, too. The art doesn't remind me of sword & sorcery, though. I think it suggests what Wonder Woman's book might have looked like if John Buscema had ever drawn it -- Athena herself looks like Wonder Woman in battle armor. (Buscema actually did draw Wonder Woman once, when she guest-starred in the second Spider-Man/Superman crossover.)
 
Posted by Spellbinder on :
 
Ooooh... we're moving toward the early 100's, when I first started reading the Avengers [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Avengers #61-88

We’re of like minds (again) about the majority of this little run, Stealth. While there were some high points, this kind of seemed like a lull b/t Thomas & Buscema’s excellent 50’s, and the upcoming Kree/Skrull War. I have to say, I really enjoy your comments on the artists (pencilers *and* inkers), as that is something I generally put towards the back-burner when I read comics.

Some random thoughts:

- I love those two ‘Hank & Jan are on their honeymoon issues’. I just really liked the Black Knight & Dr. Strange guest-starring and seeing Wakanda, but really, its just the cool chemistry b/t the Panther, Hawkeye and the Vision that makes these issues so great. In fact, this chemistry would continue to peak my interest even when the actual plots aren’t that great.

- I’ve always hated Hawkeye becoming Goliath II, and thought this was kind of a bonehead move. Also, it just made things more confusing when looking at it via historical hindsight. On a side note, I agree with most of your assessment of Hank Pym’s treatment over the years in regards to his various identities. I don’t mind him all *that* much as Yellowjacket, but prefer him as Goliath. I’m hoping for the chance for him to finally shine too.

- The Ultron-6 story was pretty awesome! With Iron Man and Thor being there to show just how serious a threat Ultron had become. Great, great cover to the issue where he’s blasting back the entire line-up. I’d say this story cemented Ultron’s place as ‘Co-Best Avengers Villain’ besides Kang.

- I really like that Gene Colon Swordsman issue. I never really looked at it from the art point of view, but the reason I love it is because this issue (#66) was the one Avengers Comic my Dad and I were missing for almost my entire childhood until he finally got it when I was about 18. Now I kinda have a soft spot for it once I finally got to read it.

- The switch from Yellowjacket and the Wasp to the return of Quicksilver and the Scarlett Witch is interesting to me, in that I don’t mind it despite my love of Hank & Jan, and I feel like Avengers fans of the day wouldn’t have either. Despite Pietro’s cool appearance in Spider-Man in b/t their departure and return, the two hadn’t really appeared in awhile and it was a worthwhile trade to get them back in return for giving up Hank & Jan. It also shows an early example of how rough it is to keep married characters interesting for long runs at a time.

- I too have never cared much for the Squadron Sinister/Supreme. Are the Lethal Legion issues during this period? Man, my Avengers memory isn’t as sharp as my Spidey one [Big Grin] . Any team with Man-Ape, the Living Laser and the Grim Reaper on it is one I might actually route for!

- I love how the Valkrye became such an instant sensation that they went and made her an actual character in that Enchantress issue. IIRC, that takes place in Salem, right? Around this time lots of Marvel comics took place in Salem for some reason or another (I suspect Rascally Roy was behind this). Thor was fighting Loki and the Absorbing Man in Salem in his own series roughly around this time.

- I remember thinking that the Harlan Ellison story wasn’t really so great, especially after they had his name all over the cover. Much cooler, in this young fan’s opinion, was that the Falcon was actually guest-starring and the Hulk was back. I haven’t read this story in years though.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"These would be John Buscema's last issues for a year, and sadly they would also be the last time Buscema was inked by Klein, who died not long after."

I just read how Carmine Infantino wanted to "improve" the look of Mort Weisinger's books, and so got rid of several of the older inkers-- INCLUDING Klein. WAS HE OUT OF HIS MIND??? DC's BEST inker (in my opinion) and he went to Marvel (and took a pay cut) for THAT reason? D'ja ever feel like some people just get promoted above their best station?

"there's also the matter of Gene Colan's art (he was perfect for Dr. Strange, but completely wrong for Avengers)."

I understand Gene Colan, Barry Smith & Sal Buscema were all "filling in" because Stan wanted John Buscema for something else... SILVER SURFER? That ONE decision really showed a serious lack of judgment & reveals an unfortunate moment of out-of-control ego. NO ONLY was Jack Kirby offended that he was never even told about the book until it hit the stands (HE wanted to do a Surfer series himself), NOT ONLY did the SS book NOT SELL in the long run (too pointlessly downbeat & depressing), but AVENGERS had to "put up with" lesser or inappropriate artists in the meantime as a result. That said, I feel Sal's BEST work was in the late 60's/early 70's-- he seemed to slowly decline, PROGRESSIVELY, over the course of his entire career. But when John would come back to replace Sal, you could see it was ALWAYS a huge improvement.

By the way, anybody ever get the feeling Jim Shooter had Gene assigned to THE AVENGERS much later, JUST because he was so wrong for the book, and JUST so he'd have more of an excuse to get rid of him (or harass him so much he'd leave on his own)?
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"How did the Green Lantern feud play itself out, and who were the writer and editor involved?"

AVENGERS was never QUITE as badly treated as GREEN LANTERN. AVENGERS kept having good periods interspaced with the bad, despite the continual turn-over of writers & artists. When Gruenwald & Stern took over in the wake of Shooter's DISASTROUS 2nd run (which was more ego-trip than anything else) the book settled into a LONG, stable, creative period, only derailed when Gruenwald decided HE wanted to write the book himself (by having a writer who'd do what HE wanted).

GL had been messed with since the mid-60's. The book lost its whole focus, its original creative team, most of its supporting cast... and as a result (I feel), its sales. NO WONDER as a last-ditch desperate move, they let Denny O'Neil do whatever the HELL he wanted. Like the abrupt change on X-MEN (also drawn by Neal Adams-- HMM) it didn't help, and the book was canned. Over the years, it was revived, but it never seemed to really find itself again, at least, until Steve Englehart (HMMM!) came in (in mid-story) and "fixed" things. Steve has said his run on the book was the FIRST time sales ever DOUBLED. I believe him! Then some FOOL decided because GL was now so popular, they'd use it to "anchor" the ACTION COMICS WEEKLY anthology. Steve wasn't interested, and WALKED. The series-- PLUMMETED, worse than ever. Some editors should have their brains examined. Slowly, GL recovered, but near-irreparable damage (over decades) had been done.

Andy Helfer (who oversaw Englehart's run) took over from Denny O'Neil, causing writer Jim Owsley to leave, as his views differed so drastrically from Helfer's, and he felt their friendship was more important. So in came new writer Gerard Jones. HE looked at the train wreck Hal Jordan's career had become, and wanted, right then and there, to replace him with a NEW character (just as Roger Stern had done with STARMAN!!!). But Helfer convinced him not to, and together, they hatched a LONG-TERM scheme to bring Jordan's career some "closure", and eventually, after he'd come to terms with his life and those pesky Guardians, have him replaced with a new, younger character. It didn't work out that way.

I read most of Jones' run. I liked a lot of it-- the way Hal "came back" from the brink, the way the GLC began to come back together, the way they had different artists rotating on stories focusing on the different GLs. But his "Mosaic" story made NO SENSE at all to me, and made me drop the book-- until Jones wrote me a PERSONAL letter asking me to give it another try! Wow. I did. It got better.

After coming back from the brink, the book was successful once again. And THAT's when Helfer (perhaps foolishly) moved on, and his assistant-- Kevin Dooley-- took over. For about a year, thinkgs continued nicely. There was a GL-Flash crossover done as a loving tribute to the 60's. There was a story about a cosmic villain named "Entropy" that I SWORE was intended as a new origin for The Time Trapper (no dice). But then Dooley started flexing his muscles. Hal began appearing ALL-- OVER-- THE-- PLACE. There were like 4 GL books, plus Hal making guest-appearances like crazy. They were doing with Hal what they'd been doing with Superman & Batman. And I felt they were KILLING him with over-exposure. Instead of more success, apparently, it had the reverse effect--sales DROPPED!!! I kept hanging on, but even I was getting sick of it. And they lost ALL their regular artists, and started having different guys on almost every issue.

One more annoying thing about this run was, there seemed to be some running sub-plot mystery going on that was very vague, and left unresolved. Turns out I was right. Jones intended to bring this to a head with his next story: "EMERALD TWILIGHT". He never got the chance.

At the LAST minute, Dooley decided to change the direction of the book-- and the character-- a direction Jones had been working toward for 4 WHOLE YEARS (and which he never would have done in the first place, had it not been for Helfer's urging). Just as Gruenwald had tried to make Stern write a story Stern felt would violate every character involved, Dooley wanted Jones to tell a story that would violate not only Hal, but EVERYTHING he'd spent 4 WHOLE YEARS building toward. He refused. Dooley replaced him. The result was appallingly badly written, and divided GL fans for the next DOZEN years or more. Jones soon got sick of the whole industry, and pretty much dropped out. Dooley-- who had the NERVE to proclaim himself "GL's #1 fan" in a GL Archive book-- EVENTUALLY left DC. Sometime after he did, other, saner heads finally prevailed. Hal Jordan is back, and in the process, EVERY SINGLE GL character is better-written than they've been for ages-- maybe ever. But it never should have HAD to happen that way.
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Cobie, the Lethal Legion issues are indeed in that run -- # 78 & # 79. I skimmed over those issues just now, and I think I may have underrated them; and as Prof mentioned earlier in this thread, John Buscema & Tom Palmer really outdid themselves on # 79 -- I had forgotten that several drawings from that issue were used in "How to Draw Comics the Marvel Way." Regarding the Valkyrie/Enchantress issues, # 83 (the one I don't like for revealing Thomas's ignorant views on feminism) does not take place in Salem, but in Rutland, Vermont; real-life Rutland resident Tom Fagan, a comics fan, threw Halloween parties which were often attended by comics fans and comics pros; Thomas wrote Fagan into this story as a tribute. # 84 (the issue I do like), takes place in Arkon's dimension, where Enchantress had fled to after her plans in the previous issue were foiled.

Prof, thank you for the Green Lantern info. Between Mike Grell's departure from GL/GA in the 1970s, and Hal Jordan's return in the 2000s, I only have a few issues -- all of them from the early 1980s, by Mike W. Barr and Keith Pollard, because I'm a fan of both creators. It's obvious I didn't miss much, although sometimes I think of trying the Steve Englehart issues (because I've heard so many good things about them) and the Marv Wolfman issues (because at the time, Wolfman was on his New Teen Titans hot streak); in both cases, the reason I haven't tried them yet is because of Joe Staton.

Spellbinder, since the Avengers early 100s are special to you, I'll dedicate the next two reviews to you.
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Avengers Volume One # 89-108

For Princess Crujectra

The first few issues of this block are mostly setup for the Kree-Skrull War, and what's amazing is how busily plotted and relentlessly paced they are: Captain Marvel! Rick Jones! Kree Sentry #559! Ronan the Accuser! Annihilus! Goliath II enslaved! Yellowjacket and three fellow scientists devolved into cavemen! An evil politician stirring up anti-alien hostility! Captain America, Iron Man, and Thor disbanding the Avengers! (Or did they?) Even though the art in these issues shows just how mediocre Sal Buscema can be when he's rushed, Thomas's writing definitely rises above the art.

Of course, the main destination of all this buildup is to Neal Adams' brief but astonishing Avengers run. It's hard to choose the best Adams work out of everything he did for both Marvel and DC in the late 1960s/early 1970s, but I always end up coming back to these Avengers issues. They are simply awe-inspiring in all senses: draftsmanship, dynamics, anatomy, design, storytelling, etc. Credit must also go to Tom Palmer for his peerless inking and coloring, and to Roy Thomas for keeping Adams's wild ideas coherent and cohesive. I first read The Kree-Skrull War twenty years after it was originally published, when I bought back issues of the 1980s Prestige Format reprints -- it was still impressive after all that time, but I can only imagine how spectacular it must have looked when it first came out! Space opera like it had never been done in comics before!! And I think it's worth noting that almost all of the main elements of this story -- Kree, Skrulls, Inhumans, Ronan, Super-Skrull, Annihilus, Supreme Intelligence -- had debuted a few years earlier in Fantastic Four. That's why it really annoys me when people complain about the Shi'ar and the Starjammers being brought into Avengers during the Harras/Epting era. So what if those characters and concepts had been mainly associated with the X-Men? IMO, history repeated itself with Operation: Galactic Storm -- another extraordinary space opera in Avengers, and this time with a proper third act.

Re: The Kree-Skrull War's lack of a third act, it's truly a tragedy that Thomas and Adams had some kind of falling out, resulting in Adams walking away and Thomas scrambling to wrap the story up. (Prof, do you know any details about what went down here?) At least they got John Buscema to draw the final installment, such as it was. # 97 would be the last Buscema/Palmer issue for more than a decade, and I think it could be seen as marking the end of an era for Avengers.

If Thomas had left at the same time as Buscema and Palmer, it would have been a good thing, because I feel that Thomas's last few issues were mediocre and uninspiring. The Hercules/Ares/return of Hawkeye story (# 98-100) seems to me like it was hastily put together, and Barry Windsor-Smith's art doesn't help any. I've always been turned off by BWS's tendencies for excessive detail and ugly faces, especially since his worst flaws became hugely influential (i.e. the Image founders). Thomas's final four issues were all unremarkably drawn by Rich Buckler: # 101 is a second Ellison collaboration, but it doesn't work at all; # 102-104 are a deadly dull wrap-up of the Sentinels plot thread from Thomas's second X-Men run, ending his Avengers run with no real sense of resolution.

That's why I find Steve Englehart's first four issues (# 105-108, Avengers vs. Savage Land mutates, Grim Reaper, HYDRA, and...the Space Phantom, unseen since Avengers # 2) so refreshing. He quickly wraps up almost all of Thomas's dangling threads, especially regarding the relationship between Scarlet Witch and Vision. In fact, Wanda comes across as more assertive and more confident than she ever had previously -- Englehart was truly the first male comic book writer who knew how to write convincing superheroines. And the art in these issues is excellent: John Buscema pencils the first one, with capable inks by Jim Mooney; a large number of pencils handle the next three issues (Rich Buckler, George Tuska, Jim Starlin, Don Heck), with Dave Cockrum's inking as the common thread (not to leave out Joe Sinnott, who also contributes some inks). I think Englehart really sells himself short when he criticizes his early Avengers issues -- they're not perfect, but they have such vitality.

[ December 20, 2006, 12:23 AM: Message edited by: Stealth ]
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
I started buying GL regularly when DAVE GIBBONS-- my favorite DOCTOR WHO artist-- got on board. This was the same issue Len Wein took over as both writer & editor. As he'd done on THOR (at the END of his run), Len decided Hal had been in space too long, and wanted to do the latest in the then-trendy "back to basics" fad of having Hal, back on Earth, back at Ferris, back with Carol, back fighting 3rd-rate super-villains. (He's an intergalactic COP, for God's sake!!!!!) Okay, it was actually not that bad, and anything drawn by Gibbons is bound to be a notch above the usual. But Len pulled this STUNT wherein Carol, despite her knowing Hal for decades' worth of comics by then, STILL could not get it thru her worse-than-Lois-Lane head that being GL was important to Hal, it was who he was. So she gave him this "ULTIMATUM" (in the worst possibly way that no doubt made feminists embarassed to have her on their side). HER-- OR THE GLC. And the IDIOT picked HER. The issue he turned in his badge and gun ("Mr. Garrison!! Teachers aren't ALLOWED to carry guns!" "Oh, I guess I can keep it, then?") Arisia had tears in her eyes, because, as it ought to have been obvious by then... SHE was in love with Hal. (NOT in a POSESSIVE, "You're MINE, you DO what I SAY or ELSE!" kinda way... shudder) The Guardians-- who'd already STUCK it to Hal by forcing him to spend an entire year in space away from Carol, NOW decided to STICK it to Hal AGAIN-- by very publicly appointing the hot-headed JOHN STEWART (who Hal did not like at that point) as his replacement!

AND... just as when Len broke up the FF in a year-long story and jumped ship in MID-story... Len had Hal quit being GL and-- wanna guess? Anybody?

Yep-- Len jumped ship-- IN MID-STORY.

Decades later I read that Dave Gibbons wanted to do space stories. When he discovered that just about the ONLY thing Hal wanted to do was stories on Earth with Carol & Ferris Aircraft... well, he got disgusted and pretty soon, decided to leave. Len, hearing the news, decided (FOR NO DAMN REASON!!!) that, HEY, he'd leave too! (Grrrrrrr.)

Andy Helfer got onboard sometime around here. Thru the most REMARKABLE luck, there was exactly ONE fill-in issue. A month later... Steve Englehart & Joe Staton debuted. Steve recently said that Andy told him, do what you what, it doesn't matter. Whatever anybody does, the sales never change on this thing. Steve-- DID what he wanted. The sales-- SHOT UP!!! Damn.

Steve did his homework, FIGURED OUT Carol Ferris from decades of inconsistent and incompetent writing-- and then, GOT RID of her. Shortly after, Hal was a GL again. Shortly after, Arisia declared her love. I swear, Staton's art may be what you'd call "cartoony"-- but when he drew HER, it was like magic. I know he must really love that character. (He was the 1st one to ever draw her, after all, back in the TALES OF THE GLC mini-series Mike Barr wrote.) Now I know some people over the years got VERY uncomfortable, in the same way people got uncomfortable about Jerry Lee Lewis and Wynona Ryder in the movie GREAT BALLS OF FIRE... but dammit, THOSE are among my all-time favorite GL comics!!!

Steve's a LOT more forgiving about certain artists than I am. I did NOT like the guy who filled in for Joe when they were doing MILLENNIUM. For that matter, I found MILLENNIUM one of the most UNREADABLE things ever perpetuated. It took company-wide-crossovers to several whole new levels that we've ALL been suffering for since, and to no good results I ever saw. And right after, ACW happened... YEESH. Before you knew it, Denny "drag 'em thru the mud" O'Neil got his DIRTY paws on the series again (as editor) and he started his run by MURDERING John Stewart's wife in the very 1st episode. Son of a *****!

You know-- generally, stuff like this can't happen when creators OWN the characters they create. Maybe that's why I've slowly gotten more and more disgusted with Marvel & DC over the last 2 decades.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
I bought the entire Neal Adams run of AVENGERS-- plus the Barry Smith issues-- as back issues about 25 years ago. Sometime later, the "deluxe" reprints came out, and while nice, a lot of detail & mood was lost in the reprinting.

I've read the story (known at the time as the "Skrull-Kree War"-- they renamed it after-the fact!) about 4 times now. You know, for me, it keeps getting worse. I'm not sure if it's the art, in which so much of the plotting and storytelling is tied up, or Roy's sense of plotting, or just Roy's mock-Shakespearean style of dialogue-writing (why he never worked on ST:TNG is beyond me). The whole thing doesn't really "take off" for me until they head INTO SPAAAAAAAAAAAAACE!!!! Then-- WOW.

I now tend to feel that Buscema is a more coherent visual storyteller than Adams has ever been, but having Buscema do a chapter here and the finale there renders a lot of the flow incoherent. From what I've read, Adams kept BLOWING DEADLINES. And, having done so, had the NERVE to be offended when they got Buscema to fill in for him. Which in turn, led to him leaving early (though, I'm not sure anybody but Adams & Thomas had any inkling the story ended before it was meant to at the time).

I only just got all the issues I was missing via ESSENTIAL AVENGERS this year. I'm of the opinion that the 2nd Sentinels story was SO intense, SO volatile, SO wrenching, that it should have been the LAST Sentinels story-- EVER. So having Roy do a 3rd one, and so quickly, was the startt of a BAAAAAAD trend. (For decades, I thought Dave Cockrum's Sentinels story was the 3rd one-- and that THAT should have been the last one, EVER. How many have there been since-- 200? 300???) At least Joe Sinnott's inks were nice.

Roy's dialogue got more and more annoying. When Englehart debuted, his early issues may NOT have been the greatest thing ever... but even with the very 1st issue, I found the dialogue MUCH more tolerable. WHAT A RELIEF!!! My memories of this are still very clear, because, it's been less than a YEAR since I read them (and for my first time ever).

I just wish the art had been more consistent. Apparently, Marvel writers at the time were "de facto editors". It was often the writer's job to line up the art team back then. Naturally, Stan & Roy had more "pull" than Steve. (This explains the large number of issues where Don Heck, Mike Esposito, Bob Brown, etc., were involved.)

By the way... I also managed to pick up every issue of X-MEN from #49 to the end of the run about the same time. Again, the originals look better than any reprints. And to me, Adams' X-MEN run is VASTLY superior to his AVENGERS run. It just holds together much better.
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Avengers Volume One # 109-135 and Giant-Size Avengers # 1-4

For Princess Crujectra

After a bright start, the Steve Englehart era took many twists and turns on its voyage to pure brilliance. The 110s and 120s find artists of varying talent coming and going, while the plots and the selection of villains (Dormammu, Loki, Magneto, Ultron, Thanos, and Klaw on the one hand; Imus Champion, the Living Bombs, the Lion God, the Broglodytes and Zodiac on the other hand) are equally uneven. The high point of early Englehart is undoubtedly The Avengers/Defenders Clash, the first -- and one of the best -- multi-issue crossover between two comic books (Avengers # 115-118 and Defenders # 8-11). At the time, Engelhart was writing both books (and at the end of this storyarc, he left Defenders so he could concentrate on improving his work on Avengers.) Secretly manipulated by Dormammu and Loki into fighting each other while searching for the components of a mystical weapon named the Evil Eye, the Avengers and the Defenders eventually team up against the villains, defying them "TO THE DEATH" while the universe is turning into a monster-filled living nightmare. When the smoke clears, the Scarlet Witch is the only hero left standing, and she saves the day! If that's not a major turning point for Wanda, I don't know what is; Engelhart would, from this point on, develop Wanda further into one of the first superheroines with a three-dimensional personality.

Another strong female character would be an original creation of Englehart, who enters the picture in # 112: the mysterious Eurasian martial-arts mistress named Mantis. By # 114, Mantis and her lover, the reformed villain Swordsman have joined the Avengers. As the issues go on, the subplots of Mantis's origin and the Scarlet Witch-Mantis-Vision-Swordsman soap-operatics slowly take over the book, building to the stunning cosmic epic known as The Celestial Madonna Saga (# 129, GSA # 2, # 130-132, GSA # 3, # 133-135, and GSA # 4.) Englehart brings back Kang, unseen for a long time, and firmly establishes him as one the Avengers Top Three villains; his quest for the Celestial Madonna, who turns out to be Mantis, is opposed not only by the Avengers but also by Rama-Tut and Immortus, two of Kang's "other selves". From Earth to Limbo and back, from the return of Hawkeye to the shocking death of the Swordsman, from the origin of the Kree-Skrull conflict to the introduction of the Priests of Pama and the Cotati, from the full origins of Mantis and Vision to the awakening of the Scarlet Witch's full powers, and finally to the weddings of Scarlet Witch & Vision and Mantis and the Cotati-using-the-body-of-Swordsman...this story truly has it all. Even though my sentimental favorite Avengers epic is Harras & Epting's Sersi-Crystal-Black Knight-Proctor Saga, the Celestial Madonna Saga is a very close second, one of the most ambitious stories ever attempted in a superhero comic, and a model for many superhero stories over the last 30 years (including the Sersi-Crystal-Black Knight-Proctor Saga, which has more than a few homages to the Celestial Madonna Saga). And by the way, as long as I'm counting my favorites, I should mention that Operation Galactic Storm takes third place.

Art-wise, this block of Englehart issues has so many artists and is so wildly uneven, it necessitates a paragraph in itself. The high points are: Giant-Size Avengers # 2 (Mantis's revelation and the Swordsman's death) and # 3 (villains: Kang and the Legion of the Un-Living), both spectacularly pencilled by Dave Cockrum -- # 2 is inked by Cockrum himself with a lot of help from Neal Adams and others, while # 3 rises above weak-tea inks by Joe Giella; John Buscema guest-penciling # 124 (villain: Star-Stalker) and # 125 (villains: Thanos's alien armada), with Cockrum inking; Cockrum also inked Bob Brown's last issue, # 126 (villains: Klaw and Solarr). The low points are: basically any issue which Don Heck (who was dealing with personal problems) either pencilled or inked -- Giant-Size # 4 (Heck pencils) looks awful, but it works because of Englehart's brilliant script, so I would say the absolute worst is # 121 (villains: Zodiac) because Heck's inking does the unthinkable by making John Buscema look bad. Somewhere in the middle are: Sal Buscema & Joe Staton's adequate but stable short run, # 127-134 -- Staton, embellishing Sal Buscema's layouts, wisely reins in his cartoony tendencies and sticks to the Marvel house style; Bob Brown's better issues (specifically the Avengers/Defenders Clash and the aforementioned Cockrum issue); and George Tuska's typically bland pencils on # 135.

Finally, Roy Thomas made up for his weak last few issues by scripting some of the Celestial Madonna issues from Englehart's plots, and for writing Giant-Size Avengers # 1 (pencilled by Rich Buckler and nicely inked by Dan Adkins), which posited a possible origin for Wanda and her brother as children of Golden Age heroes Whizzer and Miss America. Considering what a disaster the children-of-Magneto origin turned out to be in the long run, this long-forgotten origin looks better every day.

[ July 06, 2007, 09:09 PM: Message edited by: Stealth ]
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
And to think, I came in on the Zodiac story!

Kang had been gone a while, but not nearly THAT long-- he was involved in the Grandmaster story, after all, the one which introduced both The Squadron Sinister-- and funny enough-- The Invaders! (To THINK, Roy Thomas had to scramble for an entire ANNUAL just to "explain" why, during that fight, Captain America had his triangular shield instead of the round one. SHEESH!!!)

I personally rank Heck-Tartag on GIANT #4 as the all-time low point. This is the one where George Perez said he thought the figures during the wedding scene "looked like Mego toys", and walked into the editor's office declaring, "I can do better than THAT!!!" And, so full of youthful arrogance as he was, he got the chance to prove himself! (And wouldn't you know, his first 2 issues they had Colletta on inks. AUGH!)
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
Kang had been gone a while, but not nearly THAT long-- he was involved in the Grandmaster story, after all, the one which introduced both The Squadron Sinister-- and funny enough-- The Invaders!

Oops! [Embarrassed]

Thanks for the correction. I've edited my previous post.


Avengers Volume One # 136-149

What could possibly follow The Celestial Madonna Saga? Wisely, Englehart chose to write a modest pair of back-to-back short stories that introduced potential members. It appeared that Wasp and Yellowjacket may be returning, and Moondragon, a guest player in the Celestial Madonna Saga, was thinking of sticking around. But the most memorable of the potential newbies was Henry McCoy, the former X-Man known as the Beast. Englehart's first ongoing superhero gig had been the Beast's short-living solo series in Amazing Adventures. Before Englehart took over, the Beast had become a tortured soul with a monstrous appearance. Englehart tossed all the angst out the window, instead choosing to emphasize the Beast's eloquence, intelligence and wit; in fact, Englehart himself has admitted that the Beast became his fictional alter ego, and that if he could have shown Beast smoking pot, he would have. Despite its quality, the series sold poorly, and Englehart had to wrap up the plot in an issue of Incredible Hulk. And when the opportunity presented itself for Beast to join the Avengers, Englehart seized the day.

The first post-Celestial Madonna issue, #136, was actually a fill-in issue, reprinting one of Englehart's Beast solo stories guest starring Iron Man. Fill-ins would be frequent for Avengers throughout the rest of the 1970s, and into the early 1980s.

Issues #137-138 find the team fighting the cosmic villain the Stranger, who, in a Wizard of Oz twist, turns out to be the Toad impersonating the Stranger. Wasp is injured during the battle, and is hospitalized in #139, where her stalker, Whirlwind, disrupts her recovery. Yellowjacket figures out that Whirlwind is Wasp's chauffer, and attacks the creep. But it is Beast who saves the day, while Yellowjacket grows uncontrollably in #140, necessitating the Vision to phase into Yellowjacket's body with the cure. All four of these issues are unremarkably penciled by George Tuska, made even more unremarkable by Vince Colletta's inks.

# 141 is where Englehart really hits his stride, and with him every step of the way is George Perez, the first semi-regular Avengers penciler since John Buscema. Perez spent the 140s saddled with fair-to-middling inkers: Colletta, Grainger, Esposito, but the raw talent was there from the start, and could never be completely obscured. After thirty years, it's nice to see a Marvel book with art that clearly has been influenced by the best of both Marvel and DC up to that time (just as when Perez moved to DC in the 1980s, it was neat to see DC books with elements of the Marvel house style in the art.)

Englehart's scripting definitely took a turn for the quirky here, with a seven-part storyarc (interrupted by a two-part fill-in by another writer in # 145-146) involving the Avengers uncovering corporate corruption and getting trapped in the Squadron Supreme universe, where DC in-jokes abound (my favorite is Lois Lane and Lana Lang sunbathing on a roof). The highlight of the story is the transformation of Patsy Walker (the breakout star of Marvel's by-then-defunct romance comics line) into a superheroine, Hellcat. Englehart had previously written Patsy into the Beast solo stories, and bringing her into Avengers was one of his best decisions. What can I say about Hellcat as written by Steve Englehart except that it's wonderful, delightful, superlative? Hellcat was the ultimate wish-fulfillment character for fangirls. One of the reasons I don't like J.M. De Matteis is because of what he did to Hellcat when he was writing Defenders -- the character was so damaged that even Englehart himself could not undo the damage when he wrote a Hellcat limited series in 2000.

The secondary plot involves a few Avengers tracking Kang through the timestream all the way to...the Old West?? These scenes, IMO, are where the quirkiness gets too thick -- they anticipate the same problem I have with Englehart's West Coast Avengers run. But as long as Englehart sticks to the primary plot, this storyarc (retroactively titled The Serpent Crown when it was recently collected in a TPB) is pure pleasure.

Just as I consider the end of The Kree-Skrull War to be the end of an era, I also consider the end of The Serpent Crown to be the end of an era. Corporate and editorial politics would lead Englehart to temporarily leave Marvel, and in my opinion Avengers didn't completely recover until the Roger Stern/John Buscema era -- more than 100 issues later!

[ July 06, 2007, 09:10 PM: Message edited by: Stealth ]
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Looks like I’ve gotten behind on this thread! Glad to see you’re keeping this wonderful thread alive Stealth (and thanks for reminding me! [Big Grin] )

Avengers Volume One # 89-108

Set-Up for the Kree Skrull War – Even the issues preceding the Kree-Skrull War are a blast to read, and I really love Captain Marvel and Rick Jones involvement. It really gives you a sense of the Marvel U during this time. Like others, this is one of my favorite times in Avengers history too, and the Kree-Skrull War and later Englehart issues make the Avengers one of the best Marvel comics of this entire era. Stealth, you’re absolutely right in that a great deal of these concepts were old Fantastic Four ones that came into play here and the combination of that and the involvement of Cap, Iron Man and Thor really make this a ‘Marvel Universe’ spanning story.

Phenomenal Neal Adams art! Like said, all too brief!

The Kree-Skrull War itself – what a great, great Avengers story, and the beginning of a long tradition of great space epics for the Avengers. I love that in addition to the current Avengers, the five original members were a part of the story. As usual, IMO, the shining participants among the Avengers were the Vision and Hawkeye, and to some degree the Scarlett Witch. There is no doubt that the Vision emerged as the ‘star’ of the Avengers right around here (indeed, he was Marvel’s most popular character in the 70’s besides Spidey and the Thing). I love the issue with Hawk Pym resuming his Ant-Man persona and going inside the Vision. Really, I can go on and on about the Kree-Skrull War, but its all been said before.

Avengers #100 – even as a kid, I could tell this wasn’t the greatest of stories, but the notion that all past Avengers were included, even the Swordsman made this issue just a blast to read. Seeing Hercules again and returning Clint to Hawkeye (after the AWFUL decision to make him Goliath II) are good and I like the Hulk here, even if the Hulk during this era was the 70’s Hulk aka ‘the strongest one there is’.

X-Men/Avengers Crossover – this story stands out for two reasons that don’t have much to do with the story at all (like Stealth says, kinda dull). First, it is one of those rare X-Men appearances b/t the cancellation of their title (it got better) and the New X-Men, so that’s kind of cool. But more important, this story gets Quicksilver away from the Avengers for the first time that really sets him apart and sets him on the path that he’s taken to this day. Although very subtly, it marks Wanda becoming more of an Avenger and more in touch with the Vision, while Quicksilver embraces more the jerk persona that he’s always shown, as well as take his own path for a long time (despite coming in and out of the Avengers some more). If nothing better, at least these issues show some great beginnings to the Wanda/Vision romance, one of the greatest in Marvel’s history (if only a few current comic book writers would understand that—I’m looking at you Brian Bendis).

Enter Englehart – can you name five better writers than Swinging’ Steve during this era? I doubt anyone can. Englehart changed Wanda and you can feel his impact almost immediately. The Grim Reaper/Space Phantom arc remains one of my favorites, and I love, love, love the cover to #108 (at least, I think its #108). Plus, this has one of my favorite line-ups of all, with Iron Man, Thor and Cap back, and with the Panther, Wanda and the Vision in full force (and Hawkeye before he leaves briefly). The minor tweaks to come will turn the Avengers into one of my favorite line-ups of all time. Also, as Stealth says, great art all around!

Avengers Volume One # 109-135 and Giant-Size Avengers # 1-4

Since so many good comments have been made, I’ll just through in a few more:

- The Black Widow joins for one issue (#109) – this is fun for me (with DD included too), even though Natasha joining in this point in her career is obviously a mistake. But I’m glad she ‘officially’ joined here, since she’s so important to Avengers history. Something I did recently was reread all her stories in Daredevil and I’ve fallen in love with the idea of the two of them as a team (just like I love reading Cap when it starred him and the Falcon together).

- Avengers/Defenders – what a fun story. Hulk/Thor, one of the best pair-ups for a fight in all of Marvel. Namor/Cap, which rocked! And smack in the middle of it all: Hawkeye, as usual! Great story.

- There’s a cool little Klaw/Panther story in here somewhere, and despite the impressive line-up of Avengers I liked that the Panther was not forgotten and had some good stories before his eventual departing the team in a few issues.

- Mantis/Swordsman – the entrance of Mantis & the Swordsman truly mark one my favorite eras of the Avengers. I love the character of Mantis, from her attempts to ruin the Wanda/Vision romance, to her role as Celestial Madonna, and how she was so important that Marvel’s best had to defend her time and time again, and how she’s such a strong-willed, kick-ass character that she can do it without them. I also like when she says ‘This One’ [Big Grin] . I think the Swordsman here is brilliant and his death is one of the best in Marvel’s history.

- The Celestial Madonna Saga – I have many, many favorite Avenger’s stories, but I don’t think I could ever argue with anyone who said this was the greatest Avengers story of them all. It has *everything*. I mean, really, death, weddings, drama, Iron Man & Thor fitting in seamlessly despite their own comics, Thanos, Kang, Kree, Skrulls…it makes you want to catch your breath. Simply comic book magic. (Just like Stealth, my fave is the Sersi-Crystal-Black Knight-Proctor Saga [Big Grin] ). Part of me still cringes whenever Mantis is used b/c I feel most don’t get her right, but an even bigger part of me is waiting with great impatience for her return in some great, majestic story in the future.

- One other thing I love, is when Iron Man and Thor are on the roster and are in charge of the team. Cap being the team leader has been done *so* much, that I find it very refreshing when Iron Man and Thor are involved, and I especially love when these two characters get a chance to interact with other Avengers from other eras. Any line-up with Iron Man, Thor, Wanda, Vision, Hawkeye, Mantis with the Black Panther or Cap is one that will have me in pure glee.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Avengers Volume One # 136-149

These are some fun issues, although like you say Stealth, the quirkiness is in full effect towards the end of Englehart’s run. But this was such a rich time for the Avengers, that some things stand out:

- Beast – IMO, Beast is never better than when he’s with the Avengers, especially Wonder Man, although that would come later. In fact, all these years later (and all these stories) and I’ve never really liked seeing him in an X-Men line-up, even for a Marvel Silver-Age traditionalist like myself. He’s so much fun, and so energetic that he really steals the scenes.

- Moondragon – one of the most annoying heroes in Marvel, and thus, one of the most interesting. Although what she did to Quicksilver come years later is probably the worst, I can’t help but want to strangle her when she’s convincing Thor to leave the team! But yet, its so hard to deny the drama and dynamic she brings.

- Hellcat – Though not one of my absolute favorites, I can see why people would love her completely, and her introduction in the Avengers continued the tradition that Mantis & the Swordsman started of new rich characters of this era joining up. I’m glad she’s back ‘to normal’ these days, although I wish I would see her more.

- Yellowjacket & the Wasp – These are two of my favorites and seeing them return marks another transition for the Avengers. I really like how the Vision inside Hank is a play on the earlier Hank inside the Vision story during the Kree-Skrull War. Its this era here that any one reading the Avengers know that beyond the ‘Big 3’ the real core of the Avengers are Hank, Jan, Clint, Wanda, Vision, and even Black Panther & the Beast. Very rarely would another hero encompass that to the same degree (possibly Wonder Man, and Ms. Marvel to a lesser degree, the Black Knight, etc.)

- Perez – IMO, the greatest comic book artist since Jack Kirby and nothing short of amazing. His earliest issues are spectacular, as are all of his issues in almost any era in almost any comic.

- The Serpent Crown Saga – this saga isn’t really up there for ‘greatest Avengers story’ contender, but its fun and its good enough to maintain enjoyment. Seeing Kang so soon after the Celestial Madonna Saga heightened his sense of villainy, and I really enjoy the notion of the Two-Gun Kid and Hawkeye being such good buddies.

This really is the end of an era, as #150 marked the end of Moondragon & Hellcat in the Avengers, Kirby’s return (which I personally enjoy, although I’m sure some not as much) and a different kind of story-telling in Avengers that wasn’t so sharp when it came to character moments. Definitely though, #98 - #149 mark one specific segment of Avenger’s history, with the Englehart issues being some of the best super-hero team book stories ever told.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"All four of these issues are unremarkably penciled by George Tuska, made even more unremarkable by Vince Colletta's inks."

As if countless issues of Tuska art being inked by Mike Esposito weren't bad enough, there was that period when it seemed almost EVERY issue with Tuska art was inked by Vince Colletta. (sigh) That said, it seems Steve Englehart managed to play to Tuska's strenghts-- "blunt, brute force" tension & action. There was a brief running joke where the characters went on about the problems they faced, and The Beast said, "The super-biz is LIKE that, though." Later, when Hank flies into a fit and yells, "It's madness-- MADNESS!!!" Beast replies, "The super-biz is LIKE that, though." What a welcome relief he was to all the overly-serious pretentiousness!

I, of course, had NO idea of Hank & Jan's long solo-career history over all those years, so the revelation that their chauffer was Whirlwind (formerly The Human Top-- one of Stan's STUPIDEST villains, EVER!!!) meant nothing to me-- nor did the fact that, apparently, Hank & Jan were the ONLY people who didn't know by then (the readers, apparently, were in on it for many years before Hank figured it out-- which in retrospect, makes him seem stupid). I have a fond memory of the scene where he grows to huge size, and as Whirwind is trying to fly away, Hank smashes his fist through the side of a brick building, yelling at the top of his lungs, "YOU OWE ME, MISTER!!!" What a change from the "scientific" type! No doubt stuff like this "inspired" (he said-- SARACASTICALLY) the C*** that Jim Shooter pulled later on-- but it was NOT called for.

George Perez-- incredibly-- was once on my "worst artists" list (along with Bob Hall, Alan Kupperberg, Frank Robbins). He got better though. WAY better. I still recall the Grim Repaer story as THE issue where, for the first time, I didn't see any drawing mistakes. YIPEE! Nice to see someone get the chance to "learn on the job". Nobody ever gave ME that chance...

Like Beast, Hellcat was a delight, and it was a shame to lose her from AVENGERS so soon.

Moondragon is one of those characters that is so "personal" to the one who created her (in this case, Jim Starlin) that MOST writers have never "got" her right. Steve Gerber (in DAREDEVIL, where I first saw her) is, to this day, the ONLY writer I've ever seen who treated her in a way I'd consider proper. Sadly, while for the most part back then it seemed Englehart could do no wrong, with Moondragon, he did, and STEVE-- of all people-- set her on the path that EVERY OTHER hack writer has followed, each one treating her WORSE than the one before!! There was a SILVER SURFER graphic novel that Starlin wrote (in the late 80's, I think) where, for the first time in nearly 15 years, somebody (her CREATOR, of course) wrote her properly again.

I was getting really fed up with the CONTUNUAL fill-ins and changes in creative line-ups. The 2-part "Assassin" story-- written by Tony Isabella (the FIRST time he "calmed down" and treated a story "seriously", without getting over-wordy and joking it up) impressed me-- it just never should have appeared when it did. (In fact, while it was supposed to have been GIANT #5, I had a lot of trouble, based on WHO was a member in that story, trying to figure out WHERE it "fit" in continuity!! Don't you hate that?)

My frustration reached its peak when, after spending an entire YEAR having The Avengers searching for a "new lineup", they finally reached #150-- and most of the issue was a "DEADLINE-DOOM" reprint! AUGH!!!

And then, the NEXT month, they announced Steve's departure! WHAT TH'...??? Was I pissed. I actually wrote Stan Lee a personal letter-- one that contained profanity (something I almost never do), saying I wished something could be done about the "chaos". He actually wrote me back, saying he'd look into it. MANY years later, thinking back on that, I dread the thought that my "request" may have-- in even the smallest way-- led to an obsessive, dictatorial CONTROL FREAK taking over as Editor-In-Chief. (AAAUGH!!)

DECADES after-the fact, I discovered that the "editorial interference" I'd read mentioned somewhere... turned out to be ONE person: Gerry "I'm only in it for the money" Conway. According to Englehart himself, Gerry got on his nerves SO much, he not only quit THE AVENGERS, and Marvel entirely, but planned to quit COMICS altogether (following a "brief" tenure at DC, doing JLA and BATMAN, which he'd more-or-less "warmed up for" when he did The Squadron Supreme and The Shroud). THANK YOU, Gerry Conway!!! (He said, sarcastically)

Back then, Steve was my FAVORITE "current" writer, working wonders on EVERYTHING he touched. Marvel, in a great many ways, was never the same after he left. The chaos caused by Conway and the many gaping voids he left with his abrupt departure (to think, had Steve hung in a few months, Conway would have been gone) left an opening for some really talented writers, like Dave Kraft & Jim Shooter-- though the latter seemed hell-bent on needlessly running characters through the mud, and his run on AVENGERS, partly thanks to Perez' out-of-control scheduling problems (taking on 4 projects at a time and blowing deadlines on all of them) meant the bright spots in AVENGERS came in erratic spurts. Oh well...
 
Posted by walkwithcrowds on :
 
I just want to say thanks to Prof, Cobie and of course Stealth for this thread.

I'm really enjoying this and I hope you keep going and cover the ENTIRE history, up to and including, the current run.

Keep up the good work guys.
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by walkwithcrowds:
I just want to say thanks to Prof, Cobie and of course Stealth for this thread.

I'm really enjoying this and I hope you keep going and cover the ENTIRE history, up to and including, the current run.

Keep up the good work guys.

You're very welcome, WWC. Glad you're enjoying. And the best is yet to come. [Smile]


Avengers Volume One # 150-177 & Annuals # 6-8

Originally intended as the introduction of the new lineup, issue #150 has only a few pages of new Englehart material, and the rest is a reprint of Lee & Kirby's # 16. And then...exit Steve Englehart, enter a most unwelcome Gerry Conway. Issue # 151 is a real Frankenstein's Monster of a story, with Conway and Jim Shooter both padding out Englehart's final bunch of pages. According to Englehart, the pages that he recognizes as his own are 3, 7, 10, 14, 15, 17, 22, 23, 26, 27, 30, and 31. The new Avengers lineup is a dissapointment: Jan & Hank AND Wanda & Vision in the same lineup? I don't think there should be more than one married couple in a superhero team; Hellcat lets Moondragon talk her out of joining the Avengers (NOOOOOO); Moondragon herself is one of my least favorite characters, so I have no problem with her own exit -- regrettably, it wasn't a permanent exit. And then there's the return of Wonder Man. I must admit I've never really been a fan of Wonder Man, mostly because I associate him with the decline of Avengers.

Perez is gone for # 152-153, where John Buscema and Joe Sinnott substitute with art that is far below both artists' standards -- but who can blame them, when they were working from awful Conway scripts? Conway's first Avengers storyarc, a convoluted mess involving the Living Laser, the Whizzer, and Nuklo, ends in Avengers Annual # 6 (the first non-reprint Avengers Annual since # 2), drawn by Perez with three inkers, all of them failing to do Perez justice. By the time Perez returned to the monthly book in # 154, Avengers had acquired the services of Pablo Marcos, a good inker AND an inker who stayed on the book for many issues. Which makes it a shame that Conway's second (and, thankfully, his last) Avengers storyarc -- this one involving the Sub-Mariner, Dr. Doom, and Attuma -- was just as bad as his first. Perez began missing deadlines again, and so # 156-159 have undistinguished guest pencils -- this time from Sal Buscema (# 156, # 158-159) and Don Heck (# 157). Conway left after # 157, a dreary, confusing stand-alone involving the statue of the Black Knight, went to DC, and wrote five thousand issues of JLA.

# 158-159 is the first storyarc by Shooter, and right from the start he establishes one of his recurring flaws -- the villain (in this case, Shooter's creation Graviton) is too powerful! Shooter's issues during his first run tend to follow a pattern: the Avengers are out-matched by a single, powerful villain who is only defeated by some plot contrivance. In addition to this, I personally find Shooter's Avengers stories to be unpleasantly fatalistic and depressing -- Claremont's X-Men stories have the same flaw, but at least Claremont had a fanciful streak and a certain technical flair, while Shooter had neither. The shame of it is, some of Shooter's early issues have really good art -- Perez/Marcos on #160-162 (villains: Grim Reaper, Ultron) and Byrne/Marcos on #164-166 (villains: Lethal Legion II, Count Nefaria). Perez/Marcos also did the first few issues of Shooter's worst folly, the ten-part Korvac Saga (#167-168, #170-177), which in my opinion is just as self-indulgent as its 80s companion, Secret Wars II. I'm utterly puzzled by the high regard in which the Korvac Saga is held -- IMO, it's badly structured and badly paced, it squeezes in a ton of pointless guest stars, it humiliates the Avengers by having the government take away the team's special privileges (those special privileges are what make Avengers such a great wish-fulfillment book in the first place), it has yet another hopeless battle against yet another ridiculously powerful villain, and it has what I consider one of the worst endings of all time: this story asks us to believe that a murderous sociopath was actually on the side of the angels all along, and it asks us to take the egomaniacal Moondragon's word for it! On a personal level, I consider the TPB of this story (which I got rid of after one reading) to be one of the biggest wastes of money in my life. I think it proves that Shooter needed a strong-willed editor like Silver Age Legion of Superheroes editor Mort Weisinger to produce good work; instead, he was editor-in-chief for most of his years at Marvel, and he indulged himself to a sickening extent. Finally, a few words about Shooter's Mary Sue, government suit Henry Peter Gyrich: I know he's supposed to be a character we "love to hate", but I'd rather eat broken glass than read any story with Gyrich in it -- I read superhero comics to escape from the ugly real-life realities of having to deal with jerks like Gyrich, not to be reminded of those ugly real-life realities!

On a happier note, Avengers Annual # 7 (taking place just before Korvac) is in this block of issues, to remind us of how great an Avengers story can be; this is the next-to-last installment of Jim Starlin's Warlock vs. Thanos saga (it concludes in Marvel Two-in-One Annual # 2, but Avengers Annual # 7 does work as a stand-alone), and it's also yet another excellent Avengers space opera. Avengers Annual # 8 (taking place right after Korvac), by Roger Slifer and George Perez, is a well-drawn but nasty little story about Dr. Spectrum's sentient power-prism run amok.

Avengers Volume One # 178-196 & Annual 9

Following the end of Korvac, there were three fill-in issues in a row, after which Avengers picked up where it left off, this time with David Michelinie as the (nominal) writer. Never quite as horrible as Shooter at his worst, this small block of issues is distinguished mostly for being...undistinguished. Nominal writer David Michelinie is my favorite Iron Man writer (or rather, co-writer with Bob Layton), but his Avengers stories are generally dull superheroics that could take place in any run-of-the-mill superhero team book. Additionally, Michelinie was great at writing non-superpowered women in Iron Man (most notably Bethany Cabe), but when it came to writing Wasp, Scarlet Witch, or Ms. Marvel, he was clueless (I don't include Jocasta because the very concept of this she-droid feels creepy and gross to me).

In fairness, I think a couple of the stories are okay -- the battle against the Absorbing Man in #183-184, and the battle against the Grey Gargoyle in #190-191 (although the latter was plotted not by Michelinie but by then-Avengers-editor and future-Avengers-writer Roger Stern, and it's not the only time that Michelinie would have minimal input). And I think the first appearance of Taskmaster (#194-196) is better than okay, it's a good story that should have been the beginning of something better than what actually did follow. I particularly like the guest appearance of Scott Lang as Ant-Man II (a Michelinie/Layton creation who undeservedly ended up on the C-List and later became cannon fodder, because no writer other than his creators knew what to do with him). I think he had the potential to become to the Avengers what the Atom was to the JLA.

Art-wise, Avengers had John Byrne for #181-191 and George Perez for #194-196, but Pablo Marcos was gone, and a mixed bag of inkers (Joe Rubinstein and Gene Day on one hand, Dan Green and Jack Abel on the other hand) keeps this from being a highlight of either pencilers' career. In Avengers Annual # 9, Don Newton -- an underappreciated artist who did far too little work for Marvel -- takes an adequate Bill Mantlo script (villains: Mistress the super-computer and her robot guardian, Arsenal) and produces by far the best-looking issue in this block, especially the second half with inks by Joe Rubinstein.

[ January 02, 2007, 10:07 PM: Message edited by: Stealth ]
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
This time, I gotta do in "reply" form...


"Jan & Hank AND Wanda & Vision in the same lineup? I don't think there should be more than one married couple in a superhero team"

Any idea-- was this Steve's idea, or Gerry's? Steve definitely had a thing for romance, especially if it involved unusual couples.


"Hellcat lets Moondragon talk her out of joining the Avengers (NOOOOOO); Moondragon herself is one of my least favorite characters, so I have no problem with her own exit -- regrettably, it wasn't a permanent exit."

Again-- Steve or Gerry? (Will we ever know?) Hellcat worked out okay in DEFENDERS, but dammit! she belonged HERE-- where George could draw her!

I LIKE Moondragon. But outside of Starlin & Gerber, NOBODY ever wrote her decently-- so it's easy to see why she's so disliked. (Hey, I'D do 'er.)


"Avengers Annual # 6, drawn by Perez with three inkers, all of them failing to do Perez justice."

I just remember it looks "okay", but the story had no zing, nothing special about it AT ALL.


"Pablo Marcos, a good inker AND an inker who stayed on the book for many issues."

I always considered him too overpowering, though Perez' pencils were so tight they did kinda work well together. If George ever slipped back to "layouts", watch out! This happened during that Byrne 3-parter-- the last chapter is clearly MORE Marcos than Byrne. Marcos actually developed a MUCH "cleaner" ink style when he got on STAR TREK: TNG many years later-- I was shocked!


"Sub-Mariner, Dr. Doom, and Attuma"

I just re-read this as part of my re-reading the entire run of SUPER-VILLAIN TEAM-UP. As bad as THAT book tended to be, this story was possibly it's all-time LOW point! Rambling and confused. This is a "plot"???


"right from the start he establishes one of his recurring flaws -- the villain (in this case, Shooter's creation Graviton) is too powerful! Shooter's issues during his first run tend to follow a pattern: the Avengers are out-matched by a single, powerful villain who is only defeated by some plot contrivance. In addition to this, I personally find Shooter's Avengers stories to be unpleasantly fatalistic and depressing"

It's strange... at the time, Shooter seemed like a step UP from Conway (THANK YOU, Gerry Conway!!). I've never re-read any of that run, and mostly remember it for the chaos on the art front, because George kept blowing deadlines all over the Marvel Universe. It says a LOT about the "Marvel Method" that with Perez, Shooter seemed readable. The "Korvac" story was apparently as much George's idea as Jim's-- a real precursor to CRISIS ON INFINITE EARTHS and all the horrors that came after (and keeps coming-- AAAAAUGH!!!). But as soon as George left the book, in mid-story, it barely hung together at all. Shooter seemed more concerned with "story" than "good art", as witness the depths of ugly so-called "art" he plumbed in SECRET WARS II-- the all-time worst-ever crap from a guy who was MUCH more talented than that, Al Milgrom. (Perhaps the office atmosphere "inspired" him in a NEGATIVE way? I've seen it happen in drafting!!!)


"it squeezes in a ton of pointless guest stars"

George wanted the projected 12 issues to guest-star "EVERYBODY"!!! Never got that far.


"Shooter needed a strong-willed editor like Silver Age Legion of Superheroes editor Mort Weisinger to produce good work; instead, he was editor-in-chief for most of his years at Marvel, and he indulged himself to a sickening extent."

AGREED. Totalitarian dictator on one hand ("BECAUSE I SAY SO!!!") and someone no so-called "editor" under his employ could ever say "No" to.


"I read superhero comics to escape from the ugly real-life realities of having to deal with jerks like Gyrich, not to be reminded of those ugly real-life realities!"

I've written real-life SCUM into some of my own stories, and I ALWAYS do it to give them the come-uppance they haven't gotten (yet) in real life. As a friend said to me, "What's the point of writing if you don't play God?" Or, as I said to someone recently, "F*** with me, you end up DEAD in one of my stories."


"Avengers Annual # 7"

This was, I believe, the DEBUT of Joe Rubinstein, one of the BEST inkers of the last 30 years, and one of the few I can think of whose work has NEVER declined in quality in all that time! WOW! (Starlin's art had been SUFFERING from lesser inkers for some time before this.)


"Dan Green"

He started out nice, but by here, SUCKED-- BADLY. He was regularly MURDERING the work of every penciller he touched, including Byrne, Perez, Colan. When he took a shot at pencilling o DOCTOR STRANGE, I was blown away. DAMN! Who knew he was THAT good??? (And then he had the nerve to do a DS graphic novel entirely in watercolors! Holy cow!)


"Don Newton -- an underappreciated artist who did far too little work for Marvel"

This past month BACK ISSUE magazine did an issue spotlighting Don, one of my all-time fave BATMAN artists! It included a timeline of his career, and I had NO IDEA he'd made as many passes at Marvel as he had. For whatever combination of reasons, he NEVER seemed to "connect" with Marvel, and repeatedly kept going back to regular, steady employment at DC. Thank goodness! It's just possible that during Shooter's run as Editor-In-Chief, Don was TOO GOOD for Marvel!!!
 
Posted by walkwithcrowds on :
 
Reading this thread has really inspired me to buy the Essential Avengers series, but I've just found an add for the complete run of the Avengers on computer disc.
I'm kind of torn.
If I get the disc it will, I imagine, mean I get perfect quality images and if I get the Essentials it will be black and white on poor paper.
The thing is I like READING comics, as opposed to LOOKING at them on a screen - if you can understand my distinction.
I'll probably buy the Essentials but I just wondered what you guys thought.
 
Posted by wndola1 on :
 
I love my essentials. I do miss the coloring, but with the early stuff you aren't talking about too much spectacular, there really wasn't much they could do. So it doesn't really take away.
 
Posted by Spellbinder on :
 
Now see, for me, this is when I loved the Avengers most of all. Maybe it's because I started reading Avengers then as a kid. Maybe it's because I love George Perez. Maybe (probably) because it featured my favorite Avengers line up of all time (Wasp, Yellowjacket, Scarlet Witch, Vision, Beast, Captain America and Iron Man).

In any case, for me these were the best stories ever! Maybe not the most well executed, but conceptually I loved it. The Ultron issues were among my favorites (betrayed by Ant-Man; the dead or alive cliffhanger; the power of the Scarlet Witch; racing through the streets of New York, following Jocasta and the kidnapped Wasp). Those were a great read to a kid still in his early stages of comics reading.

To this day, Avengers 150 to 200 remain my overall favorite run of the series.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"I'll probably buy the Essentials but I just wondered what you guys thought."

From a few issues into Roy's run to about a dozen issues into Steve's run, I was missing MOST of them-- so the ESSENTIAL books finally filled me in on stuff I'd been missing for decades! For whatever reason, the line reproduction in the B&W books tends to be better than the color MASTERWORKS books, and when you get to the run inked by Tom Palmer, lack of color can almost be a plus!


"I do miss the coloring, but with the early stuff you aren't talking about too much spectacular, there really wasn't much they could do."

On interiors, yes. On the COVERS... oy. In the early 60's, in particular, Stan Goldberg was Marvel's main colorist, and what he did on those covers has NEVER been equalled or duplicated. Back then, Marvel's covers had a UNIQUE look to them, with dark, deep, moody colors. This stuff has NEVER been properly reprinted in color. Usually they just re-color from scratch, which is a shame. I keep thinking that, with modern computer technology, they should be able to reproduce those covers PHOTOGRAPHICALLY, but they just ain't doin' it!

I've spent more time than I should scanning in, cleaning up, "restoring" a lot of the early-60's covers from my own copies, and posting them at Nick Simon's SILVER AGE MARVEL site and the GCD. But it's very time-consuming, and I have such a long way to go. (What's annoying is the number of times editors at the GCD seem to feel my covers look "too good". I think they WANT that site cluttered with dark, dirty, UGLY scans.)
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"Maybe it's because I love George Perez. Maybe (probably) because it featured my favorite Avengers line up of all time (Wasp, Yellowjacket, Scarlet Witch, Vision, Beast, Captain America and Iron Man). In any case, for me these were the best stories ever! Maybe not the most well executed, but conceptually I loved it."

Makes me wonder how things might have been is Steve Englehart hadn't left. (CURSE YOU, Gerry Conway!!!)
 
Posted by Set on :
 
quote:
I LIKE Moondragon. But outside of Starlin & Gerber, NOBODY ever wrote her decently-- so it's easy to see why she's so disliked. (Hey, I'D do 'er.)
I'm all about the B-teams. (Like the Subs)

Moondragon is a total favorite. Xavier-class telepathy (able to mentally influence an entire planet!). Jean-class telekinesis. Martial arts skills far in advance of bikini-ninja-action-Psylocke. Enough attitude to sour the cream in Emma Frost's coffee. And hey, bald! Being old enough to have had impure thoughts about Persis Khambatta (sp?) in Star Trek: the Motion Picture, I'm all for the bald hotties.

Other B-listers I'd love to have seen more of;

USAgent, the Beast (hardly a B-lister, but he needs more love), Tigra, Photon (Captain Marvel 2, Pulsar, whatever Monique Rambeau is calling herself this week), Silverclaw, etc.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
In regards to this era, I tend to agree with Cru. I actually enjoy it quite a bit and despite a few week stories, see it as a natural extension of the greatness of the previous $150 issues. It wouldn’t be until much later (IMO) that Avengers hit its all time low.

As always though, I don’t tend to focus so much on the art (though I love reading your guys comments). To me my memories of these issues are all about story, subplots and characters. Like Cru, I first read these as a kid (probably about 12 years old) and rereading them takes me back there.

Avengers Volume One # 150-177 & Annuals # 6-8

#150 – I actually like this issue a lot! I like seeing it from the Thing’s point of view, with the newscasters (a tribute to #16, and Kurt Busiek’s later issues decades later would recall this), and its fun to see them attempt to call back in some old Avengers and seek out possible new ones. Although I didn’t like seeing Hellcat leave, I do think she fits better with the Defenders (I like Patsy). I think that its here that Beast actually becomes ‘an Avenger’, and I really wish he could do that again. Having Hank & Jan and Wanda & Vision on the line-up at the same time might be a little much at times, but they are four of my favorites, and I can’t help but eat that up. Add in Cap, Iron Man and Beast, and its close to my preferred line-up (there’s a few others I like in there slightly more). I think Shellhead should always be in the line-up myself.

Gerry Conway – I get such a kick when I read about reactions to Gerry Conway. His Marvel work in the 70’s was so reviled then, now and probably forever [Big Grin] . Love the continued presence of the Black Knight in the MU, but despite a handful of appearances here and there it would be many years before he became the star he deserved to be (and deserves to be again).

Wonder Man – I’m also a fan of Wonder Man. Avengers #9 was one of the first Avengers I ever read (the ninth to be exact [Big Grin] ), when I was 11 or 12 and I always loved the character and his noble end. Seeing that he was alive again intrigued me so much. And the reason it works *so* well is his connection to the Grim Reaper and the Vision, and therefore Ultron, Hank, Jan, etc. He’s so tied with the Avengers mythos already (not to mention he originally hated Tony, worked with Zemo, etc.) that it works perfectly And he’s powerful enough that he fits in where he’s needed—the Avengers rosters always need flashy, powerful heroes that can fly. His return marks his real entrance into the Avengers, and nothing annoys me more than a know-it-all fan who never read the issues say ‘no, Wonder Man was an Avengers waaaay back in #9!’—not really, if you read them—its here that he makes his mark.

Wonder Man & Beast – while the Torch and Spidey’s friendship remains what I consider the greatest friendship in comics, Simon and Beast give it a good run for their money. I love their interaction and wish we’d see it more.

Perez art – phenomenal. Gentleman George was knockin’ them out of the park even back then. His art makes this era for me, even if he wasn’t on every issue. His art was a transition for the Avengers, taking precedence over all else. George literally dragged them into the next era and made it look pretty.

Whizzer – I actually find this character annoying. I’m glad he’s not related to Wanda and Pietro anymore. I think the Magneto connection to them was pure brilliance—until the Marvel of the last (5) years went and kind put a damper on it. I think there’s still hope though.

Graviton, Count Nefaria, Lethal Legion II – Again, I really like these stories, and the fight scenes with these villains. It reminded me of good ol’ action—the Marvel way, and I liked seeing these villains recur and have long-standing grudges with the Avengers, and remain a viable threat in doing so. And Avengers Mansion should be destroyed every so often anyway [Big Grin]

Gyrich – reading those issues, I can see why anyone would hate Gyrich. But he’s kind of a first in comic books, as the government figure putting pressure on super-heroes (not really, I know, Silver Age Iron Man readers know he had to deal with this his whole career). But in terms of becoming a genuine member of the cast, I think so, and it shows, as he’s been around the MU in one comic or another for thirty years. That sure is a great Perez cover with him telling them only seven can stay and the rest are out.

The Korvac Saga – I have only the fondest memories of this saga. While I wouldn’t name it one of the greatest Avengers stories of all time, the sheer mass of it, especially being George’s first time for giving us the everything *and* the kitchen sink, is a pure delight. The ‘Michael’ plot is a little much at times (reminiscent of “Omen & the Prophet”, which I also liked), but the interaction between the heroes is where its really at, including the gradual addition of just about every Avengers EVER, the Guardians of the Galaxy and a whole host of others. The tension, the drama, all of it was there, and at the same time there was a tremendous sense of fun in the story. I know some people loathe the cover with Don Blake pounding on the dying Avenger’s hearts, but I love it!

Secret Wars II gets no love from me though [Big Grin]

Avengers Annual # 7 - the next-to-last installment of Jim Starlin's Warlock vs. Thanos saga – I’ve never read this! *choke* (The issue or the Saga). This is one of those stories I’ve been trying to read for fifteen years but have never had the luck. Trust, I know I’m missing out! And I want *in* dammit! [Big Grin]

Avengers Volume One # 178-196 & Annual 9

Michelinie is a brilliant writer, as he proved on Iron Man, Amazing Spider-Man, etc., but I agree that these issues are quite ‘knock your socks off’ good. But there are still consistently good character scenes, and some good battles with villains (I like the Absorbing Man issue and the Task Master issue).

Wanda & Pietro’s story continues to unfold over the decades, and Hank, Jan, the new Ant-Man, Jocasta, etc. are involved. In fact, I love the line-up here too, with the Falcon and Ms. Marvel involved, Beast, Wonder Man, Hawkeye, etc. all still around, and of course Cap and Iron Man. (I know the official line-up is 7, but really, the ‘off-screen’ official line-up must have been 10-11).

I also loved the Ultron/Ant-Man/Jocasta/kidnapped Wasp story as well, and think it was a very dynamic and heart-racing story--and a fun read.

And like Stealth said, these issues had a Byrne and Perez arc each and I think they were for the better for it. Overall, George’s Avengers work is some of his greatest, and Byrne at this point in his career was nothing short of phenomenal.

If anything positive can be said about #151 – 196, it must be the characters used and the interaction between them: Vision, Scarlet Witch, Quicksilver, Hawkeye, Black Panther, Beast, Wonder Man, Iron Man, Captain America, Yellowjacket, Wasp, Ms. Marvel, Falcon, with appearances by Hercules, Black Widow and so many others! I’d say if you asked 75% of *real* Avengers fans who they thought were ‘Avengers’, most would name a list whose majority included Avengers during this period.

Where to next? *EEP*! To me the Avengers were about to hit their all time rock bottom EVER, only to be saved by the glory known as Roger Stern for a really great run.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"To me the Avengers were about to hit their all time rock bottom EVER, only to be saved by the glory known as Roger Stern for a really great run."

Ditto.

What WAS it about David Michelinie, anyway? Twice he got on IRON MAN, blew everybody away, and BOTH times, he left, and the book went COMPLETELY to hell. It wasn't JUST that he was that good... What, did he just leave without ANY warning to whoever was editing the books? You get really SICK of a good writer leaving and then having to put up with, like, 6 consecutive MONTHS of the worst, most amateurish drek imaginable (and by, probably, 6 DIFFERENT bad writers!)

I'll jump ahead here and say just how SEVERELY disappointed I was with THE AVENGERS around that time. Even with Michelinie, Byrne & Perez, the stories were often 2nd-rate, the inks 5TH-rate (Dan Green murdering EVERYBODY). Then, abruptly, Michelinie's gone, Perez is gone, and one of my favorite pencillers of all time-- Gene Colan-- appears to be on the LEAST-appropriate assignment of his entire career. And HIS pencils get MURDERED, too. From various sources, it seems Jim Shooter PERSONALLY did not like Gene's style-- just as those infamous BBC execs in the 80's PERSONALLY did not like DOCTOR WHO-- and wanted him gone. It would appear quite possible that Colan was put on AVENGERS specifically BECAUSE he didn't fit on the book-- and it was the "best" way to make him look REALLY BAD! Then Shooter nit-picks his work TO DEATH (when Stan NEVER had a problem with Gene in ALL his years at Marvel), until Gene finally has no choice but to leave the company, if only to get away from all the aggravation.

Given the circumstances, I feel it's safe to say we NEVER found out what Bill Mantlo could or could not do on AVENGERS. Just as he was unceremoniously KICKED off IRON MAN (because Michelinie & Layton REALLY wanted that book), so Mantlo very quickly disappears, because SHOOTER wants it back. And this time, he didn't even bother with logical stories. He didn't even bother with "AVENGERS" type stories. HELL no! He just went straight for the jugular, determined to run every character he could through the mud. Yellowjacket. Wasp. Tigra. Iron Man. Wasp. (Apparently he had problems with ANYBODY have a really happy, healthy, successful marriage-- or "happy" characters AT ALL.) What an s.o.b.

I'll jump ahead a bit FURTHER here. After Steve Englehart, then Doug Moench, Roger Stern became my favorite comics-writer in the early 80's. But every so often, even he did something that just rubbed me the wrong way. This was one such instance. First, he has Hank Pym pull it together, get the baddies that framed him, and cleared his name. Great. But then, he & Jan split... But THAT'S not the worst part. What is, was when Stern had them say that-- supposedly-- Hank & Jan were "ALWAYS" wrong for each other. WHAT A LOAD!!! Talk about editorial fiat. I'd say part of the job requirement for getting this book was to agree with what Shooter started, and not make waves.

After all, it was MAKING waves that cost Stern the job several years later...
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Before I post the next review, I'd like to thank everybody for keeping the thread active during my absence with all this wonderful feedback.

Prof: "The 'Korvac' story was apparently as much George's idea as Jim's. A real precursor to CRISIS ON INFINTE EARTHS and all the horrors that came after (and keeps coming -- AAAAAUGH!!!)"

LOL! I think that Englehart's Avengers/Defenders Clash and Shooter's Korvac Saga are a study in contrasts -- Englelhart's is the right way to do this kind of story, Shooter's is the wrong way.

Prof: "I've written real-life SCUM into some of my own stories, and I ALWAYS do it to give them the comeuppance they haven't gotten (yet) in real life."

I do the same thing (see: Gladiator's fate in my first Imperial Guard storyarc). But I haven't yet seen Gyrich get the kind of comeuppance that I think he deserves -- the one that came closest was the Fabian Nicieza Thunderbolts story where Gyrich tries to destroy all superheroes and Hawkeye shoots an arrow through Gyrich's hand.

Prof: "It's just possible that during Shooter's time as Editor-in-Chief, Don Newton was TOO GOOD for Marvel!!!"

Quite likely. Marvel books went through a long phase in the early 1980s where, with very few exceptions, the art had a dull sameness and a lack of dynamics. This is around the time that George Perez gradually phased himself out of Marvel -- no coincidence there.

WWC, I'll second what Wndola and Prof said -- the Essentials are the way to go.

Cru and Cobie, I certainly respect your opinions re: the first Shooter era, and I should add that I first read the Shooter stories in my late teens/early twenties. I think I would quite possibly have a different perspective on them if I had first read them as a child.

Cobie, there's a Warlock reprint mini-series (simply titled Warlock) and the back issues are cheap.

Finally, I think Cobie and Prof have said just about all that needs to be said about the first couple years of issues that followed # 196. Those issues (specifically, # 197-220) are among the Avengers issues I refuse to read on principle. The only thing I'll add is that Ms. Marvel is another character who was dragged through the mud, and the only story from this era that I've read is Avengers Annual # 10 by Chris Claremont and Michael Golden. Claremont's script is on the wordy side (as usual), but his attempt to rescue Carol from oblivion is honorable, and it has a really cool battle between the Avengers and the definitive lineup of the Brotherhood of Evil Mutants (Mystique, Destiny, Pyro, Blob, Avalanche, and the pre-redemption Rogue.) Golden's weird, hyper-detailed art shifts from the sublime to the ridiculous, but it just about holds together; and Golden did the coloring himself, and very well.
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Avengers Volume One # 221-254 & West Coast Avengers Volume One # 1-4

This is where I come back in. There's still a few issues to go before Roger Stern starts bringing the book back on track. # 221 (plotted by Shooter, scripted by Michelinie) has a nicely-designed cover by Ed Hannigan and introduces the first good lineup in a while, a nice mix of founders (Wasp, Thor, Iron Man), kooky-quartet-ers (Captain America, Hawkeye), and one newbie (She-Hulk). The stories themselves are pretty lame, but tolerable...until # 225-226, where Steven Grant plots and scripts a suprisingly good time-travel story that brings back the Black Knight and pits the Avengers against mystical 12th Century villains. I'm amazed to this day that there's never been a sequel to this story. As a bonus, there's a couple more excellent Ed Hannigan covers.

On the art front, there's a lot of the early-1980s dullness I was talking about in my previous post. But in the cases of Greg LaRocque (# 222-223, # 225-226) and M.D. Bright (# 224) it's excusable, because they were both starting out. I think it's a real shame that LaRocque wasn't kept on the book; it would have been great to see him evolve on Avengers, the way George Perez had in the 1970s. Instead we got Al Milgrom (BLEAH) as the regular penciler; more on him later.

When Roger Stern took over Avengers (# 227), the first order of business was to clean up the mess that Shooter had left. It took four issues, and then Stern could move on to his own plots. Although the stories were hit-and-miss for a while -- the good: Spider-Man/Lava Men/Electro/Rhino/Blackout/Moonstone; Fantastic Four/Annihilus; the bad: Plant Man/Wizard; Dire Wraiths; David Letterman; Spider-Woman/Morgan Le Fay -- Stern's talent for characterization was always in evidence. Stern was the first Avengers writer since Englehart who could write convincing superheroines -- the She-Hulk instantly changed from a caricature to a loveable extrovert; Stern's own creation, Captain Marvel II/Monica Rambeau, had still waters running deep; Jan and Wanda felt like themselves again.

Just a few issues before Stern's arrival, Mark Gruenwald became the editor of Avengers. While I tend to be critical of Gruenwald, I won't deny that his memory is entitled to a good amount of the credit for turning Avengers around. And yet almost from the beginning, there is evidence of a heavy hand: bringing the smarmy, annoying Starfox into the Avengers was entirely Gruenwald's idea; and I suspect that the very long Eternals/Titanians/Maelstrom storyarc (#246-250) was mostly Gruenwald's -- don't get me wrong, I think it's a good story, but it's bothersome to see a writer as talented and distinctive as Stern reduced to a mere scripter.

Around this time, the Wasp had temporarily passed the chairmanship of the team to the Vision (due to events in Secret Wars -- UGH) and the Vision, who had begun to develop quite an ego after Starfox unwisely hooked him up to the Titanian super-computer ISAAC, created a second branch of Avengers, the West Coast Avengers, assigning Hawkeye as leader. The 4-part West Coast Avengers limited series is IMO one of the highlights of the Stern era's first half. Except for Tigra, whom I dislike intensely, the lineup (Hawkeye, Mockingbird, Iron Man, Wonder Man) had good chemistry, Graviton worked as a villain because the team used strategy and smarts to take him down, and I'm of the opinion that Stern wrote Mockingbird better than Steve Englehart would in the ongoing WCA book.

At around the time that the the WCA were establishing themselves, the Vision turned into a utopian megalomaniac, and it took both Avengers teams (including Black Knight and Hercules, two of my favorites) to bring him back to his senses and stop his takeover of the world's computers. This is where I think that Stern started getting really good, and the second (and much better) half of his run was just around the corner.

The art: for someone who had been in the comics industry for over a decade, Al Milgrom's work on the ongoing Avengers book is shockingly amateurish, full of clumsy perspectives and ugly close-ups; the usually great inker Joe Sinnott did a surprisingly sloppy job -- for proof that it wasn't just Milgrom, see the equally sloppy inking over guest artist John Byrne in the Annihilus issue (# 233). On the opposite end, Bob Hall somehow managed to pull himself together and do a really good job on the WCA limited series, although Brett Breeding's inks surely helped a lot; Hall then jumped onto the ongoing book to do breakdowns for the 4-part Vision storyarc (# 251-254)...and suddenly Sinnott was operating at 100 percent again! Unfortunately, Sinnott left after the first two issues, and the next two issues were badly inked (Joe Rubinstein gets partial credit on one of these issues, but I'm guessing he didn't do much more than a few touchups). But the real shame is that John Buscema & Tom Palmer didn't return to the book sooner so that they could have drawn the Vision storyarc -- not only because they were a great art team, but also because Buscema co-created the Vision!!

[ January 09, 2007, 12:40 PM: Message edited by: Stealth ]
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"Claremont's script is on the wordy side (as usual), but his attempt to rescue Carol from oblivion is honorable"

There've been many instances over the years where one writer does something to contradict a previous writer's work, but this was the first time I can recall it being so blatent-- that the entire story existed FOR NO OTHER REASON than that Chris Claremont was PISSED as what Michelinie, Perez & whoevger else was involved had done with "his" character. But was what Chris did really any better? Stripping Carol Danvers of her powers was one thing, but stripping her of her personal memories-- talk about going too far (or, "throwing the baby out with the bathwater"). I HATED Rogue for what she did, and when she turned up, distraught, BEGGING for help, on the X-MEN's doorstep sometime later, I had NO sympathy for her whatsoever. (As an aside: one of the things I LOVED the most about the 1st X-MEN movie was the way they took my LEAST-favorite character, Rogue, and completely REMOVED the entire part of her back-story that I so venehemntly objected to. Rogue, in the movie, became-- along with Wolverine-- the audience' POV and entry into the whole "world" of the X-MEN, and really worked as a sympathetic character. I pretty much fell in love with her in the film... I could NEVER do that with the comics version.) In AV ANN #10, Claremont pretty nuch "finished the job" started by Michelinie & co. He wanted to make a point by striking back at a previous writer; but the character (and the entire group) paid the price for it.

Funny (NOT REALLY) how, with Shooter in charge of Marvel, writers had to follow strict guidelines, not do certain things, and admit and suffer consequences if they did-- EXCEPT when it came to Shooter himself and his cronies, who could GET AWAY WITH MURDER with impunity. "It's good to be the king." That's why we have presidents in this country... (Moving on...)


"a suprisingly good time-travel story that brings back the Black Knight and pits the Avengers against mystical 12th Century villains. I'm amazed to this day that there's never been a sequel to this story"

I wonder if EVERYONE wasn't just tired of the whole mess. After all, it was Steve Englehart who stuck the Black Knight in the 12th Century WAY back in the Avengers-Defenders clash! That sub-plot had been dragging on for over a decade by then, hadn't it? One good thing early in Shooter's run was writers FINALLY getting around to finishing off long-hanging plot-threads and storylines. This one was hanging longer than most. (Though not as long as the "How can The Hood be Baron Strucker if he was killed back in STRANGE TALES? --or, if Magneto was a robot in the 2nd Sentinels story, WHO was it in the "City of Mutants" story-- and who was behind him?)


"it's excusable, because they were both starting out. I think it's a real shame that LaRocque wasn't kept on the book"

I think I first saw LaRocque on OMAC (the unenviable task of trying to follow Jim Starlin-- yikes!). He didn't really impress me until he got on LEGION OF SUPER-HEROES (the later part of Paul Levitz' run), though far too much of his work suffered under not-quite-appropriate inks.


"While I tend to be critical of Gruenwald, I won't deny that his memory is entitled to a good amount of the credit for turning Avengers around. And yet almost from the beginning, there is evidence of a heavy hand"

I'd rank Gruenwald as one more guy who was a BETTER writer than he was an editor. On EVERYTHING he did as an editor, I felt a "heavy hand". Sometimes it worked, but other times... Of course, those editorials he kept doing about the comics biz had such an overbearing, condescending tone about them, I really got SICK of 'em after awhile. Like many before and some since (notably Kevin Dooley), Gruenwald forgot that an editor's job is NOT to write the book himself!!! (Unless, of course, he's the original creator-- or in some fashion, the long-term "caretaker" of a character or series. We really haven't had that sort of editor since Mort Weisinger...)


"When Roger Stern took over Avengers (# 227), the first order of business was to clean up the mess that Shooter had left"

At a yahoo group, someone pointed out that Shooter seemed to HATE all the characters he ever wrote. He'd drag them through hell, but instead of taking them through and bringing them out, in some way, better than when they went in, he'd just DUMP them there. I realized just how true this was when I thought back over Shooter's various works in the 70's & 80's. In DAREDEVIL, he framed Heather's father for countless crimes, and had him commit suicide, thinking he was guilty; Heather found out Matt was DD, and blamed HIM for everything that happened (even though he was the ONLY one who was trying to help); and Matt had a nervous breakdown. Shooter then left it to Roger McKenzie to "clean up the mess". In GHOST RIDER, he had Roxanne suffer amnesia, and (for reasons I've completely forgotten), sent Johnny Blaze out into the desert... WHERE HE NEVER RETURNED!!!! (Until about 50 issues later-- most of them written-- badly-- by Michael "If you've read one of my stories you've read them all" Fleisher.) What WAS Shooter, an 8-year-old whose mother never taught him how to CLEAN UP AFTER HIMSELF????? (I got a lot of people in my neighborhood like that-- they throw trash all over the ground, somehow figuring SOMEONE ELSE will clean it up for them.)


"Except for Tigra, whom I dislike intensely"

ANOTHER character Shooter ran thru the mud!! I never read her original stories as The Cat or Tigra, but I did get a huge kick out of her when she guested for several months in FANTASTIC FOUR. Shooter turned her into a WIMP! My GOD, what was that guy's problem??? How much "damage control" do some writers have to put up with??


"The art: for someone who had been in the comics industry for over a decade, Al Milgrom's work on the ongoing Avengers book is shockingly amateurish, full of clumsy perspectives and ugly close-ups"

Milgrom did some nifty work on both CAPTAIN MARVEL (I think he may have done more episodes than anyone else on that book!) and GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY (like CM, they seemed to have a hard time finding any kind of steady inker). But in the 80's... WHA' HOPPEN?? Al's pencils dropped; for awhile, he spent his time aping Steve Ditko; and anytime he inked, it was a ugly, wretched nightmare! Last summer I met Jim Starlin for the first time, and among the comments I made were how glad I was to see that Al Milgrom's inks (over Starlin's recent work) were back up to his 70's high standards. (Did Jim Shooter INSPIRE people to draw badly?????


"the usually great inker Joe Sinnott did a surprisingly sloppy job"

See my previous question... Although, I understand in the 80's Joe used a LOT of assistants. WHO KNOWS what he really did-- and didn't?


"But the real shame is that John Buscema & Tom Palmer didn't return to the book sooner so that they could have drawn the Vision storyarc -- not only because they were a great art team, but also because Buscema co-created the Vision!!"

Alright, who WASN'T shocked when John Buscema AND Tom Palmer finally reunited on THE AVENGERS, after so many years of Buscema publicly saying he "hated" drawing superheroes??? And who wasn't STUNNED that they lasted together MUCH longer and more consistently than they did in the late 60's? And how about that Tom Palmer-- even when Buscema finally did leave, after a NICE, LONG run, Palmer stuck around, to ink-- oh, HOW MANY other pencillers' work? In the late 80's, Palmer really became to THE AVENGERS what Joe Sinnott had long been (before John Byrne-- HAH!) to the F.F.-- the "unifying" force that kept the book consistent, no matter WHO else was doing it.
 
Posted by walkwithcrowds on :
 
I don't have anything wise to add, I just want to keep this exellent thread on the first page, where it belongs.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
First of all, I love that we skipped ahead to #221 [Big Grin] [Cheers]

I will say though, that I think Claremont attempting to ‘rescue’ Carol and then making her a supporting character in X-Men was a noble attempt. (I actually LOVE Rogue though).

Both Stealth and Prof have made reference to Roger Stern in the 80’s being akin to Englehart in the 70’s and I agree completely. Stern was a master and his Marvel work was like a weekly birthday present to Marvel fans. I can’t say much more without repeating others, other than his Avengers and Spider-Man runs remain two of my all-time favorite runs for any series of any character.

As usual, I’ll just post a few thoughts as Stealth has really nailed the theme of this era:

Black Knight story – the return of the Black Knight here isn’t the greatest story, but it marks an especially cool moment for me as it brings him back after a really long absence. Finally now, with Dane back, we’ll eventually see (in the guiding hand of Stern) the change in Dane being a ‘cool character from the late Silver Age’ to a genuine Avenger and important part of Marvel lore. I love this character, and its owed to both Stern and (even more so) Harris.

She-Hulk – Stern took a character that was basically a female rip-off of a great franchise and made her someone we like and care about, with her own quirks. Marvel has been the better for it. I also love the inclusion of Thor, Wasp, Iron Man, Cap and Hawkeye—all always great in the Avengers. (As I’ve said, I’m a firm believer in Iron Man & Thor being Avengers first and foremost, both more so than Cap).

Stern’s use of Marvel History – What Roger Stern did (like in Spider-Man) was make incredible use of the vast history of the MU in some really dynamic stories that were fresh and exciting. Blackout & Moonstone: for the first time, I sit up and take notice. Spidey & Electro in Avengers? Hey, that’s kinda cool.

Captain Marvel II (later Photon) – and then we come to a character that I absolutely adore. Have me name you my dream Avengers line-up? Photon is always in it, despite my obvious love for the oldest Avengers members. It was a bunch of things: her powers, her enthusiasm, her ‘newness’ at the time, her friendships with other Avengers, Stern’s obvious knack for writing her as his creation…but the real reason? Because we actually got to see her grow. We saw her introduction, her growth as a junior Avenger to a full-time member that was an important part of the team, to being practically an essential member. By the time we get to the Master of Evil story (perhaps the best MoE story ever), her and Dane are no doubt ‘quintessential Avengers’, perhaps the first two you could really say that about since Wonder-Man! Later she became leader, etc. It amazes me she wasn’t used more during the 90’s…which in hindsight I consider a gift from the comic book deities.

Starfox – generally, I did not like Starfox and only have grown to like the character as the years have passed and I’m become more comfortable with him. Like Moondragon, he didn’t seem to fit, and his smary-ness was annoying, but he did have some likable qualities. The problem with Starfox was that he couldn’t be an Avenger for that long, since he just didn’t have enough depth. That being said, I’ve grown to like the character, love his appearances and think he works great as a supporting character or someone who stays on for a brief stint and moves on.

Wasp as Chairman – yes, I say, YES! This was a great move. I think the Wasp proved to be one of the best Avengers chairman’s in the history of the team, and she truly deserved it, as being pretty much the only one left of the originals to not have been so (some may not realize both Thor and Goliath had stints as chairman). She deserved it, especially after Shooter symbolically slapped her, Hank and the fans a few years before.

East Coast/West Coast Split – this must have seemed very exciting at the time (even when this was coming out, I was about 4 years old), and I generally like all the Avengers being seen these days, especially that the Vision, Wonder Man, Scarlet Witch, etc. came back into play. Generally, I’m ambivalent about Tigra, which is probably not a good thing in reflection on Marvel. But I like that we had a lot of Avengers to be seen each month. The eventual east coast line-up that would come out of this would be very enjoyable to read.

As usual, I find the insight you guys provide on pencillers & inkers to be fascinating. IMO, the best Avengers in the 80’s stories are about to hit the next portion of this timeline…
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
Black Knight story – the return of the Black Knight here isn’t the greatest story, but it marks an especially cool moment for me as it brings him back after a really long absence. Finally now, with Dane back, we’ll eventually see (in the guiding hand of Stern) the change in Dane being a ‘cool character from the late Silver Age’ to a genuine Avenger and important part of Marvel lore. I love this character, and its owed to both Stern and (even more so) Harris.

I thought you said you were glad Photon wasn't used in the 90s, yet Bob Harris' Avengers run was very certainly the 1990s...

quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
Captain Marvel II (later Photon) – and then we come to a character that I absolutely adore. Have me name you my dream Avengers line-up? Photon is always in it, despite my obvious love for the oldest Avengers members. It was a bunch of things: her powers, her enthusiasm, her ‘newness’ at the time, her friendships with other Avengers, Stern’s obvious knack for writing her as his creation…but the real reason? Because we actually got to see her grow. We saw her introduction, her growth as a junior Avenger to a full-time member that was an important part of the team, to being practically an essential member. By the time we get to the Master of Evil story (perhaps the best MoE story ever), her and Dane are no doubt ‘quintessential Avengers’, perhaps the first two you could really say that about since Wonder-Man! Later she became leader, etc. It amazes me she wasn’t used more during the 90’s…which in hindsight I consider a gift from the comic book deities.

I think the reason she hasn't used more is that she was - and, frankly, is - A Pet Character - Stern's the only creator with any actual interest in her. Take a look at her post-Stern history, after Stern quit rather than make Cap Avengers leader:



quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
Wasp as Chairman – yes, I say, YES! This was a great move. I think the Wasp proved to be one of the best Avengers chairman’s in the history of the team, and she truly deserved it, as being pretty much the only one left of the originals to not have been so (some may not realize both Thor and Goliath had stints as chairman). She deserved it, especially after Shooter symbolically slapped her, Hank and the fans a few years before.

There is the line of thought that her leadership led to the worst disaster in Avengers history until the whole active team died in Onslaught, and her plan to rectify it amounted to "Let's get Thor to bail us out." Which, y'know, had Zemo attacked five minutes later, Thor wouldn't really have been in any condition to help, with Hela's curse'n'all...

[ January 12, 2007, 01:00 PM: Message edited by: Reboot ]
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Well, 'Boot, personally, Bob Harris' Avengers run was one of the best part of the entire 1990's for both DC and Marvel IMO. I certainly wish she was used there.

What I basically mean that the 1990's and the late 1980's before that, saw the trend of seeing heroes and heroines have especially horrible stuff happen to them. I by no means meant to indicte the Avengers issues of the 1990's, as I generally feel that the Avengers was actually pretty decent for the majority of it (Heroes Reborn notwithstanding).

But the last thing I would have wanted was for Photon to show up somewhere in Marvel and get dumped on. Generally, I'm more glad she wasn't a DC character, as DC shit on its characters more in the 90's than Marvel did.

I really wish Bob Harris had used her though, like he did Dane, Crystal, Sersi, etc.

I feel like her history does suggest she has been a pet character, but I ultimately feel that she doesn't have to be and has TONS of potential, as Warren Ellis showed us, albeit slightly.

And you know I hate that Thunderbolts Captain Marvel/Photon subplot every bit as you do, complete with the totally unnecessary switch in names, Genis personality, etc., etc.

As for the Wasp, I generally don't like that line of thinking b/c I love the Wasp, but I'm aware of it.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"I think the reason she hasn't used more is that she was - and, frankly, is - A Pet Character - Stern's the only creator with any actual interest in her."

GOOD for her! Lucky lady.

This is in contrast to, say, MANTIS, who NOBODY used after Steve Englehart left... until Steve came back, and then he brought her with him. And before you knew it, Mark "BECAUSE I SAID SO" Gruenwald and his cronies TOLD him, "GET RID OF MANTIS!!!" --insisting that she NEVER appear in ANY Marvel Comics again, ever!!! (Of course, Gruenwald's GONE... Hey! Mantis is back again.)


I can't help it! Instead of a group of creative professionals, the more I look back, all I see is a bunch of overaged adolescents playing fraternity-like power games...
 
Posted by Set on :
 
Some of the best characterization, Marvel or DC, has been writers willing to pull old B-grade or even C-grade characters out of the dustbins and gussy them up. Characters like Catman (of all the amazing rebounds!) or Screaming Mimi, transformed into interesting characters. If Screaming Mimi had been around 10 years earlier, for sure she would have been one of the 25 losers killed en masse at the Bar With No Name just to establish the badass street cred of some loser wannabe villain that nobody ever heard of again anyway...

I think characters like Photon or Silverclaw or Moondragon have vastly more potential than yet another attempt to make Captain America or Iron Man fresh and exciting, that inevitably, IMO, ends up mucking up their continuity and characterization.

Plus, from a creative standpoint, the B and C-grade characters give the writer a lot more flexibility. If they want to muck around with the Swordsman's origin or powers or characterization, they don't have 250 issues worth of established contuinity to fight.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
I noticed that back in the 70's, it seemed to me the "new" characters were the ones writers did more interesting things with, perhaps because they were (in some cases) the people who had CREATED these new characaters, as opposed to messing up older, established characters whose original creators weren't around anymore.

Among my faves in the 70's were The Punisher, Moon Knight, Hellcat, Moondragon, Iron Fist, Luke Cage Hero For Hire...

D'ja ever wish some of the older, overused characters would just GO AWAY and make room for NEW ones to flourish??? (After all, we'll always have syndicated reruns... or reprints, as the case may be.)
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Re: Ms. Marvel and Chris Claremont

Claremont does go too far with Carol's memory loss, but he almost always goes too far no matter what he does. And the bottom line is, if it wasn't for Claremont, Carol would still be trapped in Limbo, suffering a fate similar to that of the female Red Guardian.

Re: Greg La Rocque -- What I was trying to say was, if La Rocque had been the regular Avengers penciler during the first half of Roger Stern's run, imagine how thrilling it would have been to see him gradually improve until reaching the quality of his best work. And imagine if he had drawn the Englehart issues of WCA Vol. 2. Coincidentally (?), La Rocque's first issue of Legion of Superheroes is cover-dated October 1985 -- the same cover date as WCA Vol. 2 # 1.

Re: Mark Gruenwald -- In my opinion, he was a better editor than writer. As an editor, he oversaw Walt Simonson's brilliant Surtur Saga in Thor and the early issues of Michelinie & Layton's 2nd run on Iron Man. As a writer...meh. If he had a co-writer with a better grasp of writing technique -- as he did on Marvel Two-in-One -- he could be good. But Gruenwald flying solo? A lot of concepts and characters with great potential that never quite paid off. Even the much-praised Squadron Supreme maxi-series didn't impress me. Although I do think a brief stretch of his Captain America run (when Ron Lim was penciller) was pretty good.

Re: Al Milgrom -- I'll be sampling his 1970s pencils sometime in the near future, because I recently found out that Dr. Minerva's first appearances were in issues of Captain Marvel that Milgrom pencilled.

Re: Roger Stern and the history of the Marvel Universe -- That's one of my favorite things about Stern: he BUILT on what had come before him, instead of tearing it down, the way a lot of writers (especially in recent years) have done.

Re: Captain Marvel II and Gruenwald's directive -- I think Gruenwald's reasons for Monica's humiliating fate were threefold: replace her with Captain America (whose solo book he writing at the time -- cross-promotion and so on) and replace her as protector of the universe with Quasar (who subsequently got his own solo book, written by guess who.) And I like Quasar, I just don't like those behind-the-scenes machinations. In fact, I once plotted a fanfic where Wendell and Monica married and had a child destined for cosmic greatness (I might get around to writing it someday). And finally, the third reason is a kind of blacklisting of Stern's creations, most likely out of spite -- look at the horrible things that happened to Nebula and Yellowjacket II.

Re: B and C-list characters vs. overused characters

Since the Bob Harras era of Avengers is my favorite, all of my favorite Avengers are on the B and C lists -- Crystal, Black Knight, Hercules, Sersi -- and Harras's own creations -- Deathcry, Swordsman II and Magdalene. It frustrates me that this era doesn't get more respect. One of the things that bothers me most about the Busiek era -- and the Morrison era of JLA for that matter -- is the whole "only the icons count, and that's the way it is" attitude. In the long run, the only thing that attitude leads to is STAGNATION!!
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Avengers Volume One # 255-269 & West Coast Avengers Volume Two # 1-10

The very welcome return of John Buscema & Tom Palmer as Avengers artists coincides with Roger Stern working towards a grandiose space opera, the kind of thing Avengers does so brilliantly. While most of the team deals with the fallout from the Vision's hubris and with Terminus's rampage through the Savage Land, Captain Marvel finds herself stranded in deep space, a prisoner of space pirates who have taken over the abandoned battleship once used by Thanos (who IMO should never ever have been resurrected) and have plans to conquer the fragmented Skrull empire.

The real turning point, for both Stern's story and for the Avengers book itself, is issue # 257. It introduces the pirate queen of space, Nebula (who had the potential to become the best of all Marvel super-villainesses) and it shocks us with Terminus's brutal destruction of the Savage Land, Lemuria, and the bird people. This is where the book gets darker, richer, more violent and more intense than it ever was before. By the time the rest of the Avengers join the space battle in # 259 (another of my favorite Avengers issues), the book has worked up a full head of steam. What could possibly throw it off course?

The unfortunate answer is [Disgusting] Secret Wars II [Disgusting] . Not satisfied with ruining the ending of the Nebula Saga by shoehorning the Beyonder into # 260, Shooter adds insult to injury by bringing the pathetic man-child back in two more Avengers issues (# 261 and # 265), and then by hijacking # 266 for the "special 32-page epilogue to Secret Wars II." To say nothing of all the other terrible SWII crossovers in other Marvel books. [Roll Eyes]

But even in this sludge, there are gems to be found. # 262 and # 264 are both wonderful stand-alone issues. The former brings the Sub-Mariner into the team, guest stars Stingray (a favorite of mine), and has a memorable conversation between Namor and Captain America. The latter is a wonderful showcase for the winsome Wasp, where the Black Knight helps her master her powers just in time for her to battle Rita De Mara, the new, villainous Yellowjacket. Not so good is # 263, the crossover with Fantastic Four and the first issue of X-Factor, featuring the return of Jean Grey.

# 267-269 bring back Kang, Immortus, and Ravonna for a fast-paced but confusing adventure. And while this is far from the best Kang story, at least it washes out the foul taste of the goofy Kang-in-the-Old-West story.

Alongside the Avengers' 260s are the first ten issues of the West Coast Avengers ongoing book. I'll be reviewing all of Englehart's issues, but not the John Byrne or Roy Thomas issues, for reasons I'll get into in next week's post. For now, I'll say that I don't think Englehart's WCA is his best work by any stretch of the imagination, but even Englehart's lesser work has a certain integrity that's lacking in a lot of superhero writing. But even so, it's appropriate that this team nicknamed themselves Whackos, because this was one weird book, balancing the easy-going camaraderie of the team members with a campy, almost retro, tone and the frequent hints at things far more sinister (and often, more than hints). The quirkiness showed in Englehart's later issues of Avengers frequently goes off the scale in WCA. It does gets off to a good start with a storyarc that culminates in the (temporary but still powerful) death of longtime villain the Grim Reaper. But then it goes way off course with all the demons and monsters and cat people and the focus on Tigra...UGH! The stories don't get back on track until the time-travel adventure starting in # 17, but even then I have my reservations, which I'll get into next week. One thing I'll add is that Firebird was an admirable attempt (especially for a mainstream 1980s comic) at developing a character who was both a non-stereotypical Christian and a non-stereotypical Latina.

There is no contest between the two art teams -- John Buscema and Tom Palmer bring the same outstanding draftsmanship and sharp storytelling that they brought to Avengers in the early 1970s. WCA, meanwhile was saddled with Buscema & Palmer's predecessors, Al Milgrom and Joe Sinnott. The only positive things I can say about their art is that after the first few issues, Milgrom's pencils went from grotesque to merely mediocre, and that every once in a while Sinnott's inking was up to the standards he had set during the Silver Age and the Bronze Age.
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
What I basically mean that the 1990's and the late 1980's before that, saw the trend of seeing heroes and heroines have especially horrible stuff happen to them.

But the last thing I would have wanted was for Photon to show up somewhere in Marvel and get dumped on. Generally, I'm more glad she wasn't a DC character, as DC shit on its characters more in the 90's than Marvel did.

As opposed to the '00s, with such light stories as Our Worlds at War, Identity Crisis, Infantile Crisis and 52 (is it true that one issue ended with Sue Dibney resurrected into a straw dummy so she could get killed over again so that Elongated Man could go utterly nutterly?).

I do think there's an implied blind spot here, where the various reversions of Hal Jordan, Supergirl, etc (I'm really, genuinely shocked that the Firestorm switch hasn't been backtracked on once and for all yet) have blinded you to such things as crispy-fried Hippolyta, the Dibny mess and the GA-Superman being brought back to be beaten to death.

quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
And you know I hate that Thunderbolts Captain Marvel/Photon subplot every bit as you do, complete with the totally unnecessary switch in names, Genis personality, etc., etc.

True, but I only mentioned it in passing though, to point out that if other writers had been interested in her, that sort of joke wouldn't have been open - i.e. it was only because she'd sat on the sidelines for the better part of twenty years that Genis got to nick her name. Again.

quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
As for the Wasp, I generally don't like that line of thinking b/c I love the Wasp, but I'm aware of it.

It's true though, isn't it? She got the leadership basically because she asked for it, in Secret Wars (rather than stepping up) she recognised Cap outclassed her in the leadership stakes then went off and %^&*ed Magneto, and when Zemo & co came calling, Hercules & Jarvis got beaten into a coma, the Mansion was demolished and her counter-attack consisted primarily of "Thor, please help. Pretty please."

quote:
Originally posted by Stealth:
Re: Captain Marvel II and Gruenwald's directive -- I think Gruenwald's reasons for Monica's humiliating fate were threefold: replace her with Captain America (whose solo book he writing at the time -- cross-promotion and so on) and replace her as protector of the universe with Quasar (who subsequently got his own solo book, written by guess who.) And I like Quasar, I just don't like those behind-the-scenes machinations. In fact, I once plotted a fanfic where Wendell and Monica married and had a child destined for cosmic greatness (I might get around to writing it someday). And finally, the third reason is a kind of blacklisting of Stern's creations, most likely out of spite -- look at the horrible things that happened to Nebula and Yellowjacket II.

Okay, at least three points to pick up on here:

1) Protector of the Universe - Monica was not, and never has been, the PotU. The only two significant MU characters to have been are Mar-Vell and Quasar. The only thing she picked up off Mar-Vell was the "Captain Marvel" name. Nor did she have "Marvel Boy"/Crusader's old wristbands, and which I think Marvel Man/Quasar had before the point in question anyway. I'm not aware of any notable connection - EITHER continuity or BTS - between those two characters at all.

2) Rita/Yellowjacket - not sure what you mean here at all - her death in the Crossing was, what, seven-eight years later and followed a three-year stint in Guardians of the Galaxy (yeah, the series went to crap after Valentino left, but it was JV who actually brought her in) as a major team member. Plus, given the inconsistancy between how she left the 31st Century and arrived in the 20th, she's a snap-your-fingers bringback if you really want to.

3) Nebula - this one gets very complicated very quickly. If you mean the intended-to-be-her story from Simonson's Avengers, what's the specific problem? If you mean the fact that that was retconned into not-being-her, that was down to the fact that Englehart used her in F4 in an irreconcilable way while Kang-Nebula was being used in Avengers, and one had to go. If you mean the fact that she was retconned into not-being-Thanos'-granddaughter - well, is it really in character for Mr Death-obsessed to have a kid? I'd agree with Starlin on that one and say it's completely out of character, and retconning that one was needed for the sake of Thanos' character.

Now, you may well be right about the Captain America thing. Still, in-continuity, how quickly did Monica go from rookie to Avengers Leader? And, especially after such a meteoric rise, where else was there for her character to go but down?

quote:
Originally posted by Stealth:
Re: B and C-list characters vs. overused characters

Since the Bob Harras era of Avengers is my favorite, all of my favorite Avengers are on the B and C lists -- Crystal, Black Knight, Hercules, Sersi -- and Harras's own creations -- Deathcry, Swordsman II and Magdalene. It frustrates me that this era doesn't get more respect. One of the things that bothers me most about the Busiek era -- and the Morrison era of JLA for that matter -- is the whole "only the icons count, and that's the way it is" attitude. In the long run, the only thing that attitude leads to is STAGNATION!!

Agreed. And the same characters getting brought back from the grave and whitewashed back into service, and other characters being forced back into their milleu from decades past which they had moved on from is a trend that should end.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Reboot:
quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
What I basically mean that the 1990's and the late 1980's before that, saw the trend of seeing heroes and heroines have especially horrible stuff happen to them.

But the last thing I would have wanted was for Photon to show up somewhere in Marvel and get dumped on. Generally, I'm more glad she wasn't a DC character, as DC shit on its characters more in the 90's than Marvel did.

As opposed to the '00s, with such light stories as Our Worlds at War, Identity Crisis, Infantile Crisis and 52 (is it true that one issue ended with Sue Dibney resurrected into a straw dummy so she could get killed over again so that Elongated Man could go utterly nutterly?).

I do think there's an implied blind spot here, where the various reversions of Hal Jordan, Supergirl, etc (I'm really, genuinely shocked that the Firestorm switch hasn't been backtracked on once and for all yet) have blinded you to such things as crispy-fried Hippolyta, the Dibny mess and the GA-Superman being brought back to be beaten to death.

'Boot, I think you have me confused with some other posters. Though I often say 'the 90's', I of course realize that this isn't an accurate assessment of an era, and I generally include some books that lasted well beyond.

Our Worlds at War was atrocious and I agree with your assessment 100%. What was done to Sue Dibny sickens me. I'm not someone who hates Infinite Crisis, but I'm not going to be its greatest defender, I see the flaws in it. I'm by no means the biggest flag-waving support of DC post-90's, though I am quite pleased with some of what they've done (you know my position no Hal Jordan). I actually am enjoying the current Firestorm these days. I'm by no means suggesting that things have gotten better at any company, I'm just glad Photon has not gone through the same crap they've put through so many other great characters--and I know she has gone through some 'dark' times, but she's relatively okay compared to others.

Unfotunatenly, the Wasp was leader during some of the worst times to be an Avenger, even though they were great stories. Its too bad (for Wasp fans) that Busiek kinda did the same thing with her at the tail end of his run. Like I said though, I really like the character, and I prefer when she's written strongly. But...ugh...I forgot about that Secret Wars thing. Sometimes I remember how bad Secret Wars II was that I forget that generally, Secret Wars I is also pretty horrendous. I'm hard pressed to find any crossovers as well done as CoIE (from all companies).

I'm in total agreement with Stealth and Reboot about the Harris era Avengers, which is possibly my favorite era of all in regards to Avengers.
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
Sorry, you kind of caught the backlash of a rant that's been building a while, and reading a general "the 90s" comment (mixed a bit, I'll admit, with the fact that you HAVE been recommending DCs, including 52, and you did like the Hal whitewash), was what it took to set me off.

PS - Firestorm's cancelled.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Sucks about Firestorm [Frown]

Yeah, I kinda knew that, so hope *my* reply didn't seem to heavy-handed. Though I do reccomend a bunch of DCs (including 52, honestly I think its really great) a lot of the time our tastes are very similar. I guess I really need to find a better way to generalize the era of comics that annoys me without roping in the entire 90's which is an unfair generalization.

PS - will have comments shortly on the next leg of Stealth's 'timeline' [Big Grin]

[ January 16, 2007, 02:12 PM: Message edited by: Cobalt Kid ]
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
Wow! You guys been busy!


"Claremont does go too far with Carol's memory loss, but he almost always goes too far no matter what he does."

Somehow, "X-Men DON'T KILL." comes to mind. After awhile, it felt like he was writing robots, not people.


"if La Rocque had been the regular Avengers penciler during the first half of Roger Stern's run, imagine how thrilling it would have been to see him gradually improve until reaching the quality of his best work."

I'd like to have seen him inked by Joe Sinnott! Mike DeCarlo just WASN'T clicking with him, and was even worse over Pat Broderick (but then, I think Broderick's a lost cause for ANY inkers to fix these days) and DeCarlo finally found a perfect match when Keith Giffen returned (it was almost like Kirby-Sinnott before Keith started DISTORTING everyone's faces, starting with his 2ND ISSUE on the book and going steadily downhill from there...)


"Mark Gruenwald -- In my opinion, he was a better editor than writer."

You COULD be onto something here. Arnold Drake said a lot of bad editors are really frustrated writers. If they just did their job AS editors and didn't try "writing" by forcing their writers to do what THEY want instead of what the writers want, they might be better editors. WHO KNOWS how long Roger Stern might have lasted if not for the Gruenwald "incident"? (DITTO Gerard Jones & Kevin Dooley on GREEN LANTERN.)


"That's one of my favorite things about Stern: he BUILT on what had come before him, instead of tearing it down, the way a lot of writers (especially in recent years) have done."

Early on, I noticed Stern's specialty seemed to be taking old, overused, worn-out characters, going back to what made them special in the first place, and finding ways to make them "fresh" all over again. An example that comes to mind is The Vulture in ASM. Because I hadn't read his origin at the time, I had NO IDEA what made the guy tick! Too many times villains return again and again for endless "grudge matches"-- as someone once said, "like so many pro wrestlers". Why are they villains? Don't they have any motivations beyond getting revenge on the hero who stopped them-- over and over and OVER again? That often gets lost by writers who don't do their research, like Englehart & Stern (& Busiek) clearly do.


"Thanos (who IMO should never ever have been resurrected)"

I appreciated the fact that NOBODY brought Thanos back... until Jim Starlin did (his creator AND killer!). At first, it seemed inspired... but THEN...!!! (THANOS QUEST, INFINITY GAUNTLET, INFINITY CRUSADE, INFINITY WAR... when will it end? WHEN WILL IT END?????) There seemed to be a lot of that going on-- sheer desperation to make money leading to INFINITE spin-offs / cross-overs / etc. etc. ETC.!!!!! Bleh.


"# 267-269 bring back Kang, Immortus, and Ravonna for a fast-paced but confusing adventure. And while this is far from the best Kang story, at least it washes out the foul taste of the goofy Kang-in-the-Old-West story."

I hope someday I'll get a chance to re-read this stuff properly. Because of a lot of factors, in the late 80's, I got way behind on my reading, and then decided to pick up with the new books, and catch up on the older ones later. As a result, there's a whole pile of stories from that era I read out-of-sequence-- and what happened was, in several instances I actually read SEQUELS to stories before I read the originals. So I read about the fallout of the Savage Land before seeing its destruction-- and read Nebula's murder BEFORE I read her debut story!!! (It's like a time-traveller experiencing history in the wrong order... heehee)

My recent re-reading of all my 60's Marvels-- in chronological order, for the first time ever-- has been a way of overcoming how I first read MOST of those 60's comics (as reprints), allowing me to experience 60's Marvel development as it happened.

Yeah-- Kang-in-the-West WAS "goofy". Somehow, with early (and still-cartoony) Perez art, it never quite seemed "real", and yet they stood by that story for over a DECADE, didn't they? It took the natural "successor" to Englehart, Stern, to finally bring Kang back and have the nerve to say, "NO-- that WASN'T really Kang's final death we saw back then! What made you think it was?"


"I don't think Englehart's WCA is his best work by any stretch of the imagination"

While I often think Englehart was firing on all cylinders in the 70's, in the 80's his work seemed VERY inconsistent to me. My favorites of his from that time were SILVER SURFER (before Gruenwald & co. DERAILED his plans for it) and GREEN LANTERN CORPS (until Joe Staton took time off to do-- dare I say it-- MILLENNIUM-- aaaaauuugh!!!!). The COYOTE stories in ECLIPSE MONTHLY were brilliant-- the later episodes in his solo book made almost no sense to me. (Maybe it was the art?) WEST COAST AVENGERS seemed like it was going steadily downhill from day one, as was FANTASTIC FOUR (almost the last year of his FF seemed like drivel aimed at 6-year-olds). And VISION AND THE SCARLET WITCH maxi-series was embarrassing to read from start to finish. It was really painful to see one of my top favorite writers self-destruct like that in front of my eyes... I'm SO glad his latest work has been nothing short of BRILLIANT once again! (Very few who I've seen "fall" like that come back from the brink that way.)


"Infantile Crisis"

AHHHH-HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!!! (good one)

As Jack Nicholson once said... "Crap. Crap. Crap!" (And in my view, EXTREMEMLY over-produced, over-rendered crap.)


"she recognised Cap outclassed her in the leadership stakes then went off and %^&*ed Magneto"

WHAAAAT????? I don't even remember that! What the HELL was Jim Shooter's problem?????

The Wasp is my FAVORITE female character in the MU-- but when I say that, of course, I'm referring to the Lee-Kirby version of her... (Just like Mary Jane Watson-- the Lee-Romita version-- NOTHING ELSE "counts" in my book. To ME, ALMOST every writer since has totally screwed her over.)


"Protector of the Universe"

I woulda thought that would be DR. STRANGE...!


"Agreed. And the same characters getting brought back from the grave and whitewashed back into service, and other characters being forced back into their milleu from decades past which they had moved on from is a trend that should end."

I keep thinking of how Gerard Jones WANTED to retire Hal Jordan, but Andy Helfer talked him out of it. And then, Gerard Jones WANTED Hal Jordan to find out just how corrupt and MANIPULATIVE the Guardians really were, and QUIT being a GL... but Kevin Dooley DERAILED his plans before he got the chance.

I read ALMOST no DC's these days... among the very few I do are GREEN LANTERN and GREEN LANTERN CORPS, both of which I feel are currently written BETTER than they may ever have been before. Is that ironic, or what????? After DECADES of abuse (and in particular, 13 years of DRIVEL thanks to Dooley), now, ALL the GL's are well-written-- Hal Jordan, John Stewart, GUY GARDNER... and even Arisia is back!!! (Yay!)


"the Harris era Avengers, which is possibly my favorite era of all in regards to Avengers"

Somewhere along the line, I quit buying THE AVENGERS about 6 months into Harris' run. I LOVED the art by new penciller Steve Epting! But the story was doing NOTHING for me... and after the INTERMINABLE drudge Harris had done with NICK FURY, AGENT OF S.H.I.E.L.D., I think I'd just "had it" with him. Too bad...

I didn't pick up another AVENGERS book until the 1st Busiek-Perez issue!
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
(WHO KNOWS how long Roger Stern might have lasted if not for the Gruenwald "incident"? (DITTO Gerard Jones & Kevin Dooley on GREEN LANTERN.)

IIRC, Jones was leaving with Jordan anyway - it was just that he was fired early when they wanted a more dramatic finale than Jones had supplied (which worked - orders were apparently up something like 50% on the Marz Emerald Twilight vs. the couple of Jones ET issues that had been solicited.

quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
"That's one of my favorite things about Stern: he BUILT on what had come before him, instead of tearing it down, the way a lot of writers (especially in recent years) have done."

Early on, I noticed Stern's specialty seemed to be taking old, overused, worn-out characters, going back to what made them special in the first place, and finding ways to make them "fresh" all over again. An example that comes to mind is The Vulture in ASM. Because I hadn't read his origin at the time, I had NO IDEA what made the guy tick!

Actually, Stern was the one who GAVE VULTURE AN ORIGIN. He didn't "go back to what made him special," he made it up out of wholecloth.

quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
"Thanos (who IMO should never ever have been resurrected)"

I appreciated the fact that NOBODY brought Thanos back... until Jim Starlin did (his creator AND killer!). At first, it seemed inspired... but THEN...!!! (THANOS QUEST, INFINITY GAUNTLET, INFINITY CRUSADE, INFINITY WAR... when will it end? WHEN WILL IT END?????) There seemed to be a lot of that going on-- sheer desperation to make money leading to INFINITE spin-offs / cross-overs / etc. etc. ETC.!!!!! Bleh.

Guantlet was decent enough, wheeling out of all of Marvel's less-than-inspired "Abstracts" aside. War & Crusade suffered because Starlin had planned for Quest & Gauntlet, but War & Crusade were tacked on and required the retconning of Guantlet's great ending.

quote:
"# 267-269 bring back Kang, Immortus, and Ravonna for a fast-paced but confusing adventure. And while this is far from the best Kang story, at least it washes out the foul taste of the goofy Kang-in-the-Old-West story."
Actually, I think this one really damaged Kang as a character, by combining all the divergent Kangs into one - besides anything else, you've got the basic conceptual problem of "you'll always get more divergences" that's been The Elephant In The Room ever since when it comes to Kang stories.

quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
-- and read Nebula's murder BEFORE I read her debut story!!! (It's like a time-traveller experiencing history in the wrong order... heehee)

(Psst... Nebula's not dead. She turned up in Annihilation: Ronan)

quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
"Protector of the Universe"

I woulda thought that would be DR. STRANGE...!

"Sorceror Supreme", formally; occasionally the less formal "Master of the Mystic Arts" (less formal since it's not a real title)

quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
[QUOTE]Originally posted by Reboot:
"Agreed. And the same characters getting brought back from the grave and whitewashed back into service, and other characters being forced back into their milleu from decades past which they had moved on from is a trend that should end." I read ALMOST no DC's these days... among the very few I do are GREEN LANTERN and GREEN LANTERN CORPS, both of which I feel are currently written BETTER than they may ever have been before. Is that ironic, or what????? After DECADES of abuse (and in particular, 13 years of DRIVEL thanks to Dooley), now, ALL the GL's are well-written-- Hal Jordan, John Stewart, GUY GARDNER... and even Arisia is back!!! (Yay!)

Actually, the GL franchise was the specific franchise I was thinking of when I said that, especially for Hal & Guy (John had kind of been "parked", those two had been moved on). And another character brought back from the dead? Oh joy.

*reads no DCs these days.
 
Posted by LARDLAD on :
 
Nebula was great! I can't remember when she was "killed off". Was it during Simonson's run? And how was she brought back in Annihilation? Was she utilized well?

I think Nebula inspires me subconsciously when I write a villainess I created called Kalla Hryl in the "Omnia" tagteam thread over in Bits. Though the two aren't all that alike, there's a similar vibe somehow.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"Actually..."

Actually, I have my own opinions, too.

[Smile]
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Re: Protector of the Universe

When I made that post about Monica and Quasar, I wasn't thinking objectively. That's because, about one year ago, I outlined and plotted what was intended to be a series of fanfics that took place in an alternate MU timeline where the divergence occurs right at the end of Stern's Avengers run. Monica and Quasar was one of those fanfics. Now, the only fanfic that actually got written was the first one, because I parted acrimoniously with the website where I had planned to post them (long story short: one of that site's mods was a crazy person who played mind games on me). In my outline, which I still have, we discover the actual source of the extra-dimensional energy that gave Monica her powers, and we see her on a solo cosmic adventure where she cements her status as Mar-Vell's true successor. So, up until I read Reboot's reply, I hadn't been looking at Monica from the perspective of MU Earth-616 continuity. That's just the way my mind works sometimes.

Re: Rita/Yellowjacket II

Since I never followed any incarnation of Guardians of the Galaxy, I know next to nothing about Rita's stint with the GotG, although I was aware of it (and I didn't read The Crossing, either, because after Steve Epting left Avengers, it quickly became obvious that Harras on Avengers without Epting was like Marv Wolfman on New Teen Titans without George Perez.) If what Reboot says is true and it would be that easy to bring Rita back, then I hope that, in the future, somebody does just that (and maybe, if I get REALLY lucky, it'll be me.) I think Rita has tremendous potential, and she is a major star of the fanfic outline I mentioned before (among other things, she becomes yet another ex-villain to join the Avengers.)

Re: Nebula and 1990s Thanos and Kang divergences

First of all, while I agree that Nebula's claim to be a blood relation of Thanos was not one of Stern's better ideas (I think the only explanation for stealing the Sanctuary II should have been simply because it was a damn powerful battleship), I think that the way that Starlin had Thanos burn her alive and turn her into a zombie and humiliate her was tasteless, mean-spirited, and misogynistic, and I think Ron "Worst Misogynist in Comics" Marz added insult to injury by turning her into a bald-headed cyborg. Is it any wonder no one has taken her seriously as a villainess since? Secondly, and on a more personal level, it is my opinion that Starlin's early 1990s Thanos stories (including and especially Infinity Gauntlet) are take-the-money-and-run hackwork of the worst sort. Sure, they sold lots of copies, but that doesn't make them good. I lost a lot of respect for Starlin because of those stories (although I can still read and enjoy his 1970s Mar-Vell/Warlock/Thanos stories and his 1980s Dreadstar stories). Finally, it's kind of funny to me that the subject of the Kang divergences has come up, because in my opinion, that's the solution for re-inventing Nebula -- if Ravonna posed as Nebula, then it could just be that the victimized Nebula was a Ravonna divergence that stayed in the 20th/21st Century, and there are many other Nebulas running around in the time-space continuum.

Re: 1980s Englehart

While I respect Prof's unfavorable opinion of Englehart's 1980s work, I do feel I must point out that Englehart was the first writer to try to evolve Crystal beyond being a two-dimensional princess (in Vision & Scarlet Witch and in FF) and that, while Harras deserves most of the credit for Crystal's evolution, it was Englehart who got the ball rolling (and Harras fully acknowledged the changes Crystal had gone through in Englehart's stories.)

Oh, and a couple more things -- 1) I was overjoyed when I read the Annihilation spoilers at Wikipedia.

Click Here For A SpoilerDrax the Destoyer FINALLY killed Thanos!

YES!!

2) In answer to Lardlad's question, the impression regarding Nebula that I got from the Annihilation spoilers is that she was used as nothing more than cannon fodder.

[ January 18, 2007, 09:23 AM: Message edited by: Stealth ]
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Avengers Volume One # 255-269 & West Coast Avengers Volume Two # 1-10

I’ll add just a few brief comments about things in general:

John Buscema – What’s more enjoyable for a long-time fan of Avengers or Thor than reading an Avengers or Thor comic with Big John as the artist? Really, Buscema’s art was always welcome and it was nice to see his continued involvement with Marvel Super-Heroes.

Nebula/Terminus/Savage Land/etc. – Man, I really have to reread this following your comments Stealth. While I read it long ago and know the basic plotline, I don’t think I’ve ever given it the reread it deserves. I like Nebula a lot too and remember thinking a big ‘WHOA!’ when I first read about the destruction of the Savage Lad, Lemuria, etc.

Secret Wars II – possibly Marvel’s worst idea of the 1980’s. In almost every crossover with one of Marvel’s comics, you could just feel it being bad. Remember that building turned to gold in the Spider-Man issues? [Eek!]

Sub-Mariner – Though I often see myself as a more traditional fan, I like to believe I’m flexible in letting great stories move the MU and DCU forward (so long as their great of course). I generally never thought Namor could be an Avenger, but I really loved his run as an Avenger during Stern’s term as writer. Namor has such a rich history in the MU, having a unique relationship with almost every single major Marvel hero that in theory, there should almost never be a bad Sub-Mariner comic (a theory of course, which was shot to hell [Big Grin] ). I liked him here.

Black Knight – I’ve said before a bunch of times how much I love this character, and he’s by far one of my favorite heroes in any universe. If I was writing Avengers (or even Defenders) I would include him without question, and I’ve actually got tons of Black Knight (and Crystal) stories bouncing around in my head for the last ten years or so. I really liked him during Stern’s run, though I didn’t like the potential Dane/Wasp romance.

Female Yellowjacket – though I also am only limited to her Avengers appearances, I remember being intrigued by her when I was a wee lad, when I first saw her on a cover for the Avengers Annual with the High Evolutionary holding a bunch of Avengers in a ball (with Beast, Hulk, Falcon, etc.). I would really have to see more of the character to get a genuine opinion of her, but I like the idea of a female Yellowjacket so Hank Pym never become Yellowjacket again (I really think Hank should be Goliath, and just Goliath, once and for all).

Jean Grey’s return – bad move Marvel. Very bad move. But despite her later appearances in X-Factor still being annoying, she sure was written great in a lot of 90’s stories (again, this shows another 90’s thing I liked, so I’m beginning to see that my earlier generalization of the 90’s was pretty unfair), so I guess what was done was done. Then Grant killed her off again a few years ago, so I say once more ‘what’s done is done’. Jean should stay dead now.

Kang – generally, I’m not too bothered by all the Kang craziness of the last 40 years, b/c I really enjoyed Busiek’s Avengers Forever mini, which did a great job of clearing up a lot of stuff and giving us a great Avengers tale. While I can see the annoyance of many others with understanding, not many Kang stories leave too bad a taste in my mouth given I know that in continuity Kang’s story would continue (in the eyes of the Avengers) in Avengers Forever. Actually, I take that back—Avengers: the Crossing was pretty horrendous.

West Coast Avengers – I admit now that my WCA knowledge is nowhere near what it is to my Avengers Proper knowledge, or other longtime Marvel series. I’ve read the entire run once, with a few gaps in it. It was cool that there was a place for mainstay Avengers to be spotlighted by (1) it was weird and (2) awful things happened to a lot of longtime Avengers because they were stars of the book (not making excuses or agreeing with them, its just what happened).

Still more greatness to come for the Avengers Proper during this era…
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Stealth:
Re: Protector of the Universe

Ah, fanfic. Gotcha - I've done that sort of thing myself a few times (the number of times I've typed Leonard McCauley on Legion Wiki and had to go back and correct it later...)

quote:
Originally posted by Stealth:
Re: Nebula and 1990s Thanos and Kang divergences

First of all, while I agree that Nebula's claim to be a blood relation of Thanos was not one of Stern's better ideas (I think the only explanation for stealing the Sanctuary II should have been simply because it was a damn powerful battleship), I think that the way that Starlin had Thanos burn her alive and turn her into a zombie and humiliate her was tasteless, mean-spirited, and misogynistic, and I think Ron "Worst Misogynist in Comics" Marz added insult to injury by turning her into a bald-headed cyborg. Is it any wonder no one has taken her seriously as a villainess since? Secondly, and on a more personal level, it is my opinion that Starlin's early 1990s Thanos stories (including and especially Infinity Gauntlet) are take-the-money-and-run hackwork of the worst sort. Sure, they sold lots of copies, but that doesn't make them good. I lost a lot of respect for Starlin because of those stories (although I can still read and enjoy his 1970s Mar-Vell/Warlock/Thanos stories and his 1980s Dreadstar stories). Finally, it's kind of funny to me that the subject of the Kang divergences has come up, because in my opinion, that's the solution for re-inventing Nebula -- if Ravonna posed as Nebula, then it could just be that the victimized Nebula was a Ravonna divergence that stayed in the 20th/21st Century, and there are many other Nebulas running around in the time-space continuum.

Okay, Thanos-with-Infinity Gauntlet was fooled. Yeah yeah, uh-huh. Have I mentioned recently how Reset Buttons sucketh mightestly?

Let's narrow it for a moment to the IG (and run-up thereto) stuff, since I haven't read the later appearances (presumably in Silver Surfer) where she was cyborgised. You've been handed Thanos, Back From The Dead. He's mightily P.O.ed at Nebula for stealing his ship and, worse, pretending to be his blood-descendent. Remember that this is the guy who Loves Death - he's not going to consider killing someone a punishment. Moreover, Thanos is the bigger villain, so he needs to win - if he can't beat Nebula, what chance has he got against *insert better-known and probably more powerful character here*

A+B = Zombie Nebula.

quote:
Originally posted by Stealth:
Re: 1980s Englehart

While I respect Prof's unfavorable opinion of Englehart's 1980s work, I do feel I must point out that Englehart was the first writer to try to evolve Crystal beyond being a two-dimensional princess (in Vision & Scarlet Witch and in FF) and that, while Harras deserves most of the credit for Crystal's evolution, it was Englehart who got the ball rolling (and Harras fully acknowledged the changes Crystal had gone through in Englehart's stories.)

And I know someone who, while he likes the Harris stuff with Crystal (& Quicksilver), absolutely despises the Englehart Crystal stuff, since it pretty much doomed the character to be... well, let's just say he really hated the stuff with Crystal & Sentry in New Avengers, and sees it as pretty much an inevitable outgrowth of the sort of thing Englehart did with Crystal there, since characters' stories have a tendancy to loop (see Hank Pym for pretty much the most egregious example of this, where he's been utterly defined by That Shooter Story ever since).

[I can't say for myself - I've never read V&SW or that era of FF except the Hulk-crossover FF350]

quote:
Originally posted by Stealth:
2) In answer to Lardlad's question, the impression regarding Nebula that I got from the Annihilation spoilers is that she was used as nothing more than cannon fodder.

Not cannon-fodder, but not a major role either.

quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
Black Knight – I’ve said before a bunch of times how much I love this character, and he’s by far one of my favorite heroes in any universe. If I was writing Avengers (or even Defenders) I would include him without question, and I’ve actually got tons of Black Knight (and Crystal) stories bouncing around in my head for the last ten years or so. I really liked him during Stern’s run, though I didn’t like the potential Dane/Wasp romance.

One of these things though - the Harris BK was a far more ends-justify character, and probably more interesting for it. I get a very "Lite" vibe off the Stern BK

quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
Jean Grey's return – bad move Marvel. Very bad move. But despite her later appearances in X-Factor still being annoying, she sure was written great in a lot of 90's stories (again, this shows another 90's thing I liked, so I'm beginning to see that my earlier generalization of the 90's was pretty unfair), so I guess what was done was done. Then Grant killed her off again a few years ago, so I say once more ‘what's done is done'. Jean should stay dead now.

The thing about it is that it breaks down to "Jean is interesting, post-DPS Phoenix is not."

So, obviously, you've got writers like Morrison and Land who define her as Phoenix; and that leads to Phenominal Cosmic Boringness.

quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
Kang – generally, I'm not too bothered by all the Kang craziness of the last 40 years, b/c I really enjoyed Busiek's Avengers Forever mini, which did a great job of clearing up a lot of stuff and giving us a great Avengers tale. While I can see the annoyance of many others with understanding, not many Kang stories leave too bad a taste in my mouth given I know that in continuity Kang's story would continue (in the eyes of the Avengers) in Avengers Forever. Actually, I take that back—Avengers: the Crossing was pretty horrendous.

*just wants to point out that Iron Man/Cap: Casualties of War referenced the Crossing - and said Kang was behind it, against the AvFor retcon*

And, Avengers Forever #12, AF12... you've got Immortus getting physically ripped out of Kang for... uh... some reason (I ***REALLY*** don't like "strength of will" as a plot device unless you've got something to back it up. A telepath versus a bunch of telepathic brains and winning through strength of will†, I can buy. Someone getting shot by a gun and the gun doing something completely different from what it's supposed to because of it's target's "strength of will".... ummm....).

And then you've got an Immortus who remembers being the Immortus who got killed, yet is meant to be before that Immortus to become that Immortus later, yet that means you've got an Immortus who remembers being that Immortus, yet becomes the Immortus who gets killed only to become... my head hurts.

† - spot the reference
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"after Steve Epting left Avengers, it quickly became obvious that Harras on Avengers without Epting was like Marv Wolfman on New Teen Titans without George Perez"

I can see that, having read all of Harris' S.H.I.E.L.D. work-- though that comparison seems like an insult to Wolfman! [Smile]


"it is my opinion that Starlin's early 1990s Thanos stories (including and especially Infinity Gauntlet) are take-the-money-and-run hackwork of the worst sort. Sure, they sold lots of copies, but that doesn't make them good."

It's a toss-up as to what bugged me most: that there were SO MANY of them (talk about "decompression"-- HAH!), that there were 3 WARLOCK comics going at the same time at one point, or that during each of the 3 crossover minis, there were also COUNTLESS crossovers in just about every other mag, which derailed any hope of consistency in ALL of the books. I was buying very few by then-- DR. STRANGE was one of them, and at the time, Roy Thomas claimed he quit the book in disgust at having it interrupted 3 times for several issues each time. (Just recently, though, he said that had nothing to do with it, and there was a completely different reason he left... though I can't recall what it was. Ever think a lot of people have selective memory?)


"Re: 1980s Englehart"

One of these days-- eventually-- it'd be nice to re-read Steve's run. Having read his comments at his site, I might be able to look at his FF run in an entirely different light. It was apparently the victim of specific tampering and interference on the editorial side, while, when it was coming out, I was under the impression it was a DIFFERENT incident of editorial interference that had caused what I considered the books descent into "drivel". (The earlier issues, presumably, weren't so bad.)


"Annihilation"

Not being up much on Marvel these days, I wasn't sure-- is this "regular" MU, or "Ultimate"?? (I thought it was the latter-- but maybe not...)


"What’s more enjoyable for a long-time fan of Avengers or Thor than reading an Avengers or Thor comic with Big John as the artist?"

Either, with Jack Kirby as the artist?

[Smile]


I now really wish Stan had left John alone so he could have had a long, UNBROKEN run on THE AVENGERS in the late 60's, instead of all those interruptions. Even Neal Adams-- his art looks "WOW!", but his storytelling isn't HALF of Buscema's.


"there should almost never be a bad Sub-Mariner comic"

SHOULD. Early in Bill Everett's early-70's return to his character, there was a letter printed which said, in essence, "after 49 UNREADABLE issues, the book finally got good!" I agreed-- in the extreme. While all of early-70's Marvel went to hell in a morass of gloom and depression, Everett went completely the other way. And he did it with a book that, just before his return, had been possibly the WORST offender in the "hopelessly downbeat" category.

It amazes me that the current AGENTS OF ATLAS has included numerous references to events in Everett's issues-- which I never read until the last 2 years. (It's as if that mini was written just for me!)
 
Posted by Set on :
 
quote:
"Annihilation"

Not being up much on Marvel these days, I wasn't sure-- is this "regular" MU, or "Ultimate"?? (I thought it was the latter-- but maybe not...)

The various big events (Annhilation / Civil War) are technically occuring in the mainstream '616' Marvel continuity, but the 616 continuity is now being written by the Ultimates writers, using the 'voices' they established for the Ultimates versions of the characters, and the 616 heroes are increasingly turning into their Ultimates counterparts, who are generally anything but heroes.

Eventually, I'm expecting a Crisis of some sort to come along and eliminate any pretense of them being different universes, so that Xavier and Iron Man and Cap and Reed Richards can be the exact same malevolent dictatorial thugs in the new combined setting.

quote:
The thing about it is that it breaks down to "Jean is interesting, post-DPS Phoenix is not."
There was an old 'Death of Phoenix' special once, presenting an alternate version of the story, where Jean was stripped of the powers at the end, which was supposed to be the original ending before some people at Marvel pointed out 'She ate a planet, she can't come back from '11 billion asparagus people die with a horrible scream.''

The quote that always jumped out at me from the interview at the end was that they intended Jean to be depowered, marry Scott and become 'Scott's wife, about as important a character as the left rear wheel of the Blackbird.' That really annoyed me, the idea that Xaviers wonderful dream of humans and mutants living together was written by a bunch of hacks who considered a non-super-powered Jean (and, by extension, human supporting characters, like Kitty's dance instructor, or the dude who kept the grounds, or Angel's girlfriend-of-the-week) to be completely and utterly worthless as a character because she couldn't shoot lightning out of her butt.

[ January 18, 2007, 08:10 PM: Message edited by: Set ]
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
Ummm... Keith Giffen's (LoSH, JLI) writing Annihilation, and the lead in minis were written by Giffen, DnA (The Legion), Simon Furman (Transformers) and a guy I've never heard of.

No-one involved with Annihilation has written any Ultimate book. Ever.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Yeah, Reboot is right, Annhilation isn't written at all like anything in the Ultimate universe and is actually pretty excellent. And its very consistent with past Marvel characterizations and stays true to all characters IMO. Though it may sound like it from interviews, etc., there has been very little cannon-fodder.

Its completely 100% a different animal from Civil War in all ways.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Prof:

Re: Jack Kirby...Agree 100% [Smile]

Re: Sub-Mariner comics...also agree. Subby's had a lot of bad stories over the years (but really, all the great longtime characters have)! Its so odd to see someone with so much potential have so many bad stories in different generations, but thats the way it goes. Not too much of a complaint, at least he got to kick some ass in most of them [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Tekwych on :
 
From Comics Continuum:

Christopher Yost is writing Marvel Studios' and Lionsgate's Teen Avengers direct-to-video animated movie.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"the mainstream '616' Marvel continuity"

...which goes to show just how far out of the loop I am, I have NO idea what the hell this means!


"There was an old 'Death of Phoenix' special once, presenting an alternate version of the story, where Jean was stripped of the powers at the end, which was supposed to be the original ending before some people at Marvel pointed out 'She ate a planet, she can't come back from '11 billion asparagus people die with a horrible scream.''"

Not "some people". JIM ******* SHOOTER! (Otherwise known as "Jim 'BECAUSE I SAID SO' Shooter")


The thing that got me about that situation was, reportedly, Chris Claremont & John Byrne had such a breakdown in communication while they were co-plotting the book over the course of about 2 whole years, each thinking something other than what the other was... and they reached this point in the story, and thanks to Shooter's editorial regime in place (assistant editor, editor, EDITOR-IN-CHIEF), everything had to pass thru several people, probably several times, before being approved. The asparagus people (from AVENGERS #4!!) had their planet destroyed, maybe 3 months before the climax of the story. It went by without a hitch. 2 more months went by without a hitch. The climax of the story was almost ready to go to the printers, WHEN SUDDENLY, Jim "BECAUSE I SAID SO" Shooter stuck his nose in and said "HOLD IT...!"

In interviews afterwards, I do believe Claremont and Byrne said they felt the resulting story was better than what they intended. Personally, I think they said this because they wanted to keep their jobs. Shooter eventually got fired, not them, so I guess it worked!


(I dunno, until very recently, I never USED to be this nasty about the guy...! I guess my cynicism must be on the rise.)
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
Nebula/Terminus/Savage Land/etc. – Man, I really have to reread this following your comments Stealth. While I read it long ago and know the basic plotline, I don’t think I’ve ever given it the reread it deserves. I like Nebula a lot too and remember thinking a big ‘WHOA!’ when I first read about the destruction of the Savage Lad, Lemuria, etc.

Excellent. I'm always glad when I'm able to inspire somebody to read or re-read an underrated Avengers story. And do please share your thoughts on it in this thread when you're done re-reading it.

quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
"after Steve Epting left Avengers, it quickly became obvious that Harras on Avengers without Epting was like Marv Wolfman on New Teen Titans without George Perez"

I can see that, having read all of Harris' S.H.I.E.L.D. work-- though that comparison seems like an insult to Wolfman!

That is most definitely not what I was trying to say. Harras and Epting worked very closely on Avengers, just as Wolfman and Perez did on New Teen Titans. This kind of chemistry galvanized the plots in such a way that even the ocassional guest artist could not stop the momentum. But when Epting and Perez both left, neither of the successors had chemistry with the writers. In NTT's case, it wasn't a question of the artwork: Perez was replaced by Eduardo Barreto, a superb artist, but the chemistry just wasn't there and the stories suffered (Harras was even less lucky that Wolfman -- he got stuck with Mike Deodato during Deodato's "Jim Lee Clone" phase.) Finally, I think that to dismiss Harras's Avengers stories on the basis of having read his S.H.I.E.L.D. stories is like dismissing Doug Moench's Master of Kung Fu stories on the basis of having read his Fantastic Four stories.
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Avengers Volume One #270-285 & West Coast Avengers Volume Two #11-39

The 270s could be considered one very long storyarc. In #270-271, it appears that many supervillains are organizing for mysterious reasons. In #272, there is a battle against Atlantis (the Avengers teaming with guest stars Alpha Flight), and the Sub-Mariner takes a leave of absence to search for his runaway lover, Marrina; the Avengers have no idea how losing one of their strongest members is going to affect them.

#273 and #274 are two of the finest Avengers issues ever published. First, we finally discover what the villains are up to -- Baron Zemo II, vindictive son of the deceased Zemo I, has organized the biggest, strongest, and scariest Masters of Evil lineup ever: Zemo, Moonstone, Wrecker, Bulldozer, Thunderball, Piledriver, Tiger Shark, Fixer, Mr. Hyde, Goliath, Blackout, Absorbing Man, Titania, and Yellowjacket II (plus Grey Gargoyle and Screaming Mimi, who are arrested before the plan gets under way, Whirlwind, who is defeated early on by Captain America, and Black Mamba, who gets Hercules dangerously drunk.) As the issue comes to its terrifying end, the MoE have taken over Avengers mansion, with Jarvis as their hostage. Then, in the next issue, the MoE's plan continues to unfold, with increasingly frightening results: Black Knight and Captain America taken hostage, Captain Marvel trapped in the Darkforce dimension, and Hercules beaten into a coma. In addition to the fine-watch precision of Roger Stern's scripts, there is the art of John Buscema & Tom Palmer, which in these issues vaults to an even higher level of quality, as if Stern's story has galvanized them into outdoing themselves.

#275-277 comprise the third act, and while it's not quite as good as the first and second acts, it's still engaging (and stunningly drawn.) #278-279 are an extended coda, in which the Avengers -- left without a mansion after it is destroyed in the battle against the Masters of Evil -- settle on Hydrobase, Wasp volutarily steps down as leader, Captain Marvel succeeds her, and the team is joined by two returnees (She-Hulk and Thor) and one newbie (Dr. Druid, another of Stern's pet characters, but a lame one.) The 270s do have their flaws, but they were, up to that time, the most compelling and cohesive extended run of Avengers since Englehart at his 1970s peak.

#280 is a way, way above-average fill-in (and also the very first Avengers script by Bob Harras) -- despite the bad art, the story is both poignant and uplifting, comprising flashbacks to Jarvis's many years with the Avengers as he recovers from his injuries and ponders retirement...ultimately choosing to not retire.

With Stern, Buscema and Palmer having had a chance to catch their breath, they now dive into a new five-part epic which I think is possibly their finest story: Hercules' father Zeus, driven irrational with rage by his son's fate, wrongly blames the Avengers, and orders the gods who serve him to capture the Avengers and bring them to Olympus to stand trial. Just when it looked like Buscema & Palmer couldn't get any better than they were on the 270s, they actually get even better in #281-285. Buscema comes full circle with his mid-late Silver Age work on the Olympus story from #49-50 by giving us a feast for the eyes, from the finely detailed Olympian architecture to his beautifully individualized renditions of the Olympian pantheon: Zeus, Hera, Artemis, Hephaestus, Ares, Neptune, Pluto, Athena, Dionysus, Apollo, Hermes, Venus...also Prometheus the Titan, who plays a crucial role in the story. Of special note is the battle pitting the four most powerful Avengers -- Thor, Captain Marvel, Namor, and She-Hulk -- against Zeus alone. These scenes should be required reading for superhero writers, because THIS is the way to write a battle between a superhero team and a single, near-omnipotent villain.

Who can say where Stern might have gone from here? It is one of the biggest tragedies in comic book history that Stern was not only fired, but that he was fired at the peak of his creativity. Avengers had reached such a state of perfection that the issues which followed are among those that I refuse to read on principle. So I won't be reviewing #286-304, because I've never seen any reason to witness the heartbreaking spectacle of everything Stern had built for five years being torn down. Walt Simonson made a serious error in judgement by taking on this assignment, but from what I've read in interviews and on the web, Simonson was apparently not prepared for the lack of input allowed or for the lack of available characters for the new lineup. Simonson quit the book once the lineup was established, and less than five issues later, that lineup was history and John Byrne was the writer, beginning a steady stream of mediocrity that I'll elaborate on next week.

Meanwhile, over on West Coast Avengers, Steve Englehart finally put an end to the monster mish-mash and sent the team on an eight-issue time travel adventure. This is the best-known story of Englehart's WCA run, and it encapsulates the best and worst of this run. The basic plot mechanics are undeniably clever and diverting, and Joe Sinnott's inking temporarily got better (although he left the book before the storyarc was finished). What on Earth, then, could have possessed Englehart to write in a subplot about Mockingbird being kidnapped, drugged, and raped? It completely ruins the story!

Post-time travel, the book returned to the usual low-key weirdness -- the Zodiac storyarc and the Iron Curtain storyarc were okay-ish, but not good enough to rise above the art. Sinnott's replacement, Mike Machlan, had done nice work for DC, particularly the early issues of Infinity Inc. But his inking on WCA makes Milgrom's pencils even more mediocre than they already are. Englehart seemed to be gearing up for big changes, dividing the team and bringing in Wasp, Scarlet Witch, Vision...and Mantis! But the usual editorial disagreements brought Englehart's WCA run to an abrupt end.

John Byrne became both writer and artist on WCA, and I refuse to read his issues. Why? Because of what he did to Vision and to Scarlet Witch. The damage to Vision -- the ugly new look and the robotic personality -- was eventually, and very effectively, undone by Bob Harras in Avengers. The damage to Scarlet Witch may have started out as Byrne's typical turn-back-the-clock nonsense -- specifically to rejoin her and Quicksilver with Magneto, just like they were in the early Silver Age -- but the long-term reprecussions were disastrous. Byrne's story directly influenced Bendis (and Bendis has confirmed this in interviews) to turn Wanda evil. And for that, Byrne can never be forgiven.

In an amusing irony, Byrne's exit from WCA was just as abrupt as Englehart's, and it was caused by similar editorial disagreements. Byrne's replacements were the husband-and-wife team of Roy Thomas & Dann Thomas. I've only read a few of their issues, mainly the ones that tied into Operation Galactic Storm and Bloodties, and found them to be lazy and by-the-numbers. WCA was cancelled at the end of the Thomases' run, making the book one which arguably never found any sort of peak, despite running for almost a decade.

[ January 23, 2007, 12:37 PM: Message edited by: Stealth ]
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"I think that to dismiss Harras's Avengers stories on the basis of having read his S.H.I.E.L.D. stories is like dismissing Doug Moench's Master of Kung Fu stories on the basis of having read his Fantastic Four stories."

Fair enough. Harras's SHIELD was crap of the worst, most destructive sort. I sat thru 6 MONTHS of his AVENGERS without being the slightest bit impressed, EVEN though Epting's art blew me away. Then I dropped the book. That's more of a chance than I gave Tom DeFalco when he took over FANTASTIC FOUR. So many writers had crashed & burned on that book, and I was pretty fed up with it in general. When I heard DeFalco was coming, and feeling as I did that he was (at the time) one of the worst writers to ever have worked for Marvel, I dropped the book BEFORE ever reading a single one of his issues!


"Walt Simonson made a serious error in judgement by taking on this assignment"

I've always felt it was a case of, like Sean Connery in THE GREAT TRAIN ROBBERY: "I wanted the money."

I believe I read at the time that Simonson signed on to do a dozen issues (under Shooter, 6 consecutive issues on a book netted someone a HEFTY bonus). It's possible Simonson stepped into a situation different (and worse) than he expected, but my impression back then was that he went in with a "take the money and run" attitude. As soon as it was over, he was gone. Oddly enough, right after, Mark Gruenwald stepped in to WRITE the book himself. And then HE was gone. Quit? FIRED for incompetence? Who knows? He did his damage, and what he left in place was brushed aside almost as quickly as he had brushed Stern aside a year earlier. (What goes around comes around?)


"Englehart seemed to be gearing up for big changes, dividing the team and bringing in Wasp, Scarlet Witch, Vision...and Mantis!"

Seems like Steve wanted to reunite the team he might have had if Gerry Conway hadn't gotten in the way, all those years earlier.


"But the usual editorial disagreements brought Englehart's WCA run to an abrupt end."

Steve Englehart must be one of the nicest guys in the biz. He's worked with some really 2nd-rate (or 3rd-rate) artists over the years, but always seems to find something nice to say about each of them. But I'm also wondering if he doesn't have selective memory, as things I've read in recent interviews, on his website and in e-mails often contradicts things I read many years ago.

Back then, the general impression I got was that Mark Gruenwald (yes, the same guy who fired Roger Stern) took a PERSONAL dislike of Steve's character, Mantis, and he, along with Ralph Macchio, ORDERED Steve to get rid of her-- only a few months after her return in SILVER SURFER. I was pleasantly surprised by her character evolution in SS, and after never having cared for her at all in the 70's, found she was quickly becoming one of my favorite characters in SS. So her ABRUPT departure just made no sense. On his website, Steve said he had planned her exit anyway, but this is completely at odds with what I read 2 decades ago!

At any rate, shortly after her ejection, Steve's writing DROPPED in quality in ALL his books. It looked to me as if he were pulling a temper tantrum. Reportedly, he had a firm 3-year contract, and there was apparently nothing Gruenwald & co. could do to get rid of him-- while he knocked out almost DRIVEL for the remainder of his contract.

I admit, this view of events may not be completely accurate... but at times I wonder if I'll ever know the real, full truth.

At any rate, "Mantis" (supposedly) came back in WEST COAST AVENGERS just before John Byrne's debut... but Steve always maintained he DIDN'T write those episodes! Between the awful writing and ABOMINABLE fill-in art, it was no wonder I welcomed John Byrne's run on WCA as much as I did. At least-- at first.

I think Byrne draws about the sexiest Scarlet Witch since Dave Cockrum. But what he did to her in his writing... YEESH! Anybody remember the set of advance covers they used to promote Byrne's run? The last cover in the set NEVER appeared. Sometime before that episode appeared, plans apparently changed (Byrne's fault or his editor?) and whatever he had in mind was detoured in a completely different direction. (That was the month he introduced the Great Lakes Avengers.)

As with the regular book, I read WCA out-of-sequence... I actually read Byrne's run BEFORE reading the entirety of Englehart's! One of these days I gotta go back over in in the proper order...
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
First, an aside to all (especially Stealth): this thread has inspired me to once more reread large runs of the Avengers, and I started this last Friday. Since I’ve read the first 75 issues more than almost anything else in comics besides Spider-Man (including Legion), I started at #101, to really get a sense of Engleharts Celestial Madonna Saga (and as the issues right before he came on are almost like a lead into his run). So, I read the entire thing and beyond, and I will post comments soon, in a separate post. Needless to say, it was even more enjoyable than I remembered and remains one of the greatest eras ever of the Avengers.

Avengers Volume One #270-285
I’ve got some general comments here, as usual:

Stern/Buscema/Palmer – rarely have the Avengers had such a level of talent when all three were clicking. Truly, this was an ‘A’ team and you can see it in each issue.

The Masters of Evil Saga – even a Silver Age fan like myself has to admit that this was definitely the greatest Masters of Evil story ever written, and it really just hits on so many levels. Stern plays to his strengths, with characters having insightful moments that usually don’t, a gigantic cast and intricate plot, tons of action and growing intensity, and just so much more. This was truly one of the Avengers lowest moments and then greatest triumphs. Without a doubt this ensured the continued use over the years of Zemo II, Moonstone and the Fixer, and a bunch of others. Mr. Hyde sticks out as particularly terrifying, to the point where his original self, as depicted in early Thor comics, really comes across. Cap is heroic and its tragic how they try to hurt him and the Black Knight, despite his tough time, comes across great. Thor’s return to the Avengers, at the height of the Simonsin era, is truly an awesome sight, and Stern gets across how Mighty Thor really is.

Now, I don’t think this is the greatest Avengers story ever, and yes, I see the flaws throughout it—the Wasp’s leadership already being touched upon in this thread—but I do really like this story. Its about as action-packed and dramatic as it gets and really was unique for its time. I think many ‘super-villains vs. super-heroes’ team stories have in a way plagiarized this series greatly in the last two decades.

Dr. Druid – I generally agree that this was a Stern ‘pet’ character and he didn’t really interest me much either. I think the first time I really was interested in him was when he died.

Harris/Jarvis story – one of my favorite issues of the Avengers ever. I reread this so many times growing up…it truly is a powerful, smile-inducing tale. Though I always liked Jarvis for hundreds of issues before, this cemented him as one of my all-time favorite supporting characters in comics.

The 270s could be considered one very long storyarc. In #270-271, it appears that many supervillains are organizing for mysterious reasons. In #272, there is a battle against Atlantis (the Avengers teaming with guest stars Alpha Flight), and the Sub-Mariner takes a leave of absence to search for his runaway lover, Marrina; the Avengers have no idea how losing one of their strongest members is going to affect them.

The Olympeus Saga – well Stealth, now you’ve piqued my interest again. [Big Grin] . I’ve read this story before and remember enjoying it, but your high praise of it gives me reason to revisit it for the first time in a decade, so I will. I’ll definitely comment sometime soon!

End of Stern era line-up – you know, I didn’t mind this line-up at all, despite how off-beat it was. By the end of Stern’s run, there was no doubt that the Black Knight and She-Hulk were genuine ‘core Avengers’ in the sense that the Vision, Black Panther or Ms. Marvel are (and in the sense that Mantis, Moondragon and many others are not). I tend to put Captain Marvel II/Photon in this category, but as Reboot pointed out earlier, she’s never really appeared much beyond Stern.

The Stern/Gruenwald stuff – wow, I never really heard any of this stuff until Legion World (I’ve heard you both speak of it before). That’s all truly too bad and I hate to hear about problems between creators and editors causing potentially great comic book runs to never see light.

Since you’re not reviewing #286-304, I’ll do it for you Stealth [Big Grin]
- #286-299 – generally pretty crappy stuff, despite Simonsin’s usual brand of grandeur. For those of you that did not know, if you wanted to see the Black Knight’s story end, you’d have to check out Thor #390 - #400 for a pretty cool supporting role for Dane in what I consider a very enjoyable epic story (Asgard vs. Set).

#300 - #304 – This was about as stupid as could be, and it became obvious immediately. Mr. Fantastic and the Invisible Woman as Avengers? REALLY?!!! A very cheap marketing stunt and stupid idea, and it was evident immediately and quickly enough undone. Why, that’s as bad as Spider-Man and Wolverine as Avengers. Ooops! Just goes to show, as always, that all the recent things Marvel and DC have done have generally been done before, and usually in the 80’s. As for Gilgamesh…well, we never learned much about him, and he disappeared quickly enough, only to resurface in the 90’s—as a corpse.

I remember that at this time, the X-Men were coming off an awful period where they were stuck in Australia (what a DUMB idea), and Inferno crossed over into the Spidey titles, Avengers, etc., which seemed pretty cool, given it was one of the first crossovers. That was about all that was cool about Avengers #300 - #304.


West Coast Avengers Volume Two #11-39
As I said, I don’t have the same knowledge of the WCA run, and though I read some issues, I didn’t read enough to have a coherent view of the stories. I could probably reread those too (I have access to the issues), but that’s still a maybe. Awful that Mockingbird would be kidnapped and raped, especially since Steve so frequently wrote great female heroes. Then came Byrne, and I also agree that his decisions were awful, in ruining the Vision with only Harras’ later ability to fix the character and make him readable again (although of course, he was no longer the Vision of old, but almost completely different). The Wanda connections with Pietro and Magneto I feel are enjoyable but the ‘Wanda going evil’ stuff never was good when Byrne did it, so it was only ten times worse when Bendis did it with worse execution. Though I guess the blame for that lies squarely with Bendis and Joe Q. It was really around WCA that Byrne’s work had begun to get noticeably worse and less enjoyable.

Really wish I could have read more about Mantis by Steve. I have a Mantis story in my head I've had for years, and I always had a dream where I'd be the writer on Avengers, and big Steve would give me the go ahead with my plans for her.

I did read later WCA issues (much later than #39) towards the end of its run, and I can talk more about them later. Generally, WCA took some lame characters and did some interesting things with them at the end of the run (US Agent, Spider-Woman, War Machine, etc.). So for that it wasn’t all that bad.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"Mr. Hyde sticks out as particularly terrifying, to the point where his original self, as depicted in early Thor comics, really comes across."

I'm reminded of the earlier (?) work Stern did with both The Cobra & Mr. Hyde. In ASM, Cobra escapes from prison, leaving Hyde behind, because he realizes how many times teaming with Hyde has been a disaster. (I get the feeling it was the same issue Peter finally sewed new "underarm webbing" on his costume-- it had been shrinking and finally disappeared for years, Stern took this artists' quirk and made it part of the story by saying the elastic stuff Pete made it out of was hard to find!) In CAPTAIN AMERICA (under Stern, Byrne & Rubinstein-- DEFINITELY an "A" team that broke up way too soon), Hyde escapes prison, hijacks an oil tanker, and plans to detonate it in New York harbor, taking ALL of Manhattan with it-- JUST to make SURE he gets revenge on Cobra, who he believes is hiding somewhere in the city. MONSTROUS, jaw-dropping evil!!!!!


"The Stern/Gruenwald stuff – wow, I never really heard any of this stuff until Legion World (I’ve heard you both speak of it before). That’s all truly too bad and I hate to hear about problems between creators and editors causing potentially great comic book runs to never see light."

The story I read was, Gruenwald got Stern in his office to discuss the next year's worth of issues. Stern went home that weekend to figure out how to make it work. He came in Monday and told Gruenwald he couldn't figure out any way of doing it that wouldn't VIOLATE the integrity of every single character involved. Gruenwald told him, "Fine, then I'll get somebody who can." Stern was out, Simonson was happy to take the money.


"Really wish I could have read more about Mantis by Steve. I have a Mantis story in my head I've had for years, and I always had a dream where I'd be the writer on Avengers, and big Steve would give me the go ahead with my plans for her."

With Gruenwald gone, not only was Stern able to start working for Marvel again, but Steve was eventually able to bring Mantis back, too. Steve has gone on record that any appearances of her NOT written by him "don't count". Who am I to argue?

In-between GIANT AVENGERS #4 and SILVER SURFER, Mantis also appeared in Steve's JUSTICE LEAGUE OF AMERICA #142 (May'77) and those 2 issues of SCORPIO ROSE --but in both cases, under aliases. She was back at the forefront in Steve's AVENGERS: CELESTIAL QUEST mini-series, though apart from the ONE fill-in issue drawn by Joe Staton, I could barely tolerate the art on most of it (though Steve said he really liked it).
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
Various posts from Comicboards from Simonson on his first Avengers run (he also finished off the HR-Avengers after Liefeld was sacked):

quote:
General "Avengers Thoughts from Walt Simonson..." .

Re: my original run on the Avengers...

I wasn't originally trying to reorganize the lineup that I inherited on the title when I began writing it. However, very shortly, I decided to try to rearrange the Avengers to contain characters who did not, for the most part, have their own titles. I found over the course of the 11 or 12 issues I wrote (I think it was 11 or 12!) that I was being asked by Marvel editorial to match the continuity in my stories with that of other Marvel titles. I don't know if Roger had similar difficulties, but I was constantly having to readjust my storylines to other writers' continuities in the solo titles of Avengers' members, often with little or no warning. I would be told, for example, that this month, Thor's off in space so you can't use him in the Avengers. This is an INVENTED example, not one that actually happened but it's the sort of thing that occurred. Frequently. And as I was trying to plot stories of more than one month duration, I was having to rearrange, reorganize, and rewrite my plots pretty much on the fly.

My original solution to the problem was to try to rearrange the lineup of characters in the title so that the team that I was writing included characters who did not have their own titles. And I wanted characters who I thought would be a cool lineup, characters I thought had some dramatic possibilites. So that's what I was working towards. It wasn't a bad idea but in the end, it actually compounded the problem.

The last straw came when I was given editorial approval to bring Reed and Sue into the Avengers. They'd been written out of their own book at that time more or less permanently, and they seemed too cool a pair of characters to just leave in limbo. I also thought I could pick up some interest in the Avengers title with them involved. I still think so because having THEM in the Avengers is a startling thought, and it would have created a combination of characters in the Avengers who hadn't been together before, meaning that a whole host of dramatic possibilites would open up in terms of character relationships. In a catastrophe, who takes control of the team: Captain America? Or Reed? Both men who are used to command. And both men with skills useful in catastrophe. That sort of thing. So about SIX months in advance of the story I wanted to do, I asked for and got editorial permission to bring Reed and Sue into the Avengers.

However, literally just as I was writing the story introducing Reed and Sue into the Avengers, I was told that editorial approval had been withdrawn. Marvel editorial decided that they had to be put back in the FF, and I had to write them out of the Avengers. I'd been working toward a new lineup for Avengers 300 for almost a year by that time and to have it ripped apart at the last second was, to be relatively blunt, fairly annoying. And it was pretty typical of the time I spent on the book. I was told I would be able to use Reed and Sue in a single issue of the Avengers and then unload them. (None of this was the fault of my editor, I hasten to add; just a general approach to continuity developing at Marvel at that time that made the Avengers, for me anyway, difficult to write with any long range plans. And long range is generally the way I write monthly titles). I managed to beg three months worth of grace to include Reed and Sue in the book so that their presence wouldn't seem to be a completely random act but really, when I thought about it, I decided that it simply wasn't worth the trouble.

So I wrapped up my storylines and departed for other pastures. When you're not enjoying the work and you have other options, that seems like a reasonable thing to do.

As it turned out, there was a certain amount of irony in all this. Just as I was leaving the Avengers, I was asked if I wanted to work on the FF! I said sure! And Reed and Sue were back in their own title! So in the end, the stories I did in the FF with the dreaming Celestial and Galactus were essentially the stories I would have done in the Avengers if I'd stayed put. I even got to 'borrow' Thor and Iron Man because it WASN'T the Avengers! Or their own titles! I don't remember now if all the FF stories I did would have been Avengers stories but I think not. Every book has its own dynamic and the longer I was on the FF, the more I would have developed ideas directly out of the FF mythos.

I would also note that I myself think Reed and Sue belong in the FF but since they were available and unused at that time, I thought what the heck! As characters, they could have provided the Avengers with an unexpected combination of assets and a combination that had not been present in the Avengers before. Which means that there was the chance to write stories that weren't simply retreads of previous material--something that is occasionally difficult to do in a title with a long and honorable history.

quote:
More Reed/Sue detail: .
> It was during his time on the Avengers that Reed and Sue joined, but it was towards the very end. So I'm not sure what happened there.

Not much. I did introduce Reed and Sue into the Avengers at a time when they were not in the FF. At the time I began working on the idea, they hadn't been in the FF for awhile and there were no plans to put them back in that title. I thought it would be interesting to see what might happen, for example, between Captain America and Reed when they were on the same team, men who were both accustomed to the habit of command. After about five or six months of setting up storylines to accomodate their entry into the Avengers, I had literally just moved them in when I was told that there had been an editorial decision at Marvel to put them back in the FF and I could use them in the Avengers for one issue only. That pretty much spiked the direction I was writing; certainly I have moved the title in other directions if I'd known beforehand that Reed and Sue were only going to be available for about 10 seconds.

quote:
On killing Marinna: .
Killing Marinna was my idea. Married superheroes are, for the most part, a drag. IMHO of course! ;-)

A lot of dramatic possibilities go out the window for married characters so I thought I'd remove her from the lineup. IIRC, I did check with John Byrne at the time because John had created Marinna and I wouldn't have done it if he'd had any problem with it. He didn't.

I wasn't especially trying to disband the lineup per se but I was trying to rearrange it to contain characters who did not, for the most part, have their own titles. I don't remember Roger's reason for leaving the title, but I left because I was constantly having to readjust my storylines to match other writer's stories with the characters who had their own books, often with little or no warning.

also restates the Reed/Sue and leaving the title stuff. Well, technically states as this post was over three years earlier, but the other post does it in more detail [Smile] ]

quote:
On the Jarvis solo issue: .
Somewhere around Avengers 297 or 298, I did a Jarvis story. That particular issue remains one of my favorites of the stories I've written. So I don't want to complain too much. I was able to do some stuff I liked and I loved working with John Buscema and Tom Palmer.

quote:
On Gilgamesh & the Black Knight: .
> In legend, Gilgamesh annoyed the goddess Ishtar, who got pissed off and convinced her father, Anu, to send the Bull of Heaven to punish him. Anu did this, but Gilgamesh and his companion Enkidu battled and slew the Bull of Heaven. This annoys the gods further, and Enkidu dies as punishment.
>
> Presumably, the "cow-head" helmet is a souvenir.
>
> We know the Bull of Heaven as the constellation Taurus.
>
> kdb [Kurt Busiek]


Kurt is exactly right. In fact, I think I'll just be having Kurt answer all questions directed at me in the future because he does a much better job than I do!!! [Wink]

The only additional note I can think of to add is that the general idea was probably inspired by the stories of Hercules wearing the skin of the Nemean lion, a skin that served in the myths as a sort of armor for Hercules. Some of the pictures of Hercules I've seen show him wearing the skin with the head of the lion above his own head.

Regarding the Black Knight, I don't remember any longer exactly what I had in mind for him. I don't think I had an endgame for the Black Knight clearly in hand at the time I left writing the title. But Kurt may have a good idea there and if so, he can post it and I'll certainly claim it was my plan all along! [Big Grin]

quote:
On Cross-Time Kangs: .
> Hey Walter, I really enjoyed your short lived run on the Avengers. Could you please tell me what idea you had for the origin of the Kang Cross Time Council and what their relationship was to the "original" Kang? Thanks for your time.

I never had a specific origin in mind, particularly not for something as slippery as time traveling Kangs. Mostly, such ideas come full blown and then you work backwards to origins and such. However, I did the story because I thought the basic idea was...at its core...very funny, a strong motivator for me in a lot of stories! :-D

But if pressed, I'd would probably have envisioned something happening where a Kang at some point made a time jump and ended up in an alternate reality that had its own Kang whom he encountered. Such a jump might even have been done deliberately by a Kang who considered the possibilities of an infinite series of parallel dimensions and time streams and was interested in 'rallying the troops'. Or at least, in seeing how much alterative technology he could find and 'borrow' from another time stream for his own use. My models in a sense for such time stories probably go back to my SF reading of a long, long time ago including some of the novels and stories of Keith Laumer (Worlds of the Imperium and such). I'm sure there were other authors and books as well but I can't think of them immediately.

I don't remember offhand how I fit the MU's Kang into the mix. Or even if I did. I'm not sure he was really a 'joiner'. ;-)

quote:
More Cross-Time Kangs & what he did with the Avengers plots: .
> Interesting. Im wondering if you were influenced at all by the Council of Kangs that Roger Stern introduced during his Avengers run (early 270s I think.)

Beats me. I don't remember Roger's story now but that's not to say I wasn't familiar with it back then. I can't say now whether it was an influence or if I simply arrived at my own story from another direction. I have always been a fan of time travel/time paradox stories. But I may have just taken Roger's idea and expanded it.

[goes into FF/Thor stuff for a bit]

The FF stories I did were (in somewhat modified form) stories I would have done in the Avengers if I'd stayed on the Avengers title. But the fact that I'd just begun to work Reed and Sue into the Avengers right when I left the title and was then offered the FF right when editorial dictated that the pair be reinstated in the FF was completely coincidental. Lucky for me really. So I simpy moved over one title, recast my stories to fit different characters, and was off. I tossed in Thor and Iron Man in the original series of stories in the FF to draw a closer connection to the Avengers stories I had just finished.

And besides, it was just fun to do them! [Big Grin]

quote:
On Monica: .
...(I) thought Captain Marvel had one of the dullest costumes ever foisted on comic book readers with a personality to match, [...]

quote:
On resigning: .
[...]

Reed and Sue weren't in the FF at that time and the writer of the FF back then had no plans to reattach them to the title any time soon although I'm sure they would have returned eventually. However, the Reed and Sue business was just the end of a long chain of plot alterations I was asked to make to 'match' the Avengers characters' continuity to the solo titles in which those characters appeared. For instance, I'd be in the middle of a story and be told that Thor couldn't appear in the following issue of the Avengers because he was off in space that month. So I'd have to write him out suddenly. (This is a made-up example. I no longer remember the exact events any longer). But stuff like this happened several times over the course of the 11 issues I wrote. (One I do remember is that I believe I brought Cap back into the Avengers, thinking that he would look cool on the cover of Avengers 300. And who wouldn't want to do Captain America as head of the Avengers? Then when I was working on the issue, I discoved that contary to earlier indications, he hadn't yet reverted back to Captain America by Avengers 300 yet but was still 'The Captain'. Eh.) And the Reed/Sue business was simply the last straw.

I had been working to create a lineup that didn't have characters in it that had their own books so I'd be able to tell stories without continuously altering them during their publication. I was forever lengthening or shortening parts of my stories, generally in mid-story to match other comics I had nothing to do with. When that proved to be impossible, I decided that really, I just wasn't the writer for the Avengers.

[...]


EDIT: Fixing major links to match current Comicboards link schema.

[ December 28, 2008, 10:45 PM: Message edited by: Reboot ]
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"However, literally just as I was writing the story introducing Reed and Sue into the Avengers, I was told that editorial approval had been withdrawn. Marvel editorial decided that they had to be put back in the FF, and I had to write them out of the Avengers. I'd been working toward a new lineup for Avengers 300 for almost a year by that time and to have it ripped apart at the last second was, to be relatively blunt, fairly annoying."

That seems to match with what Steve Englehart discussed at his own website. Steve wanted the book to evolve, and "retired" Reed & Sue. But about a year later, "editorial" dictated they had to return. The protracted sequence of "dream" stories Steve did after this was his way of thumbing his nose at "editorial"! I'm sure they were not amused... as soon as his 3-year contract was up, he was OUT, and Simonson was in.

Walt's further comments go some way to "explain" what he was doing on the FF at the time. Personally, I kept wishing they'd brought back Joe Sinnott-- Walt & Joe did ONE issue of THOR together (during his 1st run, when Len Wein was writing) that to my eyes was always THE high point of that run, and I would have loved to have seen a LOT more pages that looked like those.

One thing Walt did on the FF that i thought went too far was his "retcon" of Dr. Doom's personal history. John Byrne, during his run as writer, has said that SEVERAL appearances of Doom in various titles that he, personally, did not like, were NOT really Doom, but Doom robots. There was even an extended period during his own run when Doom was apparently in space (thanks to The Beyonder?) and when he returned he set about putting his house in order.

Walt took this a step further-- and WAY past the point of complete absurdity. According to Walt, EVERY single Dr. Doom story since FF #6 had featured a Doom robot, and only the stories Walt wrote featured the "real" Doom, at last returned from DECADES' worth of comics in space. What a LOAD! (This was YEARS before the infamous "Spider-Clone" thing!!!)

I hung around to the end of Walt's run, then said "goodbye" to the book. In originals or reprints, I have every issue from #1 to the end of Walt's run. After that, only the odd ones here and there... I REALLY liked the initial "Heroes Return" issues with Alan Davis art, but when both he AND his writer got bumped due to behind-the-scenes "office politics" (after ONLY 3 issues!!!) I said, SCREW this! Good thing-- I never read a single Claremont issue of the FF...
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
Walt took this a step further-- and WAY past the point of complete absurdity. According to Walt, EVERY single Dr. Doom story since FF #6 had featured a Doom robot, and only the stories Walt wrote featured the "real" Doom, at last returned from DECADES' worth of comics in space. What a LOAD! (This was YEARS before the infamous "Spider-Clone" thing!!!)

Actually, if you look at that sequence, the only Doom stories Simonson **actually** retcons into being a Doombot are the Englehart Kristoff-kicked-Doom-out-of-Latveria stories. The rest, he merely has Doom **suggest** that it's kept being Doombots, in response to a badly-phrased comment by the Thing - since "they" kept losing!

EDIT: And, yep:

quote:
On Doombots:
> A few questions: One of the stand out stories you did involved Doc Doom and whether or not we've actually seen him since Fantastic Four #6. I thought it was a brilliant story and a very good idea. Given that, was this all just a "mind job", or did you intend for it to be actually true? I would actually explain a lot of continuity gliches with Doom's personality over the years.

Oh no, I wrote the story as real. I believe that DeFalco undid it shortly after he took over the title. Actually, if you go back, you'll see that nowhere in the story does it specify 'which' of Doom's appearances were really Doom and which were robots. Or Kristoph (who's name I can never remember the spelling to!). I've seen a lot of garble over the years saying that I was specifically excluding this appearance or that appearance--the most common 'explanations' on my behalf by fans are that I was excluding every Doom appearance after his first appearance or every appearance after the 'Battle of the Baxter Building' story around FF 40. In fact, nothing in the story suggests anything remotely specific. At the time I took over the FF, Doom had become a rather whiney (whiny?) character whose kingdom had been usurped by Kristoph and he was walking around the Marvel Universe basically begging other characters to help him get it back. Sorry. That's not even remotely what Doom would have done, IMHO. Ergo, it couldn't be Doom. So I wrote a story that demonstrated it wasn't. There was also a lot of continuity tied up in the Doombot stuff that John had written that was simply beyond my rather elementary comprehension.

So I took the Alexander the Great approach. Rather than try to undo the Gordian Knot, I cut it. I didn't care (and have no idea) which appearances of Doom in the entire run of the FF were 'real'. It doesn't matter; that wasn't the point. The point was the you--the reader in general that is--could decide for yourself. I NEVER suggested that this appearance or that appearance was bogus. If it were up to me, ALL of Stan and Jack's work was about the genuine Doom. Of course. After that, it's the reader's call as far as I'm concerned.

Which is something that generally upsets fans. Although fans indulge in plenty of discussion and argument about this or that (who's stronger, can the Hulk break Cap's shield, was Maddy Prior really a clone or bad writing, etc), they really don't like it when the puzzle is actually included as part of the story. It's part of what I see as the tendancy towards absolutism in many fans' approach to continity.

But I don't mind including puzzles for which there is no definite answer. I think it's fun. [Wink]

[Another post in the same line].



[ January 26, 2007, 07:15 AM: Message edited by: Reboot ]
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Prof – as a total Spidey fan (hey, you should stop by my Spidey review thread sometime), I look at that Cobra/Hyde story with Spidey with great fondness! Cobra and Hyde have always been in my top 20 favorite villains of all time (from when I was a wee pre-teen lad reading Silver Age Thor and Daredevil stories) and Stern really used them well in the 80’s. I LOVE that Cap/Hyde story too [Big Grin]

I read the Avengers: Celestial Quest mini a few years ago, but remember not really giving it the true read it deserved (don’t you hate when you do that?). I’ll have to reread it again soon, as I just reread the Celestial Madonna Saga—LAST WEEKEND! I’ll have to find some time today (stupid work!) to post some additional thoughts on it. I think there is still tons of room to revisit Mantis without retreading old ground.

Reboot – Thanks for posting those links! It’s interesting to hear Simonsin’s explanation on what he was thinking when he was working on Avengers. I guess, for the most part, that putting Reed and Sue somewhere in a title is an honorable thing to do (though I really don’t like seeing them as Avengers), but this was during that unmemorable (to me) period where Sharon Ventura was She-Thing and the Thing was ‘Spikey Guy’, Crystal was a member, etc. Actually, thanks for the link to the website. Busiek, Simonsin, Harras, etc. all posting is pretty interesting!
 
Posted by Ultra Jorge on :
 
Funny thing about the FF members in the Avengers. I always thought Johnny would fit in best and he's the one that has never joined.

I hated Reed & Sue in the Avengers BUT I LOVED Ben in the WCA!!! That was great chemistry.
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ultra Jorge:
Funny thing about the FF members in the Avengers. I always thought Johnny would fit in best and he's the one that has never joined.

Depends - out-of-continuity, he's an Avenger in Davis' FF: The End. In-continuity, you're right though.

And, going back to reply to a couple of other bits of prof's post:

quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
That seems to match with what Steve Englehart discussed at his own website. Steve wanted the book to evolve, and "retired" Reed & Sue. But about a year later, "editorial" dictated they had to return. The protracted sequence of "dream" stories Steve did after this was his way of thumbing his nose at "editorial"! I'm sure they were not amused... as soon as his 3-year contract was up, he was OUT, and Simonson was in.

Actually, Englehart was booted before the dream stories - but they didn't have a replacement lined up, so they made him fill out his contract. Ergo, the abysmal "John Harkness" dream-stories...

quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
Walt's further comments go some way to "explain" what he was doing on the FF at the time. Personally, I kept wishing they'd brought back Joe Sinnott-- Walt & Joe did ONE issue of THOR together (during his 1st run, when Len Wein was writing) that to my eyes was always THE high point of that run, and I would have loved to have seen a LOT more pages that looked like those.

Those were only Simonson-breakdowns though (very loose pencils), with Sinott finishes. Sinott inking finished-Simonson-pencils would have looked a lot more like Simonson's other work - as it was, those issues are halfway to Sinott pencilling & inking.

quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
I REALLY liked the initial "Heroes Return" issues with Alan Davis art, but when both he AND his writer got bumped due to behind-the-scenes "office politics" (after ONLY 3 issues!!!) I said, SCREW this! Good thing-- I never read a single Claremont issue of the FF...

Davis wasn't bumped - he's said umpteen times he only ever committed to three issues, because he was working on some lots-of-work, short-publication-time projects (might have been JLA: The Nail, which was three double-or-treble-sized issues, come to think of it) and he wanted some issues out that calendar year.

Lobdell, however, WAS bumped, for reasons which have never been entirely clear (I've heard one story most often, but I don't know if I should post it since I can't confirm it...)

[ January 26, 2007, 04:57 PM: Message edited by: Reboot ]
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"Prof – as a total Spidey fan (hey, you should stop by my Spidey review thread sometime)"

I did read your entire thread. The longer it went on, the more painful it became for me... but that's ME. I didn't want to rain on your parade, since you enjoy the books so much. (I guess I'm just getting too cynical.)


"if you look at that sequence"

Are you KIDDING? It was too painful the FIRST time! I think Walt was completely out of control. That's why I dropped the book after reading it nonstop for 2 DECADES. I knew Walt was better than DeFalco, so NO WAY I was gonna put up with HIM! [Smile]


"Cobra and Hyde have always been in my top 20 favorite villains of all time"

The very 1st THOR solo story I ever read was the 2nd half of the one about the "house of traps", "The Power Of The Thunder God". I was thrilled to get a copy of that a few years ago, and posted a really nice clean-up of the cover at the GCD...

http://www.comics.org/coverview.lasso?id=18824&zoom=4


"I read the Avengers: Celestial Quest mini a few years ago, but remember not really giving it the true read it deserved (don’t you hate when you do that?)."

The only "problem" I had with it was, part of it was a sequel to stuff I'd never read, during all those years I stopped reading AVENGERS. Based on Steve's comments, it's possible my never having read all that other stuff was a GOOD thing.

My favorite moment in the mini has nothing to do with the story-- it was when, in part 7 (of 8), the artist blew the deadline, and they got JOE STATON-- Steve's collaborator on GREEN LANTERN CORPS-- to fill in!! So cartoony you'd think he'd be a terrible fit on any modern "Marvel" book, yet in truth, a visual breath of fresh air, and to my eyes, MUCH better than the guy who did the other 7 chapters! I wish Joe had drawn the ENTIRE story.


"Englehart was booted before the dream stories - but they didn't have a replacement lined up, so they made him fill out his contract. Ergo, the abysmal "John Harkness" dream-stories..."

Sounds like PURE editorial INCOMPETENCE to me. All those months and they couldn't find ANY writer to take his place? SHEESH! Steve claims those were pretty much the stories he WOULD have written anyway, except they were framed as "dream" stories to satisfy the editorial dictates. At the time, I just thought he was "writing down" (dumbing down) the book in response to Mantis being ejected from the MU.


"Those were only Simonson-breakdowns though (very loose pencils), with Sinnott finishes. Sinnott inking finished-Simonson-pencils would have looked a lot more like Simonson's other work - as it was, those issues are halfway to Sinnott pencilling & inking."

Yeah? So? THEY LOOK GREAT!!!!!

[Smile]

The rest of that run was pencilled & inked by Tony DeZuniga, over LAYOUTS by John Buscema (boring and ugly as hell) and Walt (less boring, but still ugly). Now, if they'd gotten Tony to draw the book ENTIRELY on his own, THEN it might have looked interesting! 95% (or more) or books Tony has inked over others just wind up looking like a collosal waste of everybody's talent to me. (Ever seen his work on INFINITY INC.? Aaaaaaugh!!!)


"Davis wasn't bumped - he's said umpteen times he only ever committed to three issues, because he was working on some lots-of-work, short-publication-time projects"

Then I blame BOTH Davis AND the editor. I only picked up the series at all because Davis was pencilling. What the HELL kind of "commitment" is 3 ISSUES? (That's like Christopher Eccleston signing on for DOCTOR WHO and going in, in advance, planning to ONLY do ONE season. It's NUTS!)
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
"" "The Stern/Gruenwald stuff – wow, I never really heard any of this stuff until Legion World (I’ve heard you both speak of it before). That’s all truly too bad and I hate to hear about problems between creators and editors causing potentially great comic book runs to never see light."

The story I read was, Gruenwald got Stern in his office to discuss the next year's worth of issues. Stern went home that weekend to figure out how to make it work. He came in Monday and told Gruenwald he couldn't figure out any way of doing it that wouldn't VIOLATE the integrity of every single character involved. Gruenwald told him, "Fine, then I'll get somebody who can." Stern was out,""


In recent years, Stern has added some details: the core problem was that they disagreed about Captain Marvel -- Stern wanted her to remain leader, Gruenwald wanted her to be replaced by Captain America, in order to boost sales of Cap's solo book (written, at the time, by Gruenwald). Stern refused, insisting that any story with Steve replacing Monica would be racist and sexist. Gruenwald had more power than Stern, so Gruenwald got his way, and IMO Avengers didn't get good again until the Harras/Epting era.

I've also heard a story from another source that Gruenwald wanted to kill off Monica during the Nebula/Terminus Saga!! Luckily, Stern won that particular battle.


"Davis wasn't bumped - he's said umpteen times he only ever committed to three issues, because he was working on some lots-of-work, short-publication-time projects (might have been JLA: The Nail, which was three double-or-treble-sized issues, come to think of it) and he wanted some issues out that calendar year.

Lobdell, however, WAS bumped, for reasons which have never been entirely clear (I've heard one story most often, but I don't know if I should post it since I can't confirm it...)"


Could you please PM the story to me, Reboot? I always like finding out the behind-the-scenes stuff, good or bad.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"I've also heard a story from another source that Gruenwald wanted to kill off Monica during the Nebula/Terminus Saga!!"

Sounds to me like he had a bad "thing" about other people's characters. He wanted Monica killed; and he wanted Mantis GONE, permanently! (Mantis, of course, did return... after Gruenwald was gone, permanently. Sigh...)
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
"Prof – as a total Spidey fan (hey, you should stop by my Spidey review thread sometime)"

I did read your entire thread. The longer it went on, the more painful it became for me... but that's ME. I didn't want to rain on your parade, since you enjoy the books so much. (I guess I'm just getting too cynical.)

*choke* I hope its the actual issues of Spidey's mag and not my reviews that were painful! [Smile] I tend to be overly possitive and upbeat when reviewing Spidey, but I understand how people could not be completely thrilled with some of those eras... [Smile]
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"*choke* I hope its the actual issues of Spidey's mag and not my reviews that were painful!"

Yes. I was telling a friend (and fellow comics fan) about your thread, and I told him, this guy so clearly loves these books, it wouldn't be polite for me to dump on 'em, just because of how I've come to feel over the years.

One of the reasons I wanted to pull out my 60's comics and re-read them was so i could experience all over again the stuff I DID enjoy. Just as someone here said they refused to read the Simonson AVENGERS issues on principle, there's no point in going back over comics you DON'T like. There's too much good stuff out there-- you just gotta find it!

[Smile]


Of course, this doesn't explain the lengthy reviews of the late-60's CAPTAIN MARVEL I did for Klordny. that was more like watching a train-wreck in slow motion, and not believing what you're seeing. It can't POSSIBLY be THAT bad-- can it? Oh my God-- IT'S WORSE! (How do things like that happen???)

[Smile]

I admit, it cracks me up that, to date, the only 2 series I've ever done in-depth reviews of for my a.p.a. were CM and GL-- 2 "sci-fi series GONE BAD". I suppose it's interesting-- and frustrating-- to see something with a ton of potential gone horribly astray...
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
quote:
Just as someone here said they refused to read the Simonson AVENGERS issues on principle, there's no point in going back over comics you DON'T like.
C'est moi. [Big Grin]

And thanks to the internet and to publications like The Official Marvel Index to the Avengers, it's possible to find out what happened in those stories without even reading those comics in the first place.


Avengers Volume One # 305-333

By this time, changes had taken place in Avengers, none of them for the better. John Buscema had left after # 300, and his eventual replacement as regular Avengers penciler was Paul Ryan, whose pleasant but low-key style was all wrong for Avengers; Mark Gruenwald had left after # 303, and his replacement as editor was the infamous Howard Mackie. Worst of all, John Byrne, fresh from commiting character assasinations over in WCA, now became the writer of BOTH Avengers books! At least Tom Palmer was still around to provide an attractive finish to the art.

While I think Byrne did some great artwork during the 1970s and early 1980s, I've never had much time for him as a writer. I don't think Byrne ever really mastered the craft of writing, because his first regular writing gig (Fantastic Four) was an immediate commercial success.

Byrne's first crime was in de-stabilizing the Avengers lineup so that he could pick and choose any characters he wanted for particular stories. If he was a better writer, he would have realized that without a stable lineup, Avengers would become unfocused, which it did. Then there were the matters of structure and pace -- his Eternals/Blastaar story (the one with the most potential to be a good story, IMO) was compressed into only three issues, and spent way too much time on the setup; on the opposite end, his Nebula/Stranger story was painfully stretched out across five issues (Byrne didn't even finish this story because he quit both Avengers and WCA so abruptly -- Fabian Nicieza's last-minute resolution was pretty lame, but I think Byrne's would have been even worse.)

Byrne's single positive contribution to the Avengers was bringing Sersi into the team, although Byrne and the other pre-Harras writers stuck to Sersi's established characterization as a one-dimensional party girl in a stupid-looking green bikini.

As noted above, Fabian Nicieza jumped aboard to end a story that Byrne left unfinished. Nicieza stuck around long enough to plot and script a six-part bi-weekly story arc entitled The Crossing Line. I've long felt that Nicieza's prolific writing falls into three categories: 1) stories he passionately cares about; 2) energetic but half-baked stories; 3) outright hackwork. The Crossing Line falls into the second category -- on one hand, the pace never lets up and the tons of guest stars (Soviet Super Soldiers, Atlanteans, Alpha Flight) all serve a purpose; on the other hand, it plummets from the sublime to the ridiculous after the nuclear bomb detonates. The rushed-looking art (inevitable on a bi-weekly schedule) doesn't help. These six issues each had a five-page backup story written by Mark Gruenwald, in which the members of the Avengers' staff each become mind-controlled by villains from Captain America's solo book. This culminates in the self-contained, Gruenwald-written issue # 325, one of the single worst Avengers issues every published. If Gruenwald was hoping to attract readers to Captain America's solo book, it's more likely this story had the opposite effect.

But wait -- it gets even worse! The next Avengers writer was Larry Hama, who wrote excellent stories for G.I. Joe, and terrible stories for any superhero title unlucky enough to have him on board. Hama's Avengers issues just reek of his smug contempt for superheroes. He tries to be jokey, deconstructive, gritty, and topical all at once, and fails in every way. To give but one example, Hama's pet character, Rage, wants to clean up the streets, so he demolishes a crackhouse, the implication being that none of the people inside deserved to live. Another example -- when reporters ask Captain America about ex-villain turned Avenger the Sandman's criminal record, Cap replies, "He got a full pardon. If it was good enough for Nixon, it's good enough for him." Obviously no one told Hama that Nixon turned out to be the villain in one of Cap's solo stories. :groan:

I'm glad to have put all that awfulness behind me. Next week, Bob Harras & Steve Epting finally arrive, beginning my favorite Avengers era ever!!
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Avengers Volume One # 305-333

Uh…as Stealth says, another groan-worthy era. Most of this era is unmemorable, and I’ll add a few comments to summarize my thoughts:

- Byrne on both Avengers titles – Byrne’s typically declining work during this period as his stories continued to worsen and his character moments and set-up seemed more and more forced. Basically, there just wasn’t enough ‘oomph’ for an Avengers title.

- De-stabilizing the line-up – as many writers have learned over the years, this is a sure-fire way to lead the team into a period where no one is generally caring about the stories because no one is caring about the heroes, since you never know who is going to be around. This also generally feels like the period where a sense of ‘anyone can be an Avenger’ begins to take hold, despite there being past members that some might not consider Avengers material. This probably has more to do with Byrne’s style of using whoever he wanted.

- Sersi – I never generally cared about Sersi at all until the upcoming Harras/Epting era. But her addition here, although she didn’t have much of a personality yet, marks the beginning of another character that would later begin to ‘feel’ like an Avenger in another traditional sense that the Hulk started and some others followed (including possibly Mantis) – that of one that you didn’t really want to rely on.

- Quasar – I also remember this as a period when Quasar was in the Avengers, which to me is more of marker of the time period this era falls into in the general larger picture of the Marvel U. Quasar is yet another character that I’ve never felt any real passion for, even though I don’t dislike him. I liked the notion that he carried on for Captain Marvel as Protector of the Universe (though what Marvel is thinking these days in regards to this is anyone’s guess).

- Larry Hama – Here’s a quick note that someone might find funny. When I first really got into the internet, it was on the old DC Message Boards, generally on the Legion Board, which most of you know led to the creation of this board in some form or another. But I also was on the Batman Board’s quite a bit, and there used to be a camaraderie of posters there equivalent to the LMB here on the Legion Board. Well, during this time period (Spring 1999), Larry Hama was on Batman for probably no more than a (6) issue arc, but it was SO BAD, that the posters there deciding to hold Larry Hama accountable and we created a genuine ‘The People versus Larry Hama’, in which he was tried (and even was given a defense team), and actually found guilty of attempting to destroy Batman and all of Batman’s fans. I generally feel that whether he means to or not, Larry Hama has continually been a part of horrific runs on comic books like this over the years.

- Rage – a rather annoying character and one who didn’t belong as an Avenger. At best, he worked semi-well in the New Warriors, but in reality, he was nothing more than the transition of the old African American stereotypes pushed into a new stereotype (whether with good intentions or not) and forced into an Avengers story.

- Sandman – I like Sandman too, being a Spider-Man fan, and I didn’t even mind him being quasi-good (though I do prefer him as a villain/antagonist). But he also did not have a place in the Avengers. I can see how it was somewhat reminiscent of the Swordsman, but honestly, the execution was so poor (and worse, boring) that it wasn’t worth having him locked in as an Avenger for future stories.

Luckily, all of this above was relatively brief and there was some extraordinary stuff to come, with perhaps my favorite era of all for the Avengers.
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
quote:
- Quasar – I also remember this as a period when Quasar was in the Avengers, which to me is more of marker of the time period this era falls into in the general larger picture of the Marvel U. Quasar is yet another character that I’ve never felt any real passion for, even though I don’t dislike him. I liked the notion that he carried on for Captain Marvel as Protector of the Universe (though what Marvel is thinking these days in regards to this is anyone’s guess).
Quasar's early Avengers appearances were so unmemorable, I forgot while I was writing my review that he was in the book at all during that era. [Big Grin]

I came to like him after Operation Galactic Storm, and when I decided to use him as a point-of-view character in my first Imperial Guard fanfic, I started to really like him over the course of writing that story.

He certainly deserved better than to be killed off (or was he?) during Annihilation.

quote:
- Larry Hama – Here’s a quick note that someone might find funny. When I first really got into the internet, it was on the old DC Message Boards, generally on the Legion Board, which most of you know led to the creation of this board in some form or another. But I also was on the Batman Board’s quite a bit, and there used to be a camaraderie of posters there equivalent to the LMB here on the Legion Board. Well, during this time period (Spring 1999), Larry Hama was on Batman for probably no more than a (6) issue arc, but it was SO BAD, that the posters there deciding to hold Larry Hama accountable and we created a genuine ‘The People versus Larry Hama’, in which he was tried (and even was given a defense team), and actually found guilty of attempting to destroy Batman and all of Batman’s fans. I generally feel that whether he means to or not, Larry Hama has continually been a part of horrific runs on comic books like this over the years.
[ROTFLMAO] Great story, Cobie. Thanks, because I needed a good laugh today.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Stealth:
quote:
- Quasar – I also remember this as a period when Quasar was in the Avengers, which to me is more of marker of the time period this era falls into in the general larger picture of the Marvel U. Quasar is yet another character that I’ve never felt any real passion for, even though I don’t dislike him. I liked the notion that he carried on for Captain Marvel as Protector of the Universe (though what Marvel is thinking these days in regards to this is anyone’s guess).
Quasar's early Avengers appearances were so unmemorable, I forgot while I was writing my review that he was in the book at all during that era. [Big Grin]

I came to like him after Operation Galactic Storm, and when I decided to use him as a point-of-view character in my first Imperial Guard fanfic, I started to really like him over the course of writing that story.

He certainly deserved better than to be killed off (or was he?) during Annihilation.

Actually, I probably know him more from your fanfic than anything Marvel has actually done! [Smile] He just never interested me in the MU.

In Annhilation, he died at the end of Nova #3, but apparently, there is a new Quasar series on there horizon, though I can't remember anything about it.

Glad you liked the Larry Hama story. It was as ridiculous and over the top as you can imagine, complete with an Alt ID as Mr. Freeze being the 'icey' judge. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"At least Tom Palmer was still around to provide an attractive finish to the art."

Yeah, he really became for THE AVENGERS what Joe Sinnott had long been to FANTASTIC FOUR (at least, until John Byrne decided he wanted the art to look really ugly on purpose-- a tribute to the "George Bell" era, no doubt?).


"Byrne didn't even finish this story because he quit both Avengers and WCA so abruptly"

He seems to do a LOT of that, doesn't he? ("I'm gonna take my ball and go home!")


I remember at first thinking Rage was really Luke CAGE, in disguise, since he was MIA at the time and wanted for a murder he didn't commit (and which John Byrne exonerated him for-- in NAMOR THE SUB-MARINER, of all places). The truth of his identity & background was quite surprising, but to me, somewhat disappointing.


Larry Hama first impressed me as a penciller, on 4 of the first 5 episodes of IRON FIST (all inked by Dick Giordano). Great stuff. Later, he wrote the even more brutally violent SAMURAI series in EERIE magazine, all illustrated by Val Mayerik. (This was later continued in a book titled YOUNG MASTER, also by Mayerik, though i forget if Hama wrote it). I recall his AVENGERS being not that bad... but then, I'm sure there were a lot MORE, WORSE books I was reading at the time. I suppose one could say it was the culmination of Gruenwald, Byrne, Hama, Nicieza AND early Harras that finally made me stop reading the book. Oh well!


"Quasar's early Avengers appearances were so unmemorable"

Anybody remember his debut in CAPTAIN AMERICA, as "Marvel Man" ?
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Cobie, what would you think of the idea of putting Bendis on trial in this thread? [Wink]


Avengers Volume One # 334-344

The striking cover to # 334 makes it clear what has been lacking in Avengers for the last few years: a sense of urgency. As Captain America charges to rescue Quicksilver from the assault of new villain Thane Ector, one can feel the intensity and the darkness rushing through Avengers again -- something not seen since the Roger Stern/John Buscema era. From here on, the raw energy of Bob Harras's story builds and builds across six bi-weekly issues -- Ector and his warlike race, the Brethren, attacking first the Inhumans' settlement on the moon, then Earth; Sersi bringing out shades of grey in Ector; the team of Black Panther, Beast, Quasar and Hank Pym investigating the origin of the Brethren; Crystal earnestly volunteering to join the Avengers; the shocking cosmic-level revelations involving both the Brethren, and their former captor, the Collector; and at the end, a rousingly good final battle.

Where the artwork is concerned, there are still
the rough spots inevitable to bi-weekly releases. As Steve Epting tells it in a 1993 interview:

quote:
Howard Mackie called me from a mailed-in submission, right before he left editing. At that time, Avengers was running bi-weekly, and another penciler was needed to alternate every other issue. [Andy Kubert, who pencilled only # 334] didn't work out, and I wound up doing [almost] all the bi-weeklies.
Had Mackie not been replaced as editor by Ralph Macchio, it's quite possible that Harras would have been only the latest writer to pass through the revolving door. Harras himself confirmed it in a 1993 interview:

quote:
As to how he came to write Avengers, Harras jokingly related that he was asked to help out with the writing chores "because the book was going bi-weekly...you know, it was only a temporary thing, because I wasn't intending to do the book on a regular basis," he said. "No one ever said, 'Okay, here's Avengers, it's yours.' It was more like, 'Do me a favor, handle it for a couple of months.' I'm still wondering when it's going to end," he added, laughing.
Following a fill-in issue (# 340), Fabian Nicieza guest-wrote a two-parter guest starring the New Warriors (pencilled by Epting, showing for the first time on Avengers just how good he really is). The main purpose of this story was to write Rage out of Avengers and into New Warriors. Nicieza's story, dealing with racial tensions (this was during the aftermath of the Rodney King beating) is much better-written than his previous Avengers story, although it is definitely more typical of New Warriors.

# 343 is where the Harras/Epting era truly begins: Crystal being officially welcomed into the team, and the last-page introduction of Swordsman II and Magdalene. There is also the introduction of the first stable lineup since the Stern/Buscema era -- Captain America, Black Widow, Black Knight, Crystal, Vision, Hercules, Sersi (MIA), and Thor Substitute (who would mercifully be written out of the book after about a year) -- and one of the high points of this issue is the conversation between Captain America and Black Widow:

BW: Steve, it's nearly 2 AM...we've got an early meeting with the West Coast branch tomorrow. Is anything wrong?

CA: No, 'Tasha. Just couldn't sleep. I've got things on my mind, so I decided to get some work done.

BW: Are you worried about Crystal and ["Thor"]? Really, there's no need, they did fine...or...is it Rage?

CA: Partially. It just seems too many mistakes are being made lately, 'Tasha. Members are coming and going as if there were a revolving door here...there's no stability to the team. Sandman leaves before his ID card is printed! Rage turns out to be a child...even Sersi hasn't been seen in weeks! It makes you wonder...

BW: Wonder what?

CA: Being an Avenger used to mean something! It was a mark of honor, distinction. We were a fellowship of friends. Now it's...I don't know...changed. We've become an ill-defined group of strangers. Stop me if I'm sounding like an elitist.

BW: You? Never. No, you're just a man who cares.

CA: Maybe I'm living in the past. Lord knows I've been accused enough about that in my time. But I can't help worrying. The Avengers gave my life meaning again, I believe in what they stand for. And I can't shake the feeling that something's gone terribly wrong. [pause] Now it is time to hit the hay. Sorry for the maudlin speech.

BW: Steve, you always make maudlin speeches...that's why we love you!

CA: Please...!

# 344 features a thrilling battle against Swordsman II and Magdalene, and the introduction of mysterious new villain Proctor, beginning the longest, most complex, and most ambitious Avengers story since Mantis/Swordsman/Vision/Scarlet Witch. Magdalene is often assumed to be an alternate-world version of Mantis, but according to The Appendix to the Handbook of the Marvel Universe (http://www.marvunapp.com), she's actually the Marvel analog to DC's Big Barda. I really love Swordsman II (Philip) and Magdalene. They've been missing from the MU for almost a decade now, and I'd love to see them back someday (but not until Marvel's current editorial regime is gone.)

Next week: Operation Galactic Storm!!

[ February 06, 2007, 06:46 PM: Message edited by: Stealth ]
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
Well, she was never Mantis - I mean, we SAW her MU counterpart (and saw her killed off at that!) didn't we?

One thing that always bugged me a bit though - given Proctor's history, he took being spurned by her as opposed to killing her & Swordsman straight away?

[ February 06, 2007, 04:26 PM: Message edited by: Reboot ]
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
quote:
Well, she was never Mantis - I mean, we SAW her MU counterpart (and saw her killed off at that!) didn't we?
Of course we did. But you may be surprised (or not) at how many people on the internet overlook the details and automatically assume that just because she's with an alternate-world Swordsman, it automatically means she's an alternate-world Mantis. Another thing that a lot of people overlook is the great scene in # 357 where the Avengers are questioning Swordsman, and he reveals that the Mantis of his world looked nothing like the Earth-616 Mantis, but she was a dead ringer for Moondragon.

quote:
One thing that always bugged me a bit though - given Proctor's history, he took being spurned by her as opposed to killing her & Swordsman straight away?
It's a legimate flaw in the story, but I can live with it. And since we never learned that much about these characters' back story, I think it is possible to come up with a credible reason for Proctor letting Swordsman and Magdalene live.

A couple things I forgot to post earlier:

-- Steve Epting's style was particularly refreshing at the time, because he wasn't a Jim Lee clone or a Rob Liefeld clone. Epting combined the best of the old (smooth, eye-pleasing draftsmanship) and the new (dramatic layouts, particularly from the late 350s on.)

-- Starting with # 343, Tom Palmer began doing double-duty as both inker and colorist. The improvement in the book's look was considerable, both richer and more subtle at the same time.

[ February 06, 2007, 06:53 PM: Message edited by: Stealth ]
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"he reveals that the Mantis of his world looked nothing like the Earth-616 Mantis, but she was a dead ringer for Moondragon"

This makes sense. I recall a scene (somebody??) where Heather Douglas was complaining about how "superior" her upbringing was compared to Mantis (did SHE ever have a "real" name?), and she felt somehow gyped that the Kotati had picked that WHORE to become The Celestial Madonna instead of her. (And if memory serves, someone pointed out it was Heather's very air of "superiority" that nixed her as one of the choices! Like Thor, pre-Donald Blake, she needed to learn some humility.


"Steve Epting's style was particularly refreshing at the time, because he wasn't a Jim Lee clone or a Rob Liefeld clone. Epting combined the best of the old (smooth, eye-pleasing draftsmanship) and the new (dramatic layouts, particularly from the late 350s on.)"

I remember thinking his drawing reminded me of Neal Adams, except with layouts that better aided the story (less of that, "LOOK at me! Aren't I FLASHY just for the sake of it?" kinda thing).

I really dug it when Steve Epting teamed up with Dan Jurgens on AQUAMAN. At the time, it looked like the most "70's Marvel" book I had seen in ages! DAMN shame it got cancelled in only about a year. It's mostly been chaos & crapola since.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Avengers Volume One # 334-344

Late as usual, but I’m here [Big Grin]

As I’ve said many times before, this is one of my favorite eras of the Avengers, if not my actual favorite. When the Harras Avengers were coming out, it was when I started reading Avengers in ‘real time’, aka when I was reading the actual issues coming out off the newsstands, as opposed to reading my Father’s massive boxes of back-issues. Harras had a similar type of style to writing the Avengers that Stern and Englehart had, with some definite additional qualities to his writing that I loved. What he would do was acknowledge all of Marvel’s past continuity, and then move forward with it, doing *new* plots and bits with the characters, taking them new places that made sense when viewed in reference to the old. That is the truest and purest way to write in a shared universe with a shared continuity, and Harras not only was able to address that, he was able to make it work for him, just like Stern was able to.

The truly great Harras stuff comes slightly after these initial ten issues, but right away we see some great bits.

- Crystal – one of my favorite Marvel characters of all. Her addition to the Avengers helps *make* the team for me, and I love every minute of it. Its her relationship with the Black Knight that is perhaps my favorite of all Marvel romances, but I also love the drama-filled relationships (not romantic per se) with the Vision and Quicksilver and the rest. I love Crystal here, and I think this is the best she’s ever been written in her history.

- The line-up. The line-up during this era is one that is really very cool. In a way, its full of classic Avengers that never had a chance to really shine before, but it also feels so fresh and so firmly plant in this era. Hercules finally gets some great ongoing character bits and dynamics, and Sersi comes into her own. The Black Knight becomes the break out star, with his ‘whatever it takes’ attitude, and the Black Widow shines for the first time since basically her run in Daredevil’s title in the early 70’s. At first, this tried and true Avenger’s fan thought it would be odd for Captain America not to be the team leader, but by the middle of Harras’ run, I wanted Natasha to have that role.

- that scene you posted Stealth is a great example of the type of dialogue and scenes Harras would do. He could truly convey the sense of history, sense of camaraderie, and sense of progression in a brief second.

- The Proctor & the Gatherers story – although this really comes into play later, the beginning of this story was also very well-done, full of intrigue and mystery and adding a whole new angle to what was to come. Between this ongoing storyline and Operation: Galactic Storm and its ramifications (specifically the follow-up Kree story which I thought was even better), Harras was able to keep two running threads going throughout his run.

- Swordsman II and Magdalene – I like these two characters as well, and I like how they interact with the Avengers throughout. The Swordsman is cool here (for the first time ever in the history of the character) and I’m glad to know they’re out there somewhere (Busiek sent them *somewhere* in his Avengers annual). I like that Harras introduced new characters like Stern and Englehart before him, even if they are generally seen as ‘his’.

- BTW, I love that Moondragon/Mantis bit the Swordsman drops in. There’s all kinds of cool stuff like that in these issues.

- Epting’s art – I’m a huge fan of Steve Epting’s art and feel he’s doing his best art today on Captain America. Here it was a pleasure too, and I definitely see the Neal Adams resemblance, though also a John Buscema one too in a way. It was a very different kind of art when compared to everything else at the time (unfortunately, Mike Deodato’s art that followed didn’t do it for me, though I generally like his art when he’s ‘reigned in’.)

Also, a word on Thunderstrike/Eric Masterson – well, just like I’ve read the entire Spidey run many times, I’ve also read the entire run of Thor comics from his very start to the current issues a few times. Where I generally hated Eric Masterson at first, I’ve come to love all the eras of Thor, no matter how bad they got—and man, where there some really crappy eras. So, its funny, but I’ve come to have a soft spot for Eric, though I didn’t like it when Thor was ‘Thor-lite’ with Eric at the helm. Rereading the Harras Avengers issues though, I kind of like that he was there for a bit before they got rid of him. The problem with Thunderstrike was that he was honestly just ‘filling Thor’s spot’, so when the real deal finally came back, which was needed, Thunderstrike had to stand on his own, which he couldn’t. I wish somehow he could’ve, but that’s here nor there.
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
One little point on the art - I thought and think Tom Palmer's inks were a really bad mismatch with Epting's pencils. Take a look at Epting's fill-in on Uncanny X-Men #319 where Dan Green & Tim Townsend inked the pencils very lightly to see what I mean.
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
As I’ve said many times before, this is one of my favorite eras of the Avengers, if not my actual favorite. When the Harras Avengers were coming out, it was when I started reading Avengers in ‘real time’, aka when I was reading the actual issues coming out off the newsstands, as opposed to reading my Father’s massive boxes of back-issues.

The Harras era was my first "real time" Avengers reading, too. I had been raised on funny-animal comics, and I only got into superhero comics right after I graduated high school. Along with Peter David's Hulk, Alan Davis's Excalibur, Alan Grant & Barry Kitson's L.E.G.I.O.N., and Mark Waid's Flash, it's still just as much of a good read today as it was back then, maybe better. That doesn't hold true of other comics I was reading at the time (to give one example, the Danny Ketch Ghost Rider and the other Midnight Sons books. [Embarrassed] )

quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
Harras had a similar type of style to writing the Avengers that Stern and Englehart had, with some definite additional qualities to his writing that I loved. What he would do was acknowledge all of Marvel’s past continuity, and then move forward with it, doing *new* plots and bits with the characters, taking them new places that made sense when viewed in reference to the old. That is the truest and purest way to write in a shared universe with a shared continuity, and Harras not only was able to address that, he was able to make it work for him, just like Stern was able to.

Absolutely. Thanks to Harras, we had:

- A Sersi who was intense and moody without ever losing her sense of style or her sense of humor.

- A Black Knight who was bold and assertive, rather than reactive.

- A Hercules who was still a ferocious warrior, but who had actually learned from his lessons in humility during the Stern Era.

- A Vision who slowly regained the personality that Byrne had stripped him of.

And of course...

quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
- Crystal – one of my favorite Marvel characters of all. Her addition to the Avengers helps *make* the team for me, and I love every minute of it. Its her relationship with the Black Knight that is perhaps my favorite of all Marvel romances, but I also love the drama-filled relationships (not romantic per se) with the Vision and Quicksilver and the rest. I love Crystal here, and I think this is the best she’s ever been written in her history.

Once again, I totally agree. As written by Harras, Crystal took responsibility for her selfish actions in Steve Engelhart's stories and searched for redemption by joining the Avengers. She was a kind person, a loving mother, and a kick-ass superheroine all at once; I would say she went so far as to inspire me to try to be nicer and less selfish! Not bad for a fictional character.

It's sad that, to paraphrase something Reboot said earlier in this thread, the only thing anyone at Marvel remembers about her today is that she cheated on Quicksilver. No, it's more than sad, it's a crime.

quote:
Originally posted by Reboot:
One little point on the art - I thought and think Tom Palmer's inks were a really bad mismatch with Epting's pencils. Take a look at Epting's fill-in on Uncanny X-Men #319 where Dan Green & Tim Townsend inked the pencils very lightly to see what I mean.

I don't completely disagree about Palmer's inks over Epting's pencils, but I think there were more instances of Palmer retaining Epting's essence than of Palmer overwhelming Epting. I think the main problem is that Epting is simply once of the most difficult artists to ink, and I've never been 100% pleased with anyone's work. Al Williamson preserved the delicacy of Epting's pencils, but he also tended to oversimplify; Rick Magyar kept the amount of detail right, but his lines tended to be stiff where Epting's linework is fluid. Really, Epting's best inker is Epting himself. Here's a good example:

 -

[ February 13, 2007, 10:46 AM: Message edited by: Stealth ]
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
OPERATION: GALACTIC STORM


When I think of Operation: Galactic Storm, I think grandeur, I think colorful spectacle...but most importantly, I think space opera with substance, tragedy on an epic scale, and one of the most daring endings ever published in a mainstream superhero comic book.

Despite being spread out across 19 (!) issues (22 if you count the epilogues) of 7 different comics (Avengers, Avengers West Coast, Captain America, Iron Man, Thor, Quasar, Wonder Man), there are hardly any wasted panels at all. Unlike Marvel’s earlier attempts at this kind of mega-crossover – Evolutionary War in the 1988 annuals and Atlantis Attacks in the 1989 annuals – Operation: Galactic Storm has a tightly structured and well-thought-out story. It began with a plot for Quasar’s solo book, which Mark Gruenwald the writer quickly realized was too big for just one book, and which Mark Gruenwald the Executive Editor realized would please the Powers That Be who wanted the next Big Event. Although many writers and editors would work on the story (and, according to Ralph Macchio, even the letterers and colorists contributed story bits), there was a firm creative core in the trio of Gruenwald, Bob Harras, and Fabian Nicieza, who together produced a detailed outline. I personally think that Nicieza (who had no writing credit, and whose only O:GS credit of any kind was as editor of Wonder Man) is the true unsung hero, because later that same year (1992), there was another surprisingly good mega-crossover, the X-Cutioner’s Song in the X-Books, and that one was mostly Nicieza’s baby.

Operation: Galactic Storm is a sequel of sorts to the Kree-Skrull War – once again, there are two alien empires fighting, with Earth caught in the middle – but there are crucial differences: 1) This time it’s the Kree vs. the Shi’ar with the Skrulls in a sneakier (but important) position, and 2) This time there are a clear beginning, middle, and end – a particularly powerful ending which carries overtones of America’s bombing of Hiroshima during World War II.

This story is also notable for its cast of thousands: almost everyone who was ever an Avenger, plus guest appearances by Rick Jones, Her, Carol Danvers (as Binary), and the Starjammers, plus Kree villains varying from vintage (the Supreme Intelligence, Ronan the Accuser) to new (Captain Atlas, Korath, Shatterax) to ultra-obscure (Ultimus, Dr. Minerva), plus the Skrulls including Super-Skrull, plus the Shi’ar Imperial Guard a.k.a. Marvel’s Legion of Super-Heroes (including brand-new analogs of Dawnstar, Karate Kid, Rond Vidar, Matter-Eater Lad, and Bouncing Boy), plus Shi’ar Empress Lilandra and her mad sister Deathbird. Amazingly, out of all of these characters, there is not one who doesn't serve a purpose!

The extensive use of characters from the insular X-Corner of the Marvel Universe (authorized by Bob Harras in his role as X-Editor) has been criticized, which I think is ridiculous. Why should the X-Creators be the only ones to play with those beautiful Dave Cockrum-designed toys? Besides, as I said earlier in this thread, almost all of the key players of the Kree-Skrull War had been introduced in the pages of Fantastic Four, and no one complained about that.

As much as I love Operation: Galactic Storm, it’s not perfect, not with so many cooks at the same pot. The scripting varies wildly in quality, and the three Avengers tie-ins drawn by Steve Epting (# 345-347) are arguably the only good art. But, like the Celestial Madonna Saga, which also had a lot of dodgy art, it holds together as one sprawling epic of a story, and it stands the test of time. And now that Operation: Galactic Storm is finally available in trade paperbacks (two volumes), it can be appreciated by generations to come.

Finally, if only for the sake of completeness, here’s a checklist of all the issues:

Part 1: Captain America #398; Part 2: Avengers West Coast #80; Part 3: Quasar #32; Part 4: Wonder Man #7; Part 5: Avengers #345; Part 6: Iron Man #278; Part 7: Thor #445; Part 8: Captain America #399; Part 9: Avengers West Coast #81; Part 10: Quasar #33; Part 11: Wonder Man #8; Part 12: Avengers #346; Part 13: Iron Man #279; Part 14: Thor #446; Part 15: Captain America #400; Part 16: Avengers West Coast #82; Part 17: Quasar #34; Part 18: Wonder Man #9; Part 19: Avengers #347; Epilogue 1: Captain America #401; Epilogue 2: Quasar #35-36.

[ February 13, 2007, 11:14 AM: Message edited by: Stealth ]
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
One thing about those Avengers O:GS issues that really bugged me - Epting kept drawing Quasar with a gas mask. He didn't need one (and if his Q-bands improbably failed, he was in a lot of trouble with or without air) and the rest of the artists followed their references and left it off, meaning it only appeared in the Avengers chapters even when the action ran continuously in or out.

A few other things were wrong too - apparently no-one outside the Iron Man comic itself was aware of Iron Man's seriously poor state of health (most egregiously in the Cap epilogue, where he appears out-of-armour).

Still, good story overall indeed.
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Avengers Volume One # 348-357

Following Operation: Galactic Storm were some 1- and 2-part stories with the subplots sailing smoothly – in # 348, the Vision continues to evolve as Crystal becomes his confidant, while Black Knight and Hercules encounter Magdalene’s Earth-616 counterpart only for her to be “gathered” (erased from existence) by Proctor and Magdalene; in # 349, Hera and Ares make a wager to see who can bring Hercules more sorrow, right at the same time as Hercules begins to fall in love with a mortal woman, Taylor Madison (sadly, this subplot wouldn’t be resolved until after Epting had left and the book’s quality was in freefall); in # 350-351, two of the Starjammers, Raza and Hepzibah, are hired by a renegade Kree to assassinate the Black Knight as payback for his actions in Operation: Galactic Storm (this is a very good story, even though the second half is drawn by a different art team.)

Next is a three-part fill-in story arc, giving Harras, Epting, and Palmer a chance to catch their breath. When they come back in # 355, they continue to prove that they’re not interested in bringing back the same old super-villains by giving us the full team of Proctor’s Gatherers (Magdalene, Swordsman, Cassandra, Spoor and Coal Tiger), each one from a different alternate universes which were all destroyed under circumstances to be revealed much later; this issue also introduces Sersi’s new black-and-red costume, far less revealing and far more flattering; plus there’s a great scene where the Black Widow plays matchmaker for an unusually indecisive Hercules.

# 356 is a special issue to me, because it was the first issue of Avengers that I bought off the spinner rack instead of the back-issue bin; in it, the Avengers pursue the Gatherers to Wakanda, where they intend to “gather” Coal Tiger’s Earth-616 counterpart, the Black Panther! Great scene where Magdalene outfights the Vision, and some nice shades of grey from the Swordsman, who at the end is the one Gatherer captured by the Avengers.

# 357 is one of my favorite Avengers issues of all time: there’s no fighting in it, just a lot of great character moments giving Epting a chance to prove that, among Avengers artists, only John Buscema and George Perez are his equals when it comes to characterization. The Crystal/Black Knight/Sersi love triangle is in full bloom, the best of its sort since Scarlet Witch/Vision/Mantis. There’s also the memorable interrogation of the Swordsman which we’ve already mentioned earlier in this thread. And, most importantly, there’s the Black Widow organizing a celebration of the one-year-anniversary of this Avengers lineup. Thor Substitute is gone, and Captain America (who left temporarily after Operation: Galactic Storm) hasn’t returned yet, meaning that the cover shows none of “The Big Three” and the story proves that the Avengers didn’t need the “icons” to be a good book.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
So, this being a likely candidate for ‘My favorite Avengers era EVER’, including all the classic Silver Age #1-16 which has been imbedded as being the best to me since I was a wee pre-teen, I, of course, am late on commenting [Big Grin]

As usual, Stealth’s comments are so much fun to read that I’m having as much fun reading them as I did reading the issues originally. My comments in brief:

- Operation: Galactic Storm – In my opinion, this was one of the few times where a Marvel Crossover totally succeeded on all levels (actually I agree about Executioner’s Song—during this brief era, it seemed Marvel started having good crossovers for the first time while DC’s became simply atrocious). The grandeur, the scale and the sheer amount of characters is what makes this, as well as the character scenes shown in each and every panel. Of course, this cemented my love for the Black Knight as a ‘do whatever it takes’ hero, and it also showcased a bunch of heroes throughout with good roles, especially Iron Man, Thor, and even some of the lesser-known like Living Lightning. Though I have most of the issues (missing the Quasar ones), I have to admit right away—I’ve never actually read O:GS the way it should be read, in chronological order. Such an oversight on my part is unforgivable—and will fixed one day! I especially love the use of the Skrulls here, and I think the Kree re-emerged as the ultimate bad-ass alien race in Marvel, only to be devastated, and then all surviving Kree shown since would have an additional scariness to them that added intensity to future stories. I’m also reminded that Wonder Man had his own book, and it reminds me of a recent PM I’ve had with Reboot where we mentioned that—which seems to be totally forgotten by all writers since (and not just Bendis/etc, but even Busiek), since he had some very real character growth in his solo comic. I actually enjoyed it, but then again, I read it when I was 12 or so, so its been awhile.

- In a way, the upcoming Proctor/Gatherers Saga is almost like a sequel to the Celestial Madonna Saga, and this is almost like a sequel to the Kree/Skrull War. I mean that very loosely of course, given the long history of great space drama in Avengers, but I think it speaks to how well done this era of the Avengers was—and it very much stood on its own (I only make those connections now, years later).

- Hercules/Taylor Madison – this was the first time IMO that Hercules truly had a great subplot in Avengers, that showed him as a very real person with the same emotions we all have. Though I think the ending was pretty awful farther down the road, I remember thinking that I really enjoyed this romance, especially the awkwardness seen in Hercules which was so rare for the character (I’m thinking of when she ate at the Mansion).

- Raza and Hepzibah – my favorite two Starjammers show up in a great story, but even more, it further cements the long-standing animosity that all surviving Kree have for the Black Knight. I really wish this could be followed up on, as you would expect tons and tons of survivors trying to make Dane (and therefore Earth) a continual target from here on in.

- Proctor and the Gatherers – here begins the real meat of the Proctor story, and I think everything from here on in until #375 is about perfect. The Gatherers make a very interesting team, and having almost all the rest of them be new to Avengers lore was a good move. Proctor himself is interesting and the evil-Vision subplot and Coal Tiger/Black Panther connection make for some very cool drama. The Swordsman (once caught) proves to be a character with a tremendous amount of depth (and Magdalene does later) and it speaks volumes for Harris writing that he could make an alternate Earth Swordsman such a likeable and interesting character.

- Harris’ continual use of history without dwelling on it. Again, this is probably one of the best aspects of the run, and a good example would be the ‘fake-out’ used to draw out the Avengers when a fake Johnny Storm appeals to Crystal for some help and she recognizes their long-standing relationship/friendship. It was little things like this, jam-packed in every issue, that made the book so much more enjoyable.

- The love triangle – as Stealth says, the Black Knight/Crystal/Sersi love triangle is probably the best Avengers romance subplot since Wanda/Vision/Mantis, complete with all the connecting characters that went along with both. There is a continual intensity that builds and builds each issue, with some very real human moments from all three characters, including Sersi, who is not painted to be a bad-guy despite her gradual shift towards madness. The addition of the Vision regaining his humanity (early on), then Proctor, and later Quicksilver, only further this.

- The line-up here is one of my favorites ever, and I agree that it shows you don’t need the big three. I do like the return of Cap coming up, and I really love the return of Hank Pym as Giant-Man, as well as the help of Swordsman, Magdalene and Deathcry, but the basic six post-O:GS (Black Widow, Hercules, Vision, Black Knight, Crystal, Sersi) set the tempo for a very intricate, drama-packed, characterization-filled Avengers line-up.

Oh, and cool tidbit Stealth! I’ve got one too that’s kinda funny. Around the issue where the Avengers are trapped in the snow with the fake Vision captured (and Deathcry first meets them), a very young Cobie (I’d say 13) decided that he was so impressed that I wrote my first letter (and only one) to a comic book, and had my Mom type it out for me. It basically told them that I, so sure of myself as the greatest fan of the Avengers in its history, totally approved of the direction they were taking, enjoyed the Black Widow as leader and wanted to see Dane with Crystal. I never got a reply (or it printed) but it was a pretty cool experience.

PS – in the last few weeks I’ve reread the entire Celestial Madonna Saga, and a large potion of Stern’s run, and I’ve meant to post more in depth comments on them…and will sometime soon [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
- Operation: Galactic Storm – In my opinion, this was one of the few times where a Marvel Crossover totally succeeded on all levels (actually I agree about Executioner’s Song—during this brief era, it seemed Marvel started having good crossovers for the first time while DC’s became simply atrocious).

Yeah...Eclipso, Death of Superman, Knightfall -- all the worst things about the 1990s in a nutshell. Whereas, for a while, Marvel was getting almost all the crossovers right, big and small (such as the Hulk/X-Factor crossover during the brief time that Peter David was writing both books.)

quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
- Harris’ continual use of history without dwelling on it. Again, this is probably one of the best aspects of the run, and a good example would be the ‘fake-out’ used to draw out the Avengers when a fake Johnny Storm appeals to Crystal for some help and she recognizes their long-standing relationship/friendship. It was little things like this, jam-packed in every issue, that made the book so much more enjoyable.

"Use of history without dwelling on it." Thank you, Cobie, that sums it up perfectly. Harras always kept such things brief and to the point, unlike some other writers :cough: (Busiek) :cough: who were all like, "Look at me, I'm such a continuity expert!"

quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
Oh, and cool tidbit Stealth! I’ve got one too that’s kinda funny. Around the issue where the Avengers are trapped in the snow with the fake Vision captured (and Deathcry first meets them), a very young Cobie (I’d say 13) decided that he was so impressed that I wrote my first letter (and only one) to a comic book, and had my Mom type it out for me. It basically told them that I, so sure of myself as the greatest fan of the Avengers in its history, totally approved of the direction they were taking, enjoyed the Black Widow as leader and wanted to see Dane with Crystal. I never got a reply (or it printed) but it was a pretty cool experience.

That reminds me, I sent a letter to the Avengers editor during that time, too, but I can't seem to remember what I wrote in it. Then again, those were my heady and wild late teens...

quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
PS – in the last few weeks I’ve reread the entire Celestial Madonna Saga, and a large potion of Stern’s run, and I’ve meant to post more in depth comments on them…and will sometime soon [Big Grin]

Yay! I'm looking forward to that.


One last thing: it's been quite a while since this thread has had any posts about the current state of the Avengers family of books. Even though I don't read any of them myself, I would still like to see some posts about them here, because even though it's wonderful to look back on the classics, I really want this thread to have one foot in the present day.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Celestial Madonna Story
I'm such a lazy reviewer that I should have posted my thoughts when they were fresh about four weeks ago, when I read the entire Celestial Madonna Story--on one Friday night where I took a rare night in. I can say without a doubt that it was *better* than I remembered it being because all of the great things about it were still there, and I noticed even more stuff that I loved about it that got lost in the shuffle the previous time or two I read it.

First, its the little things, the characterization that reinforces how heroic each member of the Avengers was, while also showing how certain Avenger's had certain traits. One of the most powerful scenes to me was that Thor gave the Swordsman eulogy at his funeral, and it was actually quite poignant. Thor talked about living as a mortal vs. an immortal, and how the Swordsman hard life was culminated in a very heroic death. I thought it was very well done. I loved how Englehart played Thor and Iron Man so well together, but at the same time so well with others, and Captain America too, who weaved in and out of the saga (the same could be said for Black Panther). Englehart mastered the Vision and upon rereading them, I remember why I used to be able to relate to that character so well. Even when things were going right for the Vision, he always had a sense of being an outsider, of thinking he had a limited time before he would ultimately meet a final end. That's a feeling everyone can relate to I think.

Though the first half of the Saga, complete with the four way triangle of Wanda/Vision/Mantis/Swordsman have all the best romantic drama, I find myself really getting into the second half, after the Swordsman's death, specifically when they all decide its do or die time--let's find out Mantis' origin. Mantis was both extremely independent and strong, but at the same time had a vulnerability that is very attractive (a quality I'm sure is attractive on both men and women), and it really comes through here. There's a sense that Iron Man, Thor, Hawkeye and the Vision are her teammates really backing her up with a true sense of camraderie, that they're in it to the end with her no matter what. Its a very underlying loyalty throughout the second halfof the Saga that I feel is more pronounced when viewed as one complete storyline.

And finally, there's Kang. I've read close to every Kang story there is, and he's been done right many times, and many of them are brillant, from his Silver Age tales (brillance) to Avengers Forever (also wonderful). But I think Kang here is perhaps the best the character ever was. He became *thee* Avengers villain and was much a part of the Saga as half of the Avenger's line-up.

I could probably go on and on for more paragraphs, but I'll stop, as its now four weeks after I read them. But I'll tell you this: I've had a bunch of stories floating around in my head for some time. Although those plots were already formulated, I've kind of used the Celestial Madonna Saga's granduer as inspiration that has rekindled my enthusiasm, and in the meantime have written like four LMB short stories and a 49 page (on MS Word) LMB Onevision. I know, its LMB stuff, but that made it fun [Big Grin] Not the ideas mind you, just the overall 'feel' to these Avengers issues, the sense that 'I'm reading something truly amazing and ground-breaking here, and when it ends, I'll be blown away--and sad that it had to end!'.

...had to get our reviews all out of order and retread some old ground [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Thank you for your wonderful review, Cobie. I especially liked this observation:

quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
Though the first half of the Saga, complete with the four way triangle of Wanda/Vision/Mantis/Swordsman have all the best romantic drama, I find myself really getting into the second half, after the Swordsman's death, specifically when they all decide its do or die time--let's find out Mantis' origin. Mantis was both extremely independent and strong, but at the same time had a vulnerability that is very attractive (a quality I'm sure is attractive on both men and women), and it really comes through here. There's a sense that Iron Man, Thor, Hawkeye and the Vision are her teammates really backing her up with a true sense of camraderie, that they're in it to the end with her no matter what. Its a very underlying loyalty throughout the second half of the Saga that I feel is more pronounced when viewed as one complete storyline.

Can't wait to see your reviews of the Stern era.

quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
...had to get our reviews all out of order and retread some old ground [Big Grin]

No worries. I'm a non-linear thinker, anyway. [Smile]
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Avengers Volume One # 358-371

Bringing the Avengers over to Arkon’s dimension for the first time in quite a while, Harras & Epting revisit one of the themes of Operation: Galactic Storm – how literally should the name “Avengers” be taken? This 2-parter (# 358-359) finds Sersi’s behavior crossing over from erratic to dangerous, and as a bonus features one of the few appearances of Thundra where she is not written as a caricature.

The 360s are an extended 30th Anniversary celebration; unfortunately, this being 1993, that meant gimmicky covers and extra pages of filler. But thankfully, the actual stories and art continued to be mostly excellent. First, # 360 introduces two more Gatherers: the shapeshifting Tabula Rasa and the disgustingly creepy Anti-Vision; the Gatherers kidnap Vision to switch bodies with him and Anti-Vision, so that now Vision has a body almost identical to his original one. # 361 is one of my favorite issues, with lots of cool revelations about the Eternals to explain just what is going on with Sersi and what can be done about it, giving Epting a chance to give us his stunning interpretations of the Celestials and the Uni-Mind (yes, he already drew them in the Brethren storyarc, but these renditions are much more polished.) It ends with the love triangle getting sharper: Crystal and Black Knight finally kiss [Love] even though the Black Knight has been mind-melded with Sersi. In #362, the Anti-Vision wounds Swordsman and threatens Crystal before Sersi kicks his ass. The next four issues begin with a raid on Proctor’s citadel, where the now-erratic Black Knight defies Captain America in mid-battle and Proctor vanishes after setting the citadel on self-destruct mode and all the Gatherers except Magdalene are apparently blown up; this segues seamlessly into the introduction of Deathcry and the return of renegade Kree-man Galen Kor, this time with his private army of fellow renegades invading Earth along with a fleet of Kree Sentries and a new Nega-Bomb! Desperate for reinforcements, the Avengers draft Magdalene and Hank Pym, the latter returning as Giant-Man and deciding to make it full-time. The last-page revelation of a powerful, supposedly deceased villain as the Kree renegades’ supplier would have more resonance if it hadn’t turned into an unresolved plot thread, but overall this is one of my all-time favorite Avengers storyarcs. I’ve never made any secret that I hated the non-superpowered Hank Pym in that stupid jumpsuit, and I welcomed his return as Giant-Man, in a new costume somewhat reminiscent of Dave Cockrum’s Colossal Boy costume (although the belts and pockets are a very 1990s mistake.) The scene where Giant-Man single-handedly out-fights one of the Kree sentries is a classic Avengers moment, as is this exchange between him and Captain America at the end:

G-M: You know, I’m the only one here who was part of this team when it started way back when...so take it from an old-timer when I say, you did good today, Avengers. You did good.

CA: Amen to that, Hank.

Regarding Deathcry – I’ve always run hot or cold with this character, although I loved the hints at a possible romance between her and Vision. I think the problem was that, later on in Harras’s run, just when he started to give her more depth, was when circumstances derailed the possibility of her evolving further. And Busiek’s infamous criticism of Deathcry amuses me: he said she was a bunch of X-Men cliches, as if Busiek’s own pet character Silverclaw wasn’t a bunch of X-Men cliches herself, right down to the stereotypical “foreigner” speech patterns? [Roll Eyes]

# 367, a stand-alone, allows the Avengers to catch their breath before the next challenge, and mostly focuses on the Vision’s interaction with the rest of the team as he tries to figure out just who he is and where he fits in. The inside art is weak (Epting & Palmer only did the cover), but the story is good, especially for Vision fans.

And finally, we come to the unfortunate Avengers/X-Men crossover, Bloodties (Avengers # 368, X-Men # 26, Avengers West Coast # 101, Uncanny X-Men # 307, Avengers # 369.) One would think that the creative and editorial teams involved could have come up with something good for the mutual 30th Anniversaries of both teams, but that wasn’t the case here. It does get off to a good start when, after Crystal discovers baby daughter Luna has been kidnapped and is being held in the war-torn country of Genosha (a staple of the X-Books which would take way too long to explain) and the American government doesn’t want the Avengers to interfere, she angrily defies Nick Fury, causing Sersi to remark, “It seems our little kitten’s developed claws! I love it.” But once all the characters arrive in Genosha, the story stumbles without direction from one rote battle to the next. The only thing that I find engaging about the story is Crystal’s love for Luna, and their reunion at the end is very moving.

The next two issues were a 2-part fill-in, followed by the resolution of the Crystal/Black Knight/Sersi/Proctor Saga, which I’ll cover next week.

[ March 08, 2007, 11:37 AM: Message edited by: Stealth ]
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Avengers Volume One # 372-379

As though Bloodties had never happened, Avengers gets right back on track once the Proctor storyline returns in # 372. The four-part conclusion to this sumptuous epic has so many exciting battles and revelations that I don’t want to spoil them for people who haven’t yet read the Harras/Epting issues (one thing I really hope is that this thread might inspire people to check out these issues.) What I can say is that Proctor has a new band of Gatherers – Rik (as in an alternate-reality Rick Jones), Korg (alternate-reality Thing), Tarkas (alt-reality Karkas?), Sliver (not sure who she’s supposed to be), and Jocasta (self-explanatory, but this one is gold-plated.) This gives Epting yet another chance to display his great sense of character design (to digress for a moment, I forgot to mention before that Crystal got a new black-and-white costume during the early 360s, IMO a great improvement over that blindingly bright yellow number.) And Sersi and Black Knight both seem to be in danger of going over the edge, and we finally learn the origin of Proctor and just who his Earth-616 counterpart really is. Without giving away the ending, I really have to give Harras & Epting credit for tying it all together seamlessly, for providing each key character with important moments, for not overreaching the way creators often do with such ambitious stories, and more than anything for producing a fresh new take on Avengers while still staying true to the spirit of the book, something which nobody who has followed them on Avengers has been able to do since, IMO.

The end of that story was also the end of Epting’s run on Avengers (his last issue was # 375.) Harras stayed on for about seventeen more issues (not counting fill-ins, which included # 376 and # 377), and at first, it looked like his writing would maintain the high standards he had set – # 378 and # 379 brought back the Kree renegades for another go-round, while Deathcry learned some hard lessons about the truth behind Shi’ar legends. The story was strong and the art, mostly by Staz Johnson and Tom Palmer, was adequate except for the last few pages which were drawn (badly) by another penciler/inker team.

The letter column in # 379 informed readers that Epting’s permanent replacement would be Mike Deodato. I can still remember how disappointed I felt at that announcement – up until then, the art in Avengers had been a refreshing alternative to the pseudo-Image style running rampant through the comics industry at the time, and now the book was going to be drawn by a Jim Lee clone. Hoping that maybe Palmer could make Deodato tolerable to me, I bought # 380 and, wow, what a letdown. Not only was Deodato’s art just as unappealing to me as it had been on other books, but the story – some mish-mash about the High Evolutionary and Wundagore – was so bad, I couldn’t believe that Harras’s name was still in the credits. Thinking this might be a fluke, I bought # 381 and it was just as bad. I almost dropped the book right then, but I gave it one final chance with # 384, which was solicited as the resolution to the Hercules/Taylor Madison plot thread. Long story short, that issue was the final straw for me. I didn’t buy an issue of Avengers again until years later.

Looking back on it today, and knowing more about how the comics industry works, I can see what might have contributed to Avengers’ sudden and steep decline: relentless catering to the speculator market whose bubble was about to burst; mega-crossover madness over well-nurtured plots; Harras on his way to the Editor-in-Chief position delegating the plots to Terry Kavanagh; the poisonous influence of DC’s tearing down of Superman, Batman, and Green Lantern; and so on.

Then there was Onslaught/Heroes Reborn, which contributed to my leaving comics for several years – back then, I considered Image “the enemy”, and for Marvel to involve Image’s fading-star creators with their most important titles was just too much for me. I might not have been paying attention, but I don’t recall anyone saying at the time that this would only last one year.

By the time Avengers was relaunched from # 1 with Busiek & Perez, I was mostly ignoring comics. I did buy the odd comic here and there, depending mostly on who the artist was, but it wasn’t until 2005 that I started catching up on what I had been missing. And so, my reviews of Avengers Volume Three will begin next week.

[ March 06, 2007, 11:20 AM: Message edited by: Stealth ]
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"By the time Avengers was relaunched from # 1 with Busiek & Perez, I was mostly ignoring comics. I did buy the odd comic here and there, depending mostly on who the artist was, but it wasn’t until 2005 that I started catching up on what I had been missing."

I dropped off from Marvel a LOT earlier-- in the case of THE AVENGERS, right at the end of Harras' 1st multi-parter (with Steve Epting). I got pretty much fed up with EVERYTHING Marvel was doing, and for a stretch there, about the only book I bought regularly was-- of all things-- CONAN CLASSICS, reprinting the earliest Thomas-Smith issues which I had never read before. Also, there was a 2-issue FLASH GORDON mini-series by Archie Goodwin & Al Williamson, which must remain one of the most stunningly glorious items to ever come from the company. But before you knew it, I stopped buying any Marvels at all. For several years.

It was at the urging of a good friend and fellow fan that I decided to check out Marvel at all some years later, when Roger Stern decided to FINALLY come back and FINISH (and "fix") the unfinished mess that had been hanging for so long, which led to HOBGOBLIN LIVES! Foolishly, not long after, I checked out some other Spidey titles... within 2 years, I had sworn off the character-- "FOREVER". (Steve Rude notwithstanding.)

However, I did check out FANTASTIC FOUR, IRON MAN and THE AVENGERS when they did "Heroes Return". The FF was amazing-- for all of 3 issues. As soon as I heard Alan Davis was leaving after only 3 issues, I made damn sure I didn't buy #4. And the only new FF's I've bought since are the odd issue drawn by Stuart Immonen.

IRON MAN had me hooked for the entirely of Kurt Busiek's run, as well as Roger Stern's, who sort of finished up what Kurt had started. After that, the book took a bad left turn-- and then got MUCH worse than I could have dreamed. As soon as the story I was reading ended, I was OUTTA there, and have not read a new IM since.

THE AVENGERS was another amazing run. George Perez really showed just how good he'd gotten over all the years he was gone. It was sad when he finally left, but at least this time, he had a nice, long, mostly-"stable" run-- which he never had on the book before.

Alan Davis continued to blow me away with his work... but once again, he left FAR too quickly! Kurt Busiek may be complimented on the real "epic" he created with Kang this time out, but once Davis left, the art was on shaky ground all the way thru to the end. And damn, did it take a LONG time to reach the end. I also feel Busiek went too far. What he had Kang responsible for this time just went over way too many lines. This would have been "okay" in my book, had this been planned, definitively, as the LAST-EVER Kang story. It wasn't. The bastard got away at the end! No F****** way that guy should have been still ALIVE by the end of the story!!! When are they gonna get it into their heads that you don't need to keep villains alive forever to ensure their longevity? Ian Fleming killed EVERY ONE of James Bond's baddies-- except for Blofeld, in their first-and-only appearance. Some villains are much better when you kill 'em off at "the end".

I checked out Geoff Johns' run... was SEVERELY disappointed. The art sucked as well, as I recall. Then Olivier Copiel came along... and didn't realy add anything to THE AVENGERS. His presence served ONLY one function-- to TAKE AWAY from DC's LEGION book, which was FINALLY kicking real ass for the first time in years at that point. I suppose whoever decided to hire him away from DC might be looked at as partly responsible for the current LEGION "reboot", which made ME stop buying that book for the first time since I began buying it regularly back in 1978.
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
quote:
there was a 2-issue FLASH GORDON mini-series by Archie Goodwin & Al Williamson, which must remain one of the most stunningly glorious items to ever come from the company.
That's the first I've heard about it. I'll definitely put it on my list of back issues to search for. The Star Wars Team Supreme on Flash Gordon...sounds awesome.

quote:
It was at the urging of a good friend and fellow fan that I decided to check out Marvel at all some years later, when Roger Stern decided to FINALLY come back and FINISH (and "fix") the unfinished mess that had been hanging for so long, which led to HOBGOBLIN LIVES!
Yeah, Hobgoblin Lives was one of the few bright spots during the final year of my first love affair with superhero comics. Stern's Post-1980s work is hit-or-miss to me, but that one really clicked.

Have you read the Invaders story arc that Roger Stern wrote, Steve Epting penciled, and Al Williamson inked? It was serialized in Marvel's short-lived anthology series titled Marvel Universe, and it is OUTSTANDING! I'm not generally an Invaders fan, but a high-quality creative team like that would make just about anything a must-read.

quote:
IRON MAN had me hooked for the entirely of Kurt Busiek's run, as well as Roger Stern's, who sort of finished up what Kurt had started. After that, the book took a bad left turn-- and then got MUCH worse than I could have dreamed. As soon as the story I was reading ended, I was OUTTA there, and have not read a new IM since.
I haven't read either writers' Iron Man issues. There's a Busiek interview on the net from shortly after he left Iron Man, where he talks about how he had wanted the book to be what it was like during the Bill Mantlo era -- which I interpreted as, "pretend like the two Bob Layton eras never existed!" To a hardcore Layton era fangirl like myself, that's heresy!

quote:
THE AVENGERS was another amazing run. George Perez really showed just how good he'd gotten over all the years he was gone. It was sad when he finally left, but at least this time, he had a nice, long, mostly-"stable" run-- which he never had on the book before.
I'll get into this in more detail in my reviews, but I have to say that IMO Perez's art carried the first three years of Avengers Volume Three through many rough patches where the stories were lacking.

quote:
Alan Davis continued to blow me away with his work... but once again, he left FAR too quickly!
I recall reading somewhere that Davis left because he didn't like the way Busiek had crowded the book with obscure or semi-obscure members. That seems kind of funny to me, given that Busiek's attitude for the early part of Volume Three seemed to be "only the big guns count." That sure came around to bite him on the ass. LOL

quote:
Kurt Busiek may be complimented on the real "epic" he created with Kang this time out...
Again, I'll get into this in more detail in my reviews, but I think that that so-called "epic" is the biggest waste of space since bloody Korvac.

quote:
...but once Davis left, the art was on shaky ground all the way thru to the end.
Yep. Whose idea was it to have Kieron Dwyer draw most of the key issues?? His art is horrible!

quote:
And damn, did it take a LONG time to reach the end. I also feel Busiek went too far. What he had Kang responsible for this time just went over way too many lines. This would have been "okay" in my book, had this been planned, definitively, as the LAST-EVER Kang story. It wasn't. The bastard got away at the end! No F****** way that guy should have been still ALIVE by the end of the story!!! When are they gonna get it into their heads that you don't need to keep villains alive forever to ensure their longevity? Ian Fleming killed EVERY ONE of James Bond's baddies-- except for Blofeld, in their first-and-only appearance. Some villains are much better when you kill 'em off at "the end".
I agree. The villain resurrection that particularly pisses me off is Zemo Junior. When Roger Stern had him go splat on the sidewalk at the end of the Masters of Evil story arc, that should have been the end of that. Instead, Gruenwald resurrected him, Busiek pushed him to the forefront through Thunderbolts, and Nicieza tried to turn him into a bloody anti-hero! Now he has his own mini-series. Enough already! [Mad]

quote:
I checked out Geoff Johns' run... was SEVERELY disappointed. The art sucked as well, as I recall.
I haven't read Johns' run, because it seems like even Johns' most hardcore fans don't like it. Re: the art -- Kieron Dwyer strikes again. [Roll Eyes]

Finally, I would like to reiterate that I would really like to see some posts about the current Avengers, like we had at the beginning of this thread. Mighty Avengers is coming out soon, among other things. I'm planning to browse through (but not buy) the first few issues of Mighty Avengers just out of curiosity to see what happens with...

Click Here For A SpoilerUltron.

[ March 08, 2007, 10:43 AM: Message edited by: Stealth ]
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Stealth:
I recall reading somewhere that Davis left because he didn't like the way Busiek had crowded the book with obscure or semi-obscure members. That seems kind of funny to me, given that Busiek's attitude for the early part of Volume Three seemed to be "only the big guns count." That sure came around to bite him on the ass. LOL

Davis left because he was only ever contracted for six issues while Kilraven (IIRC) was in limbo. Similar story to his three-issue F4 stint a few years earlier.
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Ah. Okay. It's still funny to imagine, though.

(Killraven is another Davis work -- besides Superboy's Legion -- that I still don't have in my collection. [Embarrassed] )
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"That's the first I've heard about it. I'll definitely put it on my list of back issues to search for. The Star Wars Team Supreme on Flash Gordon...sounds awesome."

Al Williamson worked on FG 3-- or 4-- times that I know of. He did a brief run in the mid-60's on the King Comics comic-book. I have one issue-- WHOA!!!! Every panel a stunner.

http://www.comics.org/coverview.lasso?id=20977&zoom=4

I believe he worked on the newspaper strip-- briefly-- but I'm not really sure when, or for how long. The one that bugs me is, Goodwin & Williamson did the comic-book adaptation of the 1980 FG movie-- and I've never found a copy of it! I can only imagine it looks (and probably "reads") better than the film. Then around 1992, they did a 2-issue series, which apparently fits in with the original continuity of the newspaper strip (I'm mostly familiar with the Alex Raymond run, the decades since have ben at a loss), but also paid tribute to the movie serials. It actually featured Azura, Queen of Magic, who'd been in FLASH GORDON'S TRIP TO MARS-- but treated her with more respect than that half-baked bad sequel did. (I found out some years ago Universal went thru 3 distinct periods where it was owned by different people-- and as it happens, the 3 FG serials were made by 3 completely different managements! No wonder the 1st & 3rd are so good, but the 2nd one sucks so bad!)


I did get the entire short run of MARVEL UNIVERSE; fun book! Stern brought back the giant "dragon" submarine that had appeared in one of the Simon & Kirby issues of CAPTAIN AMERICA. That was the only INVADERS revival that really interested me.


"There's a Busiek interview on the net from shortly after he left Iron Man, where he talks about how he had wanted the book to be what it was like during the Bill Mantlo era -- which I interpreted as, "pretend like the two Bob Layton eras never existed!""

Interesting; this is the first I've heard that. What I did notice is, Busiek's IM run reminded me of Roy Thomas' 2nd DR. STRANGE run, in that, despite so many years in between, you felt like you were reading a genuine continuation of the EARLIEST stories from the mid-60's-- instead of the book's history having a disjointed feel with different eras, it made you feel like, YES, the entire history of the book is somehow consistent.

Bill Mantlo was the perennial "fill-in" guy. He did so many fill-ins on IM when others kept blowing deadlines... he eventually took over the book, along with the returning George Tuska on HIS 3rd run. When Tuska left the last time (I'm not sure if he ever came back again), they "updated" the art somewhat, and it was at that moment I felt Mantlo was finally coming into his own as a writer. I was really beginning to enjoy his work on the book... when WHAM! He was gone, replaced by Michelinie & Layton, who apparently strong-armed their way onto it in some behind-the-scenes office politics power-play. SURE, they did good. SURE, they were BETTER than Mantlo. But to this day, it still feels "wrong" to me, how they got on the book in the first place.

I felt seriously let down when they revealed Bethany Cabe was still married... and then left the book. To my eyes, it went to HELL... and then Denny O'Neil spent 3 years DRAGGING it thru the mud. When things finally got back to reasonable, he left it to more chaos. I was glad Michelinie & Layton returned. At least half of their 2nd run was fun reading. But then they decided to Tony's life was going too good... BASTARDS. (It was the "Frank Miller syndrome" taking over, that's what it was.) I kept reading the book for around 2 years after they left the 2nd time, but NEVER enjoyed a single issue, and finally quit. Heard HORRIBLE things about it afterwards, and was so happy I missed it all.

The Kurt Busiek-Sean Chen run put the book back on top, as far as I'm concerned. In fact, I found myself enjoying the book MORE than I had when Michelinie & Layton were doing it. The reason I figure this was, Michelinie & Layton seemed to me to have too much "attitude"-- they wanted it to be "THEIR" book, "THEIR" characters. Busiek seemed to want to give readers the "REAL" Tony Stark, not some re-invention of the latest know-it-all hot-shot egomaniac writers. But that's me.

One thing I never completely "got" during the entire run was, what the HELL was going on with Pepper & Happy? Apparently they were separated-- but I don't think anybody EVER found out why! As it went on and on, Pepper surprised me by becoming one of my FAVORITE female characters in the whole Marvel Universe. (And Sean Chen drew her cuter than I'd ever seen.) Frankly, when she & Tony looked like they were getting closer, I didn't mind. If her marriage was really done and over with, maybe it was about time. But then Busiek left, and Stern-- true to form-- said, "UH UH". I love Stern's work, but has anyone but me noticed he has this BAD habit of BREAKING UP longtime romances??? (Peter & MJ, Dr. Strange & Clea, Tony & Pepper) When I mentioned this to my comics-shop guy, he made a funny comment about it, but I'm not sure I should repeat it...

Joe Quesada's BRIEF run as writer was a warm-up for his longer run as EIC. Loud, in-your-face, shocking "event" stuff, not much class... I don't even remember who came after him. I just know the writing AND the art was HORRIBLE, and despite numerous hype about this or that big-name talent on the book, I've never been tempted back. I've had enough of "bait-and-switch".


"I think that that so-called "epic" is the biggest waste of space since bloody Korvac."

It looked good when it started. By the end... AAAUGH!


"The villain resurrection that particularly pisses me off is Zemo Junior."

This is always one that I have a hard time connecting with at all. This guy appeared in ONE fill-in issue written by Roy Thomas (if memory serves) in the middle of Steve Englehart's all-time classic run on C.A. And I always got the feeling Roy killed him off at the end of that ONE issue. When someone reminds me that Stern killed him off... I'm left wondering, how was it he was still alive for Stern to kill?


"Davis left because he was only ever contracted for six issues while Kilraven (IIRC) was in limbo."

That's the other thing that got me about Davis. He left AVENGERS-- which was going really good at that moment-- for KILLRAVEN ? Now, for anyone who's never seen it, Davis' art bears a STRIKING resemblance to Neal Adams'-- who drew the first issue of the 1970s KILLRAVEN series! So, you could say he was a good fit. But the story, as it turned out, did NOT-- REALLY-- fit into the original continuity! Fans-- like me-- have been waiting years for the story to be continued. When the original series ended, it was in mid-story. Years later, Don McGregor & Craig Russell did their graphic novel, and if you read it back-to-back with the earlier issues, it feels like it was written the next month. Just picks up like no time had elapsed. They were hoping to do more... but somehow, NEVER DID. So all this time later, I hear they're doing KILLRAVEN... but no McGregor, no Russell, and, apparently, it's an "alternate version". SO WHO CARES?????

I'm not completely sure... it's possible the Davis KILLRAVEN might fit in between a couple of the earliest episodes (the ones before McGregor), but something tells me not.

If Marvel could get Moench & Gulacy to do a brand-new MASTER OF KUNG FU mini-series, then dammit, it's high time they got McGregor & Russell to do a new KILLRAVEN mini-series. (And the same goes for Englehart & Brunner on DR. STRANGE.)
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
Davis' Kilraven was a pet project of his he'd been angling for for years. And a reboot.
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Avengers Volume Three # 1-22 & Annual 1998

Honestly, it puzzles me that the Busiek era is so popular. Maybe it has something to do with not reading it in real time -- as I said earlier in this thread, I wasn't into comics during the late 1990s and early 2000s and didn't start catching up until 2005. Maybe it's a technical thing -- I don't think Busiek was particularly good at pacing or at writing action sequences. Maybe it's a generational thing -- Busiek is one generation older than me, and he was captivated by a different Avengers era than I was. One particular point of contention that I have with Busiek is that he seems to be part of the sizable margin of Avengers fans who put the first 200 issues on a pedastal, whereas I think that there's a lot of good stuff there, but also a lot of not-so-good stuff. Then there's Busiek's tendency to belittle my beloved Harras/Epting era, which leads me to believe that he's jealous -- after all, Harras & Epting came up with something different and exciting that revitalized Avengers (creatively if not commercially), while Busiek rode the warmed-over nostalgia train straight to the bank. Busiek was pretty damn lucky that he had superior artwork for most of his run: Perez, Pacheco, Immonen, Epting, Davis, Reis -- it made his stories a lot more tolerable to me, on the first reading at least (each time I re-read them, which isn't often, I find something else I don't like.)

Perez, of course, was the artist who got the book up and running, and in my opinion, his second run on Avengers is some of the best art of his career -- I feel that there were several years, from the late 1980s through the mid 1990s, where Perez wasn't quite as good as he was capable of, and these Avengers issues are a complete return to peak form.

Now, where the actual stories are concerned...the first arc, where almost everyone who was ever an Avenger assmebles to battle Morgan Le Fay, is good fun for the most part, with some enchanting medieval-fantasyland imagery, but it also establishes a recurring weakness of Busiek's that's similar to one of Shooter's: the villain is so powerful that he or she can only be defeated by a plot contrivance -- in this case, Morgan suddenly acting like a psychotic two-year-old; I just don't buy it. The follow-up issue, where the Big Three plus Jan & Hank come up with a new lineup, has one panel that makes me angry just thinking about it: Sersi, back in that horrible green bikini, rejecting the offer to rejoin but telling them to invite her to the next party, as if the Harras/Epting stories had never happened; the only way I can cope with that panel is by telling myself that it's a shape-shifter posing as Sersi, and that one day, my Sersi, the real Sersi, will return. The final lineup includes ex-New Warriors Firestar and Justice, both characters I like, but not the way that Busiek would consistently mis-characterize them. The new team's first official battle is against the Squadron Supreme, who are being mind-controlled yet again, as if Busiek couldn't think of anything better; eventually -- in the 1998 Annual, drawn by Pacheco -- the two teams combine forces, with some help from Swordsman II and Magdalene, to battle Imus Champion, an obscure villain who was forgettable back in the early 1970s and even more forgettable in the late 1990s; at least Philip and Magdalene get a dignified exit at the end. Next, there's a mini-crossover where Busiek cluelessly tries to tie up some loose ends from the Harras era, involving the Kree renegades and the Supreme Intelligence; this also provides a showcase for Busiek's inept long-term fall-rise-redemption storyarc for Carol Danvers (there was NOTHING in her previous appearances that suggested she was an alcoholic -- so much for Busiek's supposed respect for continuity.) Then, Busiek's forgettable creations Triathlon and Silverclaw (who both remind me of the token minority members from Superfriends) step into the spotlight, while the villain this time is Moses Magnum, if ever there was a more stuck-in-the-1970s villain. [Roll Eyes] After a battle against the Grim Reaper and a pack of zombie ex-Avengers returned from the dead, there were humdrum guest appearances by the Thunderbolts, the New Warriors, and the Beast, as Busiek started introducing villains of his own creation: Jonathan Tremont and his self-help cult, the Triune Understanding, Lord Templar and his Avatars, and the all-brawn-no-brains Pagan, all of them with potential that was never lived up to in the long run. There followed a very dissapointing three-issue arc guest-written and guest-penciled by Jerry Ordway, who is capable of better things. But it bought Busiek & Perez enough time to put some extra effort into their next, and arguably, best arc, Ultron Unlimited. I feel the same way about it that I feel about David Michelinie's Taskmaster arc: it hits all the right notes, and it's a good read, an anomaly of its era as far as my personal tastes go. Plus, there's the clever revelation that Hank programmed Ultron with his own brain patterns, one of those "But of course! Why didn't somebody come up with that before?" moments. If Busiek had managed to come up with equally good stories during the remainder of his Avengers run, I would have a more positive opinion of it.

I had originally intended to add a review of Busiek's 12-issue time-travel limited series Avengers Forever, but after a few issues I had to admit to myself that it's borderline unreadable, even with the copious footnotes, and I ended up mostly looking at Pacheco's wonderful art and ignoring the text.

Next week: Perez, Immonen, Epting and Davis keep the book afloat, but rough waters are just around the corner.
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Stealth:
The follow-up issue, where the Big Three plus Jan & Hank come up with a new lineup, has one panel that makes me angry just thinking about it: Sersi, back in that horrible green bikini, rejecting the offer to rejoin but telling them to invite her to the next party, as if the Harras/Epting stories had never happened; the only way I can cope with that panel is by telling myself that it's a shape-shifter posing as Sersi, and that one day, my Sersi, the real Sersi, will return. keep the book afloat, but rough waters are just around the corner.

Well, she was the only Eternal who got panel time AND was still mindwiped at the end of Eternals #7, so... *shrugs*
 
Posted by Ultra Jorge on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
Avengers #30 - #49
What saved Avengers fandom in the mid to late 60’s according to my Dad, then a wee lad, was the return of Giant-Man, now known as Goliath! Seeing the Wasp on the cover of #28 and then Hank’s AWESOME return in #30 as Goliath really marked a turning point in getting this back to being ‘The Avengers’. Following that were some great stories, and although sometimes the main stories or art suffered, the subplots are what made this run such a classic Marvel run. Goliath was definitely the star now, and Hawkeye was a close second and things continued to pick up with Herc joining, Bill Foster being part of the cast (one of my all-time favorite Marvel supporting characters), the Black Widow and some interesting villains (Living Laser, Whirlwind, etc.). And then once again the team began to change, and in a very good way. The Black Knight is by far one of my favorite Marvel heroes of all, and he was welcome here. And the way the exited Hercules, Cap, Scarlet Witch and Quicksilver was done really well, in a way leaving them open for future stories.

I agree that at this point, the Avengers got really, really good. In fact, this coming up is one of my favorite Avengers periods ever, if not my absolute favorite. John Buscema’s artwork was phenomenal and at this point Roy Thomas came into his own. If #1-16 was the golden age of great Avengers stories, at this point we are on the cusp of its Silver Age with the Buscema giving us the best artwork since Kirby and Thomas channeling everything good about Stan’s Silver Age Marvel.

Heh, I think the return of Giant-Man might've been more excitement from your dad! jk. I can see one of the originals returning injecting some excitement after the kooky quartet was getting old.

But I also think John Buscema helped alot. His work was head & shoulders above the rest at that time.

I agree with Stealth that after #48/49 is when things got good. Infact, IMO this is when superhero soap opera was born.

I'm going to try to go in order in respond to some of these posts cause they are so good.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"Honestly, it puzzles me that the Busiek era is so popular."

Maybe it had to do with what it was following? I stopped reading Marvel IN GENERAL about 6 months after Harras took over AVENGERS, so I missed a lot-- and everything I heard made me think I wasn't missing anything. Busiek & Perez were part of "HEROES RETURN", that promotional push that felt like a apology for "HEROES REBORN". Also, Perez' art was better than I ever remembered it being, and this time, not only did he stay for a good, long, consistent run, but whenever they ad fill-ins, they tended to have as good or better art.


"Then there's Busiek's tendency to belittle my beloved Harras/Epting era, which leads me to believe that he's jealous"

Maybe he never read those issues? Sure would make it easier to ignore tham or pretend they never happened...


"it made his stories a lot more tolerable to me, on the first reading at least (each time I re-read them, which isn't often, I find something else I don't like.)"

I hate when that happens with movies. Bad movies is one thing, but there's movies I really LIKE where, each time I sit thru them, their faults get bigger and bigger. Like THUNDERBALL, YOU ONLY LIVE TWICE, and THE SPY WHO LOVED ME. (I once read an article which tore SPY apart scene-by-scene-- every criticism stood out so glaringly because they all made sense, it was a sort of "keep things moving so the audience won't notice this", and as a result, while the film still looks great, I've never been able to appreciate it as much since. Logically, it makes NO SENSE AT ALL.)


"The final lineup includes ex-New Warriors Firestar and Justice"

I had no idea who the hell these people were, and the way they were written didn't make me wanna care, either.


"The new team's first official battle is against the Squadron Supreme, who are being mind-controlled yet again, as if Busiek couldn't think of anything better"

Instead of "Justice League done right", every time they'd pop up, they'd make the JLA look great by comparison. (Was Busiek taking under-the-table money from DC??)


"Busiek's inept long-term fall-rise-redemption storyarc for Carol Danvers (there was NOTHING in her previous appearances that suggested she was an alcoholic -- so much for Busiek's supposed respect for continuity.)"

I wonder if it isn't something about her starting life as a supporting character in CAPTAIN MARVEL, the book "nobody" wanted to work on? Gerry Conway cast her as a partially-amnesiac POWER GIRL wannabe (who was a swipe of Supergirl, who was a swipe of Mary Marvel...), Chris Claremont claimed it took him 2 years to figure out what the heck to DO with her (so much for that era's #1 "hotshot writer"), David Michelinie treated her like CRAP, then Claremont treated her EVEN WORSE as a way of getting back at Michelinie... I mean, DAMN. All that time, I just wanted my strong, intelligent, confident & gorgeous blonde powerhouse, not all this "so damaged she can't even stand up" crap. (There's a character like her, oddly enough, in the STORMBOY comic I've been working on-- I wonder if the thing will ever get finished. I treat her with more respect than most of these guys have treated Carol over the years.)


"Jonathan Tremont and his self-help cult, the Triune Understanding"

Good God, was there ever a storyline that just dragged on forever as badly as this one? He keeps trying to convince people he's on the up-and-up, Triathlon, who started out interesting, turns out to be involved with this conspiracy, HE doesn't say anything about it, then he comes on real strong as if, so what, they're okay guys... by the time it was over, I just wanted Tremont DEAD and gone-- permanently.


"Ultron Unlimited"

Ohhh-- I HATED this thing! One more case of bringing back an old villain, AGAIN, and upping the ante, higher and higher, to simply monstrous proportions. And this wasn't even the LAST story with Ultron, was it???


"I had originally intended to add a review of Busiek's 12-issue time-travel limited series Avengers Forever"

Oh don't wimp out on us now! C'mon, SOMEBODY's gotta refresh my memory about that thing. It was too deeply involved in the overlong mess that followed.
 
Posted by Set on :
 
Wow, I loved Busieks run, and the stuff he ignored was stuff I didn't happen to like anyway...

And Avengers Forever rocked, IMO. I love continuity porn. I couldn't tell you what it was about *now,* but I couldn't even tell you what the hell Darkseid was up to in the Great Darkness Saga these days, I just remember liking and understanding it at the time.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Avengers Volume One # 358-379

The 360’s – the first time I ever noticed gimmicky covers. I remember thinking, ‘Hey, this is kind of cool’. Talk about overdoing something though—I hope we never see them again.

Proctor/Gatherers Saga continues – the Anti-Vision was awesomely portrayed as creepy and villainous and served the purpose of returning the Vision to his colorful roots. And it kicked off the next leg of the Saga, which only furthered the excellence of the then current Avengers. The return of Cap is great, as is his amazement at Sersi, Black Knight, Herc and others and the angst they are feeling. The Black Knight continues to develop into my favorite Avenger with his ‘whatever it takes’ attitude, and the love triangle b/t Dane, Sersi and Crystal heats up to a point where it becomes my favorite in Marvel history. To say I love this era is an understatement. I’ve repeated myself so many times that I almost don’t want to get into it again, but I could talk for post after post about why this era was so great. Each Avenger clicked, complete with personality flaws and dramatic moments and each issue was better than the next. Proctor’s mystery was truly intriguing, and the gradual deterioration of Sersi was scary and terribly interesting, as we wondered what exactly was going on. And through it all, Crystal and the Black Knight become closer and closer despite themselves.

Galen Kor – and suddenly it shifts gears back to the Kree fallout, in what may be the best story arc of the entire run! The introduction of Deathcry, which as Stealth says, is incredibly seemless, leads right into the follow-up of Operation: Galactic Storm in a kick-ass story. Herc, Dane, Crystal all captured by the Kree! Hank Pym returns as Giant-Man—yay! Giant Man kicks the crap out of a Sentry—double yay!! The entire Earth in trouble! The ultimate kick-ass battle with Magdalene and Deathcry helping out! I was blow away.

Giant-Man – I admit, that at the time in my youth, it was the return of Giant-Man that tipped things over the edge and made me love this run more than anything. I’ve said before that Giant-Man is one of my Dad’s all time favorite heroes (tied with Spidey and Iron Man), and that has influenced me from the first time he read me a comic—probably Avengers #1, though my memory plays tricks on me. I personally love Hank as Giant-Man and Goliath, but loathe him as Yellowjacket and hate when he’s plains-clothes Dr. Pym too. His return as Giant-Man was a ‘cheer’ moment for me, and it was executed beautifully. And Harras does what he does best, just like he was doing with Vision at the time. He was moving the characters forward, albeit in a way that made old fans cheer, but not dwelling on the past. There was no trauma or all the other baggage the character has being addressed, there was just kick-ass Giant Man as part of the team. I loved it. Busiek made some very heavy mistakes later by retreading old ground with Hank. If anything, I prefer him as Goliath, but Giant-Man is just as good.

Deathcry – despite feeling that I should hate her, I kind of have a soft-spot for her. Agree completely with Stealth about Busiek and other’s criticism. I mean really—Triathlon?

Bloodties – you know, I remember loving this too. At this point IMO, the X-titles were pretty awesome at the time too, and the combination of both of them and Harras’ Avengers made for a superb crossover. AWC was still weak at this time, but US Agent shined a little. Of course, the story got off-kilter at one point and didn’t turn out to be the next great Marvel Crossover, ut overall, I thought it worked well. Exodus makes for a great villain and the use of Luna here showcased how central a role in the MU she has. Crystal was awesome here, and I like how Wanda and the Black Knight are portrayed. I haven’t read this in years though, so I probably have rose-colored glasses.

The End of the Proctor/Gatherers Saga – and the final issues of this story from #372 – 375 are damn near perfect in my opinion. The Gatherers continue to prove to be a threat, while the drama between the Black Knight, Crystal and Sersi deepens, now with Quicksilver (FINALLY!) added into the mix. Sersi’s apparent madness becomes more and more understandable and the Black Knight finally reaches a point where he is able to break the Gans Josen (know I spelled that wrong). All the other Avengers shine with a bunch of guest stars included, and Quicksilver and the Black Knight finally learn the truth about Proctor in what has to be one of the best final pages of any Avenger’s story. The final battle is amazing, and even the inclusion of Thunderstrike gave a sense of completion to Harras and Epting’s entire run. It truly is one of the greatest Avenger’s stories ever told—if not *thee* greatest.

The end result was the exit of the Black Knight and Sersi and the end of what is my favorite Marvel romance of all time, that between Crystal and the Black Knight. On the one hand, I recognize brilliance when I read it and love the finale, but on the other hand, it was heart-breaking to read. But to a young boy, the Black Knight’s heroic decision to go with Sersi seemed *so* powerful.

Deodoto and later issues – Deodoto has always been hit or miss with me, and this was an era where his art was just way to over the top. And the line-up began to be more pronounced, so that Deathcry had more screen time, Giant Man was done well, but needed better interaction, and now Quicksilver became a full-time member, which meant it was nice to see a follow-up on where his and Crystal’s story would go from here (as well as get him back in Avengers, where I feel he belongs rather than X-Factor), although I didn’t like him wanting to reconcile with Crystal. The Taylor Madison/Herc story felt kind of like a cop-out, complete with Zeus involvement coming out of left field, so I can understand how people may have hated it.

The Crossing – perhaps the worst Avengers story ever told. Completely all over the field, it was impossible to keep track of read and made little sense. Mantis as the surprise villainous, Kang’s continuity-messy ‘hidden history of the Avengers’, Iron Man betraying them and then teen Tony arriving…it was just crap. It was the epitome of what was wrong with the 90’s. Really, I almost can’t find words venomous enough to talk about it.

Pre-Onslought – right before Onslought, Waid came in and attempted to get the book on track, but ultimately it was too discombobulated.

Heroes Reborn – Awful. Really, there isn’t one good thing to say about it. Ok, it beats the Crossing, but c’mon.

[ March 14, 2007, 03:16 PM: Message edited by: Cobalt Kid ]
 
Posted by Ultra Jorge on :
 
Busiek era? I loved and hated it.

While I really liked the Harras era I didn't think it was perfect. And then Heroes Reborn really made me miss the old Avengers. So Kurt going old school was fine by me. But yes his ignoring some of the more recent Avengers history was good and bad. I guess it depends on the reader.

I really didn't care for the Triathlon story at all. Or the villain Templar, etc. What really made angry was what he did with the Vision and Hank Pym.

The Vision and the Human Torch were now two sepereate androids. Good. I hated the Vision always owing everything he is to others...Ultron, Wonder Man, Human Torch I. I rather him be his own android. [Wink] Kurt made him a chrono-clone...ugh. Anyways, that is not as big a deal as hank.

Pym returns as YJ? ARGH?!?!?! That was very forced. Infact, I didn't care for Harras returning him as Giant-Man. But ok that's fine. But YJ? The split personality thing?

Engleheart did awesome by making the character Dr. Pym. He was a sci-fi doctor type of hero and it fit. Then the writers want to return him to the hero he was long ago...and it never worked. Still doesn't. YJ???
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Avengers Volume Three # 1-22 & Annual 1998

When Busiek and Perez came on, I was beyond excited, and I can still see why. They did a good job in returning the Avenger’s to the ‘Avengers’, especially after the recent years of Heroes Reborn and the Crossing before that. Nostalgia was heavy, but it felt like genuine Marvel Super-Hero action again. But I agree that the run was complete with flaws, for some very real reasons. But first, some of the good:

Perez’s art – talk about knocking it out of the ball park. Every issue was like getting a present. It was breath-taking.

Using old Avengers – Cap, Iron Man, Thor, Hank, Jan, Wanda, Clint, Vision, etc. So many Avengers that are true ‘core Avengers’ were brought back into the line-up and I felt that was very welcome. Especially Thor and Iron Man, who despite some fans thinking they’re part of the ‘big three’, I personally love their involvement in the team—more so than Cap.

The interaction between Avengers, with the everyday moments the dialogue, and the bureaucracy they had to deal with. That was fun and interesting to see.

Nostalgia – and yes, a lot of the nostalgia was nice. Thor yelling ‘Eric!’ to the once again dying Thunderstrike struck a cord with me, and Hawkeye struggling with his old role on the team was good. But in thinking about Busiek’s nostalgia, it hits on one of this run’s biggest flaws, in that it was way too nostalgia-centric at times. And ultimately, Busiek did things that brought he characters right back to the mid-70’s, ignoring tons of things before him. The Vision was no longer the same Vision he was back then and had been through quite a few changes. Hank was not the same ‘broken man’ anymore. Busiek felt the need to do a sequel to Avenger’s stories of old, not taking into account that sequels had already been done, with sequels to those in continuity too. He retread old ground *so* much that a great deal of history was ignored. Suddenly whole eras were lumped into ‘Heroes Reborn’ when there wasn’t any need for that.

And Busiek did the same thing Bendis does, in playing favorites. Sure, every writer does that, we all know Stern and Englehart did. But they were respectful to the past—which could be seen time and time again. But Busiek showered us with Traitholon, Silver Claw, Justice and Firestar, while at the same time ignoring many he didn’t like, just like Bendis does. It was that, and his focus on getting some Avengers stuck back in their old roles which I didn’t like. It felt like it was putting the Avengers back on the poisonous old path of being stale, which ultimately would lead to something as shitty as Avengers Dissassembled. Hate what was done to Carol, disliked his ignoring the Harras era (including changes to Vision, Sersi, Crystal, etc.).

I hated the Jerry Ordway arc. Here he had the Black Knight and Photon, two Avengers just waiting to be used again, and he pretty much mischaracterized them the whole time, on top of a boring story.

But I don’t want to seem as if I hate this era. Not the case at all—like others, I dislike parts of it, but love parts of it too. I liked the “Ultron Unlimited Arc” and thought it was fantastic. Earlier arcs with the Grim Reaper and the first few appearances with Lord Templar and Pagan were very interesting, and I couldn’t wait to see where it went. Generally, the first 25 issues of the run were pretty excellent, with only some minor things that were annoying. But those things would continue to become more pronounced later.

Avengers Forever, I actually loved. I thought it was very well done, and I loved the tributes he paid to various earlier eras, especially with Hank and Jan in tow. Songbird and Captain Marvel III (his first appearance) were interesting and the revelations were all exciting. It was like he came and ‘fixed’ all the stupid things over the years with a really great story that roped in the Kree, Srkulls, Kang, Immortus, Rick Jones, etc. It was really awesome. I think if he only retreaded old ground here most of us would have been satisfied.
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
Umm... Avengers Forever was not only NOT Genis' first appearance, he'd ACTUALLY HAD HIS OWN MINISERIES a couple of years earlier.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Oh, I know that [Big Grin] . It was a pretty awful mini too (though Beta Ray Bill showed up). But at the end of two long posts, I was getting sloppy. I meant mainly Genis first appearance in that costume. Really, its the first time he appeared that it counted, but I guess that's all a matter of opinion.

Nit-picker [Razz]
 
Posted by Ultra Jorge on :
 
I actually liked Legacy. He first appeared in the Silver Surfer. He made a few appearances there. I want to say next was Cosmic Powers mini? Then his own mini. I liked him in space better.

But yeah AF is when he actually mattered. Poor Genis. He got the shaft.
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
quote:
:Originally posted by Reboot:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Originally posted by Stealth:
The follow-up issue, where the Big Three plus Jan & Hank come up with a new lineup, has one panel that makes me angry just thinking about it: Sersi, back in that horrible green bikini, rejecting the offer to rejoin but telling them to invite her to the next party, as if the Harras/Epting stories had never happened; the only way I can cope with that panel is by telling myself that it's a shape-shifter posing as Sersi, and that one day, my Sersi, the real Sersi, will return.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Well, she was the only Eternal who got panel time AND was still mindwiped at the end of Eternals #7, so... *shrugs*

So there is hope for Sersi after all, just like there's hope for Rita, the female Yellowjacket. Yay!

quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
"Then there's Busiek's tendency to belittle my beloved Harras/Epting era, which leads me to believe that he's jealous"

Maybe he never read those issues? Sure would make it easier to ignore tham or pretend they never happened...

Oh, Busiek's read those issues, all right. He never misses a chance to pompously pontificate about how superior HIS issues are, how HE didn't try to make the Avengers more like the X-Men. *&)()&*%^% arrogant, clueless jerk! I enjoyed Harras & Epting's Avengers because it WASN'T like the X-Men, and I actually half-heartedly followed X-Men at the same time as Avengers, until the ridiculous resolution of the whole "Who's the real Betsy?" mess.

quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
"The final lineup includes ex-New Warriors Firestar and Justice"

I had no idea who the hell these people were, and the way they were written didn't make me wanna care, either.

I would highly recommend reading the Firestar mini-series (now available in digest form) and New Warriors Volume One # 1-25.

quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
"Ultron Unlimited"

Ohhh-- I HATED this thing! One more case of bringing back an old villain, AGAIN, and upping the ante, higher and higher, to simply monstrous proportions. And this wasn't even the LAST story with Ultron, was it???

LOL I think bigger is sometimes better, when it's done right. And as far as I know, Ultron didn't reappear until just this month, in Mighty Avengers # 1, which I haven't browsed through yet, but I've read some spoilers and it sounds eye-rollingly bad. [Roll Eyes]

quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
"I had originally intended to add a review of Busiek's 12-issue time-travel limited series Avengers Forever"

Oh don't wimp out on us now! C'mon, SOMEBODY's gotta refresh my memory about that thing. It was too deeply involved in the overlong mess that followed.

Sorry, but I can't do it -- I don't want my brain to melt. [Big Grin]

quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
Deodoto and later issues – Deodoto has always been hit or miss with me, and this was an era where his art was just way to over the top. And the line-up began to be more pronounced, so that Deathcry had more screen time, Giant Man was done well, but needed better interaction, and now Quicksilver became a full-time member, which meant it was nice to see a follow-up on where his and Crystal’s story would go from here (as well as get him back in Avengers, where I feel he belongs rather than X-Factor), although I didn’t like him wanting to reconcile with Crystal. The Taylor Madison/Herc story felt kind of like a cop-out, complete with Zeus involvement coming out of left field, so I can understand how people may have hated it.

The Crossing – perhaps the worst Avengers story ever told. Completely all over the field, it was impossible to keep track of read and made little sense. Mantis as the surprise villainous, Kang’s continuity-messy ‘hidden history of the Avengers’, Iron Man betraying them and then teen Tony arriving…it was just crap. It was the epitome of what was wrong with the 90’s. Really, I almost can’t find words venomous enough to talk about it.

Pre-Onslought – right before Onslought, Waid came in and attempted to get the book on track, but ultimately it was too discombobulated.

Heroes Reborn – Awful. Really, there isn’t one good thing to say about it. Ok, it beats the Crossing, but c’mon.

Thank you, Cobie, for once again covering the issues I don't have. I'm wondering...my Avengers collection ends with Busiek's last issue. Would you like to take over the chronology from Johns through the present day?

quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
And Busiek did the same thing Bendis does, in playing favorites. Sure, every writer does that, we all know Stern and Englehart did. But they were respectful to the past—which could be seen time and time again. But Busiek showered us with Traitholon, Silver Claw, Justice and Firestar, while at the same time ignoring many he didn’t like, just like Bendis does. It was that, and his focus on getting some Avengers stuck back in their old roles which I didn’t like. It felt like it was putting the Avengers back on the poisonous old path of being stale, which ultimately would lead to something as shitty as Avengers Dissassembled. Hate what was done to Carol, disliked his ignoring the Harras era (including changes to Vision, Sersi, Crystal, etc.).

Amen to that. Especially the part about putting the Avengers back on the path of being stale, which led to Avengers Disassembled. If Busiek was a better writer (and less of a stick-in-the-mud), he could have gradually evolved the team so that it went from overly-familiar members to fresh new members. Instead, the book got so grindingly stale with the status quo, that the pendulum swang too far the other way, and the book was shattered, perhaps forever. This is why I have no patience for people with very rigid ideas of what the Avengers "should" and "shouldn't" be. The book spent its first 30 years taking chances and getting better and better thanks to those chances -- there is a lesson to be learned here.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Stealth, I'd love to take over chronology wise, though I only see myself as a deputy performing duties for you for the issues you're missing [Big Grin] It won't be too many either, the John's issues can basically be covered pretty fast. I'm a John's fan, but his Avengers run wasn't anything special (and Austen...heh, Austen...).

Looking forward to thoughts on the second half of Busiek's run--which actually began with what I thought were some fine Avengers moments, only to end up going through one of the more drawn out stories in Avengers history.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"And as far as I know, Ultron didn't reappear until just this month, in Mighty Avengers # 1"

I just took a quick glance down my index, there was a one-shot called THE ULTRON IMPERATIVE (Nov'01) written by Busiek (w/ plot assist by Roy Thomas!) and with dialogue & art by a nostalgic ARMY of former & new AVENGERS creators (Roger Stern, Steve Englehart, Jim Starlin, etc.)

I'd also love for someone to review the Hellcat-related stories, AVENGERS INFINITY, the completely over-the-top absurdity of MAXIMUM SECURITY (some story ideas just go TOO DAMN FAR) and CELESTIAL QUEST.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
By the way, I also looked over my index, and noticed that the editor in charge of the entirety of Busiek's run-- and Johns' run-- was Tom Brevoort. When I started adding editors to my index, that's when I noticed that nearly every major turning point in a series or change in creative line-up coincided with changes in editors, which told me editors often have more influence on a book than writers. It's pretty obvious Brevoort is also a nostalgia freak, which is not necessarily a bad thing (especially when I see how so much of Marvel & DC have degenerated over the last 15 years).

Let's put it this way... whenever something happens-- good or bad-- ALWAYS blame whoever's in charge! (As Captain Kirk said on at least one occasion-- "It's MY ship-- and MY responsibility.")
 
Posted by Caliente on :
 
Okay, here's what I want to know. Maybe it's been asked before... whatever.

Anyway, in Civil War: The Confession Tony said-- and I quote-- "The Avengers avenge, X-Men defend, the Fantastic Four explore." Which, yeah, okay, we already knew. But what is it that the Avengers are avenging? (Also, side note: If the X-Men defend, what exactly do the Defenders do?)

I mean, the X-Men are defending mutants from humans (and humans from mutants if the House of M debacle is any indication) and the FF exploration is basically self-explanatory but... yeah. What is there to avenge, exactly? Or who? And why are these people doing it?
 
Posted by Ultra Jorge on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
By the way, I also looked over my index, and noticed that the editor in charge of the entirety of Busiek's run-- and Johns' run-- was Tom Brevoort. When I started adding editors to my index, that's when I noticed that nearly every major turning point in a series or change in creative line-up coincided with changes in editors, which told me editors often have more influence on a book than writers. It's pretty obvious Brevoort is also a nostalgia freak, which is not necessarily a bad thing (especially when I see how so much of Marvel & DC have degenerated over the last 15 years).

Let's put it this way... whenever something happens-- good or bad-- ALWAYS blame whoever's in charge! (As Captain Kirk said on at least one occasion-- "It's MY ship-- and MY responsibility.")

Brevoort then is responsible for the current nightmare. What's wrong with the middle road I say?
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Caliente:
Okay, here's what I want to know. Maybe it's been asked before... whatever.

Anyway, in Civil War: The Confession Tony said-- and I quote-- "The Avengers avenge, X-Men defend, the Fantastic Four explore." Which, yeah, okay, we already knew. But what is it that the Avengers are avenging? (Also, side note: If the X-Men defend, what exactly do the Defenders do?)

I mean, the X-Men are defending mutants from humans (and humans from mutants if the House of M debacle is any indication) and the FF exploration is basically self-explanatory but... yeah. What is there to avenge, exactly? Or who? And why are these people doing it?

Tis the job of the Avengers to avenge all attempts of attack and subversion upon the normal folk of Mid-Guard as noble Thor once said!

In 40 years of history, this has never truly been explained though. It was just such a cool name in the 1960's! [Big Grin]
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"In 40 years of history, this has never truly been explained though. It was just such a cool name in the 1960's!"

Jan said something like, "We need a name like The Avengers, or..." Sheesh.

Sure seems to me Stan Lee (& Marvel in general) spent some time gutting existing tv shows for their names...

THE AVENGERS
THE DEFENDERS
THE INVADERS
THE CHAMPIONS

At least you can't confuse the JUSTICE LEAGUE OF AMERICA with anyone else!

[Smile]


I guess when THE X-FILES started it was "payback". Had it been a comic-book rather than a tv show, I suspect Marvel's lawyers would have been all over them...
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
Stealth, I'd love to take over chronology wise, though I only see myself as a deputy performing duties for you for the issues you're missing It won't be too many either, the John's issues can basically be covered pretty fast. I'm a John's fan, but his Avengers run wasn't anything special (and Austen...heh, Austen...).

Thanks, I appreciate it. Sometimes it's more fun to review mediocre-to-bad comics than good comics, isn't it? Real cathartic.

quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
Looking forward to thoughts on the second half of Busiek's run--which actually began with what I thought were some fine Avengers moments, only to end up going through one of the more drawn out stories in Avengers history.

Here's a little advance sample:

The Kulan Gath/Origin-of-Silverclaw storyarc reminds me of those hokey old black & white jungle movies that Joel and Mike and the robots used to make fun of on Mystery Science Theater 3000.

quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
"And as far as I know, Ultron didn't reappear until just this month, in Mighty Avengers # 1"

I just took a quick glance down my index, there was a one-shot called THE ULTRON IMPERATIVE (Nov'01) written by Busiek (w/ plot assist by Roy Thomas!) and with dialogue & art by a nostalgic ARMY of former & new AVENGERS creators (Roger Stern, Steve Englehart, Jim Starlin, etc.)

Sounds moderately intriguing. If Busiek's name wasn't on it, I probably would put it on my list of back issues to search for.

quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
I'd also love for someone to review the Hellcat-related stories, AVENGERS INFINITY, the completely over-the-top absurdity of MAXIMUM SECURITY (some story ideas just go TOO DAMN FAR) and CELESTIAL QUEST.

Hellcat-related stories? Do you mean the Avengers and T-bolt annuals where she's brought back to life?

I once considered buying the back issues of Avengers Infinity, because Roger Stern is one of my favorite writers and Sean Chen is a good artist. But when I found out it stars three of my least favorite Avengers -- Starfox, Tigra, and Moondragon -- I decided against it.

I feel so lucky that uncannyxmen.net has detailed summaries of Maximum Security, so I could find out what happened without wasting money. Just as with the mini-crossover Live Kree or Die, Busiek proves he shouldn't be let anywhere near the sub-genre of superhero space opera.

I haven't read Avengers: Celestial Quest, and I've never really felt much curiosity about it. I guess it's because I think Thanos should never have been resurrected, and his presence in any comic book is an automatic turn-off to me, even with Steve Englehart writing it.

quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
When I started adding editors to my index, that's when I noticed that nearly every major turning point in a series or change in creative line-up coincided with changes in editors, which told me editors often have more influence on a book than writers.

It would be interesting to use that reasoning on the Avengers editors who came before Brevoort. At the moment, I don't have access to my copies of the Official Marvel Index to the Avengers (the 1990s update of the original), and I need them to reference the exact dates and issues. But I definitely will come back to this subject very soon.

quote:
Originally posted by Caliente:
Okay, here's what I want to know. Maybe it's been asked before... whatever.

Anyway, in Civil War: The Confession Tony said-- and I quote-- "The Avengers avenge, X-Men defend, the Fantastic Four explore." Which, yeah, okay, we already knew. But what is it that the Avengers are avenging? (Also, side note: If the X-Men defend, what exactly do the Defenders do?)

I mean, the X-Men are defending mutants from humans (and humans from mutants if the House of M debacle is any indication) and the FF exploration is basically self-explanatory but... yeah. What is there to avenge, exactly? Or who? And why are these people doing it?

I have a feeling that neither Stan Lee nor anyone else at Marvel gave any serious thought to the true meaning of the name until Bob Harras referred to it twice during his run, raising interesting questions about whether or not to take the name literally, and where to draw the line that heroes shouldn't cross. Forgive me for being vague, it's just I'm afraid that if I go into detail, I'll spoil the stories.

No one since Harras has ever addressed the subject, but hopefully that will change sometime in the future.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
My indexes aren't completely updated, but I thought I'd see what I did have and pass it on...

STAN LEE -- #1 / Sep'63
ROY THOMAS -- #103 / Sep'72
LEN WEIN -- #133 / Mar'75
MARV WOLFMAN -- #140 / Oct'75
ARCHIE GOODWIN -- #150 / Aug'76
GERRY CONWAY -- #151 / Sep'76
ARCHIE GOODWIN -- #158 / Apr'77
JIM SHOOTER -- #171 / May'78
ROGER STERN -- #173 / Jul'78
JIM SALICRUP -- #192 / Feb'80
MARK GRUENWALD -- #222 / Aug'82
HOWARD MACKIE -- #304 / Jun'89
RALPH MACCHIO -- #335 / Aug'91

I stopped buying a few months after this...

TOM BREVOORT w/Gregg Schigiel -- #1 / Feb'98
TOM BREVOORT w/Frank Dunkerley -- #28 / May'00
TOM BREVOORT w/Marc Sumerak -- #38 / Mar'01
TOM BREVOORT w/Marc Sumerak & Jeff Youngquist -- #47 / Dec'01
TOM BREVOORT w/Marc Sumerak -- #52 / May'02
TOM BREVOORT w/Marc Sumerak & Andy Schmidt -- #58 / Nov'02

I don't know how much assistant editors influence books, but I figured I'd include them on this list.
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
Ultron also appeared in Frank Tieri's last Iron Man arc (v3 #45-49 or thereabouts), following up on Ultron Imperative and explaining away Quesada's Sentient Armour (and something else Quesada introduced...).
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Avengers Volume Three # 23-40

From the peak of Ultron Unlimited, the book took a steep step down with an issue focused on the Vision. I don’t like seeing an angst-ridden Vision, considering that – as Cobie has already pointed out – Harras had already put Vision through many soul-searching nights, ending with Vision reclaiming his identity; just another example of how selective Busiek is about continuity. The two-parter which followed was a big stumbling bore – the setup was intriguing (what kind of threat could drive the Juggernaut to come running to the Avengers for help?) but the payoff was underwhelming (tellingly, the Exemplars – multiple stereotypes with superpowers – have not been seen anywhere since.) And the ending with Thor throwing his hammer at the reporters is infuriatingly out of character, yet sadly typical of Busiek’s portrayal of Thor as a belligerent oaf.

The next issue is a pleasant surprise – the pacing is unusually fast for Busiek, the guest art team of Stuart Immonen & Wade Von Grawbadger do a wonderful job, the plot twist is clever, and the focus on non-superstars (Carol Danvers, Scott Lang, Genis Mar-Vell, and...ugh...Silverclaw) gives a hint of what this Avengers era could have been. But then, after a lineup-change issue, we reach the low point of the Busiek/Perez issues: the Kulan Gath/origin-of-Silverclaw story. Pseudo-mysticism can be entertaining when it’s done right, but Busiek misses by a mile – it all feels to me like a dumb old jungle movie updated with CGI effects; this arc also introduces the redundant and totally unnecessary “Hank turns into both Goliath and Yellowjacket” plot thread. Next is Perez’s final Avengers storyarc, where the Avengers – and later, the Thunderbolts as well – are up against Masque, the Grim Reaper, and Count Nefaria. The Reaper as a crime lord is more than a little goofy to me, as is Nefaria’s motivation, and the revelation of Masque as having a small army of clones feels like lazy writing. Factoring in the Thunderbolts tie-ins and the double-size conclusion, this is a thin premise stretched out across seven issues worth of pages. The storyarc is basically one prolonged action sequence, and there’s nothing wrong with that, except that Busiek is not particularly good at writing action sequences, plus he falls into the old trap of the excessively-powerful villain. Perez seems to be having a lot of fun with the multitude of characters to draw, but the story is an anti-climactic note on which to leave.

I don’t have a copy of the Maximum Security tie-in, because I don’t want anything to do with Maximum Security for reasons I already gave in an earlier post. The two issues that follow are guest-penciled by Steve Epting, and though Al Vey’s inking ruins many panels, there is still a lot of memorable imagery – Epting’s renditions of Carol Danvers in action should be studied by any artist assigned to draw her, Bloodwraith looks terrifying, and the darkly atmospheric cover to # 37 is a classic. The next issue introduces not only the reliably excellent art of Alan Davis & Mark Farmer, but also a new, more proactive direction (although as with most of Busiek’s Avengers work, nothing much comes of this promising concept, plus the expanded lineup makes the book unfocused, like it was when Byrne was writing it.) The “Hulk City” two-parter is dumber than dumb, but Davis seems to be having fun drawing it, and that helps...a little.

Next week: The Busiek era closes with that plodding white elephant also known as the Kang Dynasty Saga.

[ March 21, 2007, 09:45 PM: Message edited by: Stealth ]
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Stealth:
(Killraven is another Davis work -- besides Superboy's Legion -- that I still don't have in my collection. [Embarrassed] )

Since you mentioned that there (and with the choice of smiley at the end [Smile] ), I thought I should point out that Marvel's just solicited a HC of that mini [I haven't actually read it myself, so I can't say how good it is]:

quote:
http://www.marvel.com/catalog/?book_id=6857
KILLRAVEN PREMIERE
COVER BY: ALAN DAVIS
WRITER: ALAN DAVIS
PENCILS: ALAN DAVIS
INKS: ALAN DAVIS
THE STORY:
In the not-so-distant future, Martians have invaded our world and laid waste to our civilization! Now, only Jonathan Raven – the gladiator known as Killraven – and his band of Freemen stand between Earth and utter annihilation! Dig sci-fi action? Love great visuals? Then grab your tub of popcorn and get ready for this modern classic from the great Alan Davis!
Collecting KILLRAVEN #1-6.
144 PGS./Rated T+ …$19.99
ISBN: 0-7851-2538-8
Trim size: standard

IN STORES: 2007-06-13



[ March 22, 2007, 04:43 PM: Message edited by: Reboot ]
 
Posted by Ultra Jorge on :
 
I agree about the Vision. Finally his own android. I liked what Byrne did. No Wonder Man brainwaves, no Human Torch body parts.

Harras gave him new brainwaves from a dead man. I dug it.

Then Busiek returns everything to like it was.
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Thanks for the information, Reboot. I'll circle that date on my calendar.

Jorge, I was wondering, since you're a Young Avengers fan, if you could please explain just what the current status of the Vision is, because what little I've seen of the Vision since his destruction by Bendis and his resurrection in Young Avengers has left me confused.
 
Posted by Set on :
 
quote:
Jorge, I was wondering, since you're a Young Avengers fan, if you could please explain just what the current status of the Vision is, because what little I've seen of the Vision since his destruction by Bendis and his resurrection in Young Avengers has left me confused.
I'm not Jorge, but I play him on TV...

Either in House of M or something, Vision (along with Hawkeye and Ant-Man) got killed, and purportedly the Scarlet Witch was responsible for all of that. Being one of those freaks who hasn't bought a mega-crossover since Age of Apocalypse, I have no idea what really happened in House of M, and from the sounds of it, it's been retconned a few times since then anyway...

A character from the future shows up with 30th century technology and attempts to contact the Avengers, but they are disbanded. He manages to track down the remains of the Vision, stored in a box in a Stark Industries warehouse, and manages to awaken his computer AI, if not restore his body. At this point, the Vision is just a holographic image springing up from his wreckage and offering advice to the group. (Frankly, the idea of the Vision as an actual 'vision,' nothing more than a holographic advisor, was cool, and I wish they'd kept that for a bit longer.) The Vision mentions a 'Avengers Next Generation' sort of program that he designed to keep track of the next wave of heroes, in case the Avengers needed to be replaced. Future-dude seeks out these kids and forms the Young Avengers from them, causing his own 30th century armor to change to a red and white approximation of Iron Man's armor (but *vastly* higher tech) and calling himself Iron Lad.

Stuff happens, future-guy has to return to the future, but the armor has to stay. Vision downloads into the future-armor, which is 'neurokinetic' (which mneans that it responds to it's wearers thoughts and reshapes itself). He makes it resemble 'Iron Lad' at first, but that bothers some of the Young Avengers who miss their former team-mate and he changes it again to look more like a slimmer version of his old Vision appearance.

So the current version of the Vision has all of the memories of the old Vision, but his 'body' is the 30th century uber-armor that does whatever the heck he wants it to do, making him able to duplicate most of his old tricks (density control, eyebeams, fly, interface with machinery, etc.) and do all sorts of other stuff (force blasts, time travel, shapechange, etc.).

I've skipped over some spoilery stuff deliberately, and this is basically the stuff relevant to the Vision character only.
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
In simpler terms, I can sum up the YA-Vision in three words: Son of Vision.

There are several scenes, most notably in YAv 7-8 (of which I've included the most explicit below), which are there solely to establish that this is NOT the Vision who died in Disassembled, but a new character based on the same "Operating System." (think new computer booted up using your old Windows installation disc) While it's true that he has access to many of the memories of Synthezoid-Vision, he always refers to them - and him - in the third person.

 -

[ March 22, 2007, 11:58 PM: Message edited by: Reboot ]
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Another great review Stealth. I have to say though, a lot of what I said about Busiek's Vision, though my own thoughts, were put into words better by Reboot in a PM about four or five months ago. [Smile] . I think we all agree on Busiek's back-tracking though and how much it reeks of the type of comic book writing that is helping kill the industry and lead to Dissassembled type scenarios.

As for Avengers #23-40, I'll recall what I can here:

- First, the Templars story, while pretty to look at (Nova and Spidey!) was really a typical 70's slugfest comic book story with little in substance, though fun. The only problem is that a lot of Busiek's stories were like this. That wouldn't be *so* bad if the characterization we were getting wasn't so off kilter.

- Change in line-up. Stealth, you're dead-on about Thor being out of character. Lashing out at reporters? C'mon. Busiek seemed to be trying to recapture Avengers #150-151, which was somewhat fun, although a little off at times. Loved seeing Hank and Jan back on the team and Carol moving forward, but the problem was I didn't like what was going on with them personality/subplot wise. Triatholon and Silver Claw are two of the more dull Avengers in its history, and stink of stereotypes.

- Hank as Yellowjacket. I think its pretty much been a theme of this thread that we all think this was a dumb move. After Shooter's disgraceful story, to Stern moving Hank forward, to Harras restoring Hank as a great hero without dwelling on the past, there was NO REASON to go this route. And now Hank has suffered for it since. Johns tried to 'fix it' again (failed), Bendis continually refers to it, including insults from other super-heroes (Carol Danvers even THIS WEEK has done so). Hank is one of my favorite heroes. It is the easiest thing in the world to move him past all this crap and make him a great hero again. But no one has the creativity to just go for it.

- Avengers/Thunderbolts crossover - this was somewhat fun at the time, with Hawkeye in the mix and Nefaria, the Grim Reaper, etc. It almost looked like for a time there would be an annual Avengers/Thunderbolts thing going on in the vein of JLA/JSA team-ups of old. Of course, the T-Bolts were screwed over worse than the Avengers, so that didn't pan out.

- Maximum Security - hardly even remember anything about it. I was in college at the time, and remember thinking "why am I even bothering to read this?"

- Bloodwraith/Steve Epting - this story, however, was a highlight of Kurt's run. I remember being really enthralled by Bloodwraith growing so large and being so threatening. Though a quick story, it was the type of story that should have been more pronounced in this run.

- Alan Davis/too many Avengers - Davis has many fans around here, and my father loves his artwork too, but I can't say I've ever really fallen in love with a lot of what he's done. Maybe I'm just looking in the wrong places? (I've never read his Excalibur stuff). But his run was all too short, which annoys me. I'm greedy and I don't apologize for it--for an artist to truly impress me, I'll need quite a few continual issues. But the main problem here is the same problem Byrne had, etc. Too many Avengers means no focus, meaning not enough drama, which makes me lose interest. The 'B' characters work well in tight situations where we see them excel, or paired up with the super-stars. But having 20 'B' characters only ensures they remain 'B' characters and basically don't do anything other than gang up on a very powerful enemy--which means that sooner or later they'll be cannon-fodder.
 
Posted by walkwithcrowds on :
 
I've said it before and I'll say it again.

Thank you for this amazing thread.
Cobie, Prof and of course Stealth.
You guys are doing a great job. I check this thread everytime I'm on for the latest updates.

Keep up the great work guys.
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
Another great review Stealth. I have to say though, a lot of what I said about Busiek's Vision, though my own thoughts, were put into words better by Reboot in a PM about four or five months ago. [Smile] . I think we all agree on Busiek's back-tracking though and how much it reeks of the type of comic book writing that is helping kill the industry and lead to Dissassembled type scenarios.

And, since you mentioned it, I may as well quote the relevant excerpt:

For instance, I still can't buy a literal "Man Without Fear" NOT going nuts nor taking stupid chances and getting themselves killed, since fear's the thing that gives us common sense, like "don't cross the road when the cars are coming you'll get killed" and "don't touch that hot pan - you'll burn yourself." And I don't like repeating patterns - once something's changed, it should stay different. The Scarlet Witch should never be an Avenger again after what she's done. Hank & Jan should never get [have got] back together. Even if Wanda is certified sane and H&J get back on speaking terms - could YOU trust someone who did what Wanda did to watch your back? They don't need to be frozen at their first status after the event, but continuity means many things, and hitting rewind is discontinuous.

And that was something Harris was good at in his Avengers run, probably best exemplified by his treatment of the Vision. He gave him back his red/green/yellow colour scheme, his ears & genitals, and his emotions. But the Vision at the end of Harris' run was still FAR different from the pre-Byrne Vision. Then Busiek took over post-Heroes Reborn and set about wiping Vision back thirty years, deleting the Alex Lipton element in favour of making him more like Wonder Man than ever, and losing that "we're a unique being" stuff from the end of Harris' Vision mini. [And, of course, Wonder Man got reset to his pre-WCA days, never mind the resurrection itself from the ion bomb DnA hit him with.]

quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
Triatholon [sic] and Silver Claw [sic] are two of the more dull Avengers in its history, and stink of stereotypes.

What surprising is that no one here's yet mentioned that Silverclaw is a direct, complete Snowbird (of Alpha Flight) rip-off.

Half-goddess, changes into animals of her native region which are always a specific colour...

quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
- Hank as Yellowjacket. I think its pretty much been a theme of this thread that we all think this was a dumb move. After Shooter's disgraceful story, to Stern moving Hank forward, to Harras restoring Hank as a great hero without dwelling on the past, there was NO REASON to go this route. And now Hank has suffered for it since. Johns tried to 'fix it' again (failed), Bendis continually refers to it, including insults from other super-heroes (Carol Danvers even THIS WEEK has done so).

In a word? WØRD.

quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
- Maximum Security - hardly even remember anything about it. I was in college at the time, and remember thinking "why am I even bothering to read this?"

 -

[Razz] [Razz]
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"Alan Davis -- his run was all too short, which annoys me."

Yeah, me too, on both F.F. and AVENGERS. No point getting on this book if that book is waiting in the wings. Had either Epting or Davis done the entire Kang story, it probably would have been-- at least-- a bit more tolerable... He left AVENGERS for KILLRAVEN??? It was a piece of C***! Oh sure, pretty to look at, and he captures "Neal Adams" very well-- which is how KILLRAVEN started originally. But I'm sure most KILLRAVEN fans want RUSSELL, not Adams. It was average AT BEST, and there was just NO POINT in creating an "alternate" version of that series! If they wanted to do an "early" adventure, couldn't they have EASILY fit it into continuity somewhere???


"Hank as Yellowjacket -- After Shooter's disgraceful story, to Stern moving Hank forward, to Harras restoring Hank as a great hero without dwelling on the past, there was NO REASON to go this route. And now Hank has suffered for it since. Johns tried to 'fix it' again (failed), Bendis continually refers to it, including insults from other super-heroes (Carol Danvers even THIS WEEK has done so). Hank is one of my favorite heroes. It is the easiest thing in the world to move him past all this crap and make him a great hero again. But no one has the creativity to just go for it."

Shooter screwed Hank over TWICE! First, he had him go crazy in the "Ant-Man" story George Perez drew. If anyone remembers, shortly after this, Claremont & Byrne did a 2-parter in MARVEL TEAM-UP where they amped up the Wasps's powers, and showed Hank was completely himself again. I always took that as a subtle "Up YOURS, Shooter!" from those guys. (Unlike when Claremont pulled an "Up YOURS, Michelinie!" with Ms. Marvel, and wound up screwing HER over even more in the process.) Shooter's 2nd screwing over of Hank didn't feel like he was trying to veto Claremont & Byrne, it just felt like part of a general screwing over of EVERY single character in the Marvel Universe that Shooter could do anything to. Talk about "NO REASON to go this route"!!!

Some writers seems to spend their entire careers destroying what others have created. As if to balance this out, other writers spend an awful lot of time trying to "fix" what those writers screwed over in the first place. This is what you get with corporate-owned characetrs who completely dominate the marketplace and are NEVER going to go away.

There's also the case of Hal Jordan-- who was REPEATEDLY screwed over by dozens of writers & editors for decades. There was NO REASON for it. Along came Steve Englehart, who "fixed" his book like it had never been fixed before. Sales DOUBLED. But some people couldn't have that. Denny O'Neil, master of destroying other people's characters, got back on the series as editor, and immediately undid everything Englehart worked so hard at. Gerard Jones had to work twice as hard trying to "fix" the damage. And then editor Kevin Dooley decided to try and out-do O'Neil. Again-- "NO REASON for it". 15 YEARS later, Hal Jordan is finally a viable character again-- in some ways, better-written than he ever was before. But of course, after so much damage for so long, this BIG "fix" has really rubbed some fans the wrong way. (At least I'm reading it again-- and, I think, enjoying it more than ever before.) From reading all the latest posts on this thread, I'm tempted to put Geoff Johns' GL more in the Harras category than the Busiek category. Because, apart from a few odd things, it really has been that damn good. So far.


MAXIUMUM SECURITY struck me as Marvel's attempt to out-do DC's INVASION-- or maybe that whacked-out Superman graphic novel, "The Planet Stealers". How can any writer possibly deal with "everyday normal" stories, after something like this????? (So, of course, they followed it up with the Kang epic... OY!!!)
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
"Alan Davis -- his run was all too short, which annoys me."

Yeah, me too, on both F.F. and AVENGERS. No point getting on this book if that book is waiting in the wings. Had either Epting or Davis done the entire Kang story, it probably would have been-- at least-- a bit more tolerable... He left AVENGERS for KILLRAVEN??? It was a piece of C***! Oh sure, pretty to look at, and he captures "Neal Adams" very well-- which is how KILLRAVEN started originally. But I'm sure most KILLRAVEN fans want RUSSELL, not Adams. It was average AT BEST, and there was just NO POINT in creating an "alternate" version of that series! If they wanted to do an "early" adventure, couldn't they have EASILY fit it into continuity somewhere???

It was something he'd always wanted to do. He even said here that it was the [Marvel] work of his he most wanted in TPB.

Another quote:
quote:
Alan Davis:
I’m not going to try to defend Killraven’s lack of commercial success by complaining that it wasn’t promoted well enough. I always knew it was going to be a hard sell because the original series never really found a successful niche—that is, neither superhero or hard sci-fi. I think the series is among the best I have written or drawn but, even before it came out, there were critics asking why I was wasting my time on a character nobody cared about (the lack of interest on this forum might confirm that). All of the people I have spoken to who actually read the series seemed to enjoy it but, frighteningly, many of the critics I have spoken to directly hadn’t read a single issue-- Others said they hadn’t bought the individual issues because Marvel was bound to bring the TPB out along with the sixth issue. I think Marvel has solicited a TPB on more than one occasion but the interest shown wasn’t enough to make a print run worthwhile. I have to believe that Marvel did their best to sell the book and I certainly couldn’t have done any better (And I’d rather spend my time writing and drawing) so I have to accept that the Killraven experience demonstrates that my ‘fan base’ isn’t that large or is only interested in my work on certain books/characters. Either way, I’m too comfortable where I am to test the market for myself.

[quote]
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
I did buy and read the entire mini-series. I repeat what I said. It looked nice, but the story was nothing special. And, there was no reason to create an alternate version when they already had the existing series-- which has been left hanging for DECADES now, still unfinished. If Davis didn't want to pick up where McGregor & Russell left off, he could have found a way to do a flashback set in between some of the existing issues, or before the Neal Adams issue. Instead, we're left with one more "reboot", which diehard fans of the original will no doubt dismiss simply because, "It's not the REAL Killraven"!
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Reboot:

In simpler terms, I can sum up the YA-Vision in three words: Son of Vision.

There are several scenes, most notably in YAv 7-8 (of which I've included the most explicit below), which are there solely to establish that this is NOT the Vision who died in Disassembled, but a new character based on the same "Operating System." (think new computer booted up using your old Windows installation disc) While it's true that he has access to many of the memories of Synthezoid-Vision, he always refers to them - and him - in the third person.

Son of Vision? Kid Vision? I don't like it at all. [sigh] The MU has turned into such a mess.

quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
- Avengers/Thunderbolts crossover - this was somewhat fun at the time, with Hawkeye in the mix and Nefaria, the Grim Reaper, etc. It almost looked like for a time there would be an annual Avengers/Thunderbolts thing going on in the vein of JLA/JSA team-ups of old. Of course, the T-Bolts were screwed over worse than the Avengers, so that didn't pan out.

Yeah, what was with those later issues of Thunderbolts? Nicieza's early issues had some great moments -- Scourge decapitating Zemo, Hawkeye shooting an arrow through Gyrich's hand -- but after # 50, the stories seemed like something inspired by a bad drug trip (and it can't be a coincidence that the decline started as soon as Mark Bagley left.) I wonder what kind of behind-the-scenes craziness was going on?

quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
And now Hank has suffered for it since. Johns tried to 'fix it' again (failed), Bendis continually refers to it, including insults from other super-heroes (Carol Danvers even THIS WEEK has done so).

And speaking of Carol's rude remark...I finally got a chance yesterday to browse through Mighty Avengers # 1. What really makes me laugh is the way that Bendis seems to be trying to make the book all things to all people (so much for his carefully crafted reputation as a maverick. [Roll Eyes] ) And then the book closes with what appears to be Iron Man being transformed by Ultron into a female cyborg. [ROTFLMAO] Not so funny is that all the members of the team are written as one-dimensional sharp-tongued cynics who kill without hesitation. Alan Grant wrote great sharp-tongued cynics in L.E.G.I.O.N. and Peter David currently writes great sharp-tongued cynics in X-Factor (and except for Lobo, none of them were killers -- Lydea Mallor doesn't count, and neither does Guido, as they were both mind-controlled at the time.) Bendis, like that wildly overrated so-called auteur Tarantino, seems to write all of his characters as extensions of his own public persona.

quote:
Originally posted by Reboot:
What surprising is that no one here's yet mentioned that Silverclaw is a direct, complete Snowbird (of Alpha Flight) rip-off.

I can't believe that never occured to me! Well, that just gives me one more reason to dislike her. [Big Grin]

quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
Shooter screwed Hank over TWICE! First, he had him go crazy in the "Ant-Man" story George Perez drew. If anyone remembers, shortly after this, Claremont & Byrne did a 2-parter in MARVEL TEAM-UP where they amped up the Wasps's powers, and showed Hank was completely himself again. I always took that as a subtle "Up YOURS, Shooter!" from those guys.

Yes, even with Perez's art, that's one of the stories I have the most difficulty reading, because of what it foreshadows.

The Claremont/Byrne MTU story is great. It, along with most of their other MTU stories as well, stands the test of time better than their more well-known work on Uncanny X-Men.


Here's the editor-by-editor analysis that I had said I would do:

I'll start with Roger Stern, since he was the first Avengers editor who was not also the editor-in-chief. He started in the middle of the Korvac arc, so I'll absolve him of any blame for that. [Wink] Once that was over, he edited the first 11 issues of the Michelinie Era, # 181-191. As I said earlier, I think these stories are not bad, but they're too generic and small-scale. Stern did provide the plot for one of the better ones, the Grey Gargoyle two-parter in # 190-191. It's been documented that Stern did not enjoy being an editor, so once other editors started coming into Marvel, he got out as soon as he could, and stuck to what he did best: writing.

Jim Salicrup's first couple issues were in the same mold as what had immediately come before. But the Taksmaster arc (# 194-196) is by far my favorite of this era. I haven't read the remainder of the Salicrup issues, except for # 221, which was his last issue and pretty lame. The stuff that falls between 197 and 220 sounds just awful, full of character assassinations (Ms. Marvel, Yellowjacket), spotlights on characters I don’t like (Tigra, Moondragon) and fill-in issues, and so I refuse to read it. The impression this leaves me with is that Salicrup fell into a situation of Shooter’s ego run amuck (as both writer and editor-in-chief), and all he could do was hang on for his life.

Mark Gruenwald’s first three issues as editor were weak, but then the Steven Grant/Black Knight two-parter steered the book back in the right direction. The next issue, Roger Stern took the wheel and kept the book in the right direction, even though there were some bumps and detours before Buscema & Palmer arrived and the book was the best it had been since the Steve Englehart era. I would imagine that the professional relationship between Gruenwald and Stern was very intense and very complicated. In the end, what really matters is that some of the all-time best Avengers stories came out of this relationship. If not for Gruenwald’s expanding ego (there’s that word again) there would have been more great stories for who knows how many more years (how long was Stern on Superman? 12 years?) The Simonson quotes posted in this thread by Reboot show that Simonson contributed more than I had originally suspected, but it still seems that Gruenwald became too controlling (his last three issues as editor were plotted by...Gruenwald himself.)

Howard Mackie – URGH! The direction he provided was literally no direction at all, because writers kept going in and out of a revolving door after only a few issues each. The only good thing he did was to put Bob Harras & Steve Epting on the book, and then step aside.

Ralph Macchio had a good track record before he became Avengers editor (out of all his pre-Avenger books, I’d have to single out Ann Nocenti’s excellent run on Daredevil.) Harras & Epting were already in place when he arrived, and he seems to have mostly allowed them to do their best work possible (coincidentally, Harras’ first job at Marvel was as Macchio’s assistant editor.) Just as when Macchio was editing Daredevil, he never got in the way of the creators taking chances and trying a fresh new approach. On the other hand, Macchio was still editing the book when it suddenly declined so sharply that I stopped reading it. I would imagine, though, that pressure from the Powers That Be had a lot to do with this decline – by the mid 1990s, Marvel had either tarnished or entirely wiped out everything that had been good about their books. Macchio must be really good at office politics, because he’s the only one of the editorial old guard to have survived all the upheavals and still be working there (he’s currently group editor of the Ultimate books.) I don’t know when exactly Macchio left Avengers or who, if anyone, came in between Macchio and Brevoort, because I didn’t read Avengers for a long time.

Tom Brevoort still edits Avengers today, and later this year will be his tenth anniversary as Avengers editor! That means that he has overseen both the Busiek approach and the Bendis approach – proving that these approaches are flip-sides of each other. Brevoort’s policy seems to be, “Whatever makes the sales go up, no matter how much it damages the book’s legacy,” because I think Busiek and Bendis have both done damage, each in his own way. And as long as Brevoort doesn't leave, the damage will continue.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"Bendis, like that wildly overrated so-called auteur Tarantino, seems to write all of his characters as extensions of his own public persona."

You know, I think I may only have seen one of his films, and after, all I could think was, what a waste of my time that was!


"Yes, even with Perez's art, that's one of the stories I have the most difficulty reading, because of what it foreshadows."

I don't think it foreshadowed anything-- at the time. In retrospect, though... AUGH!! (It's like what I said about GL. I did a 40-page retrospective of GL for KLORDNY shortly after ZERO HOUR, and it was astonishing, considering all the holes in my collection, how MANY scenes I found in earlier issues that were mirrors of bad stuff that came later. Like Steve Englehart's initial 2-part JLA story that brought back Jack Kirby's 1970's Manhunters-- and had Hal Jordan accused of MASS MURDER!!!!)

I guess it was still early in Shooter's run as writer, I wasn't sure what to expect. What I remember mostly was, the issue before, with The Grim Reaper, was the 1st issue George did where I noticed he had made NO drawing mistakes. Funny thing to notice, eh? George did what many only dream of-- he learned ON THE JOB. And those issues were when he finally got good. (Anything inked by Joe Sinnott doesn't count-- he ALWAYS "fixes" things!)


"The Claremont/Byrne MTU story is great. It, along with most of their other MTU stories as well, stands the test of time better than their more well-known work on Uncanny X-Men."

I remember one of the things I liked was having Dave Hunt on inks. I once spent about a half-hour with Chris discussing artists and inkers (but NOT writing!), and he didn't care for Hunt over Byrne. But at the time (and come to think of it, quite a LOT over the last 10-15 years) Byrne's art often seemed "muddy", and it was nice to have someone so "CLEAN" doing the inks. I also enjoyed it when Joe Sinnott started inking Byrne, beginning with MARVEL TWO-IN-ONE #50. (I hated Byrne's insistence on inking himself when he started writing the FF-- but by the end of his run, his art had changed so much, an issue inked by Sinnott showed they were no longer a good fit.)

Another story I loved at the time was the 2-parter with Iron Fist and the Daughters of the Dragon, the sort-of link between the last issue of IF and POWER MAN #48. I really wished Chris & John had stayed on PM-IF longer than they did. Seemed a waste to "save" the book like they did and then dump it for other things.


"I haven't read the remainder of the Salicrup issues, except for # 221, which was his last issue and pretty lame. The stuff that falls between 197 and 220 sounds just awful, full of character assassinations (Ms. Marvel, Yellowjacket), spotlights on characters I don’t like (Tigra, Moondragon) and fill-in issues, and so I refuse to read it. The impression this leaves me with is that Salicrup fell into a situation of Shooter’s ego run amuck (as both writer and editor-in-chief), and all he could do was hang on for his life."

Salicrup also took over X-MEN right as the Hellfire Club story began-- but left at its finale. Which suggests to me that as an editor, he was NOT really in control of what was going on in his books! There's been tons of discussion over the years about "lack of communication" between Claremont & Byrne over Jean Grey & Phoenix. SOMEHOW, they got right up to the very point of doing the finale of the story before Shooter suddenly stuck his nose in and said, "UH UH." (I should probably check the dates to see if there's any connection...) On Shooter's 2nd AVENGERS run, it just seems to me he was gonna do whatever the HELL he wanted, and nobody was gonna dare try to stop him. (I sometimes wonder how it might have been if Stan Lee had worked with an editor while HE was writing every book in sight!)

I do wish somebody would pick these issues to pieces. Why should the characters and the readers be the only ones to suffer?


"the Steven Grant/Black Knight two-parter steered the book back in the right direction"

Boy-- talk about a long-hanging sub-plot! (It's very surprising nobody got to that much earlier in Shooter's run as EIC.)


"the book was the best it had been since the Steve Englehart era"

AMEN! (Took long enough, didn't it?)


"If not for Gruenwald’s expanding ego (there’s that word again) there would have been more great stories for who knows how many more years"

I sometimes feel the same way about Stan Lee & Jack Kirby. Lee's ego blew up in the late 60's, and the only thing that popped that balloon was Kirby's abrupt departure. Kirby quit-- Stern was booted. Sad, either way.


"quotes posted in this thread by Reboot show that Simonson contributed more than I had originally suspected, but it still seems that Gruenwald became too controlling"

Yeah, for ages I had the impression he'd just pulled a "take the money and run" thing. But editorial mandates bigger than even Gruenwald made him lose his enthusiasm for the book.


"Macchio must be really good at office politics, because he’s the only one of the editorial old guard to have survived all the upheavals and still be working there"

This is kinda funny, because it strikes me that he took the longest to become a full editor, spending many years as just an assistant editor, often staying on a series as assistant while other guys replaced the main editor. He's also the guy, reportedly, who spent a lot of time bad-mouthing Jack Kirby-- though, who knows, this could be "simply" trying to be on the good side of upper management.


"Tom Brevoort still edits Avengers today, and later this year will be his tenth anniversary as Avengers editor!"

Holy cow! It's the John Nathan-Turner syndrome!


“Whatever makes the sales go up, no matter how much it damages the book’s legacy,”

Holy cow! It's the Joe Quesada syndrome!!!
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
(I hated Byrne's insistence on inking himself when he started writing the FF-- but by the end of his run, his art had changed so much, an issue inked by Sinnott showed they were no longer a good fit.)

This might not be the issue you're referring to, but the FF annual that crossed over with the Avengers annual (it has lots of Skrulls, and it takes place immediately after the Nebula Saga) has Byrne/Sinnott art and IMO it looks great. The reunion that didn't work at all was on the FF issue about Jean Grey's resurrection that crossed over with Avengers and X-Factor -- Byrne and Terry Austin were working together for the first time in five years, and it looked surprisingly bad, probably because of the way Byrne's pencils had changed.

quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
I really wished Chris & John had stayed on PM-IF longer than they did. Seemed a waste to "save" the book like they did and then dump it for other things.

But if they had stayed on the book, we might not have gotten the wonderful Jo Duffy/Kerry Gammill run (the only time I've ever found either PM or IF halfway interesting.)

quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
"If not for Gruenwald’s expanding ego (there’s that word again) there would have been more great stories for who knows how many more years"

I sometimes feel the same way about Stan Lee & Jack Kirby. Lee's ego blew up in the late 60's, and the only thing that popped that balloon was Kirby's abrupt departure. Kirby quit-- Stern was booted. Sad, either way.

Yeah, it's a shame that Kirby didn't get to kill off the Asgardian pantheon with Ragnarok and replace them with the New Gods. That would've been cool, and it would have prevented the Thor book from getting stale and repetetive for decades and decades. Sure, we wouldn't have had Simonson's Thor, but instead we would have had Simonson's New Gods (at least we have Simonson's Orion to enjoy.)

quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
"Tom Brevoort still edits Avengers today, and later this year will be his tenth anniversary as Avengers editor!"

Holy cow! It's the John Nathan-Turner syndrome!

Um...who is John Nathan-Turner?

quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
“Whatever makes the sales go up, no matter how much it damages the book’s legacy,”

Holy cow! It's the Joe Quesada syndrome!!!

Now that one, I got right away. [ROTFLMAO]
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Stealth:
quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
"Tom Brevoort still edits Avengers today, and later this year will be his tenth anniversary as Avengers editor!"

Holy cow! It's the John Nathan-Turner syndrome!

Um...who is John Nathan-Turner?
The... how you american say... "showrunner" of Doctor Who in the 1980s. The WHOLE of the 1980s.

I don't think the comparison's quite accurate, however - for his last few years in the role, JNT was literally begging to be allowed to do something else, and was told "no" every time [He eventually quit the BBC not that long after Dr Who was cancelled, and died prematurely in the late 1990s.] There's no sign that Brevoort doesn't want to be running the Avengers corner from what I can see [and a chunk of the books he nominally edits are, and have been for a few years, delegated to the lower orders of his office. If he didn't want to deal with Bendis, he could simply arrange for a subordinate to do NAv & MAv.].

Oh, and on Macchio: Cable/Deadpool #36 recap page
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"This might not be the issue you're referring to, but the FF annual that crossed over with the Avengers annual (it has lots of Skrulls, and it takes place immediately after the Nebula Saga) has Byrne/Sinnott art and IMO it looks great."

No, I don't quite remember that, but my index still isn't updated. Seems to me it was near the end of Byrne's run, around the time Al Gordon came on as inker. Sinnott did one or two issues, and they just looked odd. I realized Byrne had changed his drawing a lot.


"But if they had stayed on the book, we might not have gotten the wonderful Jo Duffy/Kerry Gammill run (the only time I've ever found either PM or IF halfway interesting.)"

Yeah, but remember, there was about a YEAR in between Chris & John bailing and Duffy-Gammill getting on there. I know they only stayed about a year, really-- but at least I consider it an "era" of sorts, Claremont-Byrne's so short it's more like a speed bump. Duffy-Gammill remains my 2ND-favorite period of PM-- the 1st, always, is Steve Englehart's run, with George Tuska & Billy Graham (Billy alternating between inking Tuska and doing full art).

I dug out the first few issue of HERO FOR HIRE last year (the ones Archie Goodwin wrote) and after all this time, it suddenly hit me just how much of a "Golden Age" feel the art and writing on that book had! Most early-70's Marvels got dark, gloomy, depressing... HFH was violent, but somehow FUN! I didn't realize back then just how long Tuska had been in the biz-- he really was another one of those Golden Age artists Stan liked to re-hire when Marvel got back up and running in the 60's. Graham was something else-- he was one of the "young turks", but his style looked even "older" than Tuska's! He was also one of the most interesting inkers Tuska had around then, when most of the time it was either Esposito or (God help us) Colletta. Those issues are SO good it almost hurts to look at 'em-- because I'm always reminded that for MOST of its 125 issues, PM was usually 3rd-rate, if that.
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Avengers Volume Three # 41-56 & Annual 2001

To say that Busiek took a kitchen sink approach to the Kang arc is an understatement. Almost all the plot threads he had hanging around get tied up here, whether they’re relevant to the main plot or not: Triunes, Carol, Hank, Templar, Pagan...you name it, it’s there, awkwardly shoehorned into a not-particularly-engaging story of Kang invading 21st Century Earth with intent to conquer. Kang spends a LOT of time posturing and pontificating before attacking Earth. Until then, there’s awkwardly-structured battles against the Atlanteans, the Deviants, the Presence, and the Master of the World; there’s also the American governement stupidly launching a Sentinel attack against Kang, and if you guessed that Kang ends up controlling the Sentinels, you’re absolutely correct. It’s also ANOTHER case of a disaster occurring under Jan’s leadership! [No] Hank overcomes his identity confusion and settles on being Yellowjacket – as we’ve all already agreed, that was a bad idea with terrible repercussions; the resolution of the Triune thread aspires to the kind of borderline-esoterica that Engelhart pulled off so seamlessly way back during the Celestial Madonna Saga, but Busiek doesn’t even come close. Kang commits mass murder and other atrocities, but the story is so cold and so unfocused that I don’t feel any sense of sadness or horror – just numbness.

As it has been for most of Busiek’s run, it’s Carol who suffers the worst – first, her confrontation with Kang’s “son,” the Scarlet Centurion, triggers a flashback to her rape during the Michelinie era (one of the stories I refuse to read) and there’s a long, tasteless, creepy conversation between Carol and the Centurion that has NO POINT being in this story or any other story – what the &^)(((*& was Busiek thinking?? And then later, Carol KILLS the Master of the World! For a story written by a guy who constantly criticizes the Harras era (I maintain, out of secret jealousy), this scene has more than a few echoes of Operation: Galactic Storm – the difference is, the morally dubious event in that story was carefully built up and presented from different points of view, whereas the morally dubious event in the Kang story is completely arbitrary and seems to be there only for shock value, regardless of how it taints the character of Carol.

(And speaking of Operation: Galactic Storm, it’s rather telling that the Kang Dynasty Saga is 15 issues to O: GS’s 22, yet it feels LONGER...and slower, much slower.)

Then there’s the art: Davis & Farmer do the first three issues (# 41-43) with their usual high quality; Ivan Reis & Scott Hanna do Annual 2001 – it looks pretty good, even though Reis has improved a lot since and Hanna’s inks are not a good match; Manuel Garcia and Bob Layton do the next four (# 44-47), and Layton’s inks are surprisingly bad, doing no favors to Garcia’s mediocre pencils; Kieron Dwyer & Rick Remender (# 48-50 and # 53-54) do the crudest, smudgiest, most amateurish Avengers art since Milgrom & Sinnott; in between Dwyer & Remender’s double-your-displeasure, Brent Anderson & Tom Palmer do one issue (# 51) and it’s okay, but not as good as they’re both capable of, and Reis returns for one issue (# 52), this time with Randy Emberlin inking – as with the annual, it’s okay but Reis has gone on to do better; Patrick Zircher & Scott Koblish do the epilogue (# 55) and once again, it could have been better.

To reiterate something that Prof said earlier in this thread, Kang really should have died at the end of this arc. That he didn’t is a cop-out which renders the whole mess pointless, and it shows that Busiek didn’t really have it in him to do a dark and hard-edged Avengers story.

Busiek’s final Avengers issue (# 56), is a lightweight stand-alone (drawn by Yanick Paquette and Ray Snyder) with the Avengers flashing back, one by one, to a battle against D-list villains the Elements of Doom during an accounting. It pretty much sums up the Busiek era: derivative, redundant, unfocused, and soft-edged.

And what has come since then...

I haven’t read the Geoff Johns issues because they sound like nothing special, and I haven’t read the Chuck Austen issues for obvious reasons. When I was first getting back into comics in early 2005, I browsed through the Disassembled trade at a bookstore, and I think the layouts and atmospherics are good, but the actual drawings are ugly and scratchy, while Bendis’s script is like something a ten-year-old on a sugar high would write. I gave New Avengers two chances, and both times I thought it was horrible. I gave Young Avengers a chance, I thought it was well-drawn but the characters and stories did not engage me. I’ve browsed through both of the Earth’s Mightiest Heroes minis and they both came across to me as insincere nostalgic mush, no real surprise to me because Joe Casey is one of my least favorite writers with one of the most annoying public personas in the world (shame that Tom Palmer wasted his talent on the second EMH mini.) I already posted my impressions of Mighty Avengers # 1, and will continue to browse through it at least through the end of the Ultron arc, but so far it’s in the “so bad it’s funny” category. [Roll Eyes] And I'll browse through Avengers: Initiative and the "second season" of Young Avengers (whenever THAT finally reaches the comic shops.)

Cobie will be continuing the chronology up to the present day, and also, I really hope more people start contributing their thoughts on both the current Avengers and the classic Avengers. I'd like to see this thread go on and on and on.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"Kang commits mass murder and other atrocities, but the story is so cold and so unfocused that I don’t feel any sense of sadness or horror – just numbness."

That's about right. I think it was the concentration camp issue that really got me. There's just so many times writers can go "too far" and expect to be able to go on later as if it's "business as usual". Maybe that's why I prefer "smaller" stories. "Big" ones too often just go against the whole concept of long-running series.


"As it has been for most of Busiek’s run, it’s Carol who suffers the worst – first, her confrontation with Kang’s “son,” the Scarlet Centurion, triggers a flashback to her rape during the Michelinie era (one of the stories I refuse to read) and there’s a long, tasteless, creepy conversation between Carol and the Centurion that has NO POINT being in this story or any other story – what the &^)(((*& was Busiek thinking??"

My impression is it took this potentially interesting character out of the realm of conqueror into the area of deviant serial whacko.


"And then later, Carol KILLS the Master of the World!"

I don't know what anybody else thinks, but from his 1st appearance, I thought John Byrne's "Master of the World" was just one all-powerful world-conqueror too many. The whole thing with those collossal walls shooting up that he built was so far beyond believability for me, rather than being awe-inspiring, I just kept thinking, "Are you kidding?"


"yet it feels LONGER...and slower, much slower."

Yeah, I got that feeling. I'm surprised (without looking at my index) that this story wasn't much longer, because it seemed like it was.


"Davis & Farmer do the first three issues (# 41-43)"

See, that's the part that pissed me off right from the word go. If Davis was gonna leave the book, he should have done it BETWEEN stories, not 3 issues into a long-running serial! That's just B**S***! Carlos Pacheco managed to make it through all 12 episodes of AVENGERS FOREVER, which served as possibly ther longest "prequel" in comics history.


"Reis has improved a lot since"

Has anyone seen his work on GREEN LANTERN ? Wow. he's "doing" Neal Adams-- and BETTER than Adams!


"Kieron Dwyer & Rick Remender (# 48-50 and # 53-54) do the crudest, smudgiest, most amateurish Avengers art since Milgrom & Sinnott"

Oh, come on-- that's an INSULT to Milgrom & Sinnott! (At his worst-- which I tend to think is when he relies mostly on assistants-- Sinnott STILL looks better than 90% of the stuff out there.) Milgrom WAS doing the worst work of his career in the 80's during Shooter's run. What was Shooter, anti-art? Of course, he hit rock-bottom with SECRET WARS 2. I was pleasantly shocked to see Milgrom's inks on Starlin in recent years, and to find he'd gotten good again. (Of course, Shooter's not around anymore-- it makes me wonder.)


"To reiterate something that Prof said earlier in this thread, Kang really should have died at the end of this arc. That he didn’t is a cop-out which renders the whole mess pointless, and it shows that Busiek didn’t really have it in him to do a dark and hard-edged Avengers story."

AMEN. To have gone to such absurd lengths, first with AVENGERS FOREVER, and then the Kang invasion, and NOT done the proper conclusion... OY. Someone once said the same thing about The Kingpin. That, at the end of "Born Again", he should have been killed, because you just DON'T do what that guy did to Matt Murdock and get away with it. When I saw what followed, I dropped the book. Permanently. I could put up with Frank Miller's S*** at that point-- just barely. But not the S*** from the people trying to follow him. (And of course, that story just opened the floodgates, didn't it... Like what followed in the wake of John Carpenter's HALLOWEEN, when dozens of people with far less talent & imagination all said at once... "HEY! I can do something like THAT!")


"I haven’t read the Chuck Austen issues for obvious reasons."

You know, I keep having a very hard time relating this "Chuck Austen" I keep reading about and whom so many seem to despise so much with the guy who did those wonderful, fun X-rated comics I loved so much 15 years ago. I can't shake the feeling that during his extended hiatus from comics that he suffered some kind of nervous breakdown & complete personality change. The only recent thing of his I've actually read was the WAR MACHINE mini that was part of the MAX line, which was one of the nastiest F***s of a comic I've ever run across.


"I'd like to see this thread go on and on and on."

Like the Kang invasion story?
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
I just did a long post for this thread, but its not showing up [Frown]

Will get back to it when I get a moment!

Basically, I pretty much agree whole-heartedly with Stealth and Prof's assessment (but had some additional words on Busiek's run).

The reviews shall continue! I want to say thanks to Stealth for making this one of the most enjoyable LW threads for these last few months, but I don't want it seem like this thread will be ending anytime soon! There will always be Avengers comics to review, and we'll always have our two cents to throw in [Wink]
 
Posted by Blacula on :
 
I've never read an Avengers comic but I'm *really* enjoying this thread about them!

It's like taking a History class at school, except FUN!
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
I don't know what anybody else thinks, but from his 1st appearance, I thought John Byrne's "Master of the World" was just one all-powerful world-conqueror too many. The whole thing with those collossal walls shooting up that he built was so far beyond believability for me, rather than being awe-inspiring, I just kept thinking, "Are you kidding?"

Has Byrne ever created a memorable villain? And why would Busiek have thought the Master was worth plucking out of obscurity?

quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
"Reis has improved a lot since"

Has anyone seen his work on GREEN LANTERN ? Wow. he's "doing" Neal Adams-- and BETTER than Adams!

He sure is. He’s one of the main reasons I read Green Lantern.

quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
"Kieron Dwyer & Rick Remender (# 48-50 and # 53-54) do the crudest, smudgiest, most amateurish Avengers art since Milgrom & Sinnott"

Oh, come on-- that's an INSULT to Milgrom & Sinnott! (At his worst-- which I tend to think is when he relies mostly on assistants-- Sinnott STILL looks better than 90% of the stuff out there.) Milgrom WAS doing the worst work of his career in the 80's during Shooter's run. What was Shooter, anti-art? Of course, he hit rock-bottom with SECRET WARS 2. I was pleasantly shocked to see Milgrom's inks on Starlin in recent years, and to find he'd gotten good again. (Of course, Shooter's not around anymore-- it makes me wonder.)

Sinnott is a great talent, but Milgrom’s Avengers pencils were so bad, they dragged Sinnott (and Sinnott’s assistants) down to their level.

quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
"To reiterate something that Prof said earlier in this thread, Kang really should have died at the end of this arc. That he didn’t is a cop-out which renders the whole mess pointless, and it shows that Busiek didn’t really have it in him to do a dark and hard-edged Avengers story."

AMEN. To have gone to such absurd lengths, first with AVENGERS FOREVER, and then the Kang invasion, and NOT done the proper conclusion... OY. Someone once said the same thing about The Kingpin. That, at the end of "Born Again", he should have been killed, because you just DON'T do what that guy did to Matt Murdock and get away with it. When I saw what followed, I dropped the book. Permanently. I could put up with Frank Miller's S*** at that point-- just barely. But not the S*** from the people trying to follow him.

I guess I’m lucky that I never read Born Again. I’ve always thought Miller was overrated. I love the work of the first writer who followed Miller after Born Again, Ann Nocenti. Her first year suffered from the lack of a regular artist, and then after the arrival of John Romita Junior (not my favorite artist by any stretch, but at least the book had a regular artist), she did some pretty cool stuff with her creation, Typhoid Mary, but it was still basically the same old crime stuff. When she had Daredevil leave New York, the book got great, and I really wish her Daredevil versus Mephisto storyarc would be reprinted in a trade. The most underrated Daredevil arc of all time, IMO.

quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
"I'd like to see this thread go on and on and on."

Like the Kang invasion story?

Heh.

quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
The reviews shall continue! I want to say thanks to Stealth for making this one of the most enjoyable LW threads for these last few months, but I don't want it seem like this thread will be ending anytime soon! There will always be Avengers comics to review, and we'll always have our two cents to throw in

I was more than happy to do it, and I look forward to reading yours and others contributions and to keep making contributions myself. Plus I've got a new review thread in the works and I'm planning to bump up a thread I've neglected. So everybody keep watching the Dr. Gym'll board.

quote:
Originally posted by Blacula:
I've never read an Avengers comic but I'm *really* enjoying this thread about them!

It's like taking a History class at school, except FUN!

Glad you’re enjoying. And it just gets more fun from here. I mean, really – She-Ultron? It is to laugh.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"Sinnott is a great talent, but Milgrom’s Avengers pencils were so bad, they dragged Sinnott (and Sinnott’s assistants) down to their level."

I guess compared to everything else Milgrom did in the 80's, it just looked stellar. His 70's work was MUCH better. This reminds me of the last 3 Wally Wood issues of DAREDEVIL, when Stan had him team up with Bob Powell. 2ND-RATE. Wally, THE greatest inker in the history of the biz, being dragged down like that. Not right! (Of course, that was nothing to when Wally worked over Keith Giffen layouts on JSA.) From comments I've read recently, Powell was at his BEST when he inked himself. But "the Marvel Method" didn't usually allow for that. So much easier (more convenient) to have one guy do pencils, then Stan would write the dialogue, pass the pages to the letterer, THEN, pass them to WHOEVER THE HELL was available that day to ink them. (Look at the early Mike Ploog GHOST RIDERs-- a different inker every freakin' issue!)


"I guess I’m lucky that I never read Born Again. I’ve always thought Miller was overrated. I love the work of the first writer who followed Miller after Born Again, Ann Nocenti."

This is with many years of retrospect, but... When Miller started pencilling DD, it looked cool. Nobody had ever "clicked" with Klaus Janson so well-- those dark, UGLY inks that just wouldn't go away, year after year! Also, since Bob Brown passed away, the book had not had any artistic stability. And the Gene Colan fill-ins were awful. (I blame Jim Shooter's constant harrassment of Gene for this, to be honest.) When McKenzie suddenly left Marvel & Miller got a shot at writing, it was pretty impressive. Not Elektra-- I always HATED that bitch and still do. His 3-part Kingpin story blew me away, though. The problem-- as I see it-- is Miller is a ONE-TRICK PONY. He does dark & nasty. That's ALL he does!!! To me, DD was NEVER meant to be dark & nasty. Heck, if you look at DD's early rogues' gallery, it seems he was intended as Marvel's answer to The Flash! What's wrong with having a "fun" book???

"Born Again", of course, could be looked at as Miller's "grand finale" on DD-- if you ignore the fact that Denny O'Neil dragged the book thru the mud for 3 years between issues. Those 2 guys are like bookends-- they're not happy unless they're destroying the happiness of every character they write-- or destroying the characters themselves. (I've never forgiven them for murdering Heather Glenn. I LIKED Heather!)

Ann Nocenti's track record made me drop the book (on top of everything else). Her issues of SPIDER-WOMAN somehow made Mike Fleisher look like he knew what he was doing. I've heard a LOT of good comments about her work after that-- but the stuff of hers I did read was so bad, I just avoided her as if she was the next Tom DeFalco.
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
Long post from elsewhere on the Harris run that I think is worth linking: http://www.comicboards.com/avengers/view.php?rpl=070401081253
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
The Avengers V.3 #57-76

There are many people who feel that Geoff Johns can do no wrong. There are also a smaller group that hate everything he touches. I’m neither extreme, but I do lean more towards the ‘no wrong’ side of the pendulum. Honestly, I think Geoff Johns has revitailzed a bunch of comics that need it, and he brings a love of the medium and enthusiasm that has been sorely missed for some time. I feel that 95% of his DC work is pure genius. What he’s done with JSA and Green Lantern are mind-blowingly phenomenal, and I thought his Flash run was as good as Waid’s, making it the only other run to ever be as good as the early Silver Age Flash. But that can all be argued until the cows come home and that’s not what this thread is for.

I feel his run on Avengers was with the best of intentions and had potential, but ultimately fell quite flat. Now, I don’t have the insight to what happens behind the scenes at Marvel like Prof or Reboot, but there’s obviously something that was going on with the editors and Geoff, in that the finished product was not what he wanted. It didn’t help that this was when Bill Jemas headed Marvel, and it was the peak period of ‘write to the trade’ policy on ALL of Marvel’s comics, so that each story dragged out and there was often a disconnect b/t stories. I certainly feel a great deal of blame lies on Marvel’s editors and upper-management. But Geoff of course isn’t innocent of all charges (again, I didn’t *hate* this run).

Geoff came in following Kurt Busiek’s monster story and attempted to get the Avengers back on track again, and in doing so, came up with a very large cast of what he saw as essential Avengers: Cap, Iron Man, Black Panther, Falcon, Scarlet Witch, Hawkeye, Vision, Ms. Marvel, Yellow Jacket, the Wasp, She-Hulk, etc. There are others I’m forgetting. Sub-Mariner and Thor were there at the start, but left shortly after. The problem was this line-up looks great on paper, but is simply too many Avengers. Sure, most of them ‘belong’ in the Avengers, but at the same time it means with a line-up of 10-12+, the comic book loses focus and direction and we thus the emotional impact of what’s happening to the characters. And like Busiek’s previous run, it relegates too many Avengers to ‘dog-piling on the rabbit’ in battle, in other words, being there in large panels as four or five heroes attack. By not doing anything ‘awesome’ or unusual’, there basically setting the pattern of Hero-A being there but not doing anything. In other words, too much of that means Hero A will soon be a B Character, and then be cannon-fodder. Which is what happened.

Geoff added Ant-Man II (Scott Lang) and Jack of Hearts to the Avenger’s roster. I happen to like both characters quite a bit, though they have struggled to stay out of limbo for 20 years. I’m not quite sold on either person being an ‘Avenger’ per se, and unfortunately, I never had the chance to see much to convince me other wise (unlike, say, Crystal). The ongoing plot of the two of them not getting along was ‘okay’ in that at least we had some characterization, but it ultimately never really got me interested. It matters little now, as Bendis came in and killed them both off in Dissassembled, in an almost ‘last ones in, first ones out’ fashion. Slap in the face to Johns? Probably.

The actual storylines were alright, and the trouble with this run was that there isn’t so much that I remember of it. I’ll be quick:

- the Initial storyline – which I thought was a dud. It ultimately ends up with all of the Avengers, including Thor, Sub-Mariner and other big guns, dog-piling on the villain of the piece. It was unfortunately, very unmemorable.

- Red Zone – now, I realize I’m skipping ahead, but I’m too lazy to recall what came between these stories because well, I just wasn’t that interested. Red Zone is probably the peak of the John’s run, and was the one complete, good story he was able to do. That being said, it reeks of editorially driven ‘fit the trade’ mentality. It does have some good moments with the Vision and Ms. Marvel, The Falcon and Cap shine when the Red Skull is revealed as the enemy, and the Black Panther has a good seen at the end. There is also an ongoing Black Panther/Iron Man subplot, as it appears that John’s is trying to restore their friendship after Priest showed a very real tension between the two characters in his Black Panther run. Personally, I thought Priest was very unfair to Iron Man (similar to JMS and everyone else at Marvel right now), but I actually did kind of like the tension between the two characters. John’s intentions are noble, but it feels forced and awkward and Johns goes too far. It would have been nice if he showed them being ‘okay’ with one another, rather than being buddy-buddy at the end.

- Hank/Jan stand alone issue – Its no secret I love these two characters, and by all accounts I should like this issue. But I don’t. And here’s why. Johns, like Busiek, likes the characters too, and its obvious he wants to ‘restore’ Hank and Jan to their proper glory. The problem is that Stern and then Harras already were able to move Hank past all the crap that Shooter put him through and return him to his truly glorious Silver Age self. Johns, like Busiek, referred more to his Yellowjacket days, which was a mistake. And after Busiek screwed Hank up again, Johns came in and attempt to show how Jan and Hank are back together and firmly in love once more. But it still felt too forced. I love Hank and Jan as a couple and I want them to be together. But what happened needs to be addressed somewhat in a logical way that does not dwell on what Shooter did. And both Busiek and Johns still wrote Hank as a weakling, while Stern and Harras wrote him as a strong, confident man. John’s also did an outrageous ‘use the shrinking for sexual pleasure scene’ that I was shocked to see in a comic book that I would expect pre-teens to be reading, and ended up making Whirlwind seem like a sicko rapist/stalker which was too creepy for my Marvel’s Mightiest Super-Hero team. It reminds me of an earlier issue in John’s run where he implies that Scarecrow was raped in prison. I don’t want that in an all-ages comic book about super-heroes. I’m sorry. I just don’t.

- She-Hulk/Hulk story – again, above all, this suffered as it was fit for a trade, when it could have been told in two issues max, possibly one issue. She-Hulk is relegated to rampaging and uncontrollable, which was annoying since at the time Dan Slott was breaking ground on her solo title. Cap, Iron Man and the rest don’t do much but talk and then ‘dog-pile’ on the Hulk who shows up. Considering the Hulk’s history with the Avengers the stage is always all set for maximum drama when the two interact, but this fell somewhat flat. Bruce Banner having the Hulk take the blame is noble, but it’s a plot point left untouched and ultimately Slott had to address it in his run, along with other stupid things writers were putting She-Hulk through (I’m looking at you Chuck Austen, having her sleep with Juggernaut—no worries, I’ll lambaste your Avenger’s run next Monday).

I’ll let others talk about the art, but I remember Copiel coming in and doing Red Zone, which helped make it much more enjoyable. By now Marvel had stolen him away from DC’s Legion, where he was sorely missed, and it was cool to see him on Avengers. But he didn’t remain a consistent Avengers artist, which only made it worse when they had other people come in. I forget who started John’s run, but I know it wasn’t quite up to snuff. I suddenly forget the artist’s name who was on Flash with John’s and did the She-Hulk/Hulk story, but I remember not liking the art there as much as I did on Flash. Honestly, I’ll let someone else talk about the art if they want to.

All in all, Geoff John’s followed up Kurt Busiek’s in much the same vein as Kurt. I thought it was good and well-intended, but it ultimately was very flawed. Both runs, combined with Austen’s upcoming horrific run helped pave the way for Dissassembled, which was disastrous. John’s run further relegated many Avengers to being members of the team that did little, which would lead them to be cannon-fodder. And unlike Busiek, John’s was saddled with Marvel’s right to the trade format policy that further hurt his stories. I can easily see why after twenty issues, John’s immediately wanted to be exclusive to DC, given the level of quality his Avenger’s run has in comparison to his other comics.

Up next: Austen! Perhaps the worst thing since Shooter?
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Re: Daredevil (I guess belongs in another thread). I guess my opinions both disagree and agree with some of your guys. About four years ago I had the pleasure of reading Daredevil's entire run from #1 to the current issues. I personally think Miller's first run was the best thing to happen to DD and loved it--and was completely blown away by Born Again and think its the greatest Daredevil story ever told, if not one of the greatest comic book stories ever told. And Ann Nocenti's run is absolutely brillant, complete with the Bullet, Mephisto and especially Typhoid Mary. At that time, with JR JR, it was probably Marvel's best comic book. I can go on and on with compliments, but I'd get redundent. Then came a few years of awful stories and then Bendis did perhaps his finest work ever in comics on his run, followed by the current Brubaker run which makes it tied for Single Best Comic Book being published right now (April 2007). That's how I feel about the history of Daredevil. I honestly never really loved the character until a few years ago and now he's one of my favorites. I do like the more fun 70's years, the Black Widow years and of course the beautiful Silver Age years.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"Re: Daredevil (I guess belongs in another thread)."

One of the things I've enjoyed so much about this thread is, since it deals with The Avengers, it's rather far-reaching and encompasses a lot of things not in actual AVENGERS comics. Plus, too many of the side-bars involve comics that over the years have gone bad so badly they turn my stomach, and I find it more fun to focus on just certain points worth discussing.


"The problem is that Stern and then Harras already were able to move Hank past all the crap that Shooter put him through and return him to his truly glorious Silver Age self."

Having missed the entire Harras run, I had no idea that Busiek was needlessly repeating what Harras had already done. What's wrong with these writers? You know, I'd rather read about characters I like having great ADVENTURES, then read endless soap-opera about characters whose lives are getting repeatedly, horribly ripped to pieces... and, yeah, by the way, they also somehow have "adventures", too, though people in as bad psychological shape as the ones most of these writers are writing about should be utterly INCAPABLE of surviving the kind of "adventures" these people have. They'd be too busy in rehab...
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Excellent review, Cobie. The next time I'm at the comics shop I'll see if they have a Red Zone trade and if they do, I'll browse through it.

Looking forward to the lambasting of the Austen era next week.

Btw, the artist who worked with Johns on both Flash and Avengers was Scott Kolins.

quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
Ann Nocenti's track record made me drop the book (on top of everything else). Her issues of SPIDER-WOMAN somehow made Mike Fleisher look like he knew what he was doing. I've heard a LOT of good comments about her work after that-- but the stuff of hers I did read was so bad, I just avoided her as if she was the next Tom DeFalco.

To paraphrase something I said earlier in this thread about Harras: I don't think it's fair to dismiss Nocenti just because her work on Spider-Woman was bad. Everybody's gotta start somewhere, and many people get really good once they're more seasoned -- IMO, Nocenti got good. Just out of curiosity, have you read the original Longshot mini-series? Nocenti wrote that after Sp-W but before DD, and that's where she came into her own as a writer.

quote:
Originally posted by Reboot:
Long post from elsewhere on the Harris run that I think is worth linking: http://www.comicboards.com/avengers/view.php?rpl=070401081253

That's an awesome thread (although it's full of spoilers -- anyone who is curious about the Harras era should wait until after they've read the stories before looking at that thread.) I echo the sentiments of the poster who hopes that the two volumes of O: GS sell well enough for the Proctor/Gatherers Saga to be collected in trades (but without scenes being omitted like in the European trades.)

quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
"Re: Daredevil (I guess belongs in another thread)."

One of the things I've enjoyed so much about this thread is, since it deals with The Avengers, it's rather far-reaching and encompasses a lot of things not in actual AVENGERS comics. Plus, too many of the side-bars involve comics that over the years have gone bad so badly they turn my stomach, and I find it more fun to focus on just certain points worth discussing.

Yes. As the thread-starter, I officially declare that just about anything goes in this thread! [Big Grin]

[ April 04, 2007, 11:31 PM: Message edited by: Stealth ]
 
Posted by He Who Wanders on :
 
I spent the last two days reading through this amazing thread, which I'd somehow managed to overlook before. The reviews are intelligent, well-written, and insightful. Even where I've disagreed with a reviewer, I've learned new things about a particular run or creator.

I hope to comment more in depth at a later time, but I do want to briefly defend one of my favorite villain teams, Zodiac, which was given a brief, negative mention earlier.

I'll agree that for most of their appearances, the crime cartel was not handled right. (The worst case was the DEFENDERS arc, when the real team didn't even appear, but were replaced by clones!) Heck, even in their first couple of appearances, most of Zodiac seemed mainly to be supporting characters for two of their members, Scorpio and Aries.

But I first encountered them, luckily, in AVENGERS # 120-122, during Englehart's run. When the group first appeared, blasting their way through the wall of Avengers Mansion and taking the heroes completely by surprise, they seemed formidable and even scary. (Kudos to Bob Brown -- I believe -- the artist, for drawing them as menacing and powerful.) They grew even scarier as their plan unfolded: to kill every Gemini in Manhattan as part of an extortion scheme. The plan is just crazy enough to be credible; it has genocidal undertones, although would-be victims were singled out by birth sign instead of race.

Then there was the intergroup conflict: the new Aries and Scorpio (who replaced the deceased or supposedly deceased originals) butted heads with Taurus, the new leader. Gemini, whom we got to know as tortured hero/villain (a policeman whose body is unkowingly taken over by his criminal brother) plays a pivotal role in all this. And most of the other characters, though seen briefly, intrigued me enough to wonder who they were, how they got their powers, etc. -- a lot like my first few Legion stories.

But my favorite character quickly became Libra. He represented my own birth sign, so I was glad when he turned out to be not such a bad guy, after all. He discovered he was Mantis' father and betrayed Zodiac to save her. He then accompanied the Avengers, revealing Mantis' origin along the way, and even popped up briefly during the conclusion of the Celestial Madonna sequence, only to fade away with the rest of Zodiac, mostly.

(Of course, Libra wasn't a saint. After all, he went along with the scheme to kill all Geminis in Manhattan, among other things.)

When Zodiac next appeared, it was in the pages of GHOST RIDER, wherein one member, Aquarius, had made a deal with Satan to gain all the powers and identities of his cartel teammates. Bad deal, Aquarius.

The second Aries then appeared in CAPTAIN AMERICA & THE FALCON, where he was transformed by Lucifer into a second Lucifer (!). This deal, too, ended badly.

Then came the clones in DEFENDERS, created by Jake Fury, the original Scorpio, who had faked his own death, only to commit suicide this time around. I vaguely remember one other appearance by the original Zodiac, thereafter; as I recall, the entire team was killed off in a brief appearance that set up some other story. I don't remember when or where this took place; it's probably just as well.

It's a shame the original Zodiac never lived up to its full potential. But for at least one story they came off as a formidable menace that could easily defeat the Avengers and cause serious damage to one of the largest cities in the world. Few other villains of that time seemed as ruthlessly capable of achieving their ends.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
I admit I'm not absolutely sure about this... but that's only because it seems to me several writers over the years contradicted each other. I believe Jake Fury was the 2nd Scorpio, and took the place of the original (the Italian race-car driver) who WAS blown sky high in his first (and only) appearance in SHIELD #1. But then, Steranko left so many loose ends hanging for others to pick up, and never explained half of what he was doing. (Let's face it-- he was always more interested in blowing people's minds than "simply" telling good stories.)

After 2 stories with the endings left hanging, unresolved, it was Roy Thomas who came along and revealed that Scorpio was just the vanguard for an entire crime cartel, Zodiac.

Jake Fury-- with the help of David Anthony Kraft & Keith Giffen-- was the one who created the 2nd Zodiac (the androids), who had the kibosh put on them VERY quickly by The Defenders. At which point, Jake committed suicide. You just didn't see that sort of thing in comics before then...

[ April 03, 2007, 02:34 AM: Message edited by: profh0011 ]
 
Posted by He Who Wanders on :
 
My memory for trivia isn't what it used to be, so thanks for the correction, prof.

One other thing about Englehart's Zodiac story stands out to me, and that's an exchange where Gemini (Joshua Link, the bad twin) complains that people with his birth sign have to get the axe in Manhattan. Aries II (in a close-up shot) retorts with "Maybe that's because you Geminis are a shiftless bunch!" (or words to that effect).

Perhaps Aries II was just trying to get Joshua's goat (not to be confused with Capricorn, of course), but there's an undercurrent of bigotry in that remark that seems ironic, considering that Aries II was a black man.

Englehart's writing remains memorable because it worked on so many levels.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"Perhaps Aries II was just trying to get Joshua's goat (not to be confused with Capricorn, of course), but there's an undercurrent of bigotry in that remark that seems ironic, considering that Aries II was a black man. Englehart's writing remains memorable because it worked on so many levels."

Englehart also wrote the BEST Luke Cage I ever read. (I was looking forward to McGregor's run, but that was sabotaged from the word go by constant changes in art.) And of course, there's that classic scene in his Red Skull story, where the guy upsets his ENTIRE plan just because... Geez...

"That black schwein-- with the WHITE woman!"

Fr***in' Nazi bastard!!!

[Smile] (It's terrible, but it's also hilarious in the context of the story-- he just couldn't HELP himself.)
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"To paraphrase something I said earlier in this thread about Harras: I don't think it's fair to dismiss Nocenti just because her work on Spider-Woman was bad. Everybody's gotta start somewhere, and many people get really good once they're more seasoned -- IMO, Nocenti got good."

It may not be "fair". It just happened. I read SPIDER-WOMAN from the beginning. Wolfman was surprisingly good. Gruenwald was even better-- and that was my 1st exposure to him. Fleisher was a waste of paper. As, almost always. (His 70's SPECTRE stories were fun-- but repetitive, when you get right down to it, and he's been repetitive ever since!) Claremont-- who'd said he had so much trouble trying to figure out how to write Ms. Marvel (oh, boo hoo) knocked it out of the ballpark with Spider-Woman. WHY in the living HELL both he and Steve Leialoha left as quick as they did-- it just bugged me no end. The length of each writer on that book seemed about the same, as if nobody could stand it for longer than that. What was it, some kind of "community service"? Nocenti was TERRIBLE. That's all I knew.

Later, on DAREDEVIL, I'd put up with Miller's incessant nastiness as long as I could. O'Neil was like Miller without the talent. then Miller came back-- did one HELL of a story-- which could be looked at as the "grand finale" of all Miller stories. the book should have changed its tone completely after that. Instead, all I saw was chaos. I left-- I think-- before Nocenti even got on it. I had NO interest in ever reading DD again at that point. I still haven't.

Then there's MACHINE MAN. I loved Kirby's work on that book. Wolfman-- and Ditko-- made me wanna puke. It just wasn't right. Then Wolfman was replaced by DeFalco. He made Wolfman's stuff look good by comparison. You see a pattern here? I dropped the book before it got cancelled.

FANTASTIC FOUR had been-- seriously-- hit-and-miss from the day Kirby left. Everybody did bad on that book. Lee! Thomas! Conway! Wolfman! Moench! (MOENCH, for God's sake!) Stern! (STERN, for Heaven's sake!!) Englehart-- geez... (I've read in detail what he wanted to do on the book at his website, but it just doesn't jibe with my memories of actually reading a couple years' worth of really baaaaaaaaaaad issues.) I tolerated Simonson... until the end. when I heard DeFalco-- DEFALCO!!!-- was taking over-- I dropped the book. Have not bought it regular since.


And don't get me started on SPIDER-MAN...

[Smile]
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"My memory for trivia isn't what it used to be, so thanks for the correction, prof."

Just to be clear... I'm NOT sure it was a correction.

Steranko-- APPARENTLY-- intended Scorpio's identity to be a mystery. he appeared to get blown to atoms at the end of SHIELD #1. but then he came back in SHIELD #5. (Or did he???) Fury recognized him at the end of the issue- but we never got to see who it was!

A few months later, Roy Thomas dropped the other shoe in AVENGERS #72 (I think). If memory serves (I could look it up, but...) Roy revealed Scorpio was really Nick Fury (SAY WHAT???). This tied in with Fury's assassination-- shot DEAD in the last issue of SHIELD! It was really an LMD that got "murdered", while Nick was off trying to infiltrate Zodiac, once he'd discovered his BROTHER, Jake, was Scorpio. I don't recall if there any explanation for how Scorpio survived that explosion in SHIELD #1.

In DEFENDERS, Dave Kraft & Keith Giffen revealed that Jake saw Scorpio blown to bits in SHIELD #1-- then took his identity, in order to kill Nick. Is this what Steranko had in mind? Is this how Thomas interpreted it? I'm not sure!! But it does seem to me some other writer-- many years later-- added to this, or downright contradicted part of it. (Damn you, Steranko! If you're gonna start a story, FINISH it!)

Retroactive continuity can be a B****.
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
He Who Wanders, I may not be a fan of Zodiac, but I always respect an opposing opinion, especially when it's phrased as eloquently and passionately as yours. And that's exactly what I want to see more of in this thread: passionate opinions.
 
Posted by He Who Wanders on :
 
Thanks for the compliment, Stealth. Opposing views (passionate, but respectful) are important in any meaningful dialogue -- or at least that's what I try to teach my students.

prof: I think you are probably right about Scorpio. It was accepted for years that Jake was the second Scorpio and that "Frenchy" was the third. At least that's how they were referred to in George Olshevsky's MARVEL COMICS INDEX series, as I recall.

Bigotry was a recurring theme in Englehart's writing. In addition to the Red Skull scene you mentioned, there was also Pietro's discrimination against the Vision (AV. # 110), and the Living Bombs taking that same discrimination even further, to fanatical and fatal ends (# 113) -- a story that resonates even more deeply today.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
One of my favorite Englehart scenes...

"THREE HUNDRED POUNDS of steel-hard muscle races across the rooftop. THREE HUNDRED POUNDS of steel-hard muscle launches into space high over the street. And when THREE HUNDRED POUNDS of steel-hard muscle hits the roof on the other side of the street...

"...MAMA, IT HOLDS!!!"


[Smile]

(I related this to a friend on the phone, when I got to the punch line, he was laughing hysterically. I'm paraphrasing-- but without looking it up, that's how I remember the narration.)
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"It was accepted for years that Jake was the second Scorpio and that "Frenchy" was the third."

"Frenchy"? Wait a minute-- would this be in the Englehart AVENGERS story? Okay, that kinda sounds right... (ESSENTIAL AVENGERS Vol.5 stops just before the Zodiac story-- so I haven't re-read that one in decades.)
 
Posted by He Who Wanders on :
 
Yes, the third Scorpio, who appeared in AV 120-122, had a distinct French accent, or what passed for one in those days. ("Mais Oui! Zat stellar device of yours eez incredible, Taurus!" [or words to that effect]).
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"Mais Oui! Zat stellar device of yours eez incredible, Taurus!"

Maurice Chevalier, anybody? (Or maybe Pepe Le Peiu)
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
There's an excellent, comprehensive Roger Stern interview from only a few months ago at http://www.marvelmasterworks.com/ (I couldn't do a direct link, because the interview is HTML). I copied and pasted everything about Avengers:

quote:
GK: How daunting of a task was it writing The Avengers for five years?

RS: The hardest part was keeping ahead of shifting deadlines, and hanging onto my cast. At one point, I was almost as ahead of schedule with Avengers as I’d been with Amazing Spider-Man, but then the West Coast Avengers debacle set me back several months.

GK: Was the hardest part working with an ensemble or trying to conjure an interesting villain for them?

RS: Neither, actually. I’d already been working with ensemble casts in all of my other assignments. The difference with the Avengers was that the entire cast was made up of super-heroes. Villains could be a challenge, as the Avengers really had only – what? – Kang and Ultron to call their own. But I could assemble small armies to give them a hard time.

The trick was in figuring out which Avengers I could use. Three of them – Cap, Iron Man, and Thor – had their own books and would be unavailable for long stretches of time. Others would be pulled away for months at a time into miniseries. Keeping the right mix of characters was the biggest challenge, but after a while I managed to develop a pretty good working repertory company of heroes.

GK: For the most part you worked with Milgrom and John Buscema on Avengers; what were they like to work with?

RS: It was fun and frustrating in both cases. Al was always a great idea man, but he was often drawing another book, as well as pulling down a day job as an editor. Because of time constraints, we never got to really collaborate as much as I would have liked. When John Buscema came back to The Avengers, he turned in full pencils for the first issue, and they were magnificent. The only problem in working with John, is that his heart was never really in drawing super-heroes. Try as I might, I could never get him as interested in The Avengers as he was in Conan.

GK: You also wrote the original West Coast Avengers miniseries; was this based on a pitch?

RS: No, I came up with WCA at a weekend convention in Rome, Georgia, that I attended with Mark Gruenwald. Gruenie wanted me to come up with a miniseries, and I wanted to nail down some of the non-active Avengers. There were a couple dozen Avengers or former Avengers at the time, and I had tried to limit the number of active members in any given issue, just to avoid writing crowd-scene comics. I had plans for most of the characters who didn’t have their own books, but every time I turned around, another writer was glomming onto one or more of them for a miniseries, often for someone other than The Avengers editor.

The West Coast Avengers was my solution to that. The original plan was to establish a second branch of the team in California. And once the miniseries was over, I’d have the members of both branches to draw on for stories. I could assemble teams of select Avengers for whatever wild challenge I could concoct. It was never supposed to spin off into its own monthly title. But, it sold very well, and the next thing I knew...

GK: Why didn't you write it when it earned a series?

RS: I was never given a choice in the matter. Steve Englehart had been lured back to Marvel, and there was obviously some interest in having him write a series that would recapture what he’d done with The Avengers in the ’70s. The first I heard about the West Coast Avengers series, it was already a done deal. So, I went from having all of these characters lined up to completely losing control of half of them. I had to scrap plans for at least a year’s worth of stories. It took me months to get caught back up.

I remember, when John (Byrne) later wound up writing both series, he told me that he intended to mix and match Avengers as the need arose. I couldn’t believe it. I said, "That was my plan, but they wouldn’t let me do it!"

Which begs the question: Could Stern have succeeded where both Byrne and Busiek failed? I think he could have found a way to make it work.
 
Posted by He Who Wanders on :
 
From an earlier post by Stealth:

One particular point of contention that I have with Busiek is that he seems to be part of the sizable margin of Avengers fans who put the first 200 issues on a pedastal, whereas I think that there's a lot of good stuff there, but also a lot of not-so-good stuff.

I found this comment interesting because I realized, without embarrassment or hurt feelings, that it applied to me. Maybe it is a generational thing, as Stealth says earlier in this post, or maybe it's because so much of the post issue 200 years were particularly bad, but AVENGERS did peak for me during Englehart's run and much of the next 50 issues.

Too many subsequent writers seemed to be trying to recapture something that had been created fresh before, like warmed-over oatmeal. This includes, unfortunately, the much admired Roger Stern era. For some reason, his writing never connected with me. Perhaps it's because he was saddled with the dreary Milgrom/Sinnott art for much of his run. But even when Buscema/Palmer returned, their art just didn't seem as fresh as it did in the earlier era. Or perhaps I was just getting bored with The Avengers reliving past glories. Perhaps I wanted something new and fresh.

(To be fair to Stern, there were original highlights in his run, including Monica Rambeau, the Masters of Evil storyline and the all-too-brief addition of Namor [I loved the ego conflict between him and Herc]. But Stern was also bogged down with Starfox, Dr. Druid, and storylines that just seemed improbable or went on too long, e.g., Vision taking over the world. The premise of this story intrigued me, but the Avengers seemed to go along too easily with Vizh's plans when his atypical behavior should have sent up red flags. At least that's how I remember it.)

It's an odd feeling. In some ways, the Avengers to me have to include at least some combination of the following characters: Thor, Iron Man, Cap, Vision, and Wanda (particularly Thor, who has always been a favorite), yet I also want something new and exciting. But when writers give me too much of what I expect, it leads to a sense of living in the past, like going back to high school again and pretending nothing's changed. This was certainly true of Busiek's run, and thank you, Stealth, for pointing this out. I now understand why I was so disappointed in his work. Even Perez's art, gorgeous though it was, seemed as if it offered nothing new.

The Avengers are at their best, to me, when they are unpredictable: when they challenge the notion that "Oh, you can't do that!" -- such as when Hulk and then all of the original members left, or when Hawkeye killed Egghead (again, a Stern highlight).
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by He Who Wanders:
It's an odd feeling. In some ways, the Avengers to me have to include at least some combination of the following characters: Thor, Iron Man, Cap, Vision, and Wanda (particularly Thor, who has always been a favorite), yet I also want something new and exciting. But when writers give me too much of what I expect, it leads to a sense of living in the past, like going back to high school again and pretending nothing's changed. This was certainly true of Busiek's run, and thank you, Stealth, for pointing this out. I now understand why I was so disappointed in his work.

You're welcome. And thank you for sharing that insight. I have to say, as much as I love the Harras era, if some future Avengers writer tried way too hard to replicate the Harras era, I would not be satisfied.
 
Posted by He Who Wanders on :
 
The only problem in working with John, is that his heart was never really in drawing super-heroes. Try as I might, I could never get him as interested in The Avengers as he was in Conan.

Hm. Perhaps Buscema's lack of excitement explains my own similar feelings about his second run.
 
Posted by He Who Wanders on :
 
Speaking of artists, I reread AVENGERS # 120 last night, and it reminded me of how underrated Bob Brown was. Don Heck, who inked this issue, probably was not the best inker for Brown, but even so, Brown's considerable strengths shine through.

One particular strength is Brown's layouts, which always managed to be interesting and varied. Consider page 2, a "quiet" scene of Cornelius Van Lunt visiting Joshua Link in jail. The number of panels, their various sizes, and the use of shadow convey an ominous feeling that something bad is about to happen, yet it's very subtle.

Brown's figures also convey a sense of power without being too exaggerated. Look at Taurus' body language in the two-page spread (pp. 16-17): He looks confident and menacing, yet completely natural. And the sequence of Gemini dodging the Avengers only to be punched out by Thor (p. 10) is both fluid and graceful.

Brown also had a good eye for scenery: The shots from atop the World Trade Center on pages 26 and 30 capture both the majesty and the acrophobic feeling of great height.

Brown had his weaknesses, particularly women's faces, but his work stands up there with Perez and Buscema's early work in my eyes.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
My favorite ink jobs over Bob Brown were by Paul Gulacy on DAREDEVIL #108 (the 1st issue I bought new-- sadly, it was ALL DOWNHILL after that!!), and Dave Cockrum on AVENGERS #126 (featuring perhaps the sexiest Scarlet Witch I'd ever seen).

The 2nd half of his DD run was murdered (in my view) by the incessantly dark and nightmarish inks of Klaus Janson. When Jim Mooney filled in, it was a breath of fresh air, and one could see (or, one should have) that Brown & Janson-- in fact, Daredevil & Janson-- were just NOT a suitable match!!! And yet, Janson stayed and stayed... thru Kane (nightmare on top of nightmare), Infantino, MILLER (at last, a real kindred spirit, no wonder they worked so well together) and then, Janson. (Who the hell's idea was THAT?)

Tragically, Marvel's "fun" hero has been nightmarishly dark and downbeat EVER SINCE. (That's how I see it, anyway.)
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
I've been thinking...history is sort of repeating itself with Bendis' Avengers:

- Disassembled was the Simonson era redux (callously tearing down what had come before.)

- New Avengers is the Byrne era redux (no structure, no focus, stories either drifting endlessly or ending anti-climatically)

- Mighty Avengers is the Hama era redux (trying to be all things to all people while at the same time reeking of a smug attitude -- the end result is so bad it's funny)

Which would mean that whoever replaces Bendis (yes, it'll probably take several years, but it'll happen eventually) will be the next Harras, which makes me happy (unless it turns out to be that hypothetical Harras imitator that I mentioned in a recent post.)

[ April 18, 2007, 10:51 PM: Message edited by: Stealth ]
 
Posted by He Who Wanders on :
 
I haven't read The Avengers in quite some time -- since # 19 of Busiek's run, in fact -- and, from the above descriptions, I can't say I miss it.

A friend did loan me the first seven issues of YOUNG AVENGERS last year. I thought it was fairly good, but unnecessary. Most spinoffs are.

However, this thread has prompted me to go back and re-read some earlier issues. I just finished the Trial of Henry Pym (# 227-230), which marked the beginning of Stern's run. This story line was well done and showed Stern to be a better writer than I remembered. The finale, with Hank saying goodbye to everyone, especially Jan, was deeply moving.

Therein, however, lies one of the problems I have with super-hero comics in general, and AVENGERS in particular: No one ever goes away for good.

Think of it: Hank Pym has been through a Goliath-sized wringer: His life has come undone by his own design (and then made even worse by Egghead) -- yet he manages to save the day, defeat Egghead, clear his name, and assert a new identity for himself: an identity that does not involve being a costumed hero. This transformation was utterly believable: Not everyone is cut out to be a super-hero. For Hank to finally admit that was probably one of the most heroic things he ever did.

So it pained me years later to pick up Busiek's AVENGERS and find out that Hank was Giant-Man once again. I have no idea how or why this happened. (I had stopped reading Volume One around # 378 or so.) But it was as if the previous years and all that Hank had gone through had been for nothing. And, somehow, he not only had gone back to being a costumed hero, but had also rekindled his relationship with Jan (or maybe this happened later; I don't care to remember). Although Hank and Jan were one of the cornerstone couples of the Marvel Universe, their relationship had ended. They forgave each other, yes, but that doesn't mean they should be together again.

I would rather have had Hank's story left as it ended in # 230: with him going off to a "Midwest research facility" and never setting foot in New York or Avengers Mansion ever again. I would have preferred it if he had never become Hank Pym, plainclothed adventurer (and Avenger) in AVENGERS and WCA. I would rather have believed that he had gone off to find happiness far removed from the life that had brought him so much pain and agony.

That, of course, would have been the "real world" outcome -- and there was a time when I actually believed that Marvel (moreso than DC) was concerned with creating "real world" super-heroes, who despite having powers, were first and foremost human beings. But nothing screams "THIS IS ONLY A COMIC BOOK" to me louder than characters who keep going back to being the way they used to be, with only a superficial nod at change.

I dunno. Perhaps I expected too much out of fictional characters.

[ April 05, 2007, 10:58 PM: Message edited by: He Who Wanders ]
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
HWW, are you sure you stopped reading Volume One with # 378? Because Hank became Giant-Man again in # 366, written by Bob Harras, which I think is one of the best Avengers issues ever published. I'll use a spoiler box for the exact circumstances.

Click Here For A SpoilerFirstly, I mean no disrespect to Stern's well-written story, but I personally could do with a little less of the real world in superhero comics, because I believe that superhero comics are, more than anything, wish-fulfillment to take us out of the real world for a short while. I respect that many readers prefer a more true-to-life approach, but that just doesn't work for me.

Hank's return as Giant-Man came about because the team was facing a major crisis (Kree invaders with a plan to destroy Earth) and needed all the help they could get (some key members had been taken hostage by the Kree.) And so Hank became Giant-Man again, even with the risk to his own health, with the most selfless of motivations -- to prevent the destruction of Earth. He then takes on a Kree Sentry who is trying to wreck the team's ship, and single-handedly defeats the Sentry. This is immediately followed by an exchange between Giant-Man and Captain America that puts it all in a nutshell:

GM: You know, I'd forgotten how exhilarating all this could be!

CA: But, Hank -- your heart...

GM: Cap, with the fate of the world in the balance, my health problems pale in significance, don't you think?

I think Hank WAS meant to be a superhero, he just wasn't ready for it the first time around. By giving him a second chance, Harras did what is, in my opinion, a fantastic job of bringing together all the stops and starts and stumbles in Hank's checkered history (and as Prof has pointed out earlier in this thread, a lot of this came from writers working at cross-purposes, specifically Claremont/Byrne and Shooter) and moving the character to the next level.

Subsequent writers, probably out of a mixture of ego and lack of inspiration, have messed up Hank all over again (and Millar's -- forgive the expression -- turd-polishing of Shooter's view of Hank in Ultimates hasn't helped at all.) And that's just the sad reality of multiple writers taking their turns on comic book characters.


[ April 05, 2007, 11:49 PM: Message edited by: Stealth ]
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
My opinion... Shooter's insane rampages are just the sort of completely wrong-headed $#%* that deserves later writers contradicting the hell out of it. (Like EMERALD TWILIGHT. Sorry, couldn't help it.) Roger Stern hit the ground running with the beginning of one of the best runs in the books' history. HOWEVER... it also contained one of the few things in his entire run that really, REALLY rubbed me the wrong way, and has remained a serious sore point with me ever since. That is, him saying Hank & Jan were "never" right for each other. In the words of Pam Bouvier-- "B***S***!!!!!" This has always felt to me-- more than anything else-- as Stern following a editorial edict of Shooter's-- nothing less.

Meanwhile, I'm surprised that so few have reviewed WEST COAST AVENGERS yet. I'm kind of wondering... what does anyone think of Steve Englehart-- COMPLETELY out of left field, especially for him-- having Hank ATTEMPT SUICIDE????? Jesus...
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
HWW, you should really check out the issue Stealth mentions. I think the execution of Hank rejoining the team during the Harras era really reflects where he was after Stern's story and is a very logical and understanding turn of events.

Its only later during Busiek's run and the bad runs since Busiek that Hank has reverted to the mess of a character he is now.

But from Avengers #366 - 380 (or so), Hank was really Hank, back in business as Giant-Man and an Avenger, having grown even further as a man. I think it was done really well.

Stealth - I hope you're right. I hope there is some great era of Avengers just over the horizon. Something new and fresh, drawing on some old characters (re: not just members), but moving forward in some new direction. We all want it so badly...it will assuredly happen. Lets just hope the don't ruin the Marvel Universe too badly in the meantime.
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
Stealth - I hope you're right. I hope there is some great era of Avengers just over the horizon. Something new and fresh, drawing on some old characters (re: not just members), but moving forward in some new direction. We all want it so badly...it will assuredly happen. Lets just hope the don't ruin the Marvel Universe too badly in the meantime.

Here's another thing that makes me hopeful -- Bendis' Avengers books may be selling well, but let's not forget that Morrison's X-Men sold well at the time and was hyped as being "edgy", but today it's generally looked at as little more than a footnote.

For the moment, I must report that I browsed through Avengers: The Initiative # 1 and found it dreary and mean-spirited. I think that Marvel made a big mistake by turning it into an ongoing at the last minute. Hey, maybe it'll be the first scratch in the armor of the current Avengers.
 
Posted by He Who Wanders on :
 
HWW, are you sure you stopped reading Volume One with # 378?

Not entirely. Much of that period is a blur to me. Someday, I'm going to have to re-read those Harras issues; my memories of them are vague. I remember being unimpressed with the new Swordsman arc (mainly because I felt that Swordy was another character whose story was "over" and should have been left that way, alternate version or not).

I don't remember the spoiler story you described at all. That tells me that either it just wasn't very memorable, or I never read it in the first place.

Yes, comics are meant as escapist fantasy. But Marvel always raised the bar a bit, and this particularly true in the early '80s, with the death of Phoenix and then Hank's meltdown. I saw these types of stories as an extension to the "heroes with problems" theme that Marvel pioneered in the early '60s: Spidey's money problems and being branded a menace by the Daily Bugle; the FF bickering among themselves; Cap feeling like a relic, etc. Then, too, I grew up during the Watergate era, in which a President resigned (an incident that was memorably reinterpretted by Englehart in CAPTAIN AMERICA), and John Lennon had been murdered in 1980. So, real world heroes were flawed and finite; comic book heroes, I felt, should be the same. It made their attempts to accomplish something good even more heroic.
 
Posted by He Who Wanders on :
 
As for Jan and Hank saying they were never meant for each other, I don't know if they ever used those exact words, but in # 230, Hank tells Jan, "I fell for the young lady who reminded me of my first wife ... and you fell for the strong, silent hero. But I was never that strong, Jan. You know that now." To which Jan replies, "Uh-huh."

It is probably true that both initially had unrealistic expectations of each other (which happens often in relationships). But it's also true that they were married for a very long time, even by Marvel standards ... long enough, I'd bet, to get to know and love each other for who they really were.

Given that they were going their separate ways in # 230, it's possible that Hank tried to soften the blow by assuring Jan that their love was never meant to be (and Jan sought to return the favor by agreeing with him). I wouldn't read anything of Stern or Shooter's motives into this.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Avengers v.3 #77 - 84

There was a time a few years ago that Chuck Austen got a terrible reputation online. I'm understating it actually--he had by far the worst reputation out of any writer I've ever seen save possibly Byrne or Liefield.

Unfortunately, he largely deserved the criticism. And no where was it more pronounced than in Avengers.

If you've never read the Austen Avengers issues, I can't justify reccomending them to anyone. They'll simply annoy you. Allow me to highlight them:

(1) The writing is downright terrible. Weak stories that have little accomplished. Dialogue is forced and ridiculous, coming across like a sitcom. Stories are at the peak of Marvel's 'pad it for the trade' era, stretching six issues each time. There is nothing good here.

(2) Chuck Austen ultimately had to sex it up for no reason, and in doing so, made many characters look very bad and out of character. We've spoken at length about Harras good things with Hank, Busiek's rehashing and then John's bad decision to put Hank and Jan firmly together even moreso than Busiek. Well, now comes the worst one. Austen decides to make Jan cheat on Hank with Hawkeye. Does Jan come off as a tramp (I won't use a worse word b/c I think that would be unneccessary)? Yes, she does. Does Hank seem weak-willed and slightly unhinged/'out there' again? Yes. Does Hawkeye seem like a complete jerk for doing this to his friend? Oh yes--and let's not forget that at one point the Avengers were simply Jan, Hank and Clint, and all were three very close friends, and remained so for many years. Hank and Clint stuck by each other during Hank's final battle with Egghead after all. But here's Austen's take: "Fuck continuity, let's sex up the Avengers for some drama". Even worse, he tries to sell it as some 'pro-female' situation, which ultimately fails and feels patronizing.

(3) Captain Britain II - the ultimate 1990's stereotype of a battered woman/single mother, who becomes a super-hero. Not a bad concept, and it could have worked well. But Austen failed in delivery. Horribly. Have you never seen her again in Avengers? There's a reason.

(4) No real antagonists/storylines. I'm going through my brain repeatedly right now trying to figure out what stories I'm forgetting. I realize its because so many were so bad I blocked them out. The Wrecking Crew were stretched out for four or six issues and the story sucked.

(5) Giant-Jan - stupid.

Ultimately, I feel this was as bad an era as Shooter's era post #200, and definately worse than Byrne's post #300. It was a terrible time for Avenger's fans, and it made Bendis Dissassembled happen. Because by then the Avengers had been dissassembling since around Busiek's Kang story, and never recovered. The majority besides the big three were reduced to B-listers who did nothing other than dog-pile on the villains, and the Marvel Editorial staff had gone so far beyond forgetting the characters continuity, that they were making up their own versions of the characters with each story. It didn't help that the 'fit the trade' approach was more prominent than ever, and Marvel's sensationlism had shifted from entertaining you to outraging you.

But when Austen left the Avengers, a clear path could be seen with 20/20 hindsight to how we had gotten to the start of Bendis' run.

I almost didn't say this, b/c I'm afraid someone will say they liked Austen's run and be offended. But honestly, anyone who says that it was good better be a better orator than Martin Luther or Cicero, b/c your credibility is on the line.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
The only Chuck Austen stories I've read of late were the WAR MACHINE mini-series, which took me a bit to figure out were not in continuity with the "main" MU. Dark, nasty, MEAN-spirited... sheesh. And then I started hearing all these things about the other stuff he was doing... YEESH! What the hell happened to the guy whose work I used to LOVE 15 or so years back?

Austen started out as an artist with a rather realistic style, but he offended many of his earliest fans when he struck out and evolved a more "cartoony" style. As that was when I came in, I loved it. He was also doing one of my favorite x-rated book at the time-- STRIPS. The one thing I couldn't figure out back then was, the letters page (yep, a letters page in a porn comic!) had some of the nastiest, most viscious in-fighting and back-biting I'd ever seen in a comic-book letter column. What th'...?

At some point, the book got canned, and Austen dropped from sight. Several years later, he resurfaced, and tried to pick up right where he left off. But he made one of the dumbest marketing blunders I'd ever seen. For a few months, he was publishing 2 separate runs of STRIPS simultaneously-- new episodes (that picked up where the original story left off) and reprints of the originals, with extra "new" material added. This was just a rip-off! If you already had the orignals, you'd feel ripped off if you bought the reprints just for the few new pages. (Topps pulled this EXACT same crap with the 2nd LADY RAWHIDE mini-series, which was cancelled after 5 issues-- and then, the reprints were cancelled after 4.) Meanwhile, if you didn't have the old issues, you might not wanna buy the new episodes UNTIL you had all the earlier ones. A TPB collecting all the earlier episodes would have been the way to go. OY.

Some time later still, Austen turned up at Marvel as a writer. My impression is that, just possibly, he'd had some kind of nervous breakdown and complete personality change since 15+ years ago. I dunno. It's just so bizarre...


As it is, I dropped AVENGERS before Johns left, and have not picked it up since. Haven't missed it, either. Although, after reading all the posts here, I may just wanna look up the Harras run one of these days when finances are a lot better.
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
I'll get back to some of this (not just this post) later, just one minor point just now:
quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
(3) Captain Britain II - the ultimate 1990's stereotype of a battered woman/single mother, who becomes a super-hero. Not a bad concept, and it could have worked well. But Austen failed in delivery. Horribly. Have you never seen her again in Avengers? There's a reason.

Yes - Claremont grabbed her (and changed her name to "Lionheart"). Considering she's such a Claremontian stereotype, even given that Austen created her, not so surprising...
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
We've spoken at length about Harras good things with Hank, Busiek's rehashing and then John's bad decision to put Hank and Jan firmly together even moreso than Busiek. Well, now comes the worst one. Austen decides to make Jan cheat on Hank with Hawkeye. Does Jan come off as a tramp (I won't use a worse word b/c I think that would be unneccessary)? Yes, she does. Does Hank seem weak-willed and slightly unhinged/'out there' again? Yes. Does Hawkeye seem like a complete jerk for doing this to his friend? Oh yes--and let's not forget that at one point the Avengers were simply Jan, Hank and Clint, and all were three very close friends, and remained so for many years. Hank and Clint stuck by each other during Hank's final battle with Egghead after all. But here's Austen's take: "Fuck continuity, let's sex up the Avengers for some drama". Even worse, he tries to sell it as some 'pro-female' situation, which ultimately fails and feels patronizing.

Jeez Louise! [Roll Eyes]

Shouldn't Brevoort share some of the blame for the blase attitude toward continuity? After all, Austen AND Busiek AND Bendis each committed a whole bunch of continuity sins...and all under Brevoort's supervision!

quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
Ultimately, I feel this was as bad an era as Shooter's era post #200

I think that's an accurate comparison, because, as I said early on in this thread, Shooter's grafting of his personal demons onto these characters predated a similar approach from Austen.

quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
I dropped AVENGERS before Johns left, and have not picked it up since. Haven't missed it, either. Although, after reading all the posts here, I may just wanna look up the Harras run one of these days when finances are a lot better.

I'm very glad that you're considering giving the Harras run a chance.
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
One minor thing about Austen though - didn't he take Hank out of the Yellowjacket costume near the end? (Even if Bendis dropped him right in it again)
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
I'm trying to recall, and I can't, probably b/c Bendis and McNiven paid no attention if he did. For some reason I don't think so, but think we might have just seen more scenes with Hank in regular old scientist gear. I probably won't be re-reading these issues anytime soon.

And 'Boot, I forgot that Captain Britain II was in Excalibur under Claremont. Oh boy, I can imagine that one [Roll Eyes] [LOL]

BTW, up next is Bendis' Avengers Dissassembled. Stealth, did you read that? If so, I'll return the ball to your court for reviewing, if not, I can give a very brief but unkind review of it. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
I've read Disassembled only once, as a trade, more than two years ago, in one sitting at a Barnes & Noble. I remember thinking it was mean-spirited and senseless and incredibly stupid, like something a ten-year-old on a sugar high might write. I also remember thinking that David Finch's layouts were dynamic, but the drawings themselves were ugly and scrathy (although that might have had to do with the inking.) And I remember that the extra issue at the end (was it called Avengers Finale?) had a lot of guest artists, some of them very talented, but the coloring was so murky that none of them looked their best.
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
I'm trying to recall, and I can't, probably b/c Bendis and McNiven paid no attention if he did. For some reason I don't think so, but think we might have just seen more scenes with Hank in regular old scientist gear. I probably won't be re-reading these issues anytime soon.

Lucky for you, I didn't have to actually read an issue to verify it [Razz]

Avengers v3 #83, p2: http://milehighcomics.com/cgi-bin/backissue.cgi?action=page2&issue=05819410642%2083

PS: Scott Kolins' Wasp headshot in that last panel REALLY reminds me of Triad, for some reason.
PPS: Fer the heckavit: http://www.thexaxis.com/misc/avengers81.htm - and while I'm at it: http://www.thexaxis.com/xmen/xmen164.htm

quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
And 'Boot, I forgot that Captain Britain II was in Excalibur under Claremont. Oh boy, I can imagine that one [Roll Eyes] [LOL]

Yuuuuuuuuuuuuup

[ April 19, 2007, 03:50 PM: Message edited by: Reboot ]
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"it was mean-spirited and senseless and incredibly stupid, like something a ten-year-old on a sugar high might write"

This brings up a point I've had on my mind for some months now. More and more I get the feeling that a lot of "professionals" found success too fast, too early, too YOUNG. They hit adolescence and turned their backs on everything they liked and believed in when they were kids (normal, natural), but never quite reached adulthood when they would come to their senses and embrace things from their childhoods that WERE worth holding onto. I strongly suspect a LOT of writing in comics these days is a result of writers who never really grew up, and since they're getting paid for writing at a 15-year-old level, they don't have to, and probably never will.

Of course, there's some guys who are just cynical and mean-spirited by nature. While watching COMIC-BOOK SUPERHEROES UNMASKED on the History Channel, it really pissed me off to hear Denny O'Neil talk about how as the years have gone by, he's come to realize that as writers, they're the "custodians" of modern mythology. OH. REALLY. Took him THIS F****** long to figure that out, did it? After he almost single-handedly DESTROYED my #1 favorite costumed character, and with the help of his cronie, Frank Miller, pushed the entirety of "mainstream" superheroes into a dark, ugly pit from which they may never escape.


Meanwhile... I'm still waiting for detailed overviews of WEST COAST AVENGERS! (I didn't miss 'em-- did I?)
 
Posted by He Who Wanders on :
 
I wonder how much the writers actually have to do with the direction of the characters, or whether they are just "mouthpieces" for editors or publishers who really control the characters.

It would be naive to think that Marvel didn't know what Bendis, Austen, etc., were doing. It would be even more naive to think they could get away with "destroying" the characters without the parent company's consent. I've always viewed writers and artists who work for Marvel and DC as foot soldiers, carrying out the commands of some unseen authority, which can always find someone to do its dirty work.
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
"it was mean-spirited and senseless and incredibly stupid, like something a ten-year-old on a sugar high might write"

This brings up a point I've had on my mind for some months now. More and more I get the feeling that a lot of "professionals" found success too fast, too early, too YOUNG. They hit adolescence and turned their backs on everything they liked and believed in when they were kids (normal, natural), but never quite reached adulthood when they would come to their senses and embrace things from their childhoods that WERE worth holding onto. I strongly suspect a LOT of writing in comics these days is a result of writers who never really grew up, and since they're getting paid for writing at a 15-year-old level, they don't have to, and probably never will.

Well said.

quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
Meanwhile... I'm still waiting for detailed overviews of WEST COAST AVENGERS! (I didn't miss 'em-- did I?)

No, you haven't missed them. I'm still waiting for them, too.

C'mon, Whacko fans! Where are you??

quote:
Originally posted by He Who Wanders:
I've always viewed writers and artists who work for Marvel and DC as foot soldiers, carrying out the commands of some unseen authority, which can always find someone to do its dirty work.

I think that's true some of the time, but I think there's always a handful of writers who become successful and then find themselves working for editors who indulge their every whim.


And, finally, here's something I forgot to include in the post last night (I was getting tired by that time.) If anyone hasn't read Disassembled but is curious about what actually happened, here it is:

A strange force is causing terrible things to happen at Avengers mansion. The mansion is set on fire; Ant-Man, Vision, and Jack of Hearts all die; She-Hulk goes savage; a small army of Ultrons attacks; a Kree armada comes out of nowhere and attacks and Hawkeye dies counterattacking; finally, the enemy is revealed to be the Scarlet Witch, because (according to Bendis) she's always been unstable and potentially dangerous and she's finally snapped. In an ending that's even worse than what's come before, the Avengers allow Magneto to carry away the unconscious Scarlet Witch. Yes, you read that right.

Pitiful, isn't it? And this is the reason why I think that revealing Quicksilver and Scarlet Witch to be Magneto's children was a terrible idea in the long run.

[ September 13, 2007, 10:47 PM: Message edited by: Stealth ]
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"I've always viewed writers and artists who work for Marvel and DC as foot soldiers, carrying out the commands of some unseen authority, which can always find someone to do its dirty work."

"I think that's true some of the time, but I think there's always a handful of writers who become successful and then find themselves working for editors who indulge their every whim."

In the case of Denny O'Neil, the "destruction" didn't really start until he became an editor! Then-- KABLOOIE! (Need I remind anyone who was editor on DAREDEVIL when Frank Miller decided Jim Shooter's dark, nightmarish character-destruction habits were something to be expanded on? I'm pretty sure the 2 of them collaborated on Heather Glenn's murder. I know it was a suicide. But somebody had to WRITE it. That's murder in my (comic) book!)

When O'Neil returned to DC in 1986... OHHH boy. Overnight, he took my favorite costumed hero-- who he'd generally written really decent stories about in the past-- and unleashed something that has only recently begun to back off.

A lot of the guys who've written character-destructive storylines in the years since have been trying to "out-Miller" Miller-- only without the talent. Kinda like all those slasher movies that followed in the wake of HALLOWEEN. "Hey! WE can do something like THAT!" (No-- they couldn't...)


Wasn't it John Byrne who came up with the idea of revealing that Wanda & Pietro were Magneto's kids-- and that the idea was best if NOBODY but the audience would ever find out? Shame it didn't stay that way...
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
Wasn't it John Byrne who came up with the idea of revealing that Wanda & Pietro were Magneto's kids-- and that the idea was best if NOBODY but the audience would ever find out? Shame it didn't stay that way...

Yeah, but once the secret was out, Byrne decided he wanted to turn Wanda evil and have her fight at Magneto's side -- and Bendis has confirmed that this story was the one that inspired him to turn Wanda evil. If not for Byrne, it might never have happened and the Marvel Universe would be a better place.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"Yeah, but once the secret was out, Byrne decided he wanted to turn Wanda evil and have her fight at Magneto's side"

So... is THAT why Byrne had the Federal Government MURDER the Vision-- so the Scarlet Witch would go crazy?

I still recall the ad announcing Byrne's run on WCA, which featured 5 covers (I think). They got thru the first 4, but the 5th never appeared. It seems like Byrne abruptly changed the story's direction just before the climax, making a farce (in my eyes) of the whole "destroyed Vision" storyline.

Byrne then JUMPED ship-- just as abruptly-- just as he'd done on SHE-HULK, HULK, CAPTAIN AMERICA... (boy, this guy has a long track record of pulling temper tantrums and leaving books without warning, doesn't he?). Roy Thomas-- apparently-- finished off the "Wanda goes crazy" story, but it didn't really make much sense. I don't think I had a clue it was Byrne's idea, either.

Byrne's art & writing at the time was still pretty damn good at the time-- and in some ways, was a HUGE improvement over what he came after. But the actual stories he told... EHHH!!! The other main memory I had of those issues was, Byrne & Bob Wiacek (I think) did the SEXIEST Scarlet Witch since Dave Cockrum. I don't think the art on the book ever recovered after he left. (sigh)


The strangest thing about those WCA issues, for me, may be that I was so far behind on my reading, but a big Byrne fan at the time-- so I actually read Byrne's issues of WCA before any of Englehart's! (Let that thought soak in!)

[Smile]
 
Posted by Set on :
 
quote:
This brings up a point I've had on my mind for some months now. More and more I get the feeling that a lot of "professionals" found success too fast, too early, too YOUNG. They hit adolescence and turned their backs on everything they liked and believed in when they were kids (normal, natural), but never quite reached adulthood when they would come to their senses and embrace things from their childhoods that WERE worth holding onto. I strongly suspect a LOT of writing in comics these days is a result of writers who never really grew up, and since they're getting paid for writing at a 15-year-old level, they don't have to, and probably never will.
And yet, for every writer that is a big deconstructionist, insisting that whatever came before 'sucked' and must be torn down and 'made fresh' by crapping all over it and turning everything that made it popular upside down and inside out, there's a writer who has the nostalgia bug, who has some sense of reverence for what has come before.

Both sides have their downsides. I believe it was Stealth who made a point that Busiek did nothing new, bringing back an old team, telling old stories, putting Hank back in a costume he'd grown out of, rearranging relationships to a 'classical' mode that they had evolved beyond, etc.

While *I* loved that sort of thing, being a nostalgia goob, and felt not a speck of interest for the characters that Stealth holds up as the best Avengers ever, I do agree that too much 'nostalgia,' if it leads to stagnation and characters forever frozen and unable to change or grow or develop, can be stale and backwards-looking.

So there's some mythical 'happy medium,' where an author can allow a character to grow (allow Spider-Man to marry Mary-Jane, allow Dick Grayson to become Nightwing and leave the shadow of the bat, etc.), without crapping all over what has made them great in the past.

Dan Didio, who wants Nightwing dead, dead, dead, or Joe Quesada, who wants Mary-Jane dead, dead, dead, are both guilty of, IMO, going too far in *both* directions. They want to freeze the clock in some aspects, and they want to upturn the apple cart in others by radically transforming Stark into a ruthless villain, idealistic Wonder Woman into a cold-blooded pragmatist, Captain America into a waffling poll-watcher, Hal Jordan into a psychopath, etc.

I love reading this thread, even if some of the opinions are 180 degrees reversed from my own! [Smile]
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
For the WCA, I don't think I could really do justice for reviews for the first 80 or so issues, but I do remember the final 20, and the Forceworks comic that followed. I'm more interested in all of your guy's comments, so I know what to look at and avoid upon a reread [Big Grin]

Prof, I'm currently rereading the entire Spider-Man run (I'm about #87 right now, issues before Capt. Stacey dies-- [Frown] ), and I recently read the Quicksilver appearance (early 70's). Sexiest Scarlet Witch may just go to Johnny Romita Sr. in that one issue, where we only see her for about two pages! But WOW, Jr. Sr. could draw beautiful women! Of course, Jr. Sr.'s Gwen is the benchmark for me, but his touch could be seen on all his characters (men also, since his Peter Parker, Flash Thompson, Ned Leeds, and even older Joe Robertson have a strong leading man attractiveness to them that even I can see).

HWW, I definately agree that the editors not only have the knowledge of what's happening, but are most likely pushing for it. The so-called 'protector of Marvel's past' Tom Brevoort is probably anything but, that I'm convinced of. Still, better than Axel Alonzo, who does the Spider-Man comics these days.

Set, great points and I think we all agree on that. Some degree of a happy medium is needed, and I think that's where the best comic book writers since the late 60's have excelled. Steve Englehart's run on Avengers is probably the best example.
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Set:
I love reading this thread, even if some of the opinions are 180 degrees reversed from my own! [Smile]

That's the exact spirit in which I started this thread. Everyone is welcome, and the greater the diversity of opinions, the better.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"So there's some mythical 'happy medium,' where an author can allow a character to grow (allow Spider-Man to marry Mary-Jane, allow Dick Grayson to become Nightwing and leave the shadow of the bat, etc.), without crapping all over what has made them great in the past."

I read a fantastic article once-- in SCARLET STREET, I think-- that talked about how drastic changes and character growth often destroy long-running series. The writer's favorite example of the opposite was NERO WOLFE. The stories were written over a stretch of decades, each clearly taking place during the period it was written in. But Nero & Archie NEVER changed! The whole POINT of the series wasn't watching the characters change, it was watching the GREAT characters take part in extrememly well-written stories. I often think too many writers these days can't really write, either-- and just take the "easy" way out by doing bad soap-opera. (And of course, in soap-operas, EVERYBODY's miserable, all the time.)


As for SPIDER-MAN, I'm afraid that, being a fan from about 1967-up, I see the book as one that has REPEATEDLY "jumped the shark"-- each time worse than the time before-- and I wonder how some ever put up with it. Of course, for me, the first time was the death of Captain Stacy. Gil Kane got on the book, and his "specialty" seems to be high-tension nightmares and characters on the verge of a nervous breakdown all the time. (Gee, he might have been a good artist for the SPACE: 1999 comic! heehee) I only read the 2 years following Stacy's death a couple years ago, but they were far more downbeat and miserable than I expected. And unfortunately, except for brief periods here and there, it's been that way ever since. Oh well...


So guess what I just started watching on my VCR today???

[Smile]
 
Posted by He Who Wanders on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
I read a fantastic article once-- in SCARLET STREET, I think-- that talked about how drastic changes and character growth often destroy long-running series. The writer's favorite example of the opposite was NERO WOLFE. The stories were written over a stretch of decades, each clearly taking place during the period it was written in. But Nero & Archie NEVER changed! The whole POINT of the series wasn't watching the characters change, it was watching the GREAT characters take part in extrememly well-written stories.

I often think Marvel spoiled us (or me, at least), by creating the "illusion of change," where characters could grow and face serious changes. At least, that's what I've come to expect from serialized comics in general.

I started reading comics a little later than you did, so I grew up with a Legion while it was being that Bates-and-Cockrumized, a Spider-Man who was mourning the loss of Gwen, and a Captain America who quit being Cap for several months. Change was practically written into my comics-reading experience from the beginning.

So, for me, the issue becomes what changes are too much and when do they go too far? I'm not sure I have an answer, but one change that went too far for me was Byrne's demolition of The Vision and dismissal of his and Wanda's children. These changes set the characters back, not forward.

For an example of a TV series where change is an integral part of its development, I'd point to "7th Heaven," which is now ending after 11 seasons. The show has remained true to its premise, even though the original children have grown up and several have moved on. New cast additions have kept the story moving forward instead of detracting from it.
 
Posted by Set on :
 
quote:
So, for me, the issue becomes what changes are too much and when do they go too far? I'm not sure I have an answer, but one change that went too far for me was Byrne's demolition of The Vision and dismissal of his and Wanda's children. These changes set the characters back, not forward.
A huge pet peeve of mine. Change is good, within reason, but the characters are no longer seen as characters. They are seen as iconic properties, and changing anything about their 'IPs' is a major no-no, from name to costume to marital status to physical condition.

Robin 'growing up' and becoming Nightwing could *never* happen in todays environment, I fear. He'd be back as Robin within six months, because Dan Didio is happy enough to massacre and decapicate and dismember and rape characters, but he'll be *damned* before he'll allow one of them to mature or develop or grow as a character.

Hank Pym coming to the realization that he doesn't need a costume or fancy name in West Coast Avengers was good character development, IMO. Having him go back to the 'crutch' of his name(s) or costume(s) doesn't work for me.

Getting rid of Mary-Jane to 'reboot' Spider-Man back into a loner doesn't work for me. Having Superman, or Spider-Man, change costumes and then mysteriously reboot back to their classic look the moment a new creative team comes along doesn't work for me. Reed and Sue breaking up *because Reed's become an insane monster who takes his moral guidance from a super-villain who'se first name is 'Mad'* and then Joe deciding that they get back together because the event is over, without any consequences at all, doesn't work for me. Xavier getting out of the chair, and then back into it, and then back out of it, and then back into it, doesn't work for me. Let the man walk already! The wheelchair does not *define* Charles Xavier! How many broken backs does one man need? It's like 'bold new direction! Right back to where we started...'
 
Posted by He Who Wanders on :
 
Those are good examples, Set.

Another "change" that stuck in my craw was Byrne's (just to pick on him some more) redaction of The Vision being the original Human Torch. Vizh's true identity had long been established and was important in his development (learning of his heroic past gave him the courage to propose to Wanda). Undoing this made no sense, and was completely unnecessary. All it did was resurrect the original Torch for a few unmemorable stories.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
I don't mind characters growing up naturally. DICK TRACY started out as a bachelor; he adopted an oprhan long before he got married and had kids of his own. "Life" went on!

Gwen Stacy, on the other hand... this "SHOCKING MOMENT-- FROM WHICH NOTHING WILL EVER BE THE SAME AGAIN!!!!!" stuff, is a load of C***!!!

And I just thought of something... you know how in recent decades, that some fans have complained about certain "artists" who think they're "writers"? One of my favorite artists was responsible for that mess!!! DAMN you, John Romita!!!

[Smile]

Okay, to be honest... I LOVED MJ, and hated Gwen Stacy. But after Stan pushed the Pete & Gwen relationship against all odds and all common sense, it was really a case of people getting "cold feet" and not wanting to progress to the next logical, natural development. Or, according to Romita, it was a case of just trying to "shake things up" while simultaneously "paying tribute" to his hero-- Milton Caniff-- who'd once killed off Steve Canyon's girlfriend in the papers, which caused readers to talk about it for months-- or years-- after. Good grief...

I know, this is decades behind us... but that one event seems to have-- ahem-- "inspired" dozens of later writers to keep trying to out-do each other in the "SHOCKING EVENT!!!" category.
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
In current Avengers news, I browsed through Mighty Avengers # 2 at my local comic shop yesterday, and it continues to be in the so-bad-it's-funny category. The team spends the whole story standing around, sporadically getting blasted by She-Ultron. To break up the monotony, we get more flashbacks to the formation of the team, but these only serve as further proof of how clueless Bendis is about these characters. Moving on to Avengers: Initiative, the extensive previews posted at Newsarama are so bad, they have almost convinced me to not even bother browsing through it any more. The upcoming appearance of Dani Moonstar is the only thing that prevents me from simply turning my back on that book.

quote:
Originally posted by He Who Wanders:
For an example of a TV series where change is an integral part of its development, I'd point to "7th Heaven," which is now ending after 11 seasons. The show has remained true to its premise, even though the original children have grown up and several have moved on. New cast additions have kept the story moving forward instead of detracting from it.

And that's precisely why I never have a problem with a non-traditional Avengers lineup, and in fact prefer it to a more traditional lineup.

quote:
Originally posted by Set:
Hank Pym coming to the realization that he doesn't need a costume or fancy name in West Coast Avengers was good character development, IMO. Having him go back to the 'crutch' of his name(s) or costume(s) doesn't work for me.

Interesting point, because it relates to a certain pet peeve of my own. The key word is "crutch". Now, I'll admit I'm biased because I personally didn't like Hank as a cross between Dr. Who and Snapper Carr. The appeal to me of costumed superheroes is that they allow the characters to express their truest selves, at the risk of being humiliated or attacked yet gritting their teeth and expressing themselves anyway. So a Hank who decides to turn back on his truest self doesn't work for me at all. Another example is She-Hulk. To me, the real She-Hulk is the one who is big and green 24 hours a day. I've read posts about her current self, who goes back and forth between mousy lawyer Jennifer and big ball-buster She-Hulk, being described on another forum as "Jennifer no longer using She-Hulk as a crutch." I don't see it that way at all. I see it as She-Hulk (and Hank) giving in to the pressures of society, and I don't like that.

And, on a simpler level, Hank as Giant-Man and always-big-and-green She-Hulk are the verisons of these characters that go back to my personal favorite era in comics, a little bit on both sides of 1993. On that level, my opinion is purely subjective.
 
Posted by He Who Wanders on :
 
And that's precisely why I never have a problem with a non-traditional Avengers lineup, and in fact prefer it to a more traditional lineup.

Just to be clear, I don't have a problem with non-tradional lineups, either. Though I prefer some combination of "my" five Avengers (Thor, IM, Cap, Vizh, Wanda) to be present, I also regard new recruits as a necessity. Some of the best storylines in Avengers history have involved The Swordsman, Mantis, Beast, Wonder Man, and others.
 
Posted by He Who Wanders on :
 
The appeal to me of costumed superheroes is that they allow the characters to express their truest selves [...]. So a Hank who decides to turn back on his truest self doesn't work for me at all.

The whole point of the Stern and Englehart story lines was that being Dr. Pym was Hank's true self.
 
Posted by Set on :
 
quote:
The whole point of the Stern and Englehart story lines was that being Dr. Pym was Hank's true self.
That was the impression that I'd gotten from it as well. That the reason why he was never comfortable in the 'skins' of Ant-Man, Giant-Man, Goliath or Yellowjacket is that these were assumed identities and not truly 'him.' None of the other founding Avengers seemed as dissatisfied with their identities, so it was a sign of actual character growth for him to realize that no rotating series of masks was going to fix the problem. If anything, the masks *were* the problem.

He had 'Stark syndrome' before even Stark.

[By 'Stark syndrome,' I mean a tendency to put on the mask to avoid seeing that other face, which Stark has taken to the logical, if psychotically dissociative, next stage of completely denying responsibility for anything he has ever done wrong, lying to himself, his fellow Avengers and the rest of the world about who was responsible for rampages like the Armor Wars, which was the first time he has been responsible for killing a fellow super-hero (and assaulted a bunch of others), but, sadly, not the last.]
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
In my opinion, Dr. Pym was just as much of a mask as Yellowjacket and Ant-Man, and Giant-Man is Hank's true self. I think the concept of the costumed superhero is analogous to real-lfie people who dress unconventionally, and/or wear their hair unconventionally, and/or practice alternative lifestyles. For a lot of people, this is a passing phase before the get older and start acting and looking "normal." But there's also a lot of people who try to be "normal" because they're so insecure and they worry so much about what other people think of them -- in many cases, they become depressed and suicidal. I think Hank was completely fooling himself by thinking he should just be Dr. Pym -- that was a cop-out which I believe would have led him to becoming depressed and suicidal a second time. Becoming Giant-Man again saved his life, and from there he spent a few years confident and angst-free. If the writers who followed Harras had respected continuity and left well enough alone, he'd probably still be confident and angst-free.

[ April 22, 2007, 10:26 PM: Message edited by: Stealth ]
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"But there's also a lot of people who try to be "normal" because they're so insecure and they worry so much about what other people think of them -- in many cases, they become depressed and suicidal. I think if Hank had stayed Dr. Pym longer, he would have gotten depressed and suicidal -- which he already went through just before he became Dr. Pym. I think he was completely fooling himself by thinking he should just be Dr. Pym -- that was the easy way out. Becoming Giant-Man again saved his life, and from there he spent a few years confident and angst-free. If the writers who followed Harras had respected continuity and left well enough alone, he'd probably still be confident and angst-free."

As I mentioned earlier, Pym DID become depressed and in fact DID try to commit suicide-- during the Englehart run of WCA!! It came as a shock to me reading it, because it just seemed to come out of nowhere. Here, Roger Stern was trying to convince us that he'd gotten himself back together-- Steve Englehart was apparently taking it to the next level-- and then-- where did THIS come from??? He was "saved", in part, by Firestar (if memory serves), who'd "gotten religion".

I'm really wishing I'd read the bulk of Harras' run now...


I think it's safe to "blame" Gerry Conway and Jim Shooter for all this in the long run. Conway drove Englehart so crazy in such a short time he quit Marvel and actually planned to quit comics altogether-- and I know from personal experience how ONE person can screw you and your career up like that. Then Shooter pulled his number of Pym-- TWICE-- and the 2nd time, he was in charge, so who was gonna stop him?

This makes me wonder what Englehart might've done if he HADN'T left Marvel (and THE AVENGERS) when he did, way back in the 70's.
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
Firebird/Espirita, not Firestar.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"Firebird/Espirita, not Firestar."

Well, I was close!

[Smile]
 
Posted by He Who Wanders on :
 
I think the concept of the costumed superhero is analogous to real-lfie people who dress unconventionally, and/or wear their hair unconventionally, and/or practice alternative lifestyles.

I agree with this analogy, and believe it fits most super-heroes (Spider-Man, for example). But there are people who "conform to non-conformity" merely because they are trying to fit in with someone they perceive to be more powerful or attractive. Some children, for example, dress rebelliously not to express themselves, but to fit in with other kids who dress that way and are perceived as strong or cool.

Consider, also, girls who suffer from annorexia or bullimia because they want to look thin, like models.

During Stern's trial of Yellowjacket arc, Hank explains to a psychiatrist that one of the reasons he became Giant-Man was to impress Jan, whose flirtatious comments about Thor made Hank feel insecure. Stern brilliantly used a minor and long-forgotten aspect of Jan's personality to show how it must have felt to her boyfriend, at the time, to be compared, literally, to a god.

[ April 23, 2007, 12:50 AM: Message edited by: He Who Wanders ]
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
I think of Hank's transition from Yellow Jacket to plain ol' Dr. Pym a natural transition, but like Stealth, I also think that his switch back to Giant-Man was as natural a transition as any for the character.

What it did was not place Hank squarely back in 'angst-ridden adventurer super-hero', but show him in the light of a man who has the intelligence and wits to help out, powers that could be helpful, and the courage and bravery to use them despite a long-standing preference to *not* use them for many years/months. When he became Giant-Man once more, in an effort to save the team of Avengers when all else had failed, he didn't do so out of any insecurities or because he wanted to be adulated, but because he knew he had the experience and the means, and that deep down, Hank is a super-hero in the Marvel Universe, and in one of the truest senses a 'Silver Age Super-Hero' aka Scienctist/Explorer/Adventurer.

I also think that he was deluduing himself for years by thinking that being plain 'ol Dr. Pym was what he truly wanted. Now, I do think Stern's story was excellent and achieved the idea that Hank could put behind him his troubles with Jan, his feelings of insecurity and his inability to create a real identity for himself. After becoming 'Hank Pym' again, after dismissing his countless identities, there was something still lacking from this, and that was the idea that deep down he's a hero, and he has the powers and the know-how to make a difference. It was only during Harras' run that he was presented with a 'do or die' opportunity and he seized the moment and did what was right and for the first time in ages felt an aspect of himself that he hadn't felt in a long time, and was complete again.

By the end of Harras' run, Hank was Giant-Man. He should never have become Ant-Man or Yellow Jacket again (the latter laid to rest by Stern years earlier). And plain ol' Dr. Pym, while being the dominant part of Hank's personality, was lacking something that Giant-Man made up for. (Also, Giant Man basically = Goliath, so I see little difference there. If anything, I wish he was Goliath now as a tribute to Bill Foster, who longtime fans should know was one of Hank's best friends).

Harras did a great job thereafter showing Hank as the scientist Avenger he was meant to be, without dwelling on any of his personnal problems that have become beyond redundant at this point, showing that he had grown and moved on from them and was now complete. Its too bad we never got to see what was in store next for *that* Hank, since I believe Busiek's entire run with Hank was a means to somehow get him back in the Yellow Jacket costume. If anything, there should just have been a new Yellow Jacket to satisfy anyone who wanted to see that costume back in action.

I guess what I'm saying is that sure, Hank grew past all those identities during Stern's story and naturally moved on as Dr. Pym. But there was something missing, because he couldn't simply forget about all his experiences and couldn't deny that he had the means to make a difference out there. So by returning as Giant-Man in that story, he was able to find the final piece of himself that was missing.
 
Posted by Set on :
 
I kinda liked the Rita DeMar (?) Yellowjacket. The notion of Hank Pym creating and casting off super-hero persona, which then get picked up by others (like Scott Lang), was kinda neat.

Unfortunately, every single super-hero that Pym has created has died. Black Goliath. Clint Barton - Goliath. Rita - Yellowjacket. Lang - Ant-Man. Jocasta. Atlas has the ionic energy thing bringing him back to life, but he's died at least twice. It's like the curse of Pym...
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
And Atlas is currently in a bad way - he's currently stuck giant-sized-and-depowered in Germany (depowered meaning he doesn't have the strength to move, speak or crap. That catheter's going to be a doozy...).
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
You know, for most of the Busiek run, certain things kept frustrating me-- but I tended to brush them aside because, compared to 90% of what Marvel was doing around then, it was pretty damn good. By comparison! The longer his run went on, though... AI YI YI!!!

I think I'd have to agree with most of what's been said here about Hank Pym. The one exception, for me, is that Stern should have NEVER had Hank & Jan go their separate ways. I guess I'm just from a different generation, but 2 people who'd been together as long as they had and been as much in love as they were should have been able to work things out. The fact that they got back together eventually just proves it. It just keeps looking to me like one writer determined to do whatever they wanted, character history be damned, and other, later writers, determined to "fix" what other writers screwed over.

It's not that I don't appreciate the "fixes". Without them, many longtime series would be in even worse shape today than they are. It's just that most of these "fixes" should never have been "necessary"!
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Set:
I kinda liked the Rita DeMar (?) Yellowjacket.

I loved Rita. I mentioned in this thread a while ago that I was planning to do a series of fanfics which would have taken place in an alternate timeline which diverged at the point where Stern's run ended. Rita would have been one of the stars. I had an origin story for her and everything (I don't know if she ever had an origin story in Guardians of the Galaxy, since I wasn't into that book, but even if she did, my stories took place outside of Earth-616 anyway.) I had plans for Rita to become the latest ex-villain to join the Avengers, for Wasp to forgive her and become her friend, for She-Hulk to also become her friend, for Rita to start a relationship with Scott Lang and become a mother figure to Cassie Lang, and for a Masters of Evil storyarc where the Masters, now led by Moonstone, try to blackmail Rita into betraying the Avengers.

I may still write those stories. Time will tell.

[ April 23, 2007, 09:55 PM: Message edited by: Stealth ]
 
Posted by He Who Wanders on :
 
What it did was not place Hank squarely back in 'angst-ridden adventurer super-hero', but show him in the light of a man who has the intelligence and wits to help out, powers that could be helpful, and the courage and bravery to use them despite a long-standing preference to *not* use them for many years/months.

I just want to say that this is nicely argued, well supported, and highly convincing, Cobie.

I haven't read (or don't remember reading) the stories in question, so I haven't formed an opinion on them. But I can accept that Hank would become Giant-Man once more if he thought doing so would serve the greater good. (I'm not sure if this means he would continue being GM permanently, but that's a different issue.)
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
Did anyone read the recent BEYOND miniseries? It featured a Hank Pym that was definitely still an adventurer, though an unmasked, uncostumed one. He used the 'pym particle' powers of shrinking/enlarging objects (including the whole cast at one point, I think) rather than focusing on 'personal' size changing. To me, this seemed much more like Hank Pym than anything Marvel's published in years.

Anyway, I thought it was a fun rendition of Hank-- much more so than anything featuring the character in that Yellowjacket costume (why other Marvel characters don't run for the hills as soon as they see that black and yellow number is beyond me...) Seriously, I wish some character or other would make this observation. Currently, there are too many hating on him, though.

I always thought it'd be a cool storyline for Hank to mentor a small team comprised of an Ant-man, a Giant-man and a Yellowjacket-- each with personality conflicts similar to ones Hank has experienced. This would depend upon him being relatively stable for a period of time before the story's opening, however. That doesn't look likely to occur for some time, given the current regime's attitude towards the character.
 
Posted by He Who Wanders on :
 
(why other Marvel characters don't run for the hills as soon as they see that black and yellow number is beyond me...)

While re-reading the Stern issues, it occurred to me that Hank should have run whenever he saw that costume. The shoulder doohickeys were so high, he couldn't possibly have seen over them. Who would want to go into battle with their vision obstructed like a horse with blinders? Perhaps Hank had suicidal tendencies even then. [Hmmm?]
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
Any idea who designed the Yellowjacket costume? John Romita? John Buscema? Roy Thomas? (I seriously doubt it was Jack Kirby... heh heh.)
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by He Who Wanders:
What it did was not place Hank squarely back in 'angst-ridden adventurer super-hero', but show him in the light of a man who has the intelligence and wits to help out, powers that could be helpful, and the courage and bravery to use them despite a long-standing preference to *not* use them for many years/months.

I just want to say that this is nicely argued, well supported, and highly convincing, Cobie.

I haven't read (or don't remember reading) the stories in question, so I haven't formed an opinion on them. But I can accept that Hank would become Giant-Man once more if he thought doing so would serve the greater good. (I'm not sure if this means he would continue being GM permanently, but that's a different issue.)

Thanks HWW! I've got to say that I'm honestly thrilled that so many people like Hank, and the majority of us all want to see good things for him. I feel like even if there's some small disagreement, its more like we're almost all on the same side of the coin.

The other side being Jim Shooter, Brian Bendis, etc.

The Hank issue and the well-spoken arguements (particulurly the respectable nature of them so far) is one of the reasons I check this thread so regularly!

As for the costume, I feel like it was Jr. Sr. for some reason. But I can't remember where I read that now.
 
Posted by Ultra Jorge on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mystery Lad:
Did anyone read the recent BEYOND miniseries? It featured a Hank Pym that was definitely still an adventurer, though an unmasked, uncostumed one. He used the 'pym particle' powers of shrinking/enlarging objects (including the whole cast at one point, I think) rather than focusing on 'personal' size changing. To me, this seemed much more like Hank Pym than anything Marvel's published in years.

Anyway, I thought it was a fun rendition of Hank-- much more so than anything featuring the character in that Yellowjacket costume (why other Marvel characters don't run for the hills as soon as they see that black and yellow number is beyond me...) Seriously, I wish some character or other would make this observation. Currently, there are too many hating on him, though.

I always thought it'd be a cool storyline for Hank to mentor a small team comprised of an Ant-man, a Giant-man and a Yellowjacket-- each with personality conflicts similar to ones Hank has experienced. This would depend upon him being relatively stable for a period of time before the story's opening, however. That doesn't look likely to occur for some time, given the current regime's attitude towards the character.

I agree 100%. That was Hank! Nice to see you again buddy. It's been over a decade!
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"As for the costume, I feel like it was Jr. Sr. for some reason. But I can't remember where I read that now."

You mean J.R. Sr., right? [Smile] Or, as I like to just call him... "JOHN ROMITA". (the "real" one)

Seems like in the early 60's Kirby was designing every new character that came along-- unless Steve Ditko was doing them. But after Romita came onboard at the start of 1966, he began doing more and more and more for Stan. I guess that's what happens when you're working IN the office all the time-- it's just too easy for the editor to pull you aside and ask "Could you do THIS?" I read Romita felt it would be easier to focus and get more work done if he wasn't doing it at home. The flip side of that was, his run on ASM was REPEATEDLY interrupted by other projects. (In a way, it's similar to what happened with John Buscema on THE AVENGERS-- Stan kept yanking him away for other projects as well. Did Stan have a problem focusing??)

When I think of Romita costumes, I'm afraid the ones that keep sticking in my mind-- and not in a good way-- are all those "open shirt" things he did in the early 70's. Seems every character-- including the WOMEN!!! --were showing more and more skin. For the women, none of those outfits looked as good as the one he was no doubt inspired by... Vampirella's. (Costume designed by Trina Robbins, if memory serves!)

There's a funny thing that happened much later where Jack Kirby once did a cover (or pin-up) of The Avengers, included both Giant-Man and Yellowjacket in the line-up, apparently because he didn't know they were supposed to be the same guy!
 
Posted by DrakeB3004 on :
 
Speaking of Hank's costumes, anyone know who designed the yellow/blue one? I always liked that one...
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
I'd guess it might have been Jack Kirby, if only because Jack drew several covers with Goliath featured prominently on them at the time.

http://www.comics.org/coverview.lasso?id=20047&zoom=4

http://www.comics.org/coverview.lasso?id=20186&zoom=4
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Some random Avengers-related thoughts:

1A. Writers I would like to see on Avengers: Alan Grant, Dave Gibbons, Tony Bedard, Roger Stern, Peter David, Fabian Nicieza, Mark Waid, Mike Carey, Gail Simone

1B. Writers I don’t ever want to see on Avengers: Joe Casey, Ed Brubaker, Judd Winick, Greg Rucka, Keith Giffen, J. Michael Straczyniski, Dan Jurgens

2. Until re-reading the Busiek era for this thread, I’d never before admitted to myself just how much I dislike that era. I’m seriously considering putting the Busiek issues in my collection up for sale.

3. In my opinion, She-Ultron is the latest proof that Bendis is a misogynist.

4. One particular criticism of the Harras era that angers me is the claim that alternate-universe counterparts are like something out of the X-Men. The concept of alternate-universe counterparts didn’t originate in Claremont’s X-Men, as these people seem to think. They originated in JLA during the Silver Age. One development I would have loved to see in the Avengers is the discovery of an alternate universe where the planet has not been devastated and where the Avengers of both worlds befriend each other and have a team-up every year, in the same spirit as the JLA/JSA team-ups, which happened every year from the early 1960s to the early 1980s.

5. One particular scene that I hate from the first Shooter era is from the “attacked by the Ant-Man” issue where the Scarlet Witch panics when the ants are crawling all over her. Englehart’s Scarlet Witch would have calmly hexed away the ants with a flick of her wrist.

[ April 25, 2007, 09:29 PM: Message edited by: Stealth ]
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Stealth:
1B. Writers I don’t ever want to see on Avengers: Joe Casey,...

Not been reading the two Earth's Mightiest Heroes minis then, huh?
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
You got it. I wouldn't touch either of the EMH minis with a twenty-foot pole. On other forums, I've seen a lot of posts that say they want Casey on an ongoing Avengers book. I hope that never comes to pass. It would probably be a lot like the Busiek era, only worse.
 
Posted by He Who Wanders on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Stealth:
1B. Writers I don’t ever want to see on Avengers: [...] J. Michael Straczyniski [...]

Again, I must offer a (somewhat) dissenting opinion. I admit I'm not that familiar with JMS's comics work (and, even then, mainly his Top Cow series, RISING STARS and MIDNIGHT NATION), but my all-time favorite TV series is "Babylon 5," which JMS co-created, executive produced, and wrote the lion's share of episodes.

I did read some of JMS's SPIDER-MAN work last year, on the "rebirth" arc (or whatever it was called; I borrowed the issues from a friend and no longer have them), which started out really well, but ended up going in an all-too-famliar direction:

Click Here For A SpoilerSpidey dies and comes back to life. Where have we seen that before?

As I recall, JMS wrote the early parts of the arc, which I liked best.

So, just out of curiosity, why is he writer non grata on The Avengers?
 
Posted by Ultra Jorge on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Stealth:
You got it. I wouldn't touch either of the EMH minis with a twenty-foot pole. On other forums, I've seen a lot of posts that say they want Casey on an ongoing Avengers book. I hope that never comes to pass. It would probably be a lot like the Busiek era, only worse.

I disagree. Casey is an Avengers fanboy he loves the history like Busiek BUT most his other books are very progressive. Heck, even EMH shows the inbetween issues things as progressive.
 
Posted by Ultra Jorge on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by DrakeB3004:
Speaking of Hank's costumes, anyone know who designed the yellow/blue one? I always liked that one...

I think it was Buscema? Maybe Heck but I wanna say Buscema.
 
Posted by Set on :
 
quote:
3. In my opinion, She-Ultron is the latest proof that Bendis is a misogynist.
You are far too kind. Bendis is a political hack who wants to express his contempt for what is going on in this country by tainting and destroying and trashing everything he gets his hands on, like a frustrated child having a tantrum. Everything from 'do you think this A on my head stands for France' on has been nothing more than him crapping on the characters and fans in an attempt to highlight how pissed off he is at the world and how we are too damn stupid to appreciate his very important point.

Joey Q is just clueless enough to not have noticed how much BiMBo is flipping him off (and Marvel as a company, it's properties and it's customers as a whole) with every single genre convention or fan favorite character he derides and pisses all over.

Bendis just stomps around screaming, "Pay attention to me! I'm so controversial! This is my face while I'm ****ing you in the ***!" like a 90 lb goth prepubescent pretending to be Godzilla.

And he can't get a book out on time to save his chapped hide, so he's also incompetent.

Other than that, I don't much like him...
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Set:
quote:
3. In my opinion, She-Ultron is the latest proof that Bendis is a misogynist.
You are far too kind. Bendis is a political hack who wants to express his contempt for what is going on in this country by tainting and destroying and trashing everything he gets his hands on, like a frustrated child having a tantrum. Everything from 'do you think this A on my head stands for France' on has been nothing more than him crapping on the characters and fans in an attempt to highlight how pissed off he is at the world and how we are too damn stupid to appreciate his very important point.

Joey Q is just clueless enough to not have noticed how much BiMBo is flipping him off (and Marvel as a company, it's properties and it's customers as a whole) with every single genre convention or fan favorite character he derides and pisses all over.

Bendis just stomps around screaming, "Pay attention to me! I'm so controversial! This is my face while I'm ****ing you in the ***!" like a 90 lb goth prepubescent pretending to be Godzilla.

And he can't get a book out on time to save his chapped hide, so he's also incompetent.

Other than that, I don't much like him...

Ummm... that was all Millar ("A for France" = Ultimates v1)

And, whatever Bendis' many and copious faults, he makes the trains run gets his books out on time as a general rule.

[ April 26, 2007, 01:09 PM: Message edited by: Reboot ]
 
Posted by Set on :
 
quote:
Ummm... that was all Millar ("A for France" = Ultimates v1)

And, whatever Bendis' many and copious faults, he makes the trains run gets his books out on time as a general rule.

They aren't the same person? Well crud. That conspiracy theory shot to heck. I could never tell any of the Authority / Ultimates writers apart. The stories always seemed to be the same. Someone punches someone in the brain. Stuff blows up. Look into the camera and say something nasty.
 
Posted by Ultra Jorge on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Set:
quote:
3. In my opinion, She-Ultron is the latest proof that Bendis is a misogynist.
You are far too kind. Bendis is a political hack who wants to express his contempt for what is going on in this country by tainting and destroying and trashing everything he gets his hands on, like a frustrated child having a tantrum. Everything from 'do you think this A on my head stands for France' on has been nothing more than him crapping on the characters and fans in an attempt to highlight how pissed off he is at the world and how we are too damn stupid to appreciate his very important point.

Joey Q is just clueless enough to not have noticed how much BiMBo is flipping him off (and Marvel as a company, it's properties and it's customers as a whole) with every single genre convention or fan favorite character he derides and pisses all over.

Bendis just stomps around screaming, "Pay attention to me! I'm so controversial! This is my face while I'm ****ing you in the ***!" like a 90 lb goth prepubescent pretending to be Godzilla.

And he can't get a book out on time to save his chapped hide, so he's also incompetent.

Other than that, I don't much like him...

I'm with you! That was very well said. And Millar goes along with that as well. They both are good writers but both seem to have an agenda...especially Bendis.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"I think it was Buscema? Maybe Heck but I wanna say Buscema."

Well, as seen here...

http://www.comics.org/coverview.lasso?id=20047&zoom=4

...it debuted in AVENGERS #28 (May'66), pencilled by Don Heck, but the cover was Jack Kirby. John Romita had already come back some months before, but as far as I know John Buscema didn't return until some months later (his return being in STRANGE TALES #150 and TALES TO ASTONISH #85 / both Nov'66).

You know, it's fairly simple-- it could be a Romita design!
 
Posted by Ultra Jorge on :
 
I thought the blue/yellow came later for some reason. Oh well. [Smile]
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
I definately never want JMS on a Marvel or DC comic book again, because of his runs on Spider-Man or Fantastic Four.

He's on par with Chuck Austen for me of writers I never want on my favorite comics.
 
Posted by Ultra Jorge on :
 
I am terrified of him writing Thor already. I agree with Stealth about all the writers I don't want on Avengers except Joe Casey. Ofcourse can it get any worse?

I hate that JMS is bringing back Donald Blake. ugh!
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
Here's a nice John Buscema GOLIATH (blue & yellow)...

http://www.comics.org/coverview.lasso?id=21128&zoom=4

...and another one...

http://www.comics.org/coverview.lasso?id=21793&zoom=4


Now here's a good question: who designed THIS one?

http://www.comics.org/coverview.lasso?id=22654&zoom=4
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Re: J. Michael Straczynski -- I only started disliking JMS recently. During the mid-late 1980s, he was one of my favorite TV cartoon writers, thanks to his work on She-Ra, He-Man, and especially The Real Ghostbusters, the last of which he story-edited for its first 65 episodes. And although I never really got into Babylon 5 -- despite the show starring one of my favorite actresses, Claudia Christian -- I certainly respect how JMS achieved his ambitious plans for the show.

Being completely unfamiliar with his comics work when I started reading comics again two years ago, I was very excited that he was going to be doing Fantastic Four. And even after his character asassination of Reed Richards in the FF's Civil War tie-ins (which I'm sure was at least partly dictated by Millar and the editors), I still think his Pre-CW FF issues were quite good, including the ones with Dr. Doom and Thor's hammer, which were advertised as a CW prologue but ended up having nothing to do with Civil War.

What made JMS lose a lot of my respect was when I found out after-the-fact that the did a retcon in Spider-Man where Gwen Stacy had an affair with Norman Osborn (if that's not a vomit-inducing midlife-crisis fantasy, I don't know what is.) And when he did a recent interview, talking about his plans for Thor, where he announced it was going to be a "comedy of manners" with the Asgardian gods living in the American heartland, that was really the last straw for me. And I agree with Jorge about bringing back Donald Blake -- that's adding insult to injury.

Re: Joe Casey -- Casey puts the first 200 issues of Avengers on a pedastal, and the Harras era doesn't fit into Casey's narrow view of what the Avengers are "supposed" to be. I respect his opinions, but I don't want anyone with those opinions to write Avengers. And if any of the writers on my list of writers I DO want has the same opinons as Casey, then I would no longer want them writing Avengers. I firmly believe that setting limits to what the book is "supposed" to be and that holding up a certain bunch of issues as un-reachable are the reasons the Avengers haven't had an approach that feels fresh to me since the Harras era.

Re: Bendis and Millar -- I think Bendis is basically an arrested nerd who, even as a supposed grown-up, still thinks it makes him "cool" to act like a schoolyard bully, and who is too self-centered to ever convincingly write a character who is not an extension of himself. Millar is the one who really angers me, with his flippancy, his utter contempt for America and Americans, and his cynical pandering to the lowest common denominator (and he's not the only one -- see also Ellis' Thunderbolts.)

[ April 26, 2007, 10:03 PM: Message edited by: Stealth ]
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
I can't speak to Millar's disrespect towards Americans or cynical pandering to the lowest common denominator, since his Ultimate Cap and Ultimate Hank left such a bad taste in my mouth not too long ago, but I do think he's gotten quite a bad rap for Civil War, where the blame shouldn't really fall on him. I think he's a extremely talented writer and lots of his Marvel work has restored a sense of granduer and escapism that other writers imitate, and fail at doing so. But Tony being a facist and Reed being a McCarthist are not Millar's fault, and he's said so. Neither really come across that way in Civil War #1-7, especially Tony. No, the fault there lies with JMS. JMS is the one who made Tony look so over the top facist in Spider-Man, and then did the worst Reed scenes in comic book history in Spidey and FF--which are unforgivable. Jenkins, the Black Panther writer and a few others just added insult to injury with their bit of hack writing. But Millar all along stressed that Tony had a more conservative point of view and was really trying to do the right thing. But its Joe Q and Marvel editorial's inability to understand that viewpoint that helped them push for a more and more facist Tony, which is what we've gotten. Add in Bendis writing him like some strange version of 'an uneducated American's view of a smarmy business man' (which is how I read it) and you get Tony in the Avengers title. The ultimate blame must go to Tom Brevoort though, for allowing all of the Civil War related titles to be nothing at all like Civil War. Tony really comes across as villianous, hell, as a strait-up DICK, in the spin-offs and tie-ins, while Millar tries for seven issues to show a logical, in-character way for Tony to be on one side against the side that the fans are obviously going to side with all along.

I honestly think Millar tried to make Tony a complex character in Civil War, and JMS, Joe Q, Bendis and Brevoort made him out to be Cheney, Bill O'Reilly, and every other conversative figure that people love to hate. So I think Millar is off the hook here, and JMS, once more, gets a large portion of my blame.

As for Bendis, I can't understand how he can be so damn brillant sometimes, as with Alias, Daredevil, and Ultimate Spider-Man, and be so damn terrible other times, as with all of his Avengers related titles. Even his USM stories are often lacking, but he makes up for it by being able to convey the 'spirit' of a young Spider-Man. Probably b/c that is who is really is (Bendis I mean), still a real life Peter Parker who grew up, got married, had kids and has a pretty cool life, but still feels that anxiety of old. He simply can't write team comics, fight scenes or cosmic widescreen epics.

Ellis I don't know why anyone likes. His comics should be 10 cents for the amount of content you get in each one.

Jenkins is another one that I just don't know why people like. I think the last semi-decent comic book he wrote that didn't star the Sentry was probably an issue of Spider-Man in 1999 or 2000. He obviously doesn't know the characters or material and has no problems hiding it (like Ellis, who gloats about that in interviews).

So if I'm the biggest Speedball fan of all time and Jenkins introduces some new reporter in Civil War: Frontline, what am I supposed to think? If I was breaking into the comics industry, I'd bide my time, get hired by Marvel and give that new character a gruesome death in retribution. Okay, I'm kidding, because that's obviously way over the top and no one would really do that. Right? I'd say wrong, because I'm pretty sure that's what John Byrne has been doing for the last ten years, and so have a bunch of other creators.

It's much easier to deconstruct a character or concept that build upon it and create new things. There should be little praise left for deconstructionalists after Watchman and Dark Knight Returns in 1986. We got it. We've moved on. No more Avengers: Dissessembled. No more tear everything down at one time and render it inert, so something new can take its place. Be creative and be fresh, and if a character dies and it fits the story, than so be it. No one screamed when the Swordsman met his end, or few can argue that Phoenix's original death wasn't brillant. But people do get mad about Hawkeye for a reason.

Guess I started ranting [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Tamper Lad on :
 
Really. I don't think Millar hates Americans. You guys have to realize he writes Americans as the rest of the world sees you, especially in the current climate. And it's certainly not entirely their fault the world sees you as the Kobe Bryant of Nations. (Actually that analogy is so perfect I'm claiming dibs on it.)

And yes they've hijacked the MU to tell an allegorical tale of what it's like to deal with Americans these days. And yes Reed and Tony infuriate me. But the comics medium was always an allegory. Be it joining the war effort, why snitching on criminals is good or standing up to bullies one day they'll find a new morality tale and they'll move on.
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
But people do get mad about Hawkeye for a reason.

 -
 
Posted by Set on :
 
Tamper Lad
quote:
You guys have to realize he writes Americans as the rest of the world sees you, especially in the current climate.
Trust me on this, it's not real fun for half of the people living in this country in the current climate. Many of my best friends I just can't talk to about anything substantive, since they get red-faced and screaming if I bring up Guantanamo Bay or Pat Tillman or something.

And yet, I pick up Civil War, supposedly an entertainment, and Reed Richards is throwing people into the Negative Zone without due process or trials or habeas corpus or any of those quaint things. I'm the liberalist peacenik wussy that ever wussed, and yet *I* don't want to pick up my comic books to see super-heroes preaching at me, and the WWII hero representative of spirit of America being chased through crowded New York City streets and buildings by people launching explosive missiles at him because 'they are the responsible ones.'

That's a bit over the top in the 'see how hypocritical they are' area. I got it. We're dicks. There are two kinds of people in America. The half who don't like it, and the half who do, and Civil War isn't going to change either of our minds. Millar, Bendis, etc. may or may not have an ounce of talent, but they sure aren't Jon Stewart or Rush Limbaugh.

More super-heroes please, less 'you people reading this comic suck.' Lead by example. If there must be a timely comic-book analogy to current political events, show Captain America presenting the moral argument, and in the time-honored fashion of superhero funny books *winning, because he's right.*

Sure, that's not how it works in the real-world, but when I pick up a comic-book with the word 'Avengers' in the title, I'm wanting to read about superheroes. (or, possibly, a British woman in a catsuit named Emma Peel) [Smile]
 
Posted by Ultra Jorge on :
 
Quick thoughts.

Kobe Bryant? I can tell if that's a compliment or not. [Smile] I mean he has no individual awards like an MVP like that selfish canuck Nash or anything but has three team 3 rings! [Wink] (i love Steve Nash!)

You know I went to Spain last summer and hung out with some adults from all over Europe. At first they said how bad the USA is seen across the world. I proposed the USA is on a big stage and they don't have 30 neighboring countries to worry about. We are the cowboys. But for every "atrocity" every other country may have more. These people were mostly English and German. The funny part is they said that France is worse than the USA just hide it better. [Smile] [Smile] [Smile] I couldn't stop laughing when they told me that one. I think the US sadly seems to be dominated by extremes and the rational silent majority needs not to speak up. Speak up in a logical wise way. I always say the extremes in every country/culture are a minority...but minorities have napolean complexes and like to be seen and heard. [Smile]

Bendis and the Marvel lefties are like this. They certainly want to be heard.

I actually have no problem with Millar's politics. His American politics (and Jenkins) are more thought out and realistic. The Americans IMO are the ones that make us look bad. [Wink]
 
Posted by Ultra Jorge on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Stealth:
[QB]Re: Joe Casey -- Casey puts the first 200 issues of Avengers on a pedastal, and the Harras era doesn't fit into Casey's narrow view of what the Avengers are "supposed" to be. I respect his opinions, but I don't want anyone with those opinions to write Avengers. And if any of the writers on my list of writers I DO want has the same opinons as Casey, then I would no longer want them writing Avengers. I firmly believe that setting limits to what the book is "supposed" to be and that holding up a certain bunch of issues as un-reachable are the reasons the Avengers haven't had an approach that feels fresh to me since the Harras era.

Stealth, how do we know he doesn't care for the Harras run? Has he said it in an interview? I can say you hold the Harras run in a pedestal. Just because Casey loves the old Avengers doesn't mean he will write that. He honestly is one of the more progressive writers out there. He's not Kurt Busiek who I agree was too retro.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Tamper Lad:
Really. I don't think Millar hates Americans. You guys have to realize he writes Americans as the rest of the world sees you, especially in the current climate. And it's certainly not entirely their fault the world sees you as the Kobe Bryant of Nations. (Actually that analogy is so perfect I'm claiming dibs on it.)

And yes they've hijacked the MU to tell an allegorical tale of what it's like to deal with Americans these days. And yes Reed and Tony infuriate me. But the comics medium was always an allegory. Be it joining the war effort, why snitching on criminals is good or standing up to bullies one day they'll find a new morality tale and they'll move on.

Bah. If people around the world really feel like all Americans are like this, than they deserve to be conquered [Razz]

[ April 27, 2007, 12:31 PM: Message edited by: Cobalt Kid ]
 
Posted by Tamper Lad on :
 
True only your leadership is Kobe. The rest of you are collectively knonw as, 'The 11 other Lakers'. [tease]
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
You know, 95% of real Americans hate Los Angeles and hate seeing it in movies, TV shows, the news, etc.

I know I never root for any L.A. teams. Then again, I prefer if the Yankees won every World Series from here on out, but that's neither here nor there...

Millar still writes Americans in the same stereotypical vain as Luke Cage was written in the 70's.
 
Posted by Ultra Jorge on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Tamper Lad:
True only your leadership is Kobe. The rest of you are collectively knonw as, 'The 11 other Lakers'. [tease]

Who had a pretty good night last night. [Wink]

I don't understand the hate for the big city teams personally.

IMO Bendis writes Luke Cage in a 2000s stereotypical way.
 
Posted by Tamper Lad on :
 
I hate LA and I'm not even in the US. [Razz]

And thats the thing Jorge. I think the world appreciates Americans like basketball fans appreciate Kobe (as the best player in the world.) But like Kobe gets on people's nerves the US does that too. Or to use Cobie's analogy. The US is to the world what LA is to Americans.

Sterotypical writing yes, and I think it's intentional. But I don't think Millar's writing Civil War from anti-Americanism. Certainly I thought he really got the character of Superman, and you can't write Superman without appreciating the basic founding mythology of the US.

If the American media weren't so inward looking they'd show Americans that Millar's writing of the MU US population as a bunch of idiots is a reflection of a widespread view in the rest of the world (both amongst the intelligensia and the guys and gals on the street). It wouldn't suprise me if he's writing the equivalent of a politcal caricature of Americans.

Of course any subtelty was lost when it got to JoeQ's office. He's not one to know subtlety and irony when it smacks him in the head.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
When Tamper talks he makes me hate the rest of the world, my own country and the comic book industry at the same time [Smile] But Joe Q above all others.

(Light-hearted Friday comment)

PS - I don't think Millar is anti-American either, but Tamper is right in that he plays to the American caricatures. He's actually made me like him more and more despite myself these last few years, and I do really enjoy 90% of his work.
 
Posted by Ultra Jorge on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Tamper Lad:
If the American media weren't so inward looking they'd show Americans that Millar's writing of the MU US population as a bunch of idiots is a reflection of a widespread view in the rest of the world (both amongst the intelligensia and the guys and gals on the street). It wouldn't suprise me if he's writing the equivalent of a politcal caricature of Americans.

(me american, me smart, me make typos)

See that is where I have a problem though. (this has nothing to do with the avengers). The US gets stereotyped in those people living in the midwest with no education. Hey there are people like that in the rest of the world. Infact I think the US has a pretty good rate of education when it comes to that. We think of France? We think of Paris. We don't think about the sheep herders who can't spell their names.

I think part of it is our two party system. It's a strength and weakness. It's a strength because it unites the country into just two factions versus 10. [Smile] But we have less options that's the weakness.

I saw a special the other day of Indian phone reps making fun of how stupid Americans are that their helpdesk. It made Americans sound real stupid with 65 year old women who never have used a computer. Half of India can't read! [Smile]

I think there are many reasons the rest of the world thinks Americans are ignorant but some of that is because of their own ignorance. Infact taking that position is pretty ignorant. I just don't like seeing the worst of each country...i like to see the best and I think the rest of the world looks at the worst at the USA. ohwell. I will continue my education by sending a PM to the canadian brainiac TL. [Smile]

[ April 27, 2007, 02:10 PM: Message edited by: Ultra Jorge ]
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Cobie, I haven't read the Civil War mini or any of the non-FF tie-ins you mentioned, so I wouldn't be able to give an informed reply. It does sound to me, though, as if maybe Millar is trying to cover his ass because reader response turned out differently than he expected; I take anything he says with a grain of salt.

I love your spot-on comment on Ellis:

quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
Ellis I don't know why anyone likes. His comics should be 10 cents for the amount of content you get in each one.

Jorge, I wouldn't say I put the Harras era on a pedastal, because I don't hold it up as unattainable perfection. I think it is attainable for a future Avengers writer to come up with a fresh new approach to Avengers that would please me as much as, if not even more than, the Harras era. But that won't happen until Quesada, Brevoort, and their cronies are kicked out through the door. And Casey did indeed make those statements in an interview. I'll PM you his exact words, because I don't want to give publicity to the site where the interview is.

[ April 27, 2007, 09:54 PM: Message edited by: Stealth ]
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"I wouldn't say I put the Harras era on a pedastal, because I don't hold it up as unattainable perfection. I think it is attainable for a future Avengers writer to come up with a fresh new approach to Avengers that would please me as much as, if not even more than, the Harras era."

It seems a shame I never read most of the Harras era, but he had, in my eyes, everything against him. First was several eras in a row where the book continued to disappoint. Then there was his own track record, which were some of the worst, character-destructive, over-written drek of the 80's. Between those 2 things, and the fact that I did NOT enjoy his first storyline at all, I'd just about had it, and gave up on the book (as I was giving up on most of Marvel in general around the same time). Some people do get better... but some people may never see it, if their earlier stuff turns them off that much.

Which brings up a question: has anyone here read Harras' run on NICK FURY, AGENT OF S.H.I.E.L.D.? It wasn't pretty... to say the least.
 
Posted by Ultra Jorge on :
 
Stealth, I agree that Harras' run was fresh. He managed to use two of my faves (Herc/Black Knight) and elevate Sersi and Crystal as well. I even like Deathstrike. [Smile]

As for Casey? Well how many times can you use Ultron? I hope if he ever gets the book he realizes that the things he likes have been done to death. And I think I know the site the interview is from. I sent them a few nasty emails cause they were very rude to Stern in an interview. [Wink]
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Prof, I have read his six issues of Nick Fury, Agent of S.H.I.E.L.D., as well has his mini-series, Nick Fury vs. S.H.I.E.L.D. It's all very trendy and deconstructive and mean-spirited, from the time where Watchmen and Dark Knight (both absurdly overrated, IMO) became widely influential. Just about every writer has a skeleton in their closet, and those S.H.I.E.L.D. stories are his.

But he also wrote two Iron Man annuals from the 1980s, one of which turned the original Power Man into Goliath, so that's pretty significant (and a good story in my opinion.) There's also his witty fill-in issue of Thor (# 356), where Hercules tells tall tales where inevitably he comes out looking better than Thor.

Most importantly, his first Avengers script was an outstanding fill-in issue (# 280, towards the end of the Stern/Buscema era), the one where Jarvis looks back on his years of serving the Avengers as he ponders retirement.

I've said it before, and I'll say it again: everybody's gotta start somewhere, and sometimes they get good in the long run.

[ April 27, 2007, 11:16 PM: Message edited by: Stealth ]
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ultra Jorge:
Stealth, I agree that Harras' run was fresh. He managed to use two of my faves (Herc/Black Knight) and elevate Sersi and Crystal as well. I even like Deathstrike. [Smile]

As for Casey? Well how many times can you use Ultron? I hope if he ever gets the book he realizes that the things he likes have been done to death. And I think I know the site the interview is from. I sent them a few nasty emails cause they were very rude to Stern in an interview. [Wink]

How many times can you use Ultron? I think Bendis' first Mighty Avengers arc has answered that question. [ROTFLMAO]
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"It's all very trendy and deconstructive and mean-spirited, from the time where Watchmen and Dark Knight (both absurdly overrated, IMO) became widely influential."

I forget which came first, exactly... see, back in the 1970's, every hack out there was making SHIELD (my heroes) look bad. They're not the CIA-- they're SHIELD! They should be better than that. There was a number of loose stories and a few with recurring sub-plots (The Huntress series in MARVEL SUPER ACTION, starring Bobbi Morse) which built up a picture that all was not right with the organization. For years it built, and at some point they announced a mini-series would deal with the problem-- head on.

Then YEARS went by, and when the long-awaited story finally came out, instead of a mini-series, or even a MAXI-series (12-issues), those greedy bastards milked it for all they could by putting it out instead as 6 "prestige format" issues. The equivalent of 12 normal issues for twice the price.

For those who missed it, the plot of "NICK FURY VS. SHIELD" involved a traitor in the organization who framed Fury as a traitor. It went on and on and ON. By the time it was over, we learned that-- supposedly-- the entire governing body (only ever seen as faces hidden in shadows in the Kirby issues) were corrupt and evil, and in fact, ALWAYS had been! Also, by the end, most of the supporting cast were brutally murdered, and Fury's longtime relationship with Val was a thing of the past. Due to overwhelming corruption, SHIELD was closed down, and Fury, one of the few left alive, retired. I waited that many years for THIS crap?????

One of the most infuriating things about it is, anyone who's read SHIELD #13 by Steve Parkhouse & Barry Smith would recognize the opening segment of the story. "BEEN THERE, DONE THAT." And Parkhouse & Smith, in a SINGLE regular size issues, had DONE IT BETTER!!!!! (It bugged me that both guys only ever did that ONE issue... Gary "Burnout" Friedrich & Herb "Hulk Smash!" Trimpe finished the story over the following 2 issues. Sort of. Parts 2 & 3 never quite "connected" well with the opening installment, "Hell Hath No Fury", my personal favorite of the post-Steranko issues.)

Then... as if to add injury to insult, some months later, they announced a new ongoing series. The same people were responsible. That's like asking Richard Nixon to "fix" the Watergate situation. The first 6 issues of the new NICK FURY pretty much amounted to Bob Harras virtually APOLOGIZING to Fury's fans, by revealing that SHIELD had NOT "always" been corrupt, that the governing body had one by one been murdered and replaced by agents of Hydra, until there was almost nobody left to watch the store. Had this come out in the "VS." story, it might have made "VS." more tolerable. The way it worked out, it just struck me as a painful load of garbage. Oh, they also revealed that several of the dead characters were still alive-- and had been prisoners since the previous storyline. Geez.

Somehow I made it thru Harras' 2nd 6 issues-- just barely. I decided, since he was leaving, to give his replacements a chance. Somehow, it never quite came together. It felt like it should have, but it never did. Then they did another LONG story involving outer space which Herb Trimpe pencilled (HIM again?). Herb was not what he had been by this point. Whoever wrote it seemed like they had no idea what they were doing. I got so fed up I decided, as soon as THIS story was over, I was outta there.

The next month I noticed they'd reinstated the 60's SHIELD logo. It caught my attention. I picked up the book. I CURSED. Butch Guice had taken over the art. Those BASTARDS. Just at the point where I swore I was dropping the book, they brought in one of my top fave artists.

D.G.Chichester & Butch Guice did the single BEST book Marvel was putting out at that point, for about the next 6 months. It was ASTONISHINGLY good. It was what the mini and what followed should have been. It made every issue that came before it look EVEN WORSE than they were by comparison. But Marvel's marketing was going into hellish overdrive... That was about the time they started doing "connected" annuals. They dragged SHIELD into it, trying to "force" you to read part of the story by spacing it out over 3 different annuals. Each annual only contained about 10-12 pages of the "big story", the rest was crap filler by unknowns getting tryouts. Even with the regular book as good as it was, they were still pissing me off.

Then, in something that would be a lot more timley now than then, "Graduation Day" had Hydra STRIKE-- levelling SHIELD HQ to the ground and killing everyone in the building. The kid gloves were off. 2 issues later-- Guice was gone. NO explanation. Marvel rarely had letters columns by then. This book still did-- but not once did they mention what happened to Guice. (Turned out he'd gone over to draw SUPERMAN). The new art was an ugly abortion trying to imitate Steranko's "OUTLAND" style. I hated it. Then they started dragging in guest-stars like Wolverine. The art changed again, Chichester left in the middle of the epic he started... and suddenly, the book looked "nice"-- very typical 70's-style Marvel art-- but the writing seemed on a 7-year-old level. That was it. I'd had enough "bait and switch". I quit.

About 2 YEARS later, I picked up the LAST issue of the book. Who'd guess it, they dragged out the revived Baron Strucker story for 3 WHOLE freakin' years. I feel lucky I missed most of it by then-- at least I caught the ending. Geez.

There was a long stretch there where I bought no Marvels at all. Stuff like this may help explain why!
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Harras' issue of Thor where Hercules tells the stories about him and Thor to the kids has got to be one of the finest, if not *the* finest Hercules tale of all time! He captures Herc so well, specifically when Herc realizes that his over the top version of Thor losing is hurting the little kids supporting Thor, so he changes the story abrubtly, so that its Thor who acts heroic and wins out in the end. Its such a simple, nice tale, but it really conveys Hercules so well. Probably my #1 favorite Hercules scene in Marvel history!

I'm so glad you reminded me about it Stealth!
 
Posted by MLLASH on :
 
ARRRGH!!! I accidentally bought "Mighty Avengers" # 2 thinking it was "Initiative Avengers" (Dan Slott's book) # 2. BARF!

Well, guess what... Ultron's a transsexual now!

Y'know, I was really hoping that was going to turn out to be Jocasta... THAT might have been cool.


Bleeeeah.
 
Posted by Disaster Boy on :
 
I DID TOO!!! (accidently bought it)

I bet they planned that.........
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
After all the talk about Shooter & DeFalco & Harras and etc...... I just HAD to pass this on.

My God! It's like sitting in on a MAFIA conference!!!


http://ohdannyboy.blogspot.com/2007/04/vinnie-collettas-exit-interview.html
 
Posted by He Who Wanders on :
 
Re: Colletta erasing pencils so he wouldn't have to ink them.

There's always two sides to every story, and it's good to hear why Colletta probably had to do this (in order to finish on time another artist's late work) and why many feel his inking was so rushed. I'm not taking sides in this debate -- I don't have an opinion on Colletta's work one way or the other -- but it's good to read another view of someone whose work is so often denigrated by fans.

Re: the transcribed phone conversation/interview.

This provides a very interesting look at the events that led up to Shooter's firing from Marvel, as well as Colletta's views on Shooter and Hobson. I can't help wondering, though, who recorded this conversation and whether or not Colletta knew it was being recorded.

[ April 29, 2007, 04:47 PM: Message edited by: He Who Wanders ]
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
Harras' issue of Thor where Hercules tells the stories about him and Thor to the kids has got to be one of the finest, if not *the* finest Hercules tale of all time! He captures Herc so well, specifically when Herc realizes that his over the top version of Thor losing is hurting the little kids supporting Thor, so he changes the story abrubtly, so that its Thor who acts heroic and wins out in the end. Its such a simple, nice tale, but it really conveys Hercules so well. Probably my #1 favorite Hercules scene in Marvel history!

I'm so glad you reminded me about it Stealth!

You're welcome, Cobie. I find that story especially delightful since I first read it after I had read Harras' entire Avengers run. It shows that he already understood Hercules years before he began writing Hercules on a monthly basis. [Smile]

Lash, Disaster Boy, sorry you both got burned. It gives new meaning to the old saying "Let the buyer beware," huh?
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Prof, thanks for that link. I love that kind of behind-the-scenes dirt. There is so much potential for a great book to be written about comics in the 1970s and 1980s.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
Colletta isn't the only inker whose work suffered to beat deadlines other people screwed over before he got involved. Back in the 80's, I met Brett Breeding-- an inker in the Bob Layton style whose work I really admired (he made Don Heck look FANTASTIC on 2 issues of J.L.A.!!). He looked too young to possibly have been in the biz as long as he was by then. Anyway, he told me a story of how the editor on AMAZING SPIDER-MAN got in the bad habit of dragging his ass on everything. You know how the production line goes. Plot in, pencils out. Pencils in, letters out. Letters in, inks out. Well, instead of looking over the art the moment it came in, this guy would let it sit on his desk for a week-- or MORE. Every time. By the time it got to the inking stage, it was running right up against a blown deadline!!! Breeding would take the pages, and-- just like "George Bell"-- knock out the work like a madman. Compared to his usual great stuff, it began to look like CRAP. But he made those deadlines. However, HIS rep as a decent inker began to suffer-- for something he had NOTHING to do with!

When I think of all the inkers I've seen who started out great and soon went to hell, I begin to think there must be a lot of this going around.


By the way, apart from THOR, if you wanna see some TERRIFIC Colletta inks, check out the otherwise questionable CAPTAIN MARVEL comic in the late 60's. During its run, TWICE, Vinnie replaced someone else who was MURDERING the art (Paul Reinmen, then John Tartaglione). Both times, Vince's inks were a HUGE improvement!!! (I wouldn't make up a thing like this.)
 
Posted by Set on :
 
See, now I'm wondering if some of the artists / inkers / writers I consider 'bad' actually had mitigating stories like this. I definitely know that some of the ones I consider 'good,' only seem to be good under certain conditions (such as paired with inkers who bring out their work), but I wonder if I've judged some too harshly.

Carmine Infantino is one artist that, at the tender age of ten, I denounced and stopped buying Flash comics because I *hated* his art. (Yes, I was an opinionated ten year old.) And now I'm wondering if I just caught him in a bad circumstance...
 
Posted by Ultra Jorge on :
 
Set, there are just some good artists not everybody likes. I don't care for Scot Kolins. You go see fan reactions to his art and you either love him or hate him.

I do love his work on the Thor mini last year. When it's fantasy it works but besides that I don't care for it.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
Carmine Infantino's a terrific "designer" and "storyteller". But over the years his work got looser and looser, to the point where what he may consider "pencils" would be somebody else's "rough layouts". It takes a special talent to decipher those sketchy lines properly!

Some of Carmine's best work was done by other people. What I mean is, in the late 60's, he started designing almost all of DC's covers, to help them compete with the more "dynamic" stuff Marvel was doing. It worked, to a degree. DC's covers across the line improved DRASTICALLY, many of Carmine's designs being illustrated by the likes of Curt Swan, Jack Sparling, Neal Adams. But al too often, the interiors were the same, dull, boring, stodgy, stuff. I wonder how many fans felt ripped off, as if those great covers were nothing more than "false advertising"? Then again, I felt the same way in the mid-70's every time Dave Cockrum did a fabulous cover for Marvel-- and inside, you had 3rd-rate hack work. (That's sort of the reverse of a year or so earlier, when Gil Kane did hundreds of covers, effectively "hiding" the fact that inside, you might have wonderful stuff. All those Paul Gulacy MASTER OF KUNG FU issues were a prime example. Best stuff Marvel put out at the time, with some of the worst covers ever!)
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Brett Breeding inked the 4-part West Coast Avengers mini-series that Roger Stern wrote and Bob Hall penciled. The first issue was magnificently inked, doing the near-impossible of making Bob Hall look good, but then the inks seemed to decline with each successive issue. I don't the issues on hand right now, but I seem to remember at least one, maybe two issues, were credited to "Brett Breeding and Friends" or something like that.

Even with the art, it still had excellent writing by Stern. IMO, the WCA mini-series was far superior to any stories that Englehart, or Byrne, or Thomas wrote in the WCA ongoing.

Which provides a convenient segue...

As both Prof and myself have pointed out, we still haven't had any in-depth discussions about WCA in this thread. So if you're reading this and you're a WCA fan, please share your thoughts.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"Brett Breeding and Friends"

Hey, that's right! A credit like that is a sure sign of desperation to beat a deadline. (Like the often-used "D.Hands"-- alias "Diverse Hands", which I always took as a joking reference to "Deadly Hands"-- of Kung Fu, of course.)

I hate it when a mini-series doesn't manage to be consistent. By its nature, a mini-series should be a "special event". WHY should it be rushed into production like the usual CR... er, comics?

[Smile]

Now, where did I read, just recently, that the WCA mini was never intended to go any further?


Anybody besides me seen that run of JLA I referred to? George Perez, after being fired by Marvel for blowing too many deadlines, felt he needed to rebuild his rep at DC, and not take on too many projects at once. His first book was JLA-- which he picked up because longtime penciller Dick Dillin died of a heart attack! Good grief-- what a way to "inherit" a title. Dillin may still hold the record for most number of JLA issues-- anybody know? I know he broke Mike Sekowsky's record, and I don't believe there were any fill-ins (apart from a reprint here or there).

Perez got a variety of inkers at DC-- Frank McLaughlin (who I felt overpowered everybody, his style was like Dick Giordano on steroids-- heehee), Brett Breeding, John Beatty (WOW!!). By comparison, Romeo Tanghal was always just "okay" by me. He & George sure did a TON of TITANS issues together. I remember George made a store appearance just before this new project of his, TITANS, came out-- and at first, I didn't know what he was talking about. Then I realized-- TEEN Titans! Oh. It'd been cancelled 3 times, they figured Marv & George couldn't screw it up any worse. Sort of like when those 2 complete unknowns Mike Friedrich & Jim Starlin took over CAPTAIN MARVEL. Who knew???? Shortly after, George said he had to decide on ONE book to do, to ensure he stay on deadline. JLA went. TITANS became DC's best seller. WHO KNEW?????

Before George completely left, Don Heck came in to do a 2-part time-travel story which featured a team-up of all of DC's wetsern heroes. What fun! Don was inked by Brett Breeding. BEST-looking Don Heck art in years, it was even better than when Joe Giella inked him on STEEL, THE INDESTRUCTIBLE MAN. (Boy, do I wish that book had not gotten canned when it did. What a waste of so much potential!) Later, Don became the regular JLA guy... but he never got such good inks again. It seemed it was a slow slide to obscurity after that... When Chuck Patton took over, his "cartoony" style, kinda reminiscent of Perez when he first started, was a welcome change. Whatever happened to him??


It always cracks me up to think that 2 guys who started out like they didn't know how to draw that well, both got popular, then got FIRED, then rebuilt their careers at DC, and the result was DC's 2 best-selling books in the 1980's-- TITANS, and LEGION! Perez & Giffen... separated at birth?

[Smile]
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
Now, where did I read, just recently, that the WCA mini was never intended to go any further?

Right here in this very thread, on Page 13, where I posted the Avengers-related material from an interview with Roger Stern.

Re: JLA -- Dillin, whose work I like a lot from the early 1970s on, did an all-time record-setting 115 issues!! Other than the reprints, the only fill-in was # 153, penciled by George Tuska. I've read some of Perez's JLA issues -- off the top of my head, I think the Red Tornado ones (inked by John Beatty) were especially good. I haven't yet read the time-travel-to-the-Old-West story, but I'll search for it. I have read some of Heck's other JLA issues, the two JLA/JSA team-ups he drew and the search for the Atom in the microscopic universe. I agree the inking could have been better, but those issues still have many nice moments by Heck.

[ April 30, 2007, 10:32 PM: Message edited by: Stealth ]
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"Right here in this very thread, on Page 13"

Wow! And we're up to 20 now.


"Dillin, whose work I like a lot from the early 1970s on, did an all-time record-setting 115 issues!!"

I knew it was a lot! I bought the book regular when Steve Englehart went to DC. Was amazed how he took such a purely "DC" book and successfully grafted his own more "Marvel" style onto it, WITHOUT any drastic changes or losing anything that made the book so "DC" in the first place.


"the only fill-in was # 153, penciled by George Tuska"

Really! All these years, this is the first I've heard of this. I bought ONE issue by Gerry Conway and dropped it... until about 2 years later, when he brought Firestorm in. Funny, huh? I suppose Conway was just such a DROP after Englehart-- and I was still bugged at the way Conway replaced Englehart on that OTHER superhero book... now, which one was it?

[Smile]

Someone once supposedly said "Superman looks like it was drawn in a bank"-- referring to how stodgy and dull DC Comics became in the 50's. But one thing I do admire about the old days was how they'd put a creative team together, and they'd STAY on a book and really make it theirs. JLA is a perfect example. From the start, Gardner Fox, Mike Sekowsky, Bernard Sachs-- EVERY SINGLE ISSUE, all 3 guys, for years on end!! Then, after the big change of regime (when, for a number of various reasons, a LOT of DC's old guard left in a short space of time), Dick Dillin got on the book, and did even MORE issues! Amazing.

Every time I'd pick up one of Steve's JLA issue, and look at the covers, I kept wishing Jack Abel was inking Dillin, since his inks on the covers looked so much nicer than Frank McLaughlin. It took until the 80's before I started to like McLaughlin's inks-- over Carmine Infantino, of all people!! Carmine's "pencils" became more and more like very sketchy diagrams, which baffled most inkers. McLaughlin gave them a solidity and weight that made the pair of them a perfect team. Anybody see the DANGER TRAIL mini-series they did? Great stuff. (The Paul Gulacy covers were definitely an added attraction.)

Seeing Breeding ink Heck made me realize what a missed opportunity they had-- imagine if Bob Layton had inked Heck on IRON MAN ? Don's pencils dropped in quality in the 70's, but if you ask me, he was STILL a better "storyteller" than Layton (who somebody should really try convincing not to pencil anymore...).
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Time for the snark-of-the-month.

In the latest Mighty Avengers, which I browsed through but did not buy, Sentry and She-Ultron fight, the S.H.I.E.L.D. Heli-Carriers gets flipped around and crashes, and...uh...that's about it. Of course there's still lots of that lame pseudo-hip dialogue and intrusive thought balloons. And the usual lack of teamwork.

I've noticed that almost no one on this board other than me has commented on Mighty Avengers. Surely I can't be the only one here who's read it. If you're reading this and you read Mighty Avengers, then why don't you post a reply, whether you agree or disagree with my posts? I've said this before: I really want this thread to have one foot in the present.

[ May 19, 2007, 07:15 PM: Message edited by: Stealth ]
 
Posted by He Who Wanders on :
 
Unfortunately, both of my feet are planted firmly in the past, as far as the Avengers are concerned. I haven't bought an issue since # 19 of Busiek's run (when was that -- 2000?). Although I read a few isses of YOUNG AVENGERS that a friend loaned me, I have no interest in following the title or any of its permutations at present.

There was a time, though, when AVENGERS was second only to LEGION as my favorite comic book. In fact, AVENGERS was the one title I followed consistently for more than 20 years (1973-94). But things change, I've changed, and life moves on. Blame (or credit) Busiek for that: even when he gave us a "classic" Avengers run, it just felt wrong. Sometimes, you really can't go back.
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
I still think there is the possibility of the book renewing itself, like it has in the past. Between the end of the Englehart era and the beginning of the Stern/Buscema/Palmer era, there are over one hundred issues which I think are mostly fair-to-middling (and sometimes awful.) If it takes that long for Bendis and Brevoort and Quesada to leave, I'll still be waiting for the day when that happens and looking forward to the possibility of renewal.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"over one hundred issues which I think are mostly fair-to-middling (and sometimes awful.)"

And to think, that was when I was buying and reading the book the most consistently. (It's amazing what you'll put up with sometimes.)

"Fair-to-middling"-- that's what Yosemite Sam saids he was with a pencil! "Alright, pardner-- DRAW!"
 
Posted by Ultra Jorge on :
 
I agree the peroid between Engleheart and Stern to be not consistent.

It was writer by committee. Micheline, Steven Grant, Stern, Grunewald even methinks? And Shooter ofcourse.

But for some reasons I have fond memories. To tell the truth it was very generic superhero stories yet I liked the generic feel it had. Perez art didn't hurt. I'm also it seems the only fan of Shooter's Avengers work. [Smile]
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
I also feel that the Avengers book is salvagable and it isn't that far gone.

I have some comments on the recent series:

(1) New Avengers - by far the worst of the lot, New Avengers suffers from the fact that Brian Bendis simply doesn't have a handle on how to write a super-hero team comic. Its forcefully 'new' and 'hip' and that might work on a pre-teen (and if it does--good for Marvel!), but it doesn't work on me. Spider-Man does not belong to the point that it hurts. Luke Cage simply is not what they've melded him into here, and I just can't get over it. The fact that this isn't really an Avengers comic, and more of a 'Defenders comic with the Avengers name to maintain sales' is blatant, and I don't mind that per se. It kind of makes it easier to accept Wolverine and Spider-Woman, and Iron Fist joining Luke again is somewhat enjoyable. But essentially, the comic remains flat. The 'anti-registration heroes' are soooo obviously and blatantly 'in the right' in Bendis' eyes that you can't help but feel editorial trickery. Dr. Strange is so out of place it hurts, as he could essentially defeat anything that the entire team together might have trouble with. The return of Hawkeye, and how its being accomplished, however, is somewhat welcome and fun. Ninjas and Electra are not. Echo is interesting to me, now that this is obviously 'New Defenders'. I want to like this book. I do. But I can't justify it with the level of quality. And I don't hate Bendis--I think he's a truly gifted writer. But he's a poor *Avengers* writer. Yu's art is not my favorite, but I recognize he has his own style and that is very refreshing sometimes.

(2) Mighty Avengers - to be honest Stealth, you've summed it up quite good for me. Iron Man is being written as overly arrogant and semi-facist, the Wasp is being written as her character at its worst to the 10th degree which essentially means (to me) that its 100% out of character, and so far there is no real reason Ares is there other than 'he looks cool and it might shock fans'. Black Widow is an obvious spy for Nick Fury (if you didn't see that one coming, well, oops!). Everything Paul Jenkins does to make the Sentry interesting, Bendis undoes with every panel he features the character. In my opinion, Bendis (when writing Avengers) takes the absolutel worst periods of the characters pasts, when the writers simply just were pissing on fans, and uses that to define the characters. As for Cho's art, I like attractive people as much as the rest, but that isn't enough to make me keep buying a comic book.

(3) Avengers: the Iniative - despite Dan Slott, I'm still not convinced. There is a cool and interesting notion of 'super-hero GI Joe' going on, but the execution is poor in that you have guys like Guantlet and a contiuation of Marvel saying that the pro-registration heroes have their own 'good side', when editorial clearly believes they don't. But I trust Slott and feel he has a plan, so I'm glad that at least Justice, Hank and Rhodey are in his hands. Art isn't exactly my favorite. I'm here for Slott and the heroes he's picked up. We'll see what happens...

(4) Young Avengers - though I do recognize that this was a great comic, I just can't subscribe to the notion that it was 'one of the industry's best' like so many others. Heinberg's schedule is so inconsistent I'm left with a feeling that I really just don't care. The first six issues were really great, but the second six were merely so-so. Maybe if I reread them all in a row I'll get a better sense of the drama and tension, but the long wait between issues made me lose that. Jim Chueng's art is nothing short of phenominal though, and I've been a huge fan since Psion at Crossgen. Again, I want to love this--but I can't, until I get the sense that Marvel really cares enough to deliver a product with both quality and consistency. Hey, Jack Kirby could do it, and do it brillantly. I see no reason that any artist or writer in comics today cannot.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
I think George Perez had a mitigating effect on Shooter's writing, in the same way his work with Marv Wolfman on TITANS was light years ahead of virtually everything else Wolfman ever did with anyone else. Back then, I kept wishing George would have just focused on ONE book-- and it seemed to me, the book he was born to draw was THE AVENGERS. All those incessant fill-ins and blown deadlines really didn't help. (Of course, he was on board for the rape of Ms. Marvel-- I wonder how much of that, if any, was his fault?)
 
Posted by Ultra Jorge on :
 
profh011, the way I remember it Michelline wanted the father of the baby be the Supreme Intelligence. Who wanted to a kree-human hybrid.

Shooter did not go for it and plugged in Immortus.

yeah one of the worst issues ever. Nice art though. [Smile]
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
Three points to reply to Cob's post:

1) Glanced at the Bendis and Slutt books, didn't like them, didn't expect to, although I'm still flicking through Mighty Avengers and wishing Cho would get back to Liberty Meadows

2) Young Avengers - Heinberg's now announced he'll only co-plot v2/"Season 2". His co-plotter/scripter hasn't been announced yet, but it's been heavily noted that he shares a studio with The Lobe. Oh dear.

3) If you're not reading Marvel Adventures Avengers, you're missing out. I know it's the "kiddie"/non-continuity book, but it's Crazy in a good way, and Just Plain Fun. Like Silver Age without the stuff I find annoying, with a hint of Livewires mixed in. I started with #9 (Everybody Is MODOC) and also especially recommend #11 (The Power of Motivational Speaking When Combined With Snakes on a Quinjet) and #12 (Ego the Loving Planet). Which isn't to say that #10 (Black Knight) and #13 (Giant-Girl (Jan)'s origin, guest-starring Ant-Man) aren't good, just Good rather than Great [Smile]
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"In my opinion, Bendis (when writing Avengers) takes the absolutel worst periods of the characters pasts, when the writers simply just were pissing on fans, and uses that to define the characters."

Oh, like Jim Shooter!


"the way I remember it Michelline wanted the father of the baby be the Supreme Intelligence. Who wanted to a kree-human hybrid. Shooter did not go for it and plugged in Immortus."

Oh, great. Michelinie had a horrible idea, then Shooter made it 10 times worse! Way to go, Shooter.


"wishing Cho would get back to Liberty Meadows"

I put up with SHANNA, but that was my limit. Some people are "too good" to be working for Marvel, in my opinion. They're doing work for Marvel somehow makes the company seem legitimate these days, instead of the dark, sleezy trash-monger they really are.

Meanwhile, I'm SO glad Mike Allred is FINALLY back doing MADMAN-- and Steve Rude is FINALLY back doing NEXUS!
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ultra Jorge:
profh011, the way I remember it Michelline wanted the father of the baby be the Supreme Intelligence. Who wanted to a kree-human hybrid.

Shooter did not go for it and plugged in Immortus.

Actually, the reason for the switcheroo was that What If had done a baby-Intelligence Supreme just beforehand. The redone version with Marcus Immortus was, by all accounts, a VERY last minute rewrite.
 
Posted by Pov on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
"the way I remember it Michelline wanted the father of the baby be the Supreme Intelligence. Who wanted to a kree-human hybrid. Shooter did not go for it and plugged in Immortus."

Oh, great. Michelinie had a horrible idea, then Shooter made it 10 times worse! Way to go, Shooter!

...And I thought slavegirl Leia had it bad with Jabba the Hutt...! [Eek!] [Frown]
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Cobie, I would be interested to know what you think of Ultimates. Myself, I think it's beautifully drawn but horribly written.

quote:
Originally posted by Reboot:
If you're not reading Marvel Adventures Avengers, you're missing out. I know it's the "kiddie"/non-continuity book, but it's Crazy in a good way, and Just Plain Fun. Like Silver Age without the stuff I find annoying, with a hint of Livewires mixed in. I started with #9 (Everybody Is MODOC) and also especially recommend #11 (The Power of Motivational Speaking When Combined With Snakes on a Quinjet) and #12 (Ego the Loving Planet). Which isn't to say that #10 (Black Knight) and #13 (Giant-Girl (Jan)'s origin, guest-starring Ant-Man) aren't good, just Good rather than Great

Thanks for the recommendation, Reboot. I'll browse through it next time I'm at the comic shop.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Reboot:
Three points to reply to Cob's post:

1) Glanced at the Bendis and Slutt books, didn't like them, didn't expect to, although I'm still flicking through Mighty Avengers and wishing Cho would get back to Liberty Meadows

2) Young Avengers - Heinberg's now announced he'll only co-plot v2/"Season 2". His co-plotter/scripter hasn't been announced yet, but it's been heavily noted that he shares a studio with The Lobe. Oh dear.

3) If you're not reading Marvel Adventures Avengers, you're missing out. I know it's the "kiddie"/non-continuity book, but it's Crazy in a good way, and Just Plain Fun. Like Silver Age without the stuff I find annoying, with a hint of Livewires mixed in. I started with #9 (Everybody Is MODOC) and also especially recommend #11 (The Power of Motivational Speaking When Combined With Snakes on a Quinjet) and #12 (Ego the Loving Planet). Which isn't to say that #10 (Black Knight) and #13 (Giant-Girl (Jan)'s origin, guest-starring Ant-Man) aren't good, just Good rather than Great [Smile]

(1) Agreed about Liberty Meadows

(2) Interesting. A co-plotter would be great in theory, but like you say, the idea of Loeb coming on board...oh dear.

(3) Thanks for the reccomendation! I've seen this 100 times and been interested but never gave it a chance. I think I'll take a look--I can always use a fun Avengers book, and I've always thought Storm on the Avengers would be cool (I'm pretty sure I saw her on the covers).

Re: the Ms. Marvel atrocity. If it was never mentioned again (by Marvel, not us) I'd be thankful.
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
I've always thought Storm on the Avengers would be cool

She sorta was very briefly: in the first few pages of Roger Stern's Kang storyarc, we see an alternate-timeline Avengers where Storm and Colossus are members.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"The redone version with Marcus Immortus was, by all accounts, a VERY last minute rewrite."

Hasn't anybody figured out yet that "last-minute rewrites" are DEATH for any series???

I'm sure we can come up with a list of examples... starting with the infamous ARMAGEDDON 2001.

Of course, this also happens in movies... I understand this sort of thing to some degree hurt such films as X-MEN 3, SPIDER-MAN 3 and the infamous HALLOWEEN 6. (As my pal Kevin calls it, "A bastardization of an abortion." It was horribly bad to begin with-- then, after-the-fact, the director made it 10 times worse! HOW could somebody DO a thing like that???)
 
Posted by Ultra Jorge on :
 
I'm actually enjoying Mighty Avengers. It's not perfect but I love the art. Bendis gives me enough character moments and lots of action.
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
All right, this thread has been inactive for way too long. Once again, I ask West Coast Avengers fans to please post your thoughts on the series, because we STILL haven't had an in-depth WCA discussion. Here are all of my opinions on WCA, copied and pasted from earlier posts in this thread (and slightly edited as well.) Do you agree or disagree? I'd like to know.

During his brief time as Avengers chairman, the Vision created a second branch of Avengers, the West Coast Avengers, assigning Hawkeye as leader. The 4-part West Coast Avengers limited series is IMO one of the highlights of the Roger Stern era's first half. Except for Tigra, whom I dislike intensely, the lineup (Hawkeye, Mockingbird, Iron Man, Wonder Man) had good chemistry, Graviton worked as a villain because the team used strategy and smarts to take him down, and I'm of the opinion that Stern wrote Mockingbird better than Steve Englehart would in the ongoing WCA book. In fact, I think Stern's WCA mini-series is better written than anything from any of the writers on the WCA ongoing (Englehart, Byrne, Mr. & Mrs. Thomas) And the art on the WCA mini-series, by Bob Hall and Brett Breeding, is IMO better than any of the art I've seen from the WCA ongoing issues that I've read.

I don't think Englehart's WCA is his best work by any stretch of the imagination, but even Englehart's lesser work has a certain integrity that's lacking in a lot of superhero writing. But even so, it's appropriate that this team nicknamed themselves Whackos, because this was one weird book, balancing the easy-going camaraderie of the team members with a campy, almost retro, tone and the frequent hints at things far more sinister (and often, more than hints). The quirkiness showed in Englehart's later issues of Avengers frequently goes off the scale in WCA. It does gets off to a good start with a storyarc that culminates in the (temporary but still powerful) death of longtime villain the Grim Reaper. But then it goes way off course with all the demons and monsters and cat people and the focus on Tigra...UGH! The stories don't get back on track until the time-travel adventure starting in # 17, but even then I have my reservations, which I'll get into next week. One thing I'll add is that Firebird was an admirable attempt (especially for a mainstream 1980s comic) at developing a character who was both a non-stereotypical Christian and a non-stereotypical Latina.

The only positive things I can say about the WCA art of Al Milgrom and Joe Sinnott is that after the first few issues, Milgrom's pencils went from grotesque to merely mediocre, and that every once in a while Sinnott's inking was up to the standards he had set during the Silver Age and the Bronze Age.

With WCA #17, Steve Englehart finally put an end to the monster mish-mash and sent the team on an eight-issue time travel adventure. This is the best-known story of Englehart's WCA run, and it encapsulates the best and worst of this run. The basic plot mechanics are undeniably clever and diverting, and Joe Sinnott's inking temporarily got better (although he left the book before the storyarc was finished). What on Earth, then, could have possessed Englehart to write in a subplot about Mockingbird being kidnapped, drugged, and raped? It completely ruins the story!

Post-time travel, the book returned to the usual low-key weirdness -- the Zodiac storyarc and the Iron Curtain/Hank's-first-wife-is-alive storyarc were okay-ish (which, for a non-fan of Zodiac like me, is something of an achievement), but not good enough to rise above the art. Sinnott's replacement, Mike Machlan, had done nice work for DC, particularly the early issues of Infinity Inc. But his inking on WCA makes Milgrom's pencils even more mediocre than they already are. Englehart seemed to be gearing up for big changes, dividing the team and bringing in Wasp, Scarlet Witch, Vision...and Mantis! But the usual editorial disagreements brought Englehart's WCA run to an abrupt end.

John Byrne became both writer and artist on WCA, and I refuse to read his issues. Why? Because of what he did to Vision and to Scarlet Witch. The damage to Vision -- the ugly new look and the robotic personality -- was eventually, and very effectively, undone by Bob Harras in Avengers. The damage to Scarlet Witch may have started out as Byrne's typical turn-back-the-clock nonsense -- specifically to rejoin her and Quicksilver with Magneto, just like they were in the early Silver Age -- but the long-term reprecussions were disastrous. Byrne's story directly influenced Bendis (and Bendis has confirmed this in interviews) to turn Wanda evil. And for that, Byrne can never be forgiven.

In an amusing irony, Byrne's exit from WCA was just as abrupt as Englehart's, and it was caused by similar editorial disagreements (specifically, both writers clashed with Marvel's then-EiC, Tom DeFalco.) Byrne's replacements were the husband-and-wife team of Roy Thomas & Dann Thomas. I've only read a few of their issues, mainly the ones that tied into Operation Galactic Storm and Bloodties, and found them to be lazy and by-the-numbers. WCA was cancelled at the end of the Thomases' run, making the book one which arguably never found any sort of peak, despite running for almost a decade.
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
I'll get back to this a bit later - my WCA/AWC reading is a bit spotty, and a while back at that.

The ending of the series was rushed as hell though - you've got the Death of Mockingbird, which appeared to be a 100th issue stunt for a sales boost. Then you've got a crossover (Bloodties) issue which has absolutely no connection to the previous issue (except in that Mockingbird was obviously absent). And then DnA were brought in to restart the flagging book under a new title, with a last issue which was almost pure deck-clearing as a result (Although, while far less satisfying to read, probably worked better for sales than giving them eight issues to fill/deck-clear before giving them the new #1).

Then they killed off Wonder Man [Smile] . Who, as we've previously discussed, got brought back by Busiek as if nothing in WCA/AWC or later/elsewhere had ever happened. [Frown]
 
Posted by Set on :
 
I think I jumped in on the Byrne bandwagon, and ended up finding USAgent to be a pretty darn compelling character (more so than Captain America, which is probably sixteen different brands of heresy, considering that if anyone admitted to me that they liked Guy Gardner better than Kyle or John Stewart, I'd be tempted to flee in horror).

There were a lot of interesting standalone issues, such as That Which Prevails, something that Byrne does pretty well, but there wasn't much of a compelling arc, and Byrne has a habit of forgetting what he's done in the previous story and end up unintentionally treading and retreading the same damn story. Wanda in particular got soundly crapped upon, issue after issue, and I don't think Byrne *meant* to do that, but it happened nonetheless. It seemed like four arcs right in a row utterly decimated the poor woman (kids wiped from existence, husband discombobulated, possessed by critters, kidnapped to be the bride of Set, blah-blah).

In retrospect, Byrne's reputation for misogyny probably didn't get any favors from his treatment of both Wanda and Tigra in this set of stories. He didn't hold back on dumping on the menfolk either (USAgent having his parents murdered, for instance), but even then it looked bad to me and I didn't have any idea yet what 'Women in Refrigerators' meant.

I was fond of the Hank Pym character, as in the one who no longer called himself Yellow-Ant-Giant-Goliath-Man. He no longer exists, but it was an interesting notion.

I didn't mind the pale Vision, since he definitely didn't seem to be emotionless (and, frankly, I liked the ghostly coloration better than than Vision as the ghost-of-christmas in red, green and yellow), just lacking in some of his memories. It had the potential to be an interesting arc, but, like Carol Danvers and her emotional plunderage, was pretty much handled off-screen, ignored, and then gotten rid of when it proved inconvenient, much like his new coloration. I kinda loathe how terrified comics execs are of change. Spider-Man can't change his costume for more than a year. Professor X's back can't stay unbroken for more than 10 issues. If someone's powers change, they will inevitably change back. If someone cuts their hair into a funky mohawk and changes their entire demeanor, they'll be back to the old style within a year. I imagine that Scott Summers will have his glasses on within the year, despite being freaking cured, and that Rogue will never learn to control her powers, despite a half-dozen ways to control her power having been floated past her.

As relates to WCA, we've got Wanda, developed to become a parent, and then retconned back into being a non-parent, we've got Vision, changed and then changed back, we've got Hank Pym, abandoning his character growth to revert to Yellowjacket. Grr. It's like being a Legion fan all over again. Spend years growing along with Garth and Imra, and then watch them endlessly rebooted, their kid(s), their marriage, their entire *history* retconned out of existence, again and again.

For all that Byrne seemed to take a sadistic childlike glee in smacking Wanda around, he also gave her some of her most impressive moments, I thought. At one point, she is standing in front of the military complex in which her husband was dissassembled, and she points at it and the whole building just collapses into a pile of rubble and dust. The blurb is something like (paraphrasing), "Wanda has no idea what impossibly long odds it would be that every structural support, every brick of concrete and beam of steel, every spot of paint and spool of cable, would all fail exactly at the same moment. Nor does she care. She wants this building to die, and die it does."

She also has one pretty buff moment when the team is exploring the new information that the Vision is *not* actually composed of the body of the WWII era Human Torch, as previously believed. The Avengers are at the grave of said Torch, Hammond, and gabbing about how it can't be possible and blither-blather about if the robot is actually in the grave or not and Wanda, who is still freaking out about her husband being ripped open like a crackerjack box yells at them to shut up, waves her hands and reactivates the Human Torch robot, who has been inactive in this grave for about 50 years or so.

He comes bursting up on fire from his grave and she walks away, satisfied that he clearly isn't her husband, with the rest of the team is giving her a look like, 'uh, I guess *raising the dead* is one way to check who'se in the grave...'

But while I like many of the characters chosen, the stories were uneven and the artwork was appalling after Byrne left, prompting me to drop the comic like a hot potato when the WCA started fighting cactus people and gila monsters and embodiments of the four primal forces or whatever. Man, it got cheesy, almost as bad as the run on the normal Avengers where Gilgamesh got beaten up by lava monsters and the hydrobase got blown up by giant robots that appeared for the apparent sole purpose of blowing up hydrobase, 'cause the writers were tired of it...

I'm pretty sure one of the Shogun Warriors enemies showed up in there, Dr. Demonicus, or something. All we needed was a visit from Rom, Spaceknight to cement the descent into madness.
 
Posted by Bicycle Repair Man on :
 
I've been reading and enjoying this topic, and, although it's been at least 10 years since I reread my WCAvengers issues, I will contribute in the hope of encouraging others to do so.

West Coast Avengers dates from the one period in my life in which I was buying a lot of Marvel titles. I only started buying Marvel-Universe series after the DC Implosion devastated my reading list, and I gave up on everything except Peter David's Hulk sometime before the "Heroes Reborn" fiasco -- and stopped buying Hulk when PAD left.

The stories in WCA may have been less ambitious than Englehart's other work of that period, but his issues certainly did have a quirky feel that was different from just about any other superhero title of the period.

My favorite character was probably "Dr. Pym, Scientific Adventurer!" Using Pym particles to shrink or enlarge anything except himself - at the time, I wished more had been done with this.

I didn't dislike Tigra the way Stealth does, but I'll admit that the cat-demon business got more panel time than it deserved.

Character Note That Some People May Care About: the Iron Man that was in the WCA was James Rhodes, not Tony Stark.

I will agree that, as far as I can remember, the art during the Englehart run was never better than average.

Memorable Moments:

-The conclusion of the Dr. Doom storyarc (in which the real Doom contended with the brainwashed-into-believing-he-was-Doom Kristoff for control of Latveria and the loyalty of the Doombots): the real Doom, in a rare show of maturity, acknowledged that maybe he'd made some not-so-good decisions lately. The listening Doombots take this admission as evidence that he must be the phony, and throw their support behind Kristoff once and for all.

-West Coast Avengers had one of my all-time favorite fill-in issues (yeah, a dubious distinction I know, but work with me here [Wink] ), in which interdimensional would-be invaders abduct the WCA, as a representative sample of Earth's defense forces, and make each of them face a robot warrior in single combat. Dr. Pym defeated his opponent by shrinking it down to the size of a bug and STEPPING on it!! [Big Grin]

I dropped the title sometime after Byrne came on board, being seriously unimpressed with the story ideas he brought to the book.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
I've been hoping the last couple days someone would start this back up again! I've read about the first 70 issues of this book-- not in the proper sequence (which doesn't help), but only once, ages ago, so it's easier for me to respond to comments than post new ones.


"Except for Tigra, whom I dislike intensely"

Is it the character, or the way she's handled? I keep thinking of that 2-parter by Shooter & Weiss where Shooter turned her into a wimpy coward! (WTF was that guy's problem??? I know, we've all asked that question before.) A shame, as I sometimes liked her, particularly when she turned up near the end of Roy Thomas' 2nd run on the FF (where she seemed as goofy as Hellcat often used to be).


"And the art on the WCA mini-series, by Bob Hall and Brett Breeding, is IMO better than any of the art I've seen from the WCA ongoing issues that I've read."

If memory serves, the WCA mini was almost like a sequel to the HAWKEYE mini, art by the same guys, where Hawkeye first met Mockingbird, fell in love and wound up getting married all in one story! (Shades of DHARMA AND GREG.)


"I don't think Englehart's WCA is his best work by any stretch of the imagination"

Steve had been my #1 favorite comics writer of the 1970's. He always seemed like the ONE guy of that era who could write just about any book better than anyone else. It was a real blow when he quit Marvel, then left comics altogether. When he came back, his work was very uneven. COYOTE started out brilliant, then devolved into "WTF?"-ness. His FF and WCA wavered from pretty good to pretty BAD. His run on GREEN LANTERN / GREEN LANTERN CORPS really seemed inspired-- until Joe Staton took off to do MILLENNIUM, at which point everything seemed to degenerate. I loved his early SILVER SURFER-- was hurt by the editorial interference (which he later denied on his website), and thought his last year on the book was "readable"-- but that was about it. Much better than his last year on the FF.


"What on Earth, then, could have possessed Englehart to write in a subplot about Mockingbird being kidnapped, drugged, and raped? It completely ruins the story!"

That had to do with the original GHOST RIDER, didn't it? Talk about destroying the reputation for a long-standing hero! I still don't know what was going on there.


"John Byrne became both writer and artist on WCA, and I refuse to read his issues. Why? Because of what he did to Vision and to Scarlet Witch."

It's a horrible shame. I was so far behind on my reading, I actually STARTED reading WCA with Byrne's issues, then went back later to read the entire Englehart run. At the time, I thought Byrne's art was top-notch, and his writing (style) was still decent. But WHAT he was writing-- again-- "WTF????" What's the point of drawing a really hot Scarlet Witch if you're gonna treat her THAT way?


"considering that if anyone admitted to me that they liked Guy Gardner better than Kyle or John Stewart, I'd be tempted to flee in horror"

Heh. Funny... under Englehart, Guy Gardner developed a bad attitude via some form of brain-damage. Then Keith Giffen came along, and in JLI, turned that "brain-damaged" personality into one of the highlights of the book. (Some things work better when they're funny-- like JJJ.) But in the last 2 years, Geoff Johns and Dave Gibbons have genuinely written the BEST Guy Gardner I've ever seen. Especially when Gibbons is also doing the art!


"Rogue will never learn to control her powers, despite a half-dozen ways to control her power having been floated past her"

Rogue was a MAJOR sore point for me way back when she was first introduced. After she joined the X-Men, I could not believe that Professor X NEVER (in any stories I read) even tried to find a way to help her control her power, since that seemed one of the main points of being an X-Man was about! (That was over 20 years ago, I admit, but it's still a valid complaint.)


"the artwork was appalling after Byrne left"

Yeah, I agree with that. Ironic, isn't it, considering how long Byrne has caught hell for HIS art going bad in the years since.


"Mike Machlan, had done nice work for DC, particularly the early issues of Infinity Inc. But his inking on WCA makes Milgrom's pencils even more mediocre than they already are."

I could never understand that. A LOT of inkers have done GREAT work at DC and C*** work at Marvel. Editorial incompetence? Brett Breeding once told me of how his Spidey editor used to let pages sit on his desk for weeks at a time, instead of looking them over and passing them on to the next stage of the assembly-line immediately. As a result, by the time he got 'em, they were already late, and his 2 choices were blown deadlines or rushed-looking art, which hurt his reputation. Then again, Al Milgrom USED to be a decent artist in the 70's (and I see he's doing good work again these days). But when Shooter was in charge, for whatever reason, Milgrom became one of the WORST artists at Marvel. I suppose his work dragged down both Sinnott AND Machlan-- and good as he was, Machlan was no Sinnott. (Who is?)
 
Posted by Pariscub on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Reboot:


1) Glanced at the Bendis and Slutt books, didn't like them, didn't expect to, although I'm still flicking through Mighty Avengers and wishing Cho would get back to Liberty Meadows

2) Young Avengers - Heinberg's now announced he'll only co-plot v2/"Season 2". His co-plotter/scripter hasn't been announced yet, but it's been heavily noted that he shares a studio with The Lobe. Oh dear.

3) If you're not reading Marvel Adventures Avengers, you're missing out. I know it's the "kiddie"/non-continuity book, but it's Crazy in a good way, and Just Plain Fun. Like Silver Age without the stuff I find annoying, with a hint of Livewires mixed in. I started with #9 (Everybody Is MODOC) and also especially recommend #11 (The Power of Motivational Speaking When Combined With Snakes on a Quinjet) and #12 (Ego the Loving Planet). Which isn't to say that #10 (Black Knight) and #13 (Giant-Girl (Jan)'s origin, guest-starring Ant-Man) aren't good, just Good rather than Great [Smile]

Being even more of an Avengers fan than even a Legion fan, it's time I add my views on all this.

New Avengers still isn't my cup of tea, even though Civil War has now stirred things up a bit and AT LAST something is happening in the book. But this is the Defenders, not the Avengers. Bendis still can't write a team book after all this time, but as long as the title sells, we won't have a return back to the "real" Avengers.

Mighty Avengers could be a great book. The team is a good mix, but once again, Bendis prefers spending time ridiculising Hank Pym than writing a good script with the characters he uses. He can't even write proper thought balloons. And I agree, Cho should go back to Liberty Meadows. This way, I wouldn't have to suffer through his art in Avengers. It's not a good match

Initiative is a very interesting book. Loads of potential and certainly very well written. Still it neeeds to find the right balance. Getting there though. But Slott has my vote only for redeeming Hank Pym, the most wronged character in a Marvel Comic book.

Young Avengers: The best of the lot! I'm so looking forward to the second season, even if it's only co-written by Heinberg.

Marvel Adventures Avengers: Great book showing how Wolverine and Spider-Man can really work in the Avengers. Bendis, take some notes please!

Ultimates... OK, the 26 issues by Millar were just great. Now, I'm really scared to see volume 3 by Loeb, whom I consider a very overrated writer
 
Posted by Set on :
 
profh0011
quote:
Rogue was a MAJOR sore point for me way back when she was first introduced. After she joined the X-Men, I could not believe that Professor X NEVER (in any stories I read) even tried to find a way to help her control her power, since that seemed one of the main points of being an X-Man was about! (That was over 20 years ago, I admit, but it's still a valid complaint.)
The thing here is when the comic inevitably comes out with the retcon that Professor X was always an evil manipulative prick (a la the new version of the Doom Patrol's Chief), suddenly his apparent unwillingness to ever actually help characters like Rogue and Scott, which we've seen that characters like Emma, Jean and Magneto can cure *like that,* turns out to be just Charles being a controlling ass and keeping them under his thumb by forbidding them any chance of actually ever leaving and living a normal life.

I know that in a 'meta' sense it was nothing of the sort, at the time, and Charles didn't flex his mighty frontal lobe and retrain his wards to be able to control their powers in about the same amount of time it would take him to teach them to speak an alien language fluently was because the story demanded that Cyclops retain his trademark glasses and Rogue have something emo to whine about with the whole, 'I can't screw Gambit, but really want to, please pity me' character theme. [Add Wolverine and Storm and, more recently, the Beast, to the list of X-folk with mental conditions that Chuck could have helped with, if not actually snapped his fingers and cured, if he had the slightest inclination to actually do so...]

But nowadays, it's 'cool' to turn old long-standing 'heroes' into mustachio-twirling manipulative bastards, with Charles, Reed and Tony at the head of the wannabe-a-supervillain class, so I'm just waiting to read that inevitable bit of character assassination, disguised as 'character development.'

Anywho, my point was that character development, character growth, character *change,* is not a bad thing. Quesada has stated openly that he wants to kill off Mary-Jane and return Spider-Man to being an unmarried geeky no-luck-but-bad-luck sort of fellow, that he feels Spidey being married somehow detracts from the character. Didio has stated openly that he wants to kill of Nightwing, since he doesn't think that there is any room for a character that isn't Robin anymore. As long as reactionary twits like this remain in charge, viewing the characters as inflexible static forever-changeless IPs and 'properties' and 'trademark / icons,' they are never going to be able to grow and develop. If they'd been in charge at the beginning, the Hulk would still be grey (as would Iron Man), Reed and Sue never would have married, Garth and Imra never would have had a kid, Gwen Stacy never would have died, the Silver Surfer would still be trapped on Earth, Hank Pym would be Giant-Man, etc. since they *fear change.*
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
I never really read much WCA, except a few issues here and there, though I came in on the last 25 or so of the series. I have to say, at the time, I thought it wasn't that bad, considering what else was being offered by Marvel, DC, Image, Valiant and Dark Horse. I found myself at first hating the line-up, but then growing fond of US Agent, Spider-Woman (Julia), Rhodey as War Machine and even Darkhawk when he was appearing. Of course, Hawkeye had his second run as Goliath II, which was absurd, and Wanda was never really written right in the 90’s. But overall, it wasn’t *too* bad, though I have to really reread the issues to give it an honest review. I remember reading the Mockingbird death issue, but at the time, I hardly knew who she was (I didn’t read her stories until a few years after I read her death). Honestly, I’m largely ambivalent about the character now, as I like Hawkeye as an unmarried man, and don’t see what made her unique in comparison to a hundred other similar characters.

I did read Force Works when it came out, and I remember then thinking it wasn’t that great. The art was over the top, Wonder Man was killed VERY poorly, Century was a bit of an odd character that has been completely ignored. But on the other hand, US Agent had a cool new costume, there was a Recorder with an interesting subplot, and Iron Man was well done here IIRC. There was an early sense by DnA that they were carving out their own little corner of the Avengers-MU, and it was working. Then came along the Crossing, which completely destroyed the book. Tony was ruined, of course, but also there was an odd subplot about an inserted-into-continuity hero named Moonraker with a relationship with Julia or Wanda or something, and it pretty much fell flat from there.

I honestly think part of the reason Avengers West Coast isn’t being clamored for by fans is because the title of the comic seems slightly ‘meh’. In my opinion, in order for such a comic to stand on its own, it needs a very real separation from the main Avengers title, but having a ‘West Coast Avengers’ team kind of implies that its working in unison with the East Coast. Even at age 11 I thought it was kind of weak.

So yeah, I never read the Englehart or Byrne issues, and I’ve got to say…I’m not sure I want to now [Big Grin]

PS - in other news, Mighty and New Avengers continue to reach new levels of hack writing. Man, Bendis has really dropped the ball here.
 
Posted by He Who Wanders on :
 
I followed West Coast Avengers from the beginning until sometime after Byrne’s tenure. I think I stopped with # 78. What do I remember about WCA after all this time? I think it was an unnecessary title that turned out pretty well. Unnecessary because it was part of Marvel’s inflated expansion of the mid ‘80s: mini-series, X-Factor, New Universe, etc. – projects that seemed generated through marketing instead of creative vision. Actually, if there was a creative vision at all, it seemed to be Jim Shooter’s idea of the Big Bang: expand as rapidly as possible in as many directions as possible. The end result was a watered-down line of comics without any real thought as to what made each title unique.

WCA started out in this vein. The characters were all second-stringers -- Hawkeye, Mockingbird, Wonder Man, Tigra, Jim Rhoades as Iron Man – who were suddenly elevated to star status. “Second stringers” may not be the best term; they were actually supporting characters who added flavor to the regular Avengers title, but lacked the substance to be truly important to it. I expected their own book to be about the same: All frosting and no cake.

But thanks to Steve Englehart, WCA turned out to be a fun, engaging, and sometimes even insightful read – often more so than the regular Avengers book. It’s been years since I’ve read those stories, so my memories are vague (Wonder Man becoming an actor; Master Pandemonium, etc.). The only story that truly stands out is Englehart’s “Lost in Space-Time” arc. As Stealth mentioned above, the story telling mechanics were clever and that alone made it memorable to me. But Englehart went further by bringing in Firebird as a Christian who counsels Hank Pym out of suicide, and then by having Mockingbird be raped by and then kill the Phantom Rider.

I’m of the opinion that it doesn’t really matter what happens to characters – it’s how they respond to their circumstances that makes a story compelling and reveals character (and, therefore, reveals truths about the human experience). Both of these story lines tackled real and tragic problems: Friends sometimes do try to kill themselves (and sometimes succeed), even those you would never expect; women sometimes are raped, even “strong” and “independent” women. The fact that these circumstances happened to characters we care about makes these stories significant, in my opinion: How the characters reacted to their circumstances tells us a little about ourselves.

Hank Pym’s story line had a positive outcome. He came to realize that suicide wasn’t the answer (and kudos to Englehart for Firebird’s role in this; people often come to such a decision through spiritual or faith intervention). Furthermore, he came to accept himself as a “plainclothes” scientist who made *other* things grow and shrink. I viewed this as a metaphor for any number of conditions (physical, spiritual, sexual, etc.) that people have trouble accepting in themselves. (This is why it’s hard for me to accept Hank returning to his Giant-Man identity; it’s like saying, “Now that you’ve accepted being gay, you can go back to being straight.”)

Mockingbird’s story turned out differently. She sought revenge (understandably) and took it to its final conclusion, but the consequences devastated her and her marriage. I don’t recall if Hawkeye knew fully what had happened to her, but he could not abide a wife who had murdered. His reaction mirrored that of many men whose wives and partners make similar, life-altering decisions. (I remember equating Mockingbird’s actions and Clint’s reaction to abortion, which was major news at the time.) Whether it was right or wrong for him to feel this way was left to the reader to decide. But Hawkeye and Mockingbird became very human characters as a result of this story line; Englehart forced the reader to question his or her own attitudes about life, death, and the relationships of men and women.

WCA/ACW never again reached similar heights for me – certainly not during Byrne’s sloppy re-plastering job, in which bad things seemed to happen just because they were bad things. After Byrne left, the stories became standard super-hero fare. I remember the Living Lightning (whom I thought of as a Hispanic stereotype) and the unnecessary resurrection of the original Human Torch, and little else.

Though my memories of the early WCA, are vague, my impressions of it are fond. In some ways, it truly rose above the mediocre expectations I had for it. I think it helped that Englehart kept a consistent core membership: this allowed him to take chances in character development that would have been impractical in the regular Avengers title. Byrne’s practice of rotating the membership between the two Avengers books destroyed WCA's uniqueness. The book already had a fragile identity to begin with; after Byrne, it seemed to have no identity at all.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"The thing here is when the comic inevitably comes out with the retcon that Professor X was always an evil manipulative prick (a la the new version of the Doom Patrol's Chief)"

I'm SURE Arnold Drake would not have appreciated that...


"the story demanded that Cyclops retain his trademark glasses and Rogue have something emo to whine about"

I just call it, "BAD WRITING".


"Quesada has stated openly that he wants to kill off Mary-Jane and return Spider-Man to being an unmarried geeky no-luck-but-bad-luck sort of fellow, that he feels Spidey being married somehow detracts from the character."

They ALREADY killed off Mary Jane (when John Byrne was doing the book-- or should I say SCREWING OVER the book?). That's why I not only stopped reading it, I swore off EVER reading it again, no matter what they did or who they got to do it. Enough was enough.


"If they'd been in charge at the beginning...Gwen Stacy never would have died"

We can blame JOHN ROMITA (and by extension, his hero Milton Caniff) for that bit. If not for that, Pete & GWEN might have been married since the early 70s, as-- possibly-- Stan Lee intended when he shoved MJ aside in favor of Gwen for ALL those issues in the first place.


"the Silver Surfer would still be trapped on Earth"

We can thank Stan Lee for all the YEARS he was trapped on Earth. There's a reason I like Steve Englehart's writing as much as I do...!


"the title of the comic seems slightly ‘meh’"

That's nothing. You should read (OR MAYBE NOT!!!) the 12-issue VISION AND SCARLET WITCH series Englehart did. AWFUL!!!!!


"Actually, if there was a creative vision at all, it seemed to be Jim Shooter’s idea of the Big Bang: expand as rapidly as possible in as many directions as possible. The end result was a watered-down line of comics without any real thought as to what made each title unique."

Well put. It could be directly connected with something Bill Black of AC Comics described. After the "direct" market became such a success for so many smaller companies, the "big 2" decided to barge their way in. Result? Stores happily buying everything they possibly could from "the big 2", and not having any money left to order books from EVERYBODY ELSE. The people who made the "direct" market a success got screwed over by the unrelenting GREED of the bigger companies. they don't want competition, they don't want free enterprise, they want it ALL. To me, that's not "business"-- that lack of morality.


"bad things seemed to happen just because they were bad things"

In the wake of Frank Miller's 2nd DD run, it seemed like everybody was trying to follow his "example". Like-- "Hey-- WE can do something like THAT!"
 
Posted by Ultra Jorge on :
 
WCA

I loved this book. So many character moments/arcs. Hawkeye as leader, Bobbi killing the Phantom Rider, Wonder Man's confidence, the competitive sparring between Iron Man and Wonder Man, Firebird(!), Tigra's mission to kill Master Panda! and most importantly DR. PYM!!!

While Stern/Buscema were on Avengers I did feel like this was the more "fun" book. It seemed like "Avengers On Vacation". They were in Hollywood and characters like Wonder Man and Tigra were living it up. From Wonder Man's horrible costume to his black/red costume.

Most importantly Steve Engleheart knew how to fix HANK PYM. Not Ant-Man, Yellow Jacket, Goliath or Giant-Man. No, he fixed Hank. He didn't try to figure out a way to bring YJ back. I can go on and on about Hank but I still cringe seeing him in the YJ costume. I loved how they used him in BEYOND! As Dr. Pym scientific adventurer.

Marvel characters are known for their weaknesses. Let Hank live with his. I prefer him not changing size unless a dire emergency.

AWC? Hey, I liked it. I guess as a kid I always thought Vision/Scarlet Witch as a mutant with a toaster. [Wink]
 
Posted by Bicycle Repair Man on :
 
A clarification:

Mockingbird didn't kill the Phantom Rider. He was hanging on the edge of a cliff; she saw the situation, chose not to help him, and walked away. Eventually he lost his grip (on the cliff; his grip on reality was slipping well before that) and fell to his death. Neither Hawkeye nor the ghost of the Rider appreciated the distinction.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
I'm SURE Dick Ayers would not have appreciated that...
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Welcome to The All Avengers Thread, Pariscub. Thanks for posting your thoughts on the current Avengers. I hope we soon see your thoughts on the previous eras of the Avengers.

quote:
Originally posted by Set:
almost as bad as the run on the normal Avengers where Gilgamesh got beaten up by lava monsters and the hydrobase got blown up by giant robots that appeared for the apparent sole purpose of blowing up hydrobase, 'cause the writers were tired of it...

There was only one Avengers/AWC writer at that time, and his name was...John Byrne. LOL

quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
"Except for Tigra, whom I dislike intensely"

Is it the character, or the way she's handled? I keep thinking of that 2-parter by Shooter & Weiss where Shooter turned her into a wimpy coward! (WTF was that guy's problem??? I know, we've all asked that question before.) A shame, as I sometimes liked her, particularly when she turned up near the end of Roy Thomas' 2nd run on the FF (where she seemed as goofy as Hellcat often used to be).

For one thing, I find Tigra creepy because I've always had a particular fear of werewolves (and were-cats and other such derivatives.)

For another, I haven't read either of the Tigra appearances you mention. In the few that I have read, she always comes across to me as being an obnoxious hussy.

quote:
Originally posted by profh0011: If memory serves, the WCA mini was almost like a sequel to the HAWKEYE mini, art by the same guys, where Hawkeye first met Mockingbird, fell in love and wound up getting married all in one story! (Shades of DHARMA AND GREG.)
I still haven't read that story, because the words "Writer: Mark Gruenwald" are an instant turn-off to me. I still might give it a chance someday, if I find it in the quarter bin.

quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
in the last 2 years, Geoff Johns and Dave Gibbons have genuinely written the BEST Guy Gardner I've ever seen. Especially when Gibbons is also doing the art!

For me, it's the only incarnation of Guy Gardner that I've ever liked.

quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
I remember reading the Mockingbird death issue, but at the time, I hardly knew who she was (I didn’t read her stories until a few years after I read her death). Honestly, I’m largely ambivalent about the character now, as I like Hawkeye as an unmarried man, and don’t see what made her unique in comparison to a hundred other similar characters.

Have you read Roger Stern's WCA mini-series? I think Stern was the only one who understood her.

quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
So yeah, I never read the Englehart or Byrne issues, and I’ve got to say…I’m not sure I want to now

And I can't honestly say whether I'd recommend giving the Englehart issues a chance; they're definitely an acquired taste. The Byrne ones, of course, I haven't read and never will.

quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid: PS - in other news, Mighty and New Avengers continue to reach new levels of hack writing. Man, Bendis has really dropped the ball here.
Heh. I can't wait to snark on those books later this month.

quote:
Originally posted by He Who Wanders:
I’m of the opinion that it doesn’t really matter what happens to characters – it’s how they respond to their circumstances that makes a story compelling and reveals character (and, therefore, reveals truths about the human experience) Both of these story lines tackled real and tragic problems: Friends sometimes do try to kill themselves (and sometimes succeed), even those you would never expect; women sometimes are raped, even “strong” and “independent” women. The fact that these circumstances happened to characters we care about makes these stories significant, in my opinion: How the characters reacted to their circumstances tells us a little about ourselves.

Once again, I find your point to be thoughtful and very well made, even though I disagree with it. Since getting back into comics a couple years ago, I've had to admit to myself that I don't want to see any true-to-life horrors visited upon these fictional characters I love. If the subject had come up back in the early-mid nineties, I probably would have argued otherwise, but today, I'm a different person, and it seems that I what I want out of comics is pure escapism.

quote:
Originally posted by He Who Wanders:
Hank Pym’s story line had a positive outcome. He came to realize that suicide wasn’t the answer (and kudos to Englehart for Firebird’s role in this; people often come to such a decision through spiritual or faith intervention). Furthermore, he came to accept himself as a “plainclothes” scientist who made *other* things grow and shrink. I viewed this as a metaphor for any number of conditions (physical, spiritual, sexual, etc.) that people have trouble accepting in themselves. (This is why it’s hard for me to accept Hank returning to his Giant-Man identity; it’s like saying, “Now that you’ve accepted being gay, you can go back to being straight.”)

Now this I find particularly fascinating, since I feel the exact opposite: I've always seen the plainclothes identity as going into the closet, and the costumed identity as coming out of the closet.

quote:
Originally posted by He Who Wanders:
I remember the Living Lightning (whom I thought of as a Hispanic stereotype)

Oh, he made me sick! I see him as Roy Thomas' attempt to give Marvel their own version of Vibe, who was created by Thomas' buddy Gerry Conway.

quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
the 12-issue VISION AND SCARLET WITCH series Englehart did. AWFUL!!!!!

I disagree; it has its flaws, but I think it was an admirable attempt at portraying a superhero couple as domesticated adults. Plus, it had the Scarlet Witch making a "F*** you" gesture at Gyrich. Truly, nobody ever wrote Wanda better than Englehart IMO.

quote:
Originally posted by Ultra Jorge:
While Stern/Buscema were on Avengers I did feel like this was the more "fun" book.

And many people obviously felt the same way, since Englehart's WCA run actually outsold Stern & Buscema's Avengers run. I just find it very off-putting the way that the tone of WCA would suddenly shift from light-hearted fun to demons and rapists. It may be argued that such a tone is more true-to-life, which, as I've said before, is exactly what I don't want in a superhero comic. The only comic book writer who can make that kind of tone work for me is Peter David. I don't know why, he just makes it work for me.

[ June 12, 2007, 09:20 PM: Message edited by: Stealth ]
 
Posted by He Who Wanders on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Bicycle Repair Man:
A clarification:

Mockingbird didn't kill the Phantom Rider. He was hanging on the edge of a cliff; she saw the situation, chose not to help him, and walked away. Eventually he lost his grip (on the cliff; his grip on reality was slipping well before that) and fell to his death. Neither Hawkeye nor the ghost of the Rider appreciated the distinction.

Thanks for clarifying that, BRM. I agree with Hawkeye: there's not much distinction. (The opinion of a rapist's ghost doesn't matter much to me.) But it's good to know what actually happened.
 
Posted by He Who Wanders on :
 
"Once again, I find your point to be thoughtful and very well made, even though I disagree with it. Since getting back into comics a couple years ago, I've had to admit to myself that I don't want to see any true-to-life horrors visited upon these fictional characters I love. If the subject had come up back in the early-mid nineties, I probably would have argued otherwise, but today, I'm a different person, and it seems that I what I want out of comics is pure escapism."

Thanks for the compliment, Stealth. I understand and respect your position. In many ways, I'm a different person, too, than I was when I first read these stories. Even then, though, I liked my heroes to be human: with all the failings and temptations that go with that. It makes their attempts to accomplish good even more heroic, in my eyes.

But 20 years and two English degrees later have given me a greater appreciation for the literary potential of comics, and for any type of story that tries to say something. Such stories require active participation from the reader: analyzing, interpreting, and reflecting. They challenge us to examine our own attitudes and experiences. To me, the best stories are those that sneak in such challenges while "pretending" to be escapism. (I think that's what lured me into comics in the first place. [Wink] )
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"For another, I haven't read either of the Tigra appearances you mention. In the few that I have read, she always comes across to me as being an obnoxious hussy."

In Roy's FF, she kept flirting with Ben. It was hilarious! "Will you knock it off? I already GOT a girl!"


"I still haven't read that story, because the words "Writer: Mark Gruenwald" are an instant turn-off to me."

I think my first exposure to Gruenwald was on SPIDER-WOMAN, when he took over from Marv Wolfman (who had been surprisingly good) and improved the book. But he left soon after, allowing Mike Fleisher to MURDER the book. Oy. In later years, I found his letter-page editorials overbearing and condescending. And then he fired Roger Stern... (GRRRRRR.) Some people should never get promoted above their best position. They should just get more money to stay where they're at, and continue to do what they do best. If I ran a corporation, that's what I'd do...


"For me, it's the only incarnation of Guy Gardner that I've ever liked."

There was one issue recently where Patrick Gleason drew half the pages, and Dave Gibbons drew the other half-- the Guy pages. LOVED it! Some writers really are MUCH better when they draw their own stories. Gleason is an amazing "illustrator"-- but half the time, I have trouble following what the HELL is going on. Never with Gibbons' art. Loved his stuff ever since the Tom Baker DOCTOR WHO strips.


"I remember reading the Mockingbird death issue, but at the time, I hardly knew who she was (I didn’t read her stories until a few years after I read her death)."

I first ran across Bobbi Morse in KA-ZAR #3-5. I also read her solo story in MARVEL SUPER ACTION #1, the B&W anthology that starred The Punisher, Dominic Fortune, and "The Huntress" (Bobbi). MSA was cancelled before it even hit the printers, becoming a one-shot, so Bobbi's series never went past the 1st episode. That was where, if memory serves, the long-long-running "SHIELD is getting corrupt" storyline got its start. Not a good point to reccomend it, is it? Then she turned up in MARVEL TEAM-UP (I think) as "Mockingbird", I think, accused of being a double-agent (by the agents who really were double-agents). Or something...


"Once again, I find your point to be thoughtful and very well made, even though I disagree with it. Since getting back into comics a couple years ago, I've had to admit to myself that I don't want to see any true-to-life horrors visited upon these fictional characters I love. If the subject had come up back in the early-mid nineties, I probably would have argued otherwise, but today, I'm a different person, and it seems that I what I want out of comics is pure escapism."

WELL PUT! I'm tired of the "characters MUST be put thru hell" mindset of writers. To me, a traumatic "origin" story ought be hell enough for anyone's lifetime. (Example: Pete lost Uncle Ben. He did NOT lose Aunt May. THERE WAS NO F***ING REASON to lose Captain Stacy, G** D*** it!!! Never mind Gwen!) Put another way: UP YOURS, Frank Miller! (And that goes DOUBLE for Denny O'Neil...)

I noticed around the early 90's that my taste in "entertainment" was changing. I'd had enough of terribly violent or downbeat stuff. I think it was because my own life had been so stressful for so long, I just wanted my "entertainment" to actually be "entertaining". (Example: when it comes to Frank Cho, you can keep SHANNA THE SHE-DEVIL. Give me LIBERTY MEADOWS!!)

When "IDENTITY CRISIS" came out, a friend and fellow writer asked me, "Would YOU ever write a story like that?" I told him I already had... the difference being, I didn't actually KILL my hero's girlfriend. More recently, I didn't actually RAPE her, either! But I DID have the guys who TRIED disembowelled... (HEY! They ASKED for it!!!!!)

[Smile]


"Oh, he made me sick! I see him as Roy Thomas' attempt to give Marvel their own version of Vibe, who was created by Thomas' buddy Gerry Conway."

"'EY, man! You got new CHOOS?"

[ June 13, 2007, 12:11 AM: Message edited by: profh0011 ]
 
Posted by He Who Wanders on :
 
"WELL PUT! I'm tired of the "characters MUST be put thru hell" mindset of writers. To me, a traumatic "origin" story ought be hell enough for anyone's lifetime. (Example: Pete lost Uncle Ben. He did NOT lose Aunt May. THERE WAS NO F***ING REASON to lose Captain Stacy, G** D*** it!!! Never mind Gwen!) Put another way: UP YOURS, Frank Miller! (And that goes DOUBLE for Denny O'Neil...)"

Well, if the characters aren't put through hell from time to time, there's not much dramatic tension, is there? They have to face some kind of problem, and the problem better be consequential (i.e., something bad will happen if they don't accomplish their goals).

This isn't to say that every character's wife has to be raped or every character's friends have to be murdered. But those ideas can be used to make a point about something, as I suggested in the Mockingbird story, above.

These ideas can and have been overdone. They have also been done for the wrong reasons, such as shock value or to portray an overly cynical view of the world. (I never read Identity Crisis, and I came into Spider-Man after the Staceys' deaths, so I can't say whether they fit this description.) But if writers completely avoided these topics, it would set our heroes in an unrealistic world where nothing truly "bad" ever touches them.

This, unfortunately, is what has mostly happened at Marvel and DC: Even characters who die come back with alarming regularity. (Does anybody think Cap is dead for good?) And this is one reason, along with escalating prices, why I've lost interest in super-hero comics today. If heroes have nothing to lose, they go through mindless and repetetive motions in stories that don't really matter.
 
Posted by Ultra Jorge on :
 
I miss Mockingbird. [Frown] Hopefully Superboy Prime's will punch Bendis and she will return to a happy purple Hawkeye.
 
Posted by He Who Wanders on :
 
I never read the story of her death, but I was disappointed when I found out that she had been killed off. It seems as if death is too easy a solution in comics these days, and too cheap, as I mentioned above.
 
Posted by Ultra Jorge on :
 
I didn't care for Roy Thomas' WCA at all. Ok, some issues were OK but...eh.
 
Posted by Set on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Set:
almost as bad as the run on the normal Avengers where Gilgamesh got beaten up by lava monsters and the hydrobase got blown up by giant robots that appeared for the apparent sole purpose of blowing up hydrobase, 'cause the writers were tired of it...

There was only one Avengers/AWC writer at that time, and his name was...John Byrne. LOL

See, I never would have known that, because the artwork was so atrocious on the main Avengers title during those arcs that I didn't realize Byrne was writing for some other artist! I'm used to Byrne stories being illustrated by him.

Characters like Sersi and the Black Knight would have probably appealed to me more if Byrne had actually drawn them, since I am shallow that way.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"I'm used to Byrne stories being illustrated by him."

There was a period in the mid-late 80's where a lot of artists-turned writer/artists decided they were tired of drawing... and wanted to "just" write. In almost every case, it was a disaster, because, for the most part, whatever "magic" they brought to their work was completely MISSING when someone else would do the drawing.

Among the "writers": John Byrne, Jim Starlin, Mike Grell, Frank Miller... (well, in Miller's case, his art got so sketchy after awhile, getting a "real" illustrator onboard was a major upgrade)


Now, when Keith Giffen did it, he kept doing layouts. In his case, it was in many ways a HUGE IMPROVEMENT to have guys like Kevin Maguire, Ty Templeton & Adam Hughes (!!!!!) drawing Keith's stories. It was only when he then decided to pencil LEGION while he was writing it solo that things turned (there's no other way to say this) "UGLY". (An' ah means... UGH- LEE!!!) If they'd has a Dave Gibbons, Chris Sprouse or Stuart Immonen drawing those stories.. I feel SURE I wouldn't have gottern sick looking at the book for 3 whole years running.

[Smile]
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by He Who Wanders:
20 years and two English degrees later have given me a greater appreciation for the literary potential of comics, and for any type of story that tries to say something. Such stories require active participation from the reader: analyzing, interpreting, and reflecting. They challenge us to examine our own attitudes and experiences. To me, the best stories are those that sneak in such challenges while "pretending" to be escapism. (I think that's what lured me into comics in the first place. [Wink] )

Alan Grant is, IMO, the master at that kind of story. I wish Marvel hadn't treated him so badly and alienated him, because I would have loved it if he'd written Avengers.

quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
"I still haven't read that story, because the words "Writer: Mark Gruenwald" are an instant turn-off to me."

I think my first exposure to Gruenwald was on SPIDER-WOMAN, when he took over from Marv Wolfman (who had been surprisingly good) and improved the book. But he left soon after, allowing Mike Fleisher to MURDER the book. Oy. In later years, I found his letter-page editorials overbearing and condescending. And then he fired Roger Stern... (GRRRRRR.) Some people should never get promoted above their best position. They should just get more money to stay where they're at, and continue to do what they do best. If I ran a corporation, that's what I'd do...

As an editor, he helped make possible such great stories as Walt Simonson's Surtur Saga in Thor, Layton & Michelinie's Armor Wars in Iron Man, and Roger Stern's Nebula Saga, Under Siege (Masters of Evil), and Assault on Olympus in Avengers. But as a writer, he made me cringe with his dialogue (especially when the characters would call each other things like "Klausy" or "Cutsy") and frustrated me with his inability to make promising characters and concepts live up to their potential, not to mention his weaknesses at plot, pace, tone, and structure.

quote:
Originally posted by Ultra Jorge:
I miss Mockingbird. [Frown] Hopefully Superboy Prime's will punch Bendis and she will return to a happy purple Hawkeye.

And then he punches Bendis again, and the Scarlet Witch who turned evil is revealed as an impostor, while the real Scarlet Witch emerges from captivity.

quote:
Originally posted by Set:
Characters like Sersi and the Black Knight would have probably appealed to me more if Byrne had actually drawn them, since I am shallow that way.

Byrne was no longer writing the book when the Black Knight entered the picture.

quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
It was only when he then decided to pencil LEGION while he was writing it solo that things turned (there's no other way to say this) "UGLY". (An' ah means... UGH- LEE!!!) If they'd has a Dave Gibbons, Chris Sprouse or Stuart Immonen drawing those stories.. I feel SURE I wouldn't have gottern sick looking at the book for 3 whole years running.

I, on the other hand, would still have refused the read those stories even if my favorite artists had drawn them. The one issue of Giffen LSH that I read was the Profem issue (and only because Colleen Doran and Curt Swan drew it), and I found it to be one of the most ignorant, reactionary, and depressing things I had ever read.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"But as a writer, he made me cringe with his dialogue (especially when the characters would call each other things like "Klausy" or "Cutsy") and frustrated me with his inability to make promising characters and concepts live up to their potential, not to mention his weaknesses at plot, pace, tone, and structure."

It suddenly strikes me that, apart from SPIDER-WOMAN (which I enjoyed), I don't really remember much of Gruenwald's writing. He did that SQUADRON SUPREME maxi-series, didn't he? I remember that... barely. what I remember was 3rd-rate art & an interminable, unenjoyable storyline. Maybe he was better off as an arrogant S.O.B. of an editor... ?


"I, on the other hand, would still have refused the read those stories even if my favorite artists had drawn them. The one issue of Giffen LSH that I read was the Profem issue (and only because Colleen Doran and Curt Swan drew it), and I found it to be one of the most ignorant, reactionary, and depressing things I had ever read."

Good grief! What a CON-JOB!!! 2/1-2/ years of art that looks like it was C****** onto ther paper rather than drawn, no wonder you picked up an issue that looked like it was done by professionals instead. I forghet who actually wrote that book (I could look it up, but the thought alone is bad enough), but I don't think it was Keith Giffen. It weas an insult all-round in any case.

I've often tried pointing out to a friend of mine (who LIKES that run) that the whole "Legion has retired / Earth is secretly controlled by the Dominators / the whole future has gone completely to hell" thing was utterly, completely wrong-headed. It was was Keith Giffen does "best" (he said, sarcastically)-- turning a series UPSIDE DOWN and doing it bass-ackwards, just to see what the results might be (and with no thought or care to the possible HORRIBLE long-standing results, which there have been in every single case).

It might have worked as an experiment, IF they'd had "real" illustrators and storytellers doing it. Keith, who proved his best talent was co-plotting & page layouts (NOT pencils) could have pulled it off, with the right "help"-- and if there hadn't been CONTINUAL, NON-STOP editorial interfence AND incompetence. (The "new" Legion's 1st editor was FIRED off the book only a few months in, for heaven's sake!!! That never happened when Karen Berger was on watch.)

I know, I know... some people LOVE that run. Doesn't change how I feel. The CRISIS may have hurt the Legion... but what happened after Levitz & Berger left RUINED it for the next 20 years. That and the blind, narrow-minded REFUSAL by the "powers-that-be" to admit their mistake, and "simply" GO BACK to doing the book the way it should have been in the first place (as it was up until the CRISIS).
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
He did that SQUADRON SUPREME maxi-series, didn't he? I remember that... barely. what I remember was 3rd-rate art & an interminable, unenjoyable storyline.

Yep. It's got a lot of fans, but I'm not one of them.

quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
I forghet who actually wrote that book (I could look it up, but the thought alone is bad enough), but I don't think it was Keith Giffen.

It was co-written by Giffen with Tom and Mary Bierbaum. Giffen's original idea had been for Shvaughn to be killed instead of Blok, but the Bierbaums sold him on the Profem idea. I have a transsexual friend who hates that story even more than I do.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
I like the TMK run, but I personally dislike that story greatly too.

To echo earlier comments in this thread, I also find the current Guy Gardner at DC to be the best he's ever been written. He's opinionated and he's a jerk sometimes, but he's heroic and the kind of person you want watching your back. Not the easiest person to become friends with, but once your friend, he's there for you no matter what, and tells it like it is to your face. In my experience, those are often the best friends you could wish for.

In regards to Avengers (and because I like keeping this thread going), I notice we’ve talked at length about a whole bunch of Avengers, particularly Hank and Wanda. One Avenger who I’ve been thinking about lately is Pietro. I feel that over the years a lot of stupid things have happened to him (by writers), but overall from a ‘larger picture’ perspective, he’s one of the few Marvel heroes whose personality has remained relatively the same, or at least grown in ways that seem natural to the character and enhance both his flaws and his highpoints. In fact, I’d say that Pietro was never one of my favorites until recent years, when I had the chance to reread the Avengers runs, as well as his X-Factor appearances.

First, I kind of like that he’s been everywhere in the MU: enemy of the X-Men, Avenger, supporting character to FF & Inhumans, part of X-Factor, Knight of Wundagore and even now. I’m not saying I didn’t like all those things at the time (I mean, his solo series as a Knight of Wundagore was tough to take at times), but I enjoy that aspect of him too. And I don’t necessarily love the character in that I would like him if he were real per se—I like the character because he’s so distanced at times, and such a jerk to people for little reason. It really makes him stand out, as arrogant and infuriating, while at the same time confident and (usually) heroic. Lately…he’s gone in a different direction. Though I hate to see the loyalty to his friends be replaced by loyalty to his father’s ideal of the ‘mutant race’, I do think its being handled good. I think his story is far from over and that comforts me in enjoying the ride for him. Some other things about him as fast opinions: (1) I do not think he should be with Crystal AT ALL, but I do like his having a previous marriage to her as part of his story, (2) I love Luna and think it humanizes him in a different way, (3) I generally prefer when he and Wanda are in separate comic books, (4) Love the idea that Magneto is his father and think it worked phenomenally well in terms of making complete sense, (5) Bova is awesome and anyone who thinks otherwise should be shot into the sun, and (6) I like his costume in shades of blue rather than green.

Fave Pietro issues: Silver Age Spider-Man appearance, guest-shot in Byrne’s FF, Silver Age X-Men/Avengers crossover, when he insulted the Vision and pissed off all Avengers fans, X-Factor (1st and 2nd runs) and especially Harras’ Avengers run. Great, great character—what, in the classic sense of the phrase, is a true ‘Marvel character’.
 
Posted by He Who Wanders on :
 
Pietro makes an interesting character study for all the reasons you cite, Cobie. A victim of prejudice himself, he nevertheless was prejudiced toward the Vision and disowned his own sister when she fell in love with the android.

Pietro had a long and distinguished career as an Avenger, but he was also arrogant and very selfish. He gave up his heroic career to marry Crystal and live with the Inhumans -- and I largely lost track of him until the Son of M mini-series last year. After losing his powers, he tried to kill himself, was rescued by Spider-Man and given a what-for for his role in rewriting history, via the Scarlet Witch. (At least this is how I remember it; I didn't read the mini-series that preceded it.) In a way, his negative and self-important attitudes came back to bite him on the a$$.

The mini-series then became confusing, with Pietro journeying back and forth in time and running off with Luna, and then Luna becoming the focus of the story (which then left the door open for some other story line!). So, Pietro never learned the lessons I thought he was going to learn, and never grew as a character. But the potential is still there for his story to reach some satisfying resolution.

[ June 14, 2007, 03:24 PM: Message edited by: He Who Wanders ]
 
Posted by Ultra Jorge on :
 
I'm a Pietro fan as well. He's a character that I also enjoy as a jerk. But I'm not sure if he's your friend he will always have your back. Why? It depends on the situation. He's a complicated character. But as hero or villain I'm a fan of his.

I like when he's a complicated anti-hero/villain personally. When they just make him seem crazy and possibly mind controlled? Eh. Don't care for it.

Marvel has lots of shades of gray and Pietro just goes along with that.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
My favorite stories with him are probably the ones by Stan & Don Heck during the year or so after he joined the Avengers. He had an air of superiority and aloofness about him, yet was in no uncertain terms determined to do the right thing and prove himself one of the good guys.

Then later writers (ROY THOMAS???) decided to have him say "Screw that!" and just get all full of himself and self-serving...

Last year I read ESSENTIAL AVENGERS Vol.5, where he disappeared during the 3rd Sentinels story. This week I'm plowing thru ESSENTIAL FANTASTIC FOUR Vol.6, the 2nd half of which I have the originals of. So now I got to read Quicksilver's story in the right sequence... and it STILL sucks. Roy broke up Johnny & Crystal for NO DAMN GOOD REASON other than to inject some lame-ass soap-opera crap into the characters' lives. Never mind Reed & Sue-- Johnny & Crystal were meant to be together, AT LEAST UNTIL Roy got done with them.

The height of stupidity had to be when Johnny considered checking up on Dorrie Evans-- that hard-headed, self-serving bossy BITCH he used to date. HOW STUPID are we supposed to believe this guy is??? Even more absurd is when she mentions that he dumped her... NO HE DIDN'T!!! It was the other way 'round. D'ja ever notice some writers just force things to happen in their stories, no matter how wrong or how little sense they make?

What astonishes me is, re-reading these stories now, that Gerry Conway's issues are actually better than Roy's... who'd a thunk it possible???


On a more absurdist level, something hit me this week that never crossed my mind before... and it's pure "Roy Thomas" fan-boyishness. Roy, John Buscema & Joe Sinnott introduced this 7-foot-tall, incredibly strong, ultra-macho BLONDE babe-- THUNDRA. Who, we find out down the line, comes from some other world (universe, dimension, whatever). And she's got this lightning bolt as part of her costume. Ring any bells? A few years later, Roy's pal Gerry introduced POWER GIRL-- Earth-2's version of SUPERGIRL. A year later, Gerry introduced MS. MARVEL-- Marvel's version of PG (sort of). I think THUNDRA was Marvel's version of MARY MARVEL...!!! (And never forget, SUPERGIRL was DC's version of MARY MARVEL!)

I think a fight meeting between THUNDRA and POWER GIRL is long overdue...
 
Posted by Ultra Jorge on :
 
prof, Roy Thomas is a legend in the Avengers. He basically created the superhero soap opera (vs. drama). And I agree with you 100%.

The guy forced so many things that in hindsight I didn't like. I notice Stan Lee Marvel is very different than Roy's. Roy tried to make it the DC.

It's nice that he tied Timely into Marvel. But the Vision being the Human Torch? He's already based on another Timely character. It was just too much. Forced as you say. Hank Pym as YJ? That was a crazy story. I recently read it and well he does show Hank to be crazy. And he had Hank create Ultron.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
I'm thinking of reviewing ESSENTIAL F.F. Vol.6 in more detail for the Kirby yahoo group, but it was such a painful read... (and the WORST stuff in the book was by STAN, not Roy or Gerry!!!)

Roy's 1st issue, a fill-in, was pretty good --apart from the odd, annoying bit here and there which just scream "ROY THOMAS!" at you. But his 2nd issue, the 1st of his regular run, was abomniably bad. Stan already had the FF at each other's throats, as if a decade of character development had never happened. Roy upped it. Then he had Reed & Sue separated, Johnny & Crystal break up (over QUICKSILVER???). Seems to me Gerry Conway's entire run was just stuff Roy would have done already, only with somehow less-annoying dialogue. (Unbelieveable, ain't it?)

I heard Roy, eternal Golden Age fan that he is, wanted to bring back The Vision. But Stan nixed it, suggesting an android instead. It's funny how the almost-identical thing happened in JLA with The Red Tornado-- isn't it? Making him The Human Torch seemed unnecesary. How many times since have we seen writers (Claremont or Byrne, especially) tie in unrelated characters together?

I always thought Roy's Marvel was just a too-serious, morose place, compared to Stan's more light-hearted place of wonderment. (Well, if you don't count Stan's SILVER SURFER issues...I think there's a reason those didn't sell!)


By the way, I contacted Roy today, he said he always thought of Thundra as a variation on Kirby's BIG BARDA. I can see that...!
 
Posted by Ultra Jorge on :
 
Thundra and Big Barda? Cool.
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Magdalene is also a Big Barda analog.


I've been wanting to share the plans I had for my alternate-timeline fanfics, but upon re-reading my outline for the first time in a while, I had to admit to myself that it's a mess. So what I'm going to do instead is go through my plans for each individual character.

The timeline diverges at the end of Roger Stern's last issue, once the adventure in Olympus is over.

FIRST ROLL CALL (alphabetical order):

Black Knight
Captain America
Captain Marvel (Monica Rambeau)
Dr. Druid
Marrina
Namor the Sub-Mariner
She-Hulk
Thor

LATER MEMBERS:

Valkyrie (Dani Moonstar)
Yellowjacket (Rita De Mara)


BLACK KNIGHT:

- With approval from Avengers leader Captain Marvel, the Black Knight upgrades the defense systems on Hydrobase and builds a new Quinjet with not only air capabilities but also land and sea capabilities.

- She-Hulk, who had flirted with the Black Knight in one of Roger Stern's issues, asks him out on a date and the relationship blossoms from there.

- To save the soul of deceased Avenger Dr. Druid (details on this coming up in Druid's entry), the Black Knight must return to the 12th Century and face the mystical villains last seen in Steven Grant's story from the mid-220s. In the end, Druid is saved and the villains defeated, but at the cost of the destruction of the Black Knight's sword. Once back in the present, the Black Knight creates an energy sword similar to the one he used during the Bob Harras era.

Next: CAPTAIN AMERICA
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
CAPTAIN AMERICA:

- He is away from the team during the whole time that another man is wearing the Captain America costume.

- His one appearance as "The Captain" is brief one between him and Namor, who is beginning to feel out of time and believes his old friend can relate.

- He returns to the team after reclaiming his identity and costume.

CAPTAIN MARVEL:

- She becomes aware of a dormant consciousness within her, which seems to be directly connected with her powers. Taking a hiatus from the team to find answers, she ventures into deep space. Once there, she discovers that the accident which gave her super-powers resulted from the merging of Monica Rambeau with an obscure Kree entity known as the Omni-Being, a sentient cosmic force whom the Kree captured and attempted to de-program into a living weapon, chiefly through the efforts of the most cold-blooded Kree scientist of all, Dr. Minerva. The project was code-named Experiment IV and was put into motion after word got around that Mar-Vell – Monica’s predecessor -- was dying of cancer. But the Omni-Being’s will was never completely broken and it was instead exiled to the Darkforce Dimension. It was accidentally freed by a machine on Earth which Monica was standing in front of at the moment of its liberation. The Omni-Being had withdrawn so deeply into itself, that it took all this time for it to begin to assert itself within Monica’s mind. Thanks to the guidance of Eon, who also trained Mar-Vell, Monica makes peace between her own self and the Omni-Being and returns to Earth, but not before Eon informs her that she is fated to mate with another superhuman similarly endowed with cosmic powers. Once back on Earth, she is a fully confident leader, but her personal life goes to hell because of Eon's prediction, and she is unable to get a relationship started with Derek Freeman, the friendly and good-looking Federal Agent who appeared a few times in Roger Stern's Avengers stories. Eventually, Monica’s fated lover will be revealed as Wendell Vaughn alias Quasar...who was also trained by Eon.

DR. DRUID:

- First he loses a telepathic battle against Mentallo, then he awakens only to be crushed to death by the Fixer, who has downloaded his consciousness into a killer machine resembling a gigantic spider.

MARRINA:

- Despite their guarded optimism in Roger Stern's last issue, the marriage of Namor and Marrina begins to unravel as they try to adapt to the surface world.

- Namor's archenemy Attuma kills the Alpha Flight villain known as the Master of the World, and appropriates all of the Master's technology, as well as his alien Plodex creatures; he then launches an attack on Hydrobase. Marrina, being a Plodex herself, cannot keep herself from reverting to her monstrous self, but she gets in touch one final time with her better self and dies a heroine.

NEXT: NAMOR THE SUB-MARINER
 
Posted by Ultra Jorge on :
 
quote:
To save the soul of deceased Avenger Dr. Druid (details on this coming up in Druid's entry), the Black Knight must return to the 12th Century and face the mystical villains last seen in Steven Grant's story from the mid-220s. In the end, Druid is saved and the villains defeated, but at the cost of the destruction of the Black Knight's sword. Once back in the present, the Black Knight creates an energy sword similar to the one he used during the Bob Harras era
Bres and Fomor? These were good villains. Why haven't they showed up again? These are basically the demonic gods of the Celtic pantheon. You'd think with Morgan Le Fey as a somewhat major villain we'd see them all back!

Bres is the celtic loki and better yet isn't tied to a specific hero like loki is with Thor.

They have connection with Spider-Woman, the Black Knight, Dr. Druid, the Falcon, and now New Avengers Luke Cage and Iron Fist.

You'd think Excalibur would fight these villains!
 
Posted by Ultra Jorge on :
 
Stealth, I like tying Monica to the Kree and Marvels but not with the "dormant consciousness within her".

I like the idea of Attuma taking over the Plodex technology! Dangerous! Combine two somewhat boring villains into one. I admit the Master isn't as boring but having Attuma with that kind of technology is much more interesting!
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Thanks for the feedback, Jorge. I look forward to reading your thoughts on the rest of the entries. I'll admit the dormant consciousness is not the best idea, but I couldn't think of any other halfway believable way that she would have been motivated to finally search for the source of her powers. I'm sure that if Stern hadn't been fired and then blacklisted, he would have covered that eventually, maybe in a Captain Marvel limited series or one-shot special, but I can only speculate what he might have come up with.


NAMOR THE SUB-MARINER:

- Enraged by the death of Marrina, Namor challenges Attuma to a fight-to-the-death -- at the end, Namor stabs Attuma with the villain's own weapon, and shouts a bitterly triumphant "IMPERIUS REX!!"

- Now feeling that he has no reason to remain on the surface world, as well as wanting to prevent the Atlanteans from turning on each other in the wake of their ruler's sudden death, Namor proclaims himself King of Atlantis and bids an icy farewell to the Avengers.

- Later, Namor is manipulated by his court into searching for the Serpent Crown and using its power to conquer the surface world -- inevitably, he and his former teammates battle each other. (Yes, I know that's a similar plot to the mega-crossover Atlantis Attacks, but this is a different timeline in which Atlantis Attacks happened much differently; at the very least, that means we don't get Byrne's nauseating Namor-the-Yuppie.)

Next: SHE-HULK
 
Posted by Ultra Jorge on :
 
Stealth, and other Hulk fans. Hercules appears in Incredible Hulk #107 and is written quite well!

Click Here For A SpoilerHerc and Angel feel guilty over fighting the Hulk over in the Champions days. They also don't appear to happy with the current Marvel status quo. They join the Hulk! The Hulk doesn't believe them and throws down on Hercules. Herc didn't fight back! He took a few hard blows and then the Hulk realized he isn't lying. It was impressive.

[ June 22, 2007, 07:45 PM: Message edited by: Ultra Jorge ]
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
Ummm... Jorge...Re: "Hulk and Angel feel guilty over fighting the Hulk over in the Champions days. They also don't appear to happy with the current Marvel status quo. "

Angel (No More Archangel, it seems) doesn't exactly join up willingly - he gets shanghaied by Cho and doesn't get much of a choice. Herc does too - but, like Namora, he decides to do it anyway.

 
Posted by Ultra Jorge on :
 
Reboot, fixed I think. [Smile]
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Thanks for the recommendation. I'll browse through it the next time I'm at the comic shop.


SHE-HULK:

Her relationship with the Black Knight gets stronger after she accidentally takes a villain's life during the battle in the 12th Century; the Black Knight knows a lot about taking lives because of the years he spent fighting in the Crusades, and he helps her deal with it.

She-Hulk helps her best friend, retired Avenger the Wasp...(WARNING: Fans of the Wasp may be bothered by what follows)...after she discovers that the Wasp has had a drug habit since getting involved in the fashion world.

She-Hulk makes a new friend in the female Yellowjacket; more details about this in the upcoming Yellowjacket entry.

She-Hulk and the Black Knight leave the East Coast Avengers to join the West Coast Avengers, partly because She-Hulk misses California and partly for reasons which I'll cover in the upcoming Valkyrie entry.

THOR:

Leads the team while Captain Marvel is in outer space; reluctantly (and without telling the rest of the team), he accepts Dr. Doom's offer to supply the team with the necesarry technology to travel to the 12th Century; naturally, this would have had repercussions, but I never got around to figuring out what they would be.

After Captain Marvel returns, the Avengers are caught up in a war between Asgard and Olympus, which turns out to have been a result of both pantheons being manipulated by the Enchantress (disguised as Hera) and, of course, by Loki. And it goes without saying that Hercules gets involved, too; so does Prometheus, the Titan who helped the Avengers in Roger Stern's Olympus storyarc.

In the aftermath of the Asgard-Olympus War, Thor must stay behind to help rebuild Asgard. His replacement in the Avengers is the all-new Valkyrie, formerly known as Dani Moonstar.

Next: VALKYRIE (DANI MOONSTAR)
 
Posted by Set on :
 
quote:
She-Hulk helps her best friend, retired Avenger the Wasp...(WARNING: Fans of the Wasp may be bothered by what follows)...after she discovers that the Wasp has had a drug habit since getting involved in the fashion world.
It might better fit the character to have any drug issues or whatever be related more to her Avengers responsibilities. Something as simple as stimulants to get the level of performance that she thinks she needs, with lives depending on her and such.

Less 'spoiled Naomi Campbell supermodel on a coke-binge,' more 'Dr. Franklin needs some chemical 'help' to fit that third surgery in today...'

It always seemed to me that she took her responsibilities a lot more seriously than people took her, and I could see her developing a bit of a complex about that, with people looking up to Captain America, Iron Man and Thor and looking down at her, every bit as much a founding Avenger.

quote:
She-Hulk makes a new friend in the female Yellowjacket; more details about this in the upcoming Yellowjacket entry.
A sadly underutilized character. I've always yearned to see a Hank Pym-created Avengers team consisting of himself, Jan, Rita DeMarr-as-Yellowjacket, Scott Lang-as-Ant-Man and perhaps a few others, like Jocasta, Bill Foster-as-Goliath, Cassie Lang and various other Pym-derived superhumans.

Pym's always been the Brainiac 5 of the Avengers (far more so than Stark, who, until just recently, didn't really get into the whole 'giving other people superpowers' game). Then again the whole occasionally going nuts and building Ultron/Computo thing is another unfortunate point of similarity...

Dani Moonstar as a Valkyrie would definitely be a welcome sight, particularly if her mutant powers got 'firmed up' into one thing, rather than the various random different things she's been able to do (make scary images, make real things, make energy bows, slice vegetables, clean windows...). A little bit of Valkyrie-derived strength and toughness (if not up to full Asgardian standards, obviously), coming from those handy apples of Idunn, the same old butt-kicking attitude she always had, and the ability to project your darkest fears into you, and she'd be a fun character. Tack on a flying horse, and the ability to travel to Asgard (and, from there, to other dimensions) and she's not only a good addition to the team, but a built-in plot hook, for when the writers want to have adventures off-Earth.

Marrina and Dr. Druid dead? Yikes. Granted, they are anyway, but I liked both characters a lot. I think Marrinas marriage to Namor was senseless and sudden. Granted, that happens a lot in the real world, so perhaps it isn't unrealistic, but now I'm picturing the two of them waking up in Vegas, looking at each other, looking at the rings on their fingers and thinking, 'oh crap'...

Dr. Druid went sideways, anyway. Last I heard his powers had ramped up into crazy territory and he was becoming unusable as a character, becoming able to cause natural disasters and stuff.

Your ideas on developing Monica Rambeau sound interesting. She's also always been a favorite (I love her powers). The whole 'must mate with champion X' thing sounds kinda Byrne-esque. Carol Danvers can attest that characters with babymaking organs sometimes seem to be expected to use said organs to advance the plots of others. It might be interesting 'though to have the entity within be sentient, allowing Monica to have a running internal monologue with the entity. (Sort of like they do with Nova these days, or they did in the Marvel Boy series with his running chatter with the Kree intelligence in his ship.)
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Another Rita fan. Yay!

I see Jan's drug use starting out as a simple "when in Rome, do as the Romans," especially in a business as drug-infested as fashion, but then snowballing (no pun intended) once she had the additional responsibilities of Avengers leadership. Good observation about her taking those responsibilities more seriously than other people took her. It would also help explain her poorly motivated departure from both the leadership and the team altogether -- Roger Stern kinda screwed up there, IMO, trying to put it down purely to stress; I find it rather strange, too, that Stern never addressed the trauma from the Masters of Evil disaster and the guilt trip it must have put her on.

quote:
Originally posted by Set:
It might be interesting 'though to have the entity within be sentient, allowing Monica to have a running internal monologue with the entity

That's exactly what I intended, for the cosmic entity to be sentient. But before Monica could start conversing with it, it would have taken a long time for it to "come out of its shell" because of the torture it suffered at Dr. Minerva's hands.
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
VALKYRIE (DANI MOONSTAR):

- Among the many things I love about Dani: how self-assured she is, she's tough as nails, and she knows she has nothing to prove. She's also a strong leader, and a straight-talker with no patience for B.S.

- I see her easily rising rapidly to become Captain Marvel's second-in-command and, eventually, leader after Monica retires.

- But life is never completely smooth. She developes a brother/sister relationship with the Black Knight, but She-Hulk becomes jealous and paranoid, even though she has no reason to. So it is that Dane Whitman and Jennifer Walters switch teams to join the West Coast Avengers, because of the tension between Jen and Dani. In the long run, though, they make peace with each other.

Next: YELLOWJACKET (RITA DE MARA)

[ June 24, 2007, 08:18 PM: Message edited by: Stealth ]
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
YELLOWJACKET (RITA DE MARA):

- I don't know if the writers of Guardians of the Galaxy ever gave Rita an origin story, but here's the one I came up with -- Rita was the youngest of three childern and the only daughter; her father repaired cars, and once her and her brothers were old enough to work alongside their father, that's just what they did; her mother was in and out of hospitals due to physical and mental health problems, and died when Rita was 12. A few years later, her father and oldest brother were shot to death by a thief; her surviving brother spiraled downward into drug abuse; Rita coped by focusing on her work, taking any machine-related jobs she could find, and eventually becoming an expert in all things mechanical; frustrated with the low pay for her work, she began taking illegal jobs because they paid better. She had also been obsessed with costumed people, heroes and villains alike, particularly Yellowjacket because, "I thought I would never be as glamorous as the Wasp or the Scarlet Witch, but Yellowjacket's outfit was kind of androgynous, and that seemed attainable." So it was that she stole the Yellowjacket costume as we saw in Avengers # 264, and subsequently joined the Masters of Evil, but she quickly realized that she was surrounded by people far more evil than she could ever be.

Wanting to redeem herself, she breaks out of jail and breaks into Hydrobase, telling the Avengers she wants to be in their custody, and offers to do maintenance work on Hydrobase. To prove she's sincere, she helps the Avengers track down and defeat the Fixer.

The Avengers succeed at getting the Comission on Super-Human activities to grant them custody of Rita, mainly because Gyrich is no longer involved, having been humiliated and thrown in jail after a sex-and-drugs scandal.

Rita and Jen become friends, and this helps Rita and Janet make peace with each other. Eventually Rita follows in the footsteps of many other former criminals and becomes an Avenger.

At a party welcoming Valkyrie to the Avengers, Rita (who has been given a glamorous makeover by Janet) meets Scott Lang, the current Ant-Man; they start a relationship (and Scott is especially glad that his daughter Cassie finally has a mother figure in her life.)

But Moonstone forms a new Masters of Evil, and they kidnap Scott and Cassie in order to blackmail Rita into betraying the Avengers. In the end, the new Masters are defeated without any harm done to Scott and Cassie, and the happy family goes on with their lives.

Next: AND WHAT ABOUT THE WEST COAST AVENGERS?

[ June 24, 2007, 08:19 PM: Message edited by: Stealth ]
 
Posted by Ultra Jorge on :
 
I like Rita as YJ as well. Anyone but Hank as YJ I am happy with. [Smile]

I always wanted to see one of the New Mutants join the Avengers. Sunspot, Dani, or Cannonball were always my picks to join. In that order.

The Black Knight while always flying under the rader is just a romance magnet isn't he. He's one of the few characters I see you can easily work into a romance. Wasp, Sersi, Crystal, She-Hulk, Dani, Tigra, heck even Captain Marvel(Monica).
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
To me, the secret of the Black Knight's sex appeal is that he's boyish without being childish.


Wrapping up the imaginary stories, we have...

AND WHAT ABOUT THE WEST COAST AVENGERS?

The Englehart-era WCA continuity stays mostly intact in this timeline, with a few exceptions such as the Wasp not joining the WCA. None, I repeat, NONE of the Byrne stories occur in this timeline. The East Coast continuity converges with the West Coast continuity right after Hydrobase is destroyed by Attuma and the Plodex, Marrina dies, and Namor quits.

Needing somewhere to stay until they either find or build a new base, the East Coasters crowd into the West Coast Compound.

But strange things start happening. Security breaches become common, leading to the deaths of Tigra and Wonder Man (despite the efforts of Captain Marvel trying to save Wonder Man with her energy-based powers, she ends up floating in outer space unconscious after Wonder Man explodes.) The investigation appears to point the finger at the Vision, until they catch an intruder who looks like the Vision in his human guise. But he's a red herring. When the teammates let down their guard, the Vision suddenly turns on his teammates, showing his capabilities as a one-man army! But it's not really the Vision, it's the Vision possessed by the Fixer (remember, he's now a disembodied cyberspace entity who can possess any kind of machine)! Realizing the team needs all the muscle it can get, Hank Pym (WARNING: those who prefer Hank Pym in plain clothes will probably not like what follows) becomes Giant-Man again. But in the end, it's all down to the Vision reclaiming his identity and ejecting the Fixer's consciousness.

Feeling that he's too much of a danger to live on Earth, the Vision exiles himself to the Inhumans' refuge on the moon; the Scarlet Witch follows.

This leaves Hawkeye as a leader without a team. Luckily for him, his prayers are immediately answered: the Black Knight and She-Hulk request a transfer to the WCA, Hank decides to remain Giant-Man, and Iron Man makes an uneasy peace with Hawkeye about Iron Man's rogue behavior in the Armor Wars. Enter the new WCA!

I had only two subsequent WCA stories plotted:

- A battle against Graviton, which brings the team full circle to their first mission.

- A battle against the Leader and his Riot Squad (for those who haven't read Peter David's Hulk, the Riot Squad are a handful of survivors of a town that the Leader nuked, who gained super-powers from the Gamma radiation.)

AND FINALLY, SOME ODDS & ENDS:

- I had sketchy, unformed ideas for a grandiose space opera tying into Steve Englehart's Second Kree-Skrull War from Silver Surfer (but in this timeline, the events of the war diverge right at the point where editorial started interfering with Englehart; it also would have resolved the dangling plot thread of Firelord and Starfox's hunt for Nebula in a much better way than it was resolved during the Avengers' Post-Stern/Pre-Harras Dark Ages.

- I eventually wanted to bring some of the Harras Avengers into the team, mainly Sersi and Crystal (the Black Knight still being in the WCA) although I didn't work it out much beyond that.

- I had vague ideas for a cosmic story where Captain Marvel and Quasar have a newborn son and they are all menaced by an unfamiliar villain who turns out to be Mantis' prematurely grown son under the mind-manipulations of Moondragon. Captain Marvel comes THIS close to killing Moondragon, and the baldie blowhard finally learns a lesson in humility. The one scene I pictured very clearly was the last one, where Moondragon changes into street clothes and puts on a wig, and joins Crystal and Luna for a walk in the park, saying it's time for Heather Douglas to rejoin the everyday world.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"I had sketchy, unformed ideas for a grandiose space opera tying into Steve Englehart's Second Kree-Skrull War from Silver Surfer (but in this timeline, the events of the war diverge right at the point where editorial started interfering with Englehart"

Still a sore point with me, whenever I think back on the period-- and more confusing since Steve's descriptions on his website sometimes seem completely at odds with what I read about back when it happened. (Part of me suspects that Steve is just SUCH a nice guy that he has selective memory and tries to look back on things as nicer than they really were.)

Care to elaborate?
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
I would have kept all of Englehart's setup (the first 14 issues and the Annual) and then introduced a Third Column: Nebula (whose original goal, in Roger Stern's story, was conquering the remains of the Skrull Empire) returning with a stronger private army than before, plus a weapon of cosmic-level power, which would have killed Firelord and mortally wounded Starfox. Then Nebula would have used it to cause several casualties for both the Kree and the Skrulls. Meanwhile, the Surfer would have flown to Earth with Starfox's body, and called upon any available super-heroes for help. The Eternals of both Earth and Titan would have joined the fray, and I'm not really sure where it would have gone from there.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Stealth, I like a lot of your ideas for where the Avengers would go after Stern’s run. I like tying Monica more into the Kree and the Marvels, and eventually a love interest with Quasar.

Love that the Black Knight would eventually get the sword he had under Harras. I, of course, prefer him with Crystal, so I hope he’d eventually get there along the timeline. Many of you know he’s one of my favorites, if not my favorite. I’ve never roleplayed comic stuff before, but I guess if I did, I would want to be the Black Knight.

Don’t mind Dr. Druid’s death/exit and prefer it actually.

Like your Sub-Mariner outline a real lot. I really like the idea of Attuma using the Master’s tech. Attuma has always appealed to me because he has a great visual and a great history, and with the right writer could really have some great stories opposite Namor. The Master, on the other hand, just feels lame to me.

I’ve always said Dani should be the new Valkrye and have a much more prominent role in the MU with the Avengers and with a solo series (it could have such a profound underlying theme of death). Really enjoy that idea. And I love a Dani/Dane friendship that could develop, with a brother/sister nature. Those friendships are a strong tradition in the Avengers that are always a delight to read when they develop naturally.

Not sure about the Wasp drug bit, but I wonder if it could make for a good story where Hank could help her, since he too understood what it was like when you think the Big 3 (Cap, Iron Man, Thor) may be looking down at you.

I’m a bit of a Rita fan too, and I really wish she could have assumed the Yellowjacket identity from then onwards (and Hank would never have seen it again).

Gyrich ‘sex and drugs scandal’: [Big Grin] [LOL]

WCA
I love Hank’s return as Giant-Man as much you Stealth, so I like it here especially. (Still give it my highest recommendation to HWW [Smile] !)

Love the Clint/Tony dynamic, so this would be great to read about here.

Hopefully Wonder Man’s story wouldn’t be over!

I really like how you’ve amped the Fixer into his all bad-ass status, as he was around the early Thunderbolts issues. He could make a great nemesis.

If I wrote Avengers, I’d be tempted to add Mantis to the team myself for another cosmic story. I love the character too much!

Nebula’s continued presence would be a welcome addition too as an antagonist. But I’m a big Firelord fan! I like to keep him around as a sometime ally/sometime antagonist to the heroes.

Your timeline seems fun and incorporates the spirit of the Stern era, moving it forward instead of simply cutting it off as it happened in 'real life'. So many of Stern's themes could be continued while keeping things new, fresh and exciting, and I think you'd capture that really well. You should start a fanfic! [Smile] You'd have one reader right here!

PS – looking forward to reading about my man Herc!
 
Posted by Ultra Jorge on :
 
And ofcourse I do not like Hank becoming Giant-Man but it doesn't bother me as much as YJ. Ant-Man and Giant-Man I like. (I dont even like Goliath as a codename)

I always loved the original Clint/Tony dynamic. Clint had to deal with two founders serving under him. But Tony certainly would challenge him.

Re: Mantis/Nebula

I had a Cosmic Avengers fanfic which centered around Monica, Black Knight, Hercules, Starfox, and Firelord. Others would guest star like the Forgotten One, Mantis, Moondragon, Quasar, etc.

I think having these characters in a series based on Titan would rock! Space opera fun!
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"Your timeline seems fun and incorporates the spirit of the Stern era, moving it forward instead of simply cutting it off as it happened in 'real life'."

This got me thinking, this sort of C*** has happened a lot of times over the years. One can imagine how things might have gone on if something abrupt and bad hadn't suddenly happened. For example...

Steve Englehart & Gene Colan's run on DR. STRANGE. What made this most jarring was that it happened exactly halfway into their latest 4-parter. Part 3 comes along, and suddenly, it's Marv Wolfman (new writer AND editor) and Alfredo Alcala. I could have stood Alcala-- but the next issue, he was gone, and there was a rotating-roster, with Rudy Nebres as the focus. It was a mess...

Gerry Conway & Ross Andru's run on AMAZING SPIDER-MAN was never the most "fun" book in the world... but by the time Pete went to Paris to find a kidnapped JJJ (you wonder why he bothered-- heh) things had FINALLY gotten decent between Pete & MJ. The, editorial interference, the Gwen Stacy clone, Conway's angry departure, and Len Wein turning MJ into a typical "bitch" girlfriend. I actually stopped reading the book 6 months into Len's run...
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
Not sure about the Wasp drug bit, but I wonder if it could make for a good story where Hank could help her, since he too understood what it was like when you think the Big 3 (Cap, Iron Man, Thor) may be looking down at you.

Wow. I must confess that never occured to me, and you're absolutely right. And that would help Janet and Hank's relationship evolve from ex-spouses to friends.

quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid: Gyrich ‘sex and drugs scandal’: [Big Grin] [LOL]
Glad you liked that one, I'm very proud of it. I wonder if we should all try to imagine all the details, with each of us trying to top each other for sheer outrageousness.

quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
Nebula’s continued presence would be a welcome addition too as an antagonist. But I’m a big Firelord fan! I like to keep him around as a sometime ally/sometime antagonist to the heroes.

Originally, I thought it would be Starfox who dies first and far more graphically, but then I thought it would work better dramatically and make more sense for it to be Firelord, since he had a much deeper vendetta against Nebula. And I also thought it would be more powerful to have Starfox not die right away, so that there could be a scene where he dies in the arms of his father, Mentor. But it's not inconceivable to bring back Firelord somehow.

quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
Your timeline seems fun and incorporates the spirit of the Stern era, moving it forward instead of simply cutting it off as it happened in 'real life'. So many of Stern's themes could be continued while keeping things new, fresh and exciting, and I think you'd capture that really well. You should start a fanfic! [Smile] You'd have one reader right here!

Why, thank you, Cobie. I do have some Avengers fanfics in mind, and I'll post a link in this thread once I have one rolling.

quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid: PS – looking forward to reading about my man Herc!
Um...I'm not sure I understand what you mean, unless maybe I'm forgetting something I had posted before. I do love Hercules, though, and I'm sure I'll write something about him sometime.

quote:
Originally posted by Ultra Jorge:
I always loved the original Clint/Tony dynamic. Clint had to deal with two founders serving under him. But Tony certainly would challenge him.

Yeah, and that would have been especially cool in the aftermath of Armor Wars. Layton & Michelinie did such a great job of bringing Tony so close to the edge. But they knew where to stop, whereas other writers keep making Tony go over the edge.

quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
Gerry Conway & Ross Andru's run on AMAZING SPIDER-MAN was never the most "fun" book in the world... but by the time Pete went to Paris to find a kidnapped JJJ (you wonder why he bothered-- heh) things had FINALLY gotten decent between Pete & MJ. The, editorial interference, the Gwen Stacy clone, Conway's angry departure, and Len Wein turning MJ into a typical "bitch" girlfriend. I actually stopped reading the book 6 months into Len's run...

Oooooh, behind-the-scenes dirt! Give us the details, Prof, please.

And re: Len Wein, I've always wondered why, during the Bronze Age, Wein did such good stories for DC on Swamp Thing and JLA, but such bad ones for Marvel (although his Hulk run is fun in a mindless way, AND he brought back my beloved DOC SAMSON!)
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"his Hulk run is fun in a mindless way"

Len hit the ground running on HULK, spending his first several issues finishing up some long-long-running subplots established by several previous writers. In effect, he wrote the "climax" of a movie that had been going on for about 2 years before he got there. It was GREAT. "Death Knell" "The Day of The Devastator"., etc. But then... he seemed to run out of ideas real fast. Then Joe Staton came on, first as inker, then doing finishes over Trimpe layouts, then doing finishes over SAL BUSCEMA layouts. It was really, really bad. Staton grew on me over the years, but his work on that book was just "wrong", especially as I felt the ONE character in the entire Marvel U. that Sal did not know how to draw was The Hulk. I quit after HULK #200. When Roger Stern got on as writer 2 years later, they got much better inkers to work with Sal.


Between me and my best friend Jim, Len was a longtime "joke" as a writer. He always seemed to start out with a bang-- then peter out so quickly, he just didn't have staying power. We were introduced to him mostly via MARVEL TEAM-UP, a book whose "formula" for the longest time seemed to be, "2 heroes cross paths, misunderstanding, big fight, then they talk and figure out who the real villain is, chase him down, climax. Which let no room for any "character" scenes, and always made heroes of the Marvel U. seem like IDIOTS.

Following the chaos that overwhelmed the 2nd half of Mike Friedrich's run on IRON MAN, Len took over and his 1st issue was a breath of fresh air. Within 6 months Bill Mantlo was doing fill-ins, then Archie Goodwin, Gerry Conway, etc. etc... Mantlo eventually got the book (his 1st regular assignment, I believe), apparently BY DEFAULT. Took him a long while to warm up. And JUST when he was starting to kick ass... Michelinie & Layton pulled a coup and kicked him off so they could do it. I don't care HOW good M&L were-- it was NO way to get a book!

Len got on the FF, but was gone in about 4 issues. When Roy left the 2nd time, Len came back for a longer run... barely. He started a year-long story where the FF break up... and then LEFT! His buddy Marv had to finish it.

Len pulled the exact same stunt on GREEN LANTERN. After Hal was in space for a year, Len came in and decided to do another "back to basics" schtick with Hal on Earth involved with Carol (bitch queen) Ferris. She gave Hal an ultimatum: her or the Corps. The IDIOT picked her. As if to shove his mistake in his face, the Guardians replaced him with John Stewart, who he really didn't like at the time. Dave Gibbons, fresh from DOCTOR WHO, had wanted to do "space adventures" (I just found this out recently). He got tired of the Earthbound crap real quick, and left. Len decided, oh, if HE's gonna leave, I might as well, too. Right in the middle of his story. Englehart & Staton came in... and did such a good job, sales DOUBLED. Take THAT, Len!


I don't know too much about what really went on behind-the-scenes on ASM, except back then, I read that a "group" of editors had looked over Spidey's future, and were felt they were in a rut. They didn't want to marry him off yet, and they'd already had him & Gwen break up too many times. So, they decided to KILL her. It wasn't Conway's idea-- but fans back then didn't know what an "editor" did, so Conway took the brunt of the HATE MAIL. Decades later, i found out it was really all John Romita's idea!!! He wanted to pay tribute to Milton Caniff, who'd bumped off Steve Canyon's girlfriend in the papers, and fans had talked about it for months. Lovely. Personally... I suspect (but can't prove) that Romita was MJ's biggest fan... and with Stan (who shoved Gwen down fans' throat for years) out of the way, this was his chance to finally get Pete & MJ back together. Sadly, only a few months after Gwen & the Goblin got bumped, Romita left the book. (GRRRRRRRRRRR.) Ross Andru could have REALLY used Romita's inks. Andru & Giacoia took almost 2 years to get the main characters to look right-- and then Esposito came in and MURDERED the art. (Yeah-- I know there's a lot of Andru & Esposito fans. I like some of what they've done. But that run on ASM was a big part of why I stopped reading the book.)

Anyway... Stan claims he knew nothing about Gwen's murder, and after it happened, asked, "Can't we bring her back?" 2 years later, Conway got orders to do just that. Result: Gwen Stacy clone. I don't know if I actually read this anywhere, but Gerry leaving Marvel the way he did at the time he did always suggested to me that he was tired of editors interefering with his storylines.

A year later, having been a writer & editor at DC, Gerry came back to be the new Editor at Marvel. CHAOS erupted. Almost every book in the line was disrupted, longtime creative teams were replaced (some of them by Conway himself, who wanted to make extra money as a freelancer in his spare time-- is it a conflict of interest to hire yourself?). He drove Steve Englehart so crazy on THE AVENGERS that Steve quit Marvel, and planned to quit comics altogether!!! (Poor fool-- if he'd stuck around a few more months, Conway would have been gone...)

The whole situation has caused me to joke over the years that "REVENGE is no basis for an editorial regime."

Again, I have no evidence to back this up, except for the comics that came out at the time and what happened to so many of them. Marvel was NEVER the same after Conway's Editorial period. About a year after he left, Jim Shooter took over. Need I say more?
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Stealth, glad you like the Jan/Hank idea. The more I think about it, but more I'd love to see you do that story!

Oh, and my Herc comment was supposed to be Jorg in reply to my anticipation of the upcoming Herc moments in Hulk.

Prof, as always, I find your insider knowlegdge of the industry fascinating. As you know, I have a nostalgia and affection for that entire era of Spider-Man stories (though I do know many of them are weak), mainly because I used to reread them constantly as a kid. I think you're right on the money though about JR/Stan and Gwen/MJ.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
To make up for the "permanent" absence of Gwen, Stan introduced a new blonde romantic interest in the early SPIDER-MAN newspaper strips-- ironically, full art by John Romita. The first time I met Romita-- in his office (!!) he was working on the strip, and I told him I wished he was instead doing the book, which I considered the "real" Spider-Man. (Even if MORE people over the last 3 decades have probably read the newspaper version. I guess the same goes for those Grantray-Lawrence & Krantz Films cartoons. I believe they contrbuted more to Spidey's worldwide popularity than the comic-books themselves ever did.)
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
My first (brief) exposure to Gwen & MJ was in ASM #55-56 (what luck, picking up 2 issues in a row-- though both ended on cliffhangers-- grrrr). I didn't really get a "feel" of Gwen until I read a MT reprint of ASM #31-- the day Pete started college. She came across as so self-centered, she just struck me as the kind of girl I'd try to avoid if I met her in real life. Sometime later, I read a reprint of ASM #43-- and completely fell for MJ.

Amazingly, when I was in art school, for 2 months there were 2 girls in my classes almost exactly like the early-Romita era Gwen & MJ. I wish I'd been listening to my instincts more back then... (In real life, "my" MJ married somebody else, who made her MISERABLE.)
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by profh0011: I felt the ONE character in the entire Marvel U. that Sal did not know how to draw was The Hulk.
I feel the opposite way, I think Sal's Hulk is the definitive "Savage Green Hulk" -- he always had a flair for monsters. I also think that his first few years on Hulk rival his early issues of Defenders as his best work.

quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
When Roger Stern got on as writer 2 years later, they got much better inkers to work with Sal.

Oh, yes. Sal with Ernie Chan inks...I'm fangirling just thinking about it.

quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
He (Len Wein) always seemed to start out with a bang-- then peter out so quickly, he just didn't have staying power.

What about his JLA run? I think that was consistently excellent, and since the book was bi-monthly for most of his run (which I find bizarre, since sales increased during his run) that limited the number of issues, and probably kept him from losing steam.

I haven't read his Green Lantern, and don't intend to. I've always felt that he did his best writing in the 1970s, and should have stuck to editing in the 1980s, seeing as he sheperded New Teen Titans, All Star Squadron, and Batman & the Outsiders, PLUS he hired Alan Moore to write Swamp Thing v 2 (Karen Berger took over the book shortly thereafter, but it was Len who hired Alan.)

quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
Gerry leaving Marvel the way he did at the time he did always suggested to me that he was tired of editors interefering with his storylines.

And his subsequent editorial stint brings to mind the old saying about seeing in ourselves the things we dislike about others.

quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
Stealth, glad you like the Jan/Hank idea. The more I think about it, but more I'd love to see you do that story!

Yeah, I think that would fit neatly into my revised plans for Avengers fanfics. I'll keep the fanfics' status updated in this thread.

[ June 28, 2007, 08:51 PM: Message edited by: Stealth ]
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
I like Sal's Hulk run too, but I think his best work was his really long stint on Spectaculur Spider-Man. I think Marvel really gave him a tremendous amount of freedom there. I generally still think of SSM as 'the Sal Buscema Spidey book'.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"I feel the opposite way, I think Sal's Hulk is the definitive "Savage Green Hulk" -- he always had a flair for monsters. I also think that his first few years on Hulk rival his early issues of Defenders as his best work."

Well, that's how it goes. My own opinion was formed reading Sal's long run on THE DEFENDERS. When he-- of all people-- replaced Herb Trimpe, I was flabbergasted. When Sal then went on to quite possibly set the all-time record for most issues drawn by anybody of THE HULK... !!! (It was kinda like Ross Andru setting the record for issues of AMAZING SPIDER-MAN. Not sure he still holds it. Anybody know?)


"Oh, yes. Sal with Ernie Chan inks...I'm fangirling just thinking about it."

Yeah, late in Wein's run. Ironically, I got those as back-issues. After, there was Alfredo Alcala, Joe Rubinstein (has Joe EVER done a bad book in 30 years??? I haven't seen one!!!), Joe Sinnott, Bob McLeod (!!!), Jack Abel, Mike Esposito (during the brief period when someone got on his case to do better work than he had been doing and stop spending so much time at the race track). But then Sal started inking himself, and by that point, Sal was no longer what he'd been in the late 60's.


"What about his JLA run?"

Would you believe? I've read almost none of his JLA run!


"I've always felt that he...should have stuck to editing in the 1980s"

I felt the same way! Len's run as editor of BATMAN remains, to me, the LAST time I genuinely liked the character. When that BASTARD Denny O'neil took over after the CRISIS, things progressively went to HELL and kept getting worse for the next 20 straight years. (You see the strong, violent feelings that man has inspired in me? GRRRRRRRRRRRRRRR...)


"And his subsequent editorial stint brings to mind the old saying about seeing in ourselves the things we dislike about others."

WELL SAID!


I actually quit buying THE DEFENDERS for several issues when Gerry, Keith Giffen & Klaus Janson (AUGH!!!) took over. But after Conway left, I gave the book another chance... before long, Janson was replaced by different inkers, and I suddenly noticed that Giffen was actually doing interesting work. (It was interesting to note, after-the-fact, that Conway & Giffen went straight from JUSTICE SOCIETY OF AMERICA to DEFENDERS-- each company's "#2" super-team. Too bad they didn't bring Wally Wood with them...!) When Dave Kraft finally took over (seemed he worked with a lot of other writers for the first several months), I was shocked that I began to like the book even MORE than when Steve Gerber & Sal Buscema had been doing it. (Damn shame Keith screwed himself up so much around then.) Kraft & Giffen-- and Kraft & Hannigan-- remain my all-time fave DEFENDERS issues. Too bad it didn't last...
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"I generally still think of SSM as 'the Sal Buscema Spidey book'."

Good example of what I was talking about before. Compare Sal & Mike Esposito in the 1st issue (written by Gerry Conway) and the work around #19-22. Mike's inks are MUCH better at that point! I hate when I know someone isn't doing work as good as they're capable of.

Same thing happened on ASM, between the beginning and end of Len's run, Mike went from MURDERING Ross Andru's art to doing really decent work. He slacked off again within 2 years, but for awhile there, I didn't mind seeing his name on books anymore.
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
I like Sal's Hulk run too, but I think his best work was his really long stint on Spectaculur Spider-Man. I think Marvel really gave him a tremendous amount of freedom there. I generally still think of SSM as 'the Sal Buscema Spidey book'.

Sal did some very sharp and energetic storytelling during that time; unfortunately, J.M. De Matteis' scripts turned me off more often than not.

quote:
profh0011: "What about his JLA run?"

Would you believe? I've read almost none of his JLA run!

A good, and reasonably priced, place to start is the Crisis on Multiple Earths Volume 3 trade. It reprints four Bronze Age JLA/JSA team-ups, three of which are written by Len. He brought back the Seven Soldiers of Victory, the Freedom Fighters, and Sandy the Golden Boy.

quote:
profh0011: "I've always felt that he...should have stuck to editing in the 1980s"

I felt the same way! Len's run as editor of BATMAN remains, to me, the LAST time I genuinely liked the character.

I can't believe I forgot about that run. Solid scripts by Doug Moench, wonderful art by Don Newton and, later, Tom Mandrake (Gene Colan was past his prime by then, though) I'm gonna have to re-read those issues.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"Gene Colan was past his prime by then, though"

Oh my God! Don't let the fanatics at the Gene Colan yahoo group hear you suggest such a thing!!!

[Smile]

Don Newton remains one of my favorite Bat-artists. In an interview with him printed recently, I was delighted to learn that HIS 2 favorite inkers for his work were also mine-- Dan Adkins and Alfredo Alcala!

Paul Gulacy also made his Bat-debut on a 2-parter during this time. Stunning work. After the CRISIS, Gulacy's occasion Bat-stories were always THE highlight for me, especially the 5-parter "Prey" in LEGENDS OF THE DARK KNIGHT #11-15. (A much-later Moench-Gulacy collaboration, "War", I'm afraid was "poisoned" by the mid-90's degenration of the character and the series in general. I was shocked that those 2 guys could work on a story that bad, that lacking in any kind of common sense or rationality.)


While I liked Gene's Bat-work, I was never as thrilled as I'd have liked to be. However, I was happily surprised when Gene wound up doing VASTLY better work years later on other projects, notably THE CURSE OF DRACULA and PREDATOR: HELL AND HOT WATER (both from Dark Horse, both printed from Gene's pencils!!). Gene continues to do commission work, among the most stunning stuff I've ever seen from him. Pretty damn good for a guy who had such serious eye problems...
 
Posted by Pariscub on :
 
Batman's in the Avengers now? [Razz]
 
Posted by He Who Wanders on :
 
Well, why not? Everybody else has been? [Wink]
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
LOL

I hope Batman has a secret plan to oust Iron Man.
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Oh. My. God.

[ROTFLMAO]

Bendis does it again!

Click Here For A SpoilerFirst She-Ultron, now She-Carnage. Is Dave Sim a Bendis fan, and/or vice-versa?

[ August 30, 2007, 11:15 PM: Message edited by: Stealth ]
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Sorry, Frank Cho fans.

quote:
There are two major challenges for me doing the Mighty Avengers: 1) Too much to draw and 2) mismanagement of my time. Brian wrote some of the most exciting scripts I’ve read in years. His scripts were wonderful. Tons of action and intrigue. Army of Iron Men fighting Avengers in grand aerial combat. City blocks getting leveled. Sweeping cityscape visuals amongst the chaos. They were awesome scripts. The downside was that I had to draw them all.
Come on, Frank, tell the truth -- you left because you couldn't deny anymore that each of Bendis's scripts was worse than the previous one.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Well, Bendis' Mighty Avengers continues to be awful--complete with Sentry's wife being killed off almost off-handidly with about zero emotional impact to the reader. Black Widow stands around yelling at people but essentially doing nothing. Ares yells a lot. Hank Pym does something great for once, but Bendis continues to try and convince us that everyone hates him (and fails).

On the other hand, New Avengers has moments where I can really get into it. Obviously, b/c Bendis loves these characters more and is better at 'street-level' types of stories. I like the Hood and I like what Bendis is trying to do there. I also like the Dr. Strange/Night Nurse romance.

Some people may be angry at Tigra's beat-down though, and I'll be able to see where they're coming from. My biggest complaints about Bendis here are (1) he's making Luke too much of a 'Mary Sue' at times and it could end up giving Luke the 'Wolverine Effect' (re: readers will hate him because Bendis tells us to love him so much) and (2) editorial mistakes, which are rampant at both Marvel and DC are distracting (the Griffin was killed by Scourge, etc.). I am glad he's doing something with some of those villains, but I'd like him to treat most of them with some respect (still too early to tell if he is).
 
Posted by Set on :
 
Huh, I like Bagley's art there. Not enough to buy something written by the BiMBo, but still.

As noted by a poster on that other forum, he does have a fondness with making all of the big bad villains evil wimmin. I also wonder what Bendis' Dr. Doom will look like with bosums.

As long as he doesn't introduce a female Kingpin (Queenpin?), I suppose...
 
Posted by Ultra Jorge on :
 
I agree with Cobalt. What has Black Widow done? Pose? I can't explain the ways I hate the Sentry. They have no idea what to do with him yet they keep him around.

I agree about Luke being overused by Bendis. Suddenly he's the leader. Problem I have with that is Luke has never really been a leader (Iron Fist neither).

I do like the Hood stuff but I don't care for the Tigra beatdown.

And I don't hate Hank Pym at all. I love HANK. I hate Yellowjacket. [Smile]
 
Posted by Set on :
 
Interesting choice of 'big bad.' The Hood.

I guess the Fabulous Frog-Man was busy and Batroc ze Leaper was too top-tier to be a Bendis Avengers villain.
 
Posted by Ultra Jorge on :
 
I heard he wanted to use Ace but Tom Brevoort objected (finally).
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ultra Jorge:
I heard he wanted to use Ace but Tom Brevoort objected (finally).

[ROTFLMAO]

Oh, how I [Love] love [Love] the Marvel Universe Appendix. [Big Grin]

I've seen posts on other forums where even Bendis fans are saying that Mighty Avengers is crap!

[ November 06, 2007, 10:03 PM: Message edited by: Stealth ]
 
Posted by DrakeB3004 on :
 
Tigra's beatdown didn't bother me as much as Wolverine having his privates shot off. it just seemed... gratuitous.

My only problem with the Tigra beatdown though was that Tigra should've been able to put up a better fight.
 
Posted by Ultra Jorge on :
 
That's my problem with the fight DrakeB3004. Tigra is always shown as a pushover. I think she can give Spidey & even Wolverine a tough time. The Hood? eh.

So I haven't read it but the Illuminati #5 has a big reveal. eh. [Smile]

Stealth, I think the Marvel Universe Appendix is the coolest comic site around! I don't count messageboards/forums like this one...which would be #1 [Smile]
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Jorge, have you read any of the Marvel Legacy specials, covering the obscure and the (sometimes understandably) forgotten of the 60s, 70s, 80s, and 90s?

If you missed them, like I did, there's good news: all four of them are now collected in a trade, which I bought today and have been enjoying tremendously. There's some overlap with the Appendix, but there's a lot of stuff that even the Appendix doesn't have.
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
This quote from Jorge in the Last Defenders thread lit up a light bulb in my mind:

quote:
Originally posted by Ultra Jorge:
Casey like Geoff is good incorporating the history of a team yet taking it to new places. At least he talks like he's good at it. [Wink] Let's find out!

This skill, of course, was most notably demonstrated in the pages of Avengers by Roger Stern, especially in Stern's last 30 issues.

And so, while I don't have much interest in Last Defenders, that mini-series could be seen as a testing ground for how Casey might write the Avengers in the present day, something which many people have been calling for ever since the first Earths Mightiest Heroes mini-series three years ago.

Now, personally, I think Casey is an overrated writer with an obnoxious public persona and a gooey nostalgia streak where the Avengers are concerned. BUT...I would be willing to give him a fair chance to see if he might surprise me and turn out to be the next Roger Stern.

So my question is, do people think Casey has the right stuff? And once Last Defenders is over sometime next year I would ask that question again.

[ December 17, 2007, 11:02 PM: Message edited by: Stealth ]
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
I've never read anything by him that I've enjoyed. But I actively stopped buying his stuff after the first few times, including his X-Men run.
 
Posted by Ultra Jorge on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Stealth:
Jorge, have you read any of the Marvel Legacy specials, covering the obscure and the (sometimes understandably) forgotten of the 60s, 70s, 80s, and 90s?

If you missed them, like I did, there's good news: all four of them are now collected in a trade, which I bought today and have been enjoying tremendously. There's some overlap with the Appendix, but there's a lot of stuff that even the Appendix doesn't have.

Sorry Stealth didn't see this. I've heard of it but I haven't read them. I will get the trade thanks!
 
Posted by Ultra Jorge on :
 
So Stealth are the Last Defenders progressive enough for you?! Blah! Progressive isn't always a good thing! [Wink]
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Hope you enjoy the trade.

Despite the lame lineup and my other misgivings, I will be browsing through Last Defenders at the store without buying it.
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Amid rumors that Mighty Avengers will be cancelled later this year* after the Skrull mega-crossover foolishness is over, that book has gotten a "permanent" artist. Fresh from nearly ruining Peter David's mutant terrorists arc in X-Factor, put your hands together for...Khoi Pham!


* file under "There Is a God!"
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Finally, something positive to report:

Essential Avengers Vol. 6 is out this Wednesday, collecting the entire Celestial Madonna Saga as well as crossovers with Captain Marvel (the end of Jim Starlin's first Thanos arc) and the Fantastic Four (the wedding of Crystal and Quicksilver.) Highly recommended to anyone who hasn't read these stories or who needs to replace their old issues.
 
Posted by Ultra Jorge on :
 
You know all the hype the Kree-Skrull War gets? I wasn't really impressed that much when I got the treade.

BUT the Celestial Madonna trade? I loved it! I thought it was going to be reversed.
 
Posted by He Who Wanders on :
 
The Celestial Madonna sequence is one of my favorite Avengers story lines of all time. Steve Englehart at his prime.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Me too. It was the coolest thing ever when the Avengers team continued to get slimmer and slimmer and the danger only became greater and greater.

There's so much good about it. I just reread the whole thing less than a year ago.
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Jorge, I like the Kree-Skrull War, but I don't deny that the ending falls flat. There's potential there for some really good "What If?" stories and/or fanfics.

HWW, I agree it was Englehart in his prime, and I think Englehart in the 70s is the equivalent of Roger Stern in the 80s, Peter David in the 90s, and Geoff Johns in this decade.

Cobie, good observation about Englehart making the Avengers team shrink as the threat keeps growing; Shooter should have learned something from that, instead of putting together twenty heroes and then using them mostly as cannon fodder.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"good observation about Englehart making the Avengers team shrink as the threat keeps growing; Shooter should have learned something from that, instead of putting together twenty heroes and then using them mostly as cannon fodder."

Didn't he wind up doing that with EVERY character he wrote about?


"I like the Kree-Skrull War, but I don't deny that the ending falls flat. There's potential there for some really good "What If?" stories and/or fanfics."

I've read the entire thing 4 or 5 times over the years, and each time it impresses me LESS. Generally, I feel Neal Adams style is not as suited to superheroes-- particuarly teams-- as one might expect, and the story seems to flounder as lng as it's Earthbound. Plus, Roy Thomas' dialogue is so STIFF!!! It's like watching a bad episode of ST:TNG. The moment they leave Earth and go into space-- YEAH! It finally gets somewhere. Unfortunately, that's when Adams blew a deadline, John Buscema had to fill in, and-- according to interrviews decades after-the-fact-- the storyline was SEVERELY cut short of how it was originally intended.

It seems Neal Adams got pissed at Roy Thomas for having the temerity to have a "fill-in" artist (John Buscema, for cryin' out loud!), even though it was Adams who clearly couldn't handle the deadlines. Had one or the other done the entire story, I'm sure it would have felt better. In the long run, I feel Buscema is a MUCH better storyteller, and much better suited to the book-- a shame Stan the Editor kept yanking him away to do other things!

It's also my understanding that some of the "outer space" epics of the late 80's (90's?) were virtually designed to "make up for" what we didn't get to see way back when.


Meanwhile, I came in on Englehart's run with The Collector issue and the Zodiac, so apart from some early introductory episodes, I pretty much got to experience the "Celestial Madonna" story right as it happened. GIANT-SIZE AVENGERS #2-- full art by Dave Cockrum (!!!) remains my favorite episode of the whole thing. I wish Dave had managed to do full art on both GIANT #3 and 4.

A friend recently forwarded to me an interview Steve Englehart did for THE COMICS JOURNAL about 3 weeks after turning in his novel, following a period where he actually had no intention of ever writing comics again. His view of Marvel & DC around 1981 is disheartening, as it paints a really bleak picture of how bad both companies (especially Marvel) had become since he'd "left comics" some years before. (Of course, there was still a sort of "Golden Age" of independant companies and the Direct Market-- but after too few years, that went to heck as well, thanks to the greed & corruption of "the big two"-- these later events spelled out in another interview I read with Bill Black.)
 
Posted by Ultra Jorge on :
 
I'm always defending Shooter. I guess I first started under Stern but Shooter's back issues are the first back issues of Avengers I read.

Shooter made the team pretty small when it was Cap, Thor, Iron Man, and Wasp? [Smile]
 
Posted by He Who Wanders on :
 
It's been years since I read the Kree-Skrull War, but, as I remember, I liked the ending better than the build-up.

The early issues were all over the place. It started with the Avengers as a quartet (Vision, Wanda, Pietro, and Hawkeye-as-Goliath), then they are unceremoniously dumped in mid story to make room for The Big Three (Thor, Iron Man, and Cap), with a guest-appearance from Ant-Man that slows down the momentum of the story. It was jarring that the focus shifted to a different set of Avengers in the middle of the story.

The ending, however, has them together in an epic battle, and features a surprisingly pivotal role for Rick Jones, the perennial sidekick. It also ends with a mystery of what happened to Goliath to propel us into the next story.

I agree that Buscema was much better suited to the story line (and to the Avengers in general) than Adams. Unfortunately, it was Adams' artwork that drove the prices of those middle issues sky high as collectors items. I had to wait until Marvel published a two-issue KSW reprint in 1984 or so to read the entire story. I was glad I hadn't wasted my money.

In my opinion, Englehart did a much better job than either Thomas or Shooter of working the Avengers' cast into the story lines. This was particularly true during the Zodiac arc, when Cap is absent from the first issue (he was accused of murder and on the run in his own book), but then shows up unexpectedly and triumphantly in the second issue to bail his comrades out of a jam. Englehart also did a much better job of making me care about the characters than most other writers have.
 
Posted by Ultra Jorge on :
 
Speaking of Buscema has anyone seen what has happened to the Olympian gods over in the Incredible Hercules?! ugh.

I think of the Olympians I think of Buscema's awesome rendition. Now they went with the typical gods masquerading as humans thing.
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
That's simply following their status quo from the last Hercules mini.
 
Posted by Ultra Jorge on :
 
Yup and I hated it in the last Herc mini as well. It's not like Marvel to follow up on a story like that. [Smile]
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Welcome back, Prof.

quote:
It's also my understanding that some of the "outer space" epics of the late 80's (90's?) were virtually designed to "make up for" what we didn't get to see way back when.
And I'm very glad they did that.

But I think it goes further back than the 80s. I'd say the first example would be Avengers # 125, the crossover with Starlin's Captain Marvel where Englehart took a breather from his own plots to set the Avengers against Thanos's space armada. John Buscema inked by Dave Cockrum -- oh, yeah! And Englehart still managed to sneak in some brief but great Wanda/Mantis/Vision moments.

Then there was Avengers Annual # 7, the crossover with Starlin's Warlock. This time Starlin himself did the creative honors, and in the Avengers' second battle with Thanos they actually fight him face to face (and then, off-panel they get defeated and imprisoned between that chapter and the finale in Marvel Two-In-One Annual # 2, but it's still a great story -- and Avengers Annual # 7 stands on its own independent of the rest of Starlin's saga.)

Then came the wretched Korvac Saga, followed by a moratorium on anything cosmic or space operatic (allegedly because Shooter was pissed at the mixed reactions to his story) that lasted until Roger Stern & John Buscema's Nebula Saga. Even with the pestilent presence of the Beyonder -- gotta have that Secret Wars II crossover [Roll Eyes] -- # 260 is still a terrific space battle issue.

And then, of course, Operation: Galactic Storm, which I've repeatedly sung the praises of in this thread and in other threads. All I can say now is: if anyone reading this hasn't read O: GS, go and buy (or borrow) the trades (two volumes.)

I'm not sure if Harras & Epting's Kree invasion arc qualifies, since it mostly takes place on Earth. Either way, I still think it's a great story.

About Busiek's two dabblings in Avengers space opera, Live Kree Or Die and Maximum Security, I have only one word: BLEAH!

There hasn't been an Avengers space opera since then, but thankfully DC has satisfied that craving in recent years, with Adam Strange, the Rann-Thanagar War, and the Sinestro Corps War.

quote:
The ending, however, has them together in an epic battle, and features a surprisingly pivotal role for Rick Jones, the perennial sidekick. It also ends with a mystery of what happened to Goliath to propel us into the next story.
I, personally, found the battle truncated, and ending it by using Rick as a deus ex machina to render all the aliens immobile felt unsatisfying to me. The stories I named above gave the battle scenes room to breathe and stretch out, IMO.

quote:
Shooter made the team pretty small when it was Cap, Thor, Iron Man, and Wasp? [Smile]
Yes, but the villains he came up with were not exactly Kang-level threats. [Big Grin]

quote:
I think of the Olympians I think of Buscema's awesome rendition. Now they went with the typical gods masquerading as humans thing.
On this we agree. I don't get the appeal of that approach, and I wish it would stop -- I've lost track of how many recent comics have used that particular gimmick. And I think Stern & Buscema's Olympus arc is quite possibly their very best work on Avengers.

[ February 11, 2008, 10:21 PM: Message edited by: Stealth ]
 
Posted by He Who Wanders on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Stealth:
quote:
The ending, however, has them together in an epic battle, and features a surprisingly pivotal role for Rick Jones, the perennial sidekick. It also ends with a mystery of what happened to Goliath to propel us into the next story.
I, personally, found the battle truncated, and ending it by using Rick as a deus ex machina to render all the aliens immobile felt unsatisfying to me.
You could be right. I had the experience of reading the conclusion (# 97) first. As it featured Buscema art, instead of Adams, it was a lot cheaper than the middle issues. (There's no accounting for taste in pricing back issues!) As a result, I had to accept # 97 on its own terms, instead of as the conclusion to a multi-part story.

I think I was also elated to see the Avengers' complete lineup -- as they should be [Smile] -- instead of the truncated, depowered unit that dominated Thomas's run.
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by He Who Wanders:
quote:
Originally posted by Stealth:
quote:
The ending, however, has them together in an epic battle, and features a surprisingly pivotal role for Rick Jones, the perennial sidekick. It also ends with a mystery of what happened to Goliath to propel us into the next story.
I, personally, found the battle truncated, and ending it by using Rick as a deus ex machina to render all the aliens immobile felt unsatisfying to me.
You could be right. I had the experience of reading the conclusion (# 97) first. As it featured Buscema art, instead of Adams, it was a lot cheaper than the middle issues. (There's no accounting for taste in pricing back issues!) As a result, I had to accept # 97 on its own terms, instead of as the conclusion to a multi-part story.
Thanks for elaborating. I can see where you're coming from better now.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"Unfortunately, it was Adams' artwork that drove the prices of those middle issues sky high as collectors items. I had to wait until Marvel published a two-issue KSW reprint in 1984 or so to read the entire story. I was glad I hadn't wasted my money."

I was lucky on that score. I believe I got all of them from my 1st comics store when they went out of business. It seems it wasn't too much later the 2-issue "Deluxe" reprint came out. Years later, comparing the two, I can attest-- the quality of the line reproduction in the reprint AIN'T what it shoulda been. I'm GLAD I bought those originals!! (I also got the ENTIRE Adams run of X-MEN in the original printing around the same time, in fact I got those issues back to X-MEN #49, the 1st Steranko cover on the series).


"John Buscema inked by Dave Cockrum -- oh, yeah!"

My first exposure to Dave Cockrum (well, that I noticed) was when he inked Buscema-- and then Bob Brown-- on AVENGERS. Mike Esposito was doing 3rd-rate inks around that time, and Dave was several notches up. I remember thinking something like, "Hey, looks like they've got another potential Joe Sinnott here!" Bob Brown had a thing for drawing VERY sexy women, but the only 2 inkers at marvel who really brought out the best in him were Cockrum, and Paul Gulacy (DAREDEVIL #108). I thought AVENGERS #126 has one of the SEXIEST depictions of the Scarlet Witch I'd ever seen! And THEN Dave did full art on GIANT #2... WHOA!!!

I recently got ESSENTIAL AVENGERS Vol.5, and was amazed at how many people Cockrum inked in there, making all of them look fantastic. (Well, except maybe Don Heck-- Dave made Don look bettere than just about anybody else was around that time, but Don's pencils were not what they had been, and I got the feeling Don was actually dragging Dave down right then!) Imagine if George Tuska's IRON MAN issues had gotten inking that good on a regular basis! (Esposito? COLLETTA? Ptui!)


"Then there was Avengers Annual # 7"

AH yes! Starlin had been getting inferior inks for a couple of years at that point... until here, along comes this new guy outta nowhere, JOE RUBINSTEIN. Wow. I've seen so many inkers start out great and the quality of their work goes to hell within a couple years. NOT JOE! 30 YEARS on, I've NEVER seen a single bad ink job from him! How does he do it? (Him and Jerry Ordway are in a special class in that regard...)


"Then came the wretched Korvac Saga, followed by a moratorium on anything cosmic or space operatic (allegedly because Shooter was pissed at the mixed reactions to his story)"

WTF was/is that guy's problem??? Everything centers on what HE thinks is the only one right way to do anything, PERIOD-- "BECAUSE HE SAYS SO!!!"

Hey, maybe the Korvac story would have gone over better if George Perez hadn't been doing 3 or 4 books at the same time and blowing multiple months worth of deadlines on all of them... (heheheh) Dave Wenzel (who I tend to remember for several SOLOMON KANE stories in SAVAGE SWORD OF CONAN) was really in a bad spot-- I don't think it would have mattered what he did, people would have looked down at it in comparison to Perez. Then again, given the "Marvel Method", I suspect Perez was suplying AT LEAST 50% of the story we saw, and without him... well, all you had was Shooter.


"All I can say now is: if anyone reading this hasn't read O: GS, go and buy the trades (two volumes.)"

One of these days...


"About Busiek's two dabblings in Avengers space opera, Live Kree Or Die and Maximum Security, I have only one word: BLEAH!"

AGREED!!! (pulls out a giant gavel and slams it down on the table) "Maximum Security" was one of those stories whose very premise was SO ridiculous, I think it damaged the fabric of the entire Marvel Universe, from a reader's perspective...


"There's no accounting for taste in pricing back issues!"

As I recall, I got AVENGERS #92-100 all at the same time. Those 3 Barry Smith issues were a jarring change! For years, I thought John Buscema's run on the book was a LOT longer than it actually had been. Turns out he kept being yanked away by Stan to do other things, leaving Brother Sal and others to fill the gaps. It's amazing, when I think about it, how, years later (and after years of his going on record as "hating super-heroes"), Buscema came back and did a LONGER and more consistent run-- and had Tom Palmer for pretty much every issue of it! Wow.
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
I was lucky on that score. I believe I got all of them from my 1st comics store when they went out of business. It seems it wasn't too much later the 2-issue "Deluxe" reprint came out. Years later, comparing the two, I can attest-- the quality of the line reproduction in the reprint AIN'T what it shoulda been. I'm GLAD I bought those originals!!

Yeah, the reprints do have more than a few hazy spots, but they also have those eyeball-searing neon colors that I love (how I miss Baxter paper.) [sigh]

quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
Hey, maybe the Korvac story would have gone over better if George Perez hadn't been doing 3 or 4 books at the same time and blowing multiple months worth of deadlines on all of them... (heheheh) Dave Wenzel (who I tend to remember for several SOLOMON KANE stories in SAVAGE SWORD OF CONAN) was really in a bad spot-- I don't think it would have mattered what he did, people would have looked down at it in comparison to Perez. Then again, given the "Marvel Method", I suspect Perez was suplying AT LEAST 50% of the story we saw, and without him... well, all you had was Shooter.

It really does lose any sense of direction after Perez leaves, doesn't it? Because of the new Alan Davis ClanDestine mini-series, I recently re-read Davis's JLA: The Nail, and I thought, wow, Davis achieved what Perez reportedly intended with Korvac, to do a story with an entire superhero universe of characters! It actually can be done!!

quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
"All I can say now is: if anyone reading this hasn't read O: GS, go and buy the trades (two volumes.)"

One of these days...

I'm gonna have to edit that part of my previous post. How could I have forgotten to list other options, like borrowing copies from a friend or from a library?

quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
"About Busiek's two dabblings in Avengers space opera, Live Kree Or Die and Maximum Security, I have only one word: BLEAH!"

AGREED!!! (pulls out a giant gavel and slams it down on the table) "Maximum Security" was one of those stories whose very premise was SO ridiculous, I think it damaged the fabric of the entire Marvel Universe, from a reader's perspective...

Fortunately, MS seems to have been quietly erased from continuity, with the Kree back to being themselves.

quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
It's amazing, when I think about it, how, years later (and after years of his going on record as "hating super-heroes"), Buscema came back and did a LONGER and more consistent run-- and had Tom Palmer for pretty much every issue of it! Wow.

I think he secretly enjoyed working on Avengers, not just because of the challenge of "blocking" those scenes with so many characters in them, but also because, on many occassions, he happened to be on the book at just the right time, whether it was Roy Thomas coming into his own as a writer, or Roger Stern taking the book (literally and figuratively) into the stratosphere. And Tom Palmer did make that the second run better in so many ways -- I wish he had been available to ink those early Buscema Avengers issues that were ruined by inks from the likes of Bell/Roussos, Colletta, and Tuska. George Klein was every bit Palmer's equal, though; then again, Palmer was a generation younger than Klein and yet was already doing spectacular work less than a year after Klein's passing.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"Davis achieved what Perez reportedly intended with Korvac, to do a story with an entire superhero universe of characters! It actually can be done!!"

I sometimes thing CRISIS ON INFINITE EARTHS was initially concocted just to make up for what happened with the Korvac story. Unfortunately, it caused more problems than it solved... and we're STILL paying for it!!!!!


"George Klein was every bit Palmer's equal, though; then again, Palmer was a generation younger than Klein and yet was already doing spectacular work less than a year after Klein's passing."

George Klein remains, to this day, my favorite inker for Curt Swan, especially on the LEGION. Klein actually inked FF #1 (and possibly part of #2, that bit is still a bit blurry). Reportedly, regular SUPERMAN inker Stan Kaye retired, and Klein took the job for a LOT more money than Stan lee could pay him. Too bad for Marvel! Years later, Carmine Infantino reportedly FIRED Klein as part of a general "weeding out" of the "older" guys in favor of newer, younger hotshots. BASTARD!!! The LEGION dipped in quality right then. Marvel did benefit, no question, though from what I've seen the results were quite variable depending on who Klein was inking. His inks on Gene Colan (on a SUB-MARINER) for instance, looked a bit "rubbery". Over John Buscema, though-- WOW!!!! Perfection. Klein was the epitomy of "CLEAN", while new young hotshop Palmer (who debuted on DR. STRANGE first as penciller, then as inker with the very next issue) was the epitomy of "mood".

I had a "day-glo" poster of DR. STRANGE from that single Palmer-Adkins issue... it's around somewhere.

An awful lot of Palmer's work over the years, I believe, was done over "layouts", so he tended to do a lot more than just "inks". When Buscema left the 2nd time, Palmer stuck around-- and stuck around... and stuck around! He really was to THE AVENGERS what Joe Sinnott was to FANTASTIC FOUR. (Which was a perfect fit, as even from the very beginning, THE AVENGERS' membership was awfully full of themselves, overly-serious and pretentious... heeheehee)
 
Posted by He Who Wanders on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:

"There's no accounting for taste in pricing back issues!"

As I recall, I got AVENGERS #92-100 all at the same time. Those 3 Barry Smith issues were a jarring change!

If I remember right, I paid $3.75 for AVENGERS # 97, circa 1980. The Adams and Smith issues were $10 each -- an exhorbitant amount back then. Somewhere along the way, I paid $5 for # 98 (featuring Smith) -- the most I'd ever paid for a comic book then.

As an odd postscript, I picked up # 100 (also Smith) at a convention for only $3.50! Convention prices are often cheaper than those in dealer's stores, but not that much cheaper. I've often wondered if the dealer didn't know the issue's value.

quote:
It's amazing, when I think about it, how, years later (and after years of his going on record as "hating super-heroes"), Buscema came back and did a LONGER and more consistent run-- and had Tom Palmer for pretty much every issue of it! Wow.
Well, a job's a job. [Smile] It's a testimony to Buscema's professionalism that he didn't let his personal feelings interfere with the quality of his work.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
Let's see, I paid...

92 - $4.00
93 - $20.00
94 - $10.00
95 - $10.00
96 - $15.00
97 - $6.00
98 - $10.00
99 - $10.00
100 - $10.00

Of course, I paid $70.00 for TALES OF SUSPENSE #39... (in the late 70's) but to this day, that's still the most I ever paid for a single comic-book!


"I've often wondered if the dealer didn't know the issue's value."

I felt that way when I got SPECIAL MARVEL EDITION #15 (the debut of Shang-Chi, Master Of Kung Fu) for only .35

[Smile]
 
Posted by Chemical King on :
 
Though I always liked Avengers as a kid, I never became a true fan - mostly due to the fact that it was qhite difficult to get German Marvel stuff in the late 70s and after. I waited 20 years to finally read the conclusion to Avengers #69 (Squadron Supreme anyone?). The translations I got were lousy to top things.

So I became a Legion fan - their comics were hard to get as well, but at least their German publisher went broke five years later than their Marvel counterpart, those five years being very critical to my childhood days [Smile]

Recently, I read the whole Essential Avengers run up to volume 5, and some of the later stuff which is obtainably in TPB format. Like you, the Korvac Saga left me with a huge question mark - never got into the story (though I always love Perez' art) and especially not into the Korvac character. Who was he, when did he become good or bad or good again, well, talk about an anticlimatic storyline. Did Korvac ever reappear?
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Much as I hate the character, I have to admit he's got a detailed, well-organized Wikipedia entry which should answer most or all of Chemical King's questions:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Korvac

I especially like the quote from his creator, the late great Steve Gerber:

quote:
The character really was a throwaway, created for one story. And I never intended to bring him back, because, among other things, I hated the name! I still think it sounds more like a vacuum cleaner than a villain.
LOL

[ February 20, 2008, 04:41 PM: Message edited by: Stealth ]
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
This thread from Paul O'Brien's blog goes wildly off-topic and turns into a discussion of everything that's wrong with Bendis's Avengers. There's a lot of very sharp and very funny criticisms. Now if I could only find a thread that totally trashes Mark Millar, I'd be walking on air.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Stealth, this has little to do with the Avengers, but I know you'll see this [Big Grin]

Many people are very displeased with the new status of Spider-Man. I have to say, I've been reading post OMD and am shocked at how much I'm enjoying it. I'm actually loving the new stories, though I hated the actual One More Day story. Why am I posting this here? Well, latest rumor is that Roger Stern may soon become part of the rotating group of writers on Amazing Spider-Man. And oh man, if that's the case, I'll be more thrilled for a Spidey writer since...well, I guess since the last time Stern was writing Spider-Man!

Rich Johnston has this as a green light 'likely' in his weekly column. I recall with some great memory Stern's part in the weekly Superman stories of the 90's (b/t the four books) and the high quality of his issues there, which I believe is some of his best work ever. So this could be great, and could actually bring in some Stern fans to Spidey...
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Cobie, that's...well...amazing!

And in the interim, Stern's writing a story for a Hulk special due in May. I posted about it recently in the Giant Size Hulk thread.

I've always felt that the Marvel Universe brings out the best in Stern. Most of Stern's DC work leaves me cold, with two exceptions: his first year or two of Superman, and, more promisingly, his JLA Classified arc which just wrapped up.

Stern is, as I've said before, the one former Avengers writer who I'd like to see do a second run. I see him as being to Avengers what Paul Levitz was to the Legion of Super-Heroes, and Levitz had two runs.

BTW, I know Stern had a run on the Reboot LSH, but I've never read it. Like I said earlier in this post, I don't go out of my way to collect his DC work.
 
Posted by MLLASH on :
 
And now for something not that completely different!

MLLASH'S VERY IMPORTANT MOST HAPPY FAVORITE AVENGERS STORIES FROM HIS CHILDHOOD

It's Avengers tales 2 kewl 2 B 4gotten by Kid Mllash now that he's become an adult!

# 1 is a series!

The Mantis/Celestial Madonna Saga

I can remember buying/reading Avengers 129 and Giant-Size A. 2 off the rack, plus the following issues featuring the Mantis saga.

Why is it a happy favorite?

Cockrum artwork, Mantis was cool, I actually enjoyed the soap-operaey aspects of the Swordsman/Mantis/Vision/Scarlet Witch quadrangle.

It was where I first learned that chicks could kick ass (Scarlet Witch takes out Thor in GSA 2). I also learned NEVER to discount ANYone... as Kang finally realized when Swordsman and Hawkeye handed him his ass on a platter.

Then we have the Legion of the Unliving-- umm, how cool was THAT? VERY, to pre-tween MLLASH.

The whole Mantis/Cotati (sp?)/marriage of Mantis to an animated glowing plant as drawn by Don Heck stuff that followed was all a little weird, but this remains one of my earliest and most favorite comic-book memories.

And to li'l MLLASH, Cockrum and Staton's art was the frikkin' shiznit. To this day, Staton's best art in my eyes except for his ALL-STAR COMICS stint. Li'l MLLASH never did warm to Don Heck, although a few years later he learned to appreciate the man's art on TEEN TITANS (mid-late 70s revival).

It should be noted:

I still have the original issues (mostly second time buys 2-decades plus ago from the back-issue bins) but they are near to falling apart, so I purchased the CELESTIAL MADONNA trade that came out a few years ago. I need to re-read it!

more Avengin' MLLASH mem'ries later!
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
I’ve been looking at the Celestial Madonna covers online lately because I’ve been reading up on Starlin’s Captain Marvel run (and it has that great crossover issue in Avengers #125), and I’ve been itching to reread those issues again even though I just did that last January 2007. Mantis just rawks my face off more each time.
 
Posted by MLLASH on :
 
Hmmm... I just read Stealth's entry on these tales and Staton was inking Buscema. Didn't remember/realize that.

And yes, Mantis (or "that one" as I like to call her) rawks hearty.
 
Posted by MLLASH on :
 
The Squadron Supreme/Serpent Crown Saga

I'll actually set this back to when the Beast and Moondragon joined the team. That issue featured (iirc) George Tuska art that I actually didn't hate and featured the team vs. The Stranger/The Toad and a bunch of giant hover-mines. Still, that (Beast joining) was just a set-up (for me) to the next great Avengers arc of my childhood: The Serpent Crown saga featuring the senses-shattering debut of HELLCAT!

Why is it a happy favorite?

Perez art that got better by the issue-- Patsy Walker as Hellcat, who would go on to be brave enough a couple issues later to take on the Squadron Supreme's Superman analogue HYPERION (albiet unsuccesfully).

This is also my intro to the Squadron Supreme, a team that since then became another favorite of mine. The politics involved with the ending were a little over li'l MLLASH's head but he sure still loved the story. Good stuff!

It should be noted:

This tale is now in TPB form. MLLASH will put it on his to-get list despite having the original issues he bought as a kid. (By the time of this story, I was taking a little better care of my favorite comics)
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Welcome to the All-Avengers Thread, Lash. I'm delighted that you accepted the invitation I posted in the Patsy Walker thread.

quote:
Originally posted by MLLASH:
It was where I first learned that chicks could kick ass (Scarlet Witch takes out Thor in GSA 2).

Thank you for mentioning that. As great as Mantis's journey is, the Scarlet Witch really came into her own during this saga, something which, for some reason, never seems to get much attention in Avengers discussions. Oh, she'd had her moments during Englehart's earlier issues (especially the climax of the Avengers/Defenders War) but it was during the Celestial Madonna Saga that she finally fulfilled her potential.


quote:
Originally posted by MLLASH:
I also learned NEVER to discount ANYone... as Kang finally realized when Swordsman and Hawkeye handed him his ass on a platter.

Yeah, the Avengers have a long history of being underestimated by their enemies, which is one of the reasons I prefer them to the JLA, especially the "Big Guns" JLA who pretty much have every battle won before it even begins.

quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid: I’ve been reading up on Starlin’s Captain Marvel run (and it has that great crossover issue in Avengers #125)
Cobie, I'm very glad you've finally gotten a chance to read Starlin's 70s Marvel work. Can't wait to find out what you think of Avengers Annual # 7. And yes, # 125 is excellent.

quote:
Originally posted by MLLASH: Hmmm... I just read Stealth's entry on these tales and Staton was inking Buscema. Didn't remember/realize that.
I just double-checked my Avengers references, and they confirm that Sal Buscema only did layouts, so the art itself really is all Staton.

quote:
Originally posted by MLLASH:
The politics involved with the ending were a little over li'l MLLASH's head but he sure still loved the story. Good stuff!

The Squadron Supreme/Serpent Crown Saga is one of those stories that gets better and better with each successive read. Subversive super-heroics worthy of Alan Grant's L.E.G.I.O.N. run.

Looking forward to your next Avengers post, Lash.
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Oh, Lash? I think you'll be pleased by these news:

http://www.newsarama.com/comics/080927-baltimore-cupofb.html
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
An interview with the creator in question.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
"I’ve been looking at the Celestial Madonna covers online lately because I’ve been reading up on Starlin’s Captain Marvel run (and it has that great crossover issue in Avengers #125), and I’ve been itching to reread those issues again"

In my 70's Re-Reading project, I just got thru Wayne Boring's 3rd (and last) issue of CAPTAIN MARVEL. You know what that means!
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Now that Secret Invasion is finally over, Marvel has declassified its solicitations, and this one is of interest:

quote:
MIGHTY AVENGERS #21
Written by DAN SLOTT
Pencils & Cover by KHOI PHAM
“Earth's Mightiest Part 1 of 3"
"The Smartest Man in the Room"
IT ALL STARTS HERE! A new roster! One of the team's most powerful foes! And one of the most popular and requested Avengers returns to the fold! When darkness reigns and chaos falls, there's no room for compromise, no time to run and hide. The world needs EARTH'S MIGHTIEST HEROES! But after the events of Secret Invasion, is HANK PYM ready to rejoin their ranks? And what is the secret that haunts him, a secret dating back to the earliest days of the original team? Join Dan Slott and Khoi Pham for a new age of ALL OUT AVENGERS ACTION! Special giant-sized issue! 36 pages of all-new story and art! Guest starring: NEW AVENGERS, DARK AVENGERS, YOUNG AVENGERS, and CLASSIC AVENGERS!
48 PGS./Rated A …$3.99
FOC – 12/18, On-Sale – 1/14

I'm not a fan, but I'm willing to give him the benefit of the doubt, and I will read his first arc.

Will he turn out to be the next Roger Stern or the next Kurt Busiek? Stay tuned.
 
Posted by Set on :
 
This is potentially exciting. I have no idea what sort of stuff Slott is going to get away with, but the sheer dripping contempt he heaped on the recent state of comic books and 'superheroes' in general in GLA: Misassembled was, IMO, really powerful, and made me wish that someone with his sensibilities would be allowed to write a more prominent book.

He seems to have some 'old school' in his blood, and miss the days when superheroes weren't all killers and every story-arc didn't start with a bunch of people dying and end with a bunch of people dying.

Granted, that was a few years back, and I haven't read his more recent stuff. Perhaps he's all gung-ho and on-board with the new 'more realistic!' way of doing stuff.
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Let the controversy begin!

As his first order of business, Dan Slott has given Hank Pym a new identity.

Click Here For A SpoilerHank performs the Wasp-ifying process on himself, growing wings and taking on his recently deceased ex-wife's superhero identity. That's right, Hank is now the Wasp.

Details in Secret Invasion: Requiem (don't buy it, read it in the store -- it's a few pages of new material framing two worthless reprints, and some mediocre bonus material.)
 
Posted by Set on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Stealth:
Let the controversy begin!

As his first order of business, Dan Slott has given Hank Pym a new identity.

Man, Hank changes his identify more than Jan changes costumes! The dude must have some serious self-esteem issues...
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
I have no problem with that, because to me anything's preferable to seeing him in plain clothes.

And I have no problem with this new identity, although I'm sure a lot of people will.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
Over at the Silver Age Marvel website, I've been updating THE AVENGERS section to include links between certain issues that allow you to follow the histories of certain villains, like Kang, The Masters of Evil, etc. (Yep, I have strange ideas of "fun".)

http://www.samcci.comics.org/

Click on "Titles", then "Avengers"... (it's still a work in progress, but it's getting there)
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Slott elaborates on his approach to Hank
 
Posted by DrakeB3004 on :
 
While Hank's name change to Wasp might be a way for him to honor Jan, given his previous mental instability it's almost like he feels so guilty that he's given up on being himself and is hiding in the identity of someone who was much stronger than him.

That's just one interpretation...
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
5 days and counting until Slott's first issue of Mighty Avengers.

Please post any comments about it in this thread. I created this thread to be as much about the current Avengers as the classic Avengers. A couple of years ago, I was very upset when somebody started an Avengers: Initiative thread instead of posting about it in this thread; I played it down at the time, claiming I was exaggerating in jest, but the truth is that I really was very upset.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
The first 100 issues of THE AVENGERS are represented at the Silver Age Marvel site. I've been updating the site extensively over the last 2 months, and one of the additions I've made has been links between related stories, where there's "sequels" and "prequels". Makes it easy in some cases to follow the complex histories of some super-villains and the like!

http://www.samcci.comics.org/

Follow the link, click "Titles", then click on the "Avengers" icon. Have fun! (But please excuse me if there's any links that aren't working-- it's an IMMENSE project, and at the moment, definitely "work in progress".)
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
RANDOM THOUGHTS ON MIGHTY AVENGERS # 21, DAN SLOTT'S FIRST ISSUE:


- Any doubts I had about Slott's grasp of Hank/He-Wasp have been wiped away. The character hasn't been this well-written since the Harras era.

- Slott writes a great Jarvis.

- I'd been hoping that Hercules would be talking like himself instead of the erratic speech patterns he's sported since he got his own book. No such luck. And the alleged charms of his teenage sidekick continue to elude me.

- The "Avengers Assemble!" moment is the most deliciously corny moment in superhero comics since the "Fastball Special" at the climax of Joss Whedon's first Astonishing X-Men arc.

- The artwork is a big disappointment, but it's more the fault of the inkers than the penciller. God, I wish Tom Palmer was here.

Click Here For A Spoiler

- The temporary lineup, some of whom will be dropped after Slott's first MA arc, are: He-Wasp, Hercules, Hulk (green), Scarlet Witch, Stature, Young Vision, Jocasta, and U.S. Agent.

- I never thought I'd say this, but I'm starting to like Jocasta. That alone makes Slott pretty close to a miracle worker.

- Having said that, the presence of Modred and Ch'thon as the villains is dangerously retro, and Ch'thon possessing Quicksilver is too self-consciously "clever" by half.


VERDICT: Flawed but promising.
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
I thought Click Here For A Spoiler Bova died not too long ago...

I like the mysterious aura built up around Wanda, as she transports from site to site. That's new for her, isn't it?

Time to codify her powers, for me. Personally, I wish she'd go back to the barely controlled hex sphere.

I don't have a clear memory of Modred, so his appearance didn't come across as retro, to me.

Click Here For A Spoiler Pietro's imprisonment and re-re-re-villainization was a big disappointment, for me. I liked the place he was in at the end of Peter David's oneshot a few months ago. The character appears on a future cover of MIGHTY AVENGERS as Quicksilver, so this 'Chthon' ID most likely won't last.

I liked the interaction between Vision and Stature, Jocasta, Hank, Herc and Cho (sorry- I thoroughly enjoy INCREDIBLE HERCULES and find their teaming fitting and fun).

Loved my spoonful of corn-- seconds, please!
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Re: the character that was presumed dead -- that sort of thing hasn't stopped any writers, good ones and bad ones, lately.

This same week, over in EVERYBODY READ ----> Thunderbolts <---- EVERYBODY READ, a character also came back from the dead with no explanation, although we do get a hint there might be one in the future.

And yes, that corn was particularly tasty.
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
I hate corn.

And the character I think you mean came back in MCP, not Tbolts, Stealth (also without explanation). I suspect the one who died was a skrull.
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Reboot:
I hate corn.

Less than a month into 2009, and we already have a front-runner for Legion World's Least Surprising Statement of the Year. [Big Grin]

quote:
Originally posted by Reboot:
And the character I think you mean came back in MCP, not Tbolts, Stealth (also without explanation). I suspect the one who died was a skrull.

A Skrull. What a surprise. [Roll Eyes]

Was that before or after MCP # 4? I only read the first four issues of that book, and only really paid attention to the Hellcat serial.
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Stealth:
quote:
Originally posted by Reboot:
I hate corn.

Less than a month into 2009, and we already have a front-runner for Legion World's Least Surprising Statement of the Year. [Big Grin]
For the record, I meant it literally - I can't stand sweetcorn [Smile]

quote:
Originally posted by Stealth:
quote:
Originally posted by Reboot:
And the character I think you mean came back in MCP, not Tbolts, Stealth (also without explanation). I suspect the one who died was a skrull.

A Skrull. What a surprise. [Roll Eyes]

Was that before or after MCP # 4?

Uh... I know it was in the Vanguard strip. I haven't actually read it.
 
Posted by MLLASH on :
 
Well, suckle me Elmo... MA 21 was totally sold out tonight. I'll look again next week, if I get to the CBS.
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
The latest Mighty Avengers interview with Slott (SPOILERS):

http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=19662

I wasn't happy after I read this bit:

quote:
“One of the things I wanted to do with ‘Mighty’ is not just bring back the legacy of the Avengers heroes but to really bring back the A-List Avengers villains,” Slott explained. “With the exception of Ultron, you really haven't seen them around that much in 'Mighty Avengers'. So I want to get to the big powerful Avengers threats. Your Kangs, your Immortuses, your Count Nefarias."
Come on, Slott, I'm trying to stay hopeful that you'll be the next Roger Stern, not the next Kurt Busiek. Don't let me down.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Yeah, I don't want another retread of Kang, Ultron, etc. I want new and fresh stories.

While I wouldn't mind seeing Count Nefaria again since its been so long, I really hope its in a new and exciting way.

Haven't picked up any of the latest but I'll review when I do.

Final impressions post Secret Invasion:

(1) New Avengers - actually a pretty decent comic book but nothing specatcular. The addition of Mockingbird w/ Clint is interesting and so is the inclusion of the new Cap/Bucky. Bendis is dropping Iron Fist, and honestly he should--he's not one of Bendis' favorites, and it obviously shows because he didn't have him do anything. That's a major Bendis problem.

(2) Mighty Avengers by Brian Bendis ultimately failed IMO. It just wasn't a good comic book. Like the current JLA, a good line-up does not make a good comic book. You need good solid writing and stories. I hope Dan Slott can give us that.

(3) Avengers: the Iniative has moments of greatness but overall is generally pretty mediocre. I hope that changes as well, though I'm a little unsure of how the concept of the book will change in this new status.

(4) Young Avengers - at this point, I can hardly remember why we all liked this so much. Talk about no follow through.
 
Posted by Bevis on :
 
I've not actually really read any Avengers stuff since Disassembled but picked up Mighty Avengers #21 because I liked the sound of it and was pretty pleased I did. I've never really been a big Marvel person and only ever had a few Avengers annuals when i was younger so I really only have a passing knowledge of most of the characters but I thought the issue did a really nice job of introducing each of the characters, saying who they are but not getting bogged down in exposition.

The set up of the story I think is a good start and even though it's very much an introduction issue (and to all intents and purposes a relaunch of the title as far as I can see) we actually got plot and character development trhough out the issue. Since I don;t have any real past experience of the Avengers to any great degree using old villains doesn't bother me either, as long as Slott writes good stories I don't mind. Also since he's using mostly well established heroes there's no reason that using well established villains should be a bad thing either.

I certainly interested to see where he goes with the line-up as well. I know the only confirmed member past the first story arc is Scarlet Witch and it's been pretty strongly implied that Iron Man is only around for the first one, but of the ones featured in the first issue I think I'd be happy for any (or all) of them to stick around. I suspect teh characters with solo titles are less likely to be on the team permanently but since lott has said he's going for a rotating cast with a core team that should work well in terms of characters coming and going as the story needs them.

As for the art i really rather liked it. I think the inking is a little inconsistent but I think Pham has a style that fits very well with the title. He reminds me a little of Coipel or Jimmy Cheung (which is a very good thing) but possibly just needs a bit more experience to become a really great artist. I did think the colouring was lovely though. Bright and clear without swamping the line art.

All in all a ncie little read and enough to keep me on the title at least for the next few issues to see where it goes. I'm not adding it to my pull list yet but what with half the other titles I do have in there being cancelled at the moment I can certainly afford to add it if it proves to be enjoyable.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Okay, read the latest New & Might:

Might Avengers - I thought it was a solid, good first issue. Intriguing storyline, and Slott does a good job organizing the characters together. I don't think the Hulk will be around long (or Iron Man for that matter), but I like seeing them here. I'm a huge fan of Hank Pym, so I'm glad Slott is intending to make him a major player here--I thought he was very well-written. I kind of like Jocasta being around, but hopefully Slott plays off readers fears to make it seem like it *could* be weird, rather than actually making it weird. I'm loving Herc and Amadeus Cho in their own title and am loving their inclusion here. I actually quite like Herc's mannerisms and speech patterns lately. Jarvis being so involved rocked. Loving Wanda's role here. I'm pretty 'meh' about US Agent, so we'll see what happens there. I'm interested in what happens to Quicksilver. I also love the setting of Wundagore Mountain because of the sheer history there.

All in all, a solid good first issue to start. We'll see where it goes.

New Avengers - the latest tied up the Luke Cage /baby storyline, and further force-fed us more Norman Osborn and his Dark Avengers. It was...not bad. Nothing spectacular, but it wasn't horrible. In a weird way, Bendis makes Cage out to be a really big liar. Obviously the readers can understand where he's coming from, but its odd that Bendis wrote it that way (I wouldn't use the word dishonorable, which would be overly harsh). One of the things I think Bendis has done very right is show how much sacrifice it takes to become a parent, something which my father has told me about on several occassions. You end up sacrificing a large portion of yourself to ensure your child has a happy life--obviously, skrulls and superpowers take this to an extreme, but it kind of goes with that theme.

I already cringe everytime Norman Osborn shows up in a comic. Tony Stark syndrome is setting in.
 
Posted by DrakeB3004 on :
 
I know what you mean about seeing too much Osborn. Marvel's use of a shared universe used to be fun, but now it's like it has a stranglehold on their titles. I want to see the Avengers do something other than deal with the strife of their own lives.
 
Posted by DrakeB3004 on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
Yeah, I don't want another retread of Kang, Ultron, etc..

Yeah, you shouldn't pick up the latest Avengers/Invaders.... *cough*ultron*cough*
 
Posted by Disaster Boy on :
 
i miss heroics too.....
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
I actually quite like Herc's mannerisms and speech patterns lately.

I'm surprised to read that, given the high esteem in which you hold the Harras/Epting era, where Herc was at his most Shakespearean.

If the current Herc were an organic evolution, I could grudgingly accept it, but it feels like an arbitrary re-invention to me.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
I'm actually finding the current Hercules very refreshing and fun. His history in the MU has always been spotty with some good eras here and there (I love him during the Silver Age, by Roger Stern and in the Harras/Epting era, but hate so many other interpretations for him).

Really, there's a sense of fun for Herc right now, particularly in his friendship with Amadeus, that I'm liking. I also like the 'ladies man' aspect, and I like his enjoyable embrace of his long, multi-millenia wide history. There just seems to be a lot of positive going on in Hercules world, probably moreso than ever before. I'd rank his solo title in the top ten best comics being produced right now.

I don't mind a different interpretation of Thor or Hercules speech patterns or mannerisms so long as it feels 'good', which this does. So many writers seem to get it all wrong, and it ends up feeling awkward and ill-suited. I'd rather they carve out their own feel for the character.

I'm hoping you warm up to how he's currently being written [Smile]
 
Posted by Spellbinder on :
 
I'm going to give this new run on Mighty Avengers a try. I dropped NA after a few issues, and did the same with MA. Neither was my cup of tea. NA is more like New Defenders (it just never felt like an Avengers title to me) and I hated the writing on MA, even though I liked alot of the characters.

Hopefully MA will be the one to draw me back into the Avengers orbit... I miss collecting them.
 
Posted by Set on :
 
I've been avoiding Avengers books since, uh, I think the Busiek / Perez run, and the latest 'must have Wolverine' on the team run has kept me happily away.

But Dan Slott is one of my favorite writers, so I gave his first Mighty Avengers issue a chance and so far I'm liking it. Hank Pym has always been a favorite (although I no longer have any idea what history is his and what history is Skrull, so I'm just going to try and forget that he's a pre-existing character), as well as USAgent. I'm not sure about Jocasta or Hercules, and while I like Wanda, the power levels she's exhibiting right now scare me. I fear that, in fine Marvel fashion, something drastic is going to have to happen to her...

As if she hasn't had enough abuse.

Seeing the Darkhold, Modred the Mystic, Wundagore Mountain and Cthon back is certainly a surprise. The out of control mystical disasters were, IMO, over-the-top, but obviously it's all going to be 'set right,' considering how many people died.

And yay for Jarvis!
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
AVENGERS: THE INITIATIVE 22-- Not a fan of the art, here. Sometimes I like Ramos, but with this many characters, highly stylized art can get in the way of the story.

Thor clone is now Ragnarok? OK- it'll be interesting to see him face a real Asgardian or two.. besides Thor Girl, that is.

Trauma, Ultra Girl and a couple of others get some focus-- however, there's sort of a end-of-the-line feel to this title. Don't know if a change is coming or what. With a 'Dark Young Avengers' coming, it seems a tad superfluous. Unless the New Warriors take over?
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
MIGHTY AVENGERS 22: OK, not as tight as Slott's first issue- but still enjoyable.

Pym, Hercules and Cho stood out for me. Hulk and Tony Stark ate up some storytime that I really would rather have seen go to explaining just what is up with Scarlet Witch.

Jocasta's got me curious, too.

I liked the somewhat offhand end involving Bova and Quicksilver. Anticlimactic? Maybe-- but distinct and character-driven, too.
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
I thought the new issue of Mighty Avengers was atrocious. It shows every sign of having been hacked up and clumsily sewn back together by Brevoort and his assistant editors. I really want to like Mighty Avengers, because it's been way too long (almost 15 years) since I followed a current Avengers book, but I'm finding it hard to do.
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Slott's first arc comes to a L-A-M-E climax, but nearly rebounds with a last-page twist ending that works for me.

Click Here For A SpoilerSo Wanda was She-Loki all along. Clever way of tying this team to legacy of the original team.

Hopefully, this means better stories are ahead.
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
I liked this issue more than the second of the initial storyline, perhaps not as much as the first.

As for the climax, I really disagree. I thought Pym's and Amadeus' use of the old Ant-man cybernetic helmet to combat a spellcaster was inspired.

I could've done without Tony Stark completely. He had a funny line or two, and I suppose he played a necessary role in the structure of the storyline, but I'm just tired of him.

The last page was one of the best surprises in years. Outstanding, I thought. And a perfect use of Avengers history.

I wish Bova would go back with the team. She was fun. I imagine Pietro could use her support, for more than one reason.

Love this title, now.
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
AVENGERS: THE INTIATIVE: REPTIL-- this was an enjoyable character debut. Said character has an interesting superpower (shapechanging into various human-sized dinosaurish creatures and manifesting said dinosaur's characteristics. Flying while changed into a pterodactyl-like shape, for example) and a horrible name. He's a likeable kid, though. One with his own mission that could make for a longtime storyline. And a distinct supporting cast member in his video game-playing grandfather.

There are nice moments for Cloud-9, Batwing and various other Intiative members. And especially for Tigra. It's pleasing to see her taken seriously and proven to be an effective heroine, considering her recent usages in various AVENGERS titles.

She makes a fine mentor (her pregnancy isn't mentioned, but that could make her a tad more nurturing) and a good leader, as well, as she works around the rules of the Initiative.

In addition, a hanging plot from Marvel's recent pass is dealt with in what I found to be a satisfying way. A life is saved, characters are reunited and Reptil gets an offer that he didn't expect, but actually wanted more than the one he did.

Worth a read.
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mystery Lad:


As for the climax, I really disagree. I thought Pym's and Amadeus' use of the old Ant-man cybernetic helmet to combat a spellcaster was inspired.


Click Here For A SpoilerGetting him to talk gibberish, inspired?

I can picture Slott sitting at his computer, chewing his nails, desperately trying to come up with something.

Then he phones Jeph Loeb.

Slott's so desperate and so far behind on his deadline that he uses Loeb's first suggestion.

I'm having a better time snarking about this issue than I did reading it.

Maybe it's time I dropped it. I need to make room for Andy Diggle's Daredevil, after all.

Undeniably clever ending to the current issue, though.

On second thought, it's probably a fluke.
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
NEW AVENGERS #52: Clint Barton takes on a new role (aside from 'Ronin') and makes a suprising move.

Dr. Strange begins the search for the new supreme sorceror, and has a positive encounter and one that's less so.

Young Avenger Wiccan guest stars, but there's something off about his characterization. Maybe it's the art, which was fine elsewhere, but didn't successfully get his personality across, I thought.

The cover's a bit of a misleading image, as only three of the characters on it actually appear in the story, though a fourth is mentioned.

All in all, I find this a pretty interesting premise for a story, for all that I find supremely powerful magicians not so captivating, though the characters themselves often are.

We'll see.
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
NEW AVENGERS #52-- Dr. Strange is quite likeable, here. He hasn't always been (to me, anyway). I enjoyed how this team sort of foisted themselves on him as he rests for a bit before resuming his search for the new Sorceror Supreme.

Dr. Strange impressed with young Wiccan-- I liked that.

Scared of Dr. Doom-- effective, but in character?

Trembling at The Hood?-- Marvel's working hard to put this character at the center of things, but I don't quite buy into all that yet.

I will say that the sequence with Madame Masque did more to make me like The Hood than anything I've read with him in it. I always liked Whitney Frost, even if she can't decide which side of the law she's on. I think she's fallen for a bit of a loser, but at least he's an interesting one.

However, that scene builds to yet another tease of her removing her mask, drawn in such a way that the reader doesn't see her face. The two-page spread after she drops her mask is completely indecipherable. In the first panel, she kisses The Hood (prompting a 'Wow' from the guy-- reaction to her face or the kiss?). From there, I have no clue. I don't even know what mood I'm supposed to get from that spread. It ends with a big devilish skull-face in an archway. I presume it's Dormammu, since that's who is powering The Hood.

Is he drawn to the sex? To a female? What?

As always, the group dynamics are the funnest things about NEW AVENGERS (even though Clint Barton in that costume irritates me to no end...) and there's always some mystifying bit.

Or a case of casting some non-recurring character in a completely out-of-character, mostly negative light. Tigra, not so long ago, and now Son-of-Satan.

He appears in the concluding scene (emaciated, wearing jeans with no shirt and chains-- with Fire Lad hair), and looks to be on the verge of being 'taken out'. If so, that's just... lame. Hopefully, I'm mistaken and an inspiring fight scene will ensue next issue. One in which a non-New Avenger acts competently and shows some fight.
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
INITIATIVE #23-- I'm not a fan of the art. Particularly from the moment Komodo gets shot. Yet another spider-face unmasking. I liked bits with Ultra Girl, Tigra, Doc Samson and the Baron.

There are a ton of great characters populating this title. I'd like to read about them. But the weight of everything Osborn that's permeated Marvel these days is dragging this title down.
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
MIGHTY AVENGERS #24-- The Cabal, The Young Avengers, Quicksilver, there's a lot going on here.

What I liked--
-- the brief Y.A. appearance. I wish Cassie and Vision had brought along Amadeus, though. He might've liked getting to know the crew.
--Herc's battle-bliss as he fought his 'glorious lunatic' foe, The Swarm.
--Hank mentoring Cassie.
--Amadeus learning to use the cyber-helmet. This should carry over into INCREDIBLE HERCULES.
--Quicksilver's return and Hank's eventual acceptance, and Hank's looking past Pietro's obvoius face-saving lie.
--Osborn's showing his true face. And Loki's little grin. Is this title heading to a THOR crossover? It would seem it would have to.

What I didn't--
-- Dark Avengers? Yawn.
--Jocasta staying behind again? Is she on the team or isn't she?
--Titan. Has this critter been seen before?
--Blackjack. History, please.
--Problems with Pym pockets already? The idea of them hasn't really even sunk in yet.
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
I liked this issue better than the previous three. It had a snap, crackle, and pop to it that the previous ones didn't quite cook up. I also thought the art and coloring were better.

The most interesting thing with Mighty Avengers right now, though, is that, per the July solicitations, issue # 27 will introduce A NEW VILLAIN!! Said villain has a cool look and an okay, but acceptable name, the Unspoken. Now I just hope Slott doesn't repeat the mistakes Busiek made with his original villains, leaving them to wither in sub-plot land and/or getting them sidetracked by too many stories with old villains.
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
Let's just hope this new villain doesn't have his sights set on adopting the name/persona of some existing superHERO. That seems to be Marvel's main schtick these days.

The Unspoken does look quite Kirby-esque.

It's a fine line, isn't it? If a new villain appears *too* often, it's a major turn-off. But if they don't get re-used fairly quickly, they fade into the ether.

I hope he's his own entity and doesn't get swept up in all The Hood's/The Cabal's/Dormammu's stuff.
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
DARK REIGN CABAL: A sequence of short stories highlighting each member of the Cabal, Marvel's villainous recasting of the Illuminati.

An interesting mixed-bag. Doom's portion ends up being a dream, but it had me going there for a few minutes.

I most enjoyed the Namor sequence, where he enacts the role of judge as part of his duties as King of the Atlanteans (ain't really an Atlantis to be king of at the moment, but he's still king of the people who used to live there...) As such, he removes a mutant from the problematic care of his separated parents and promises to take the youth to what has to be Xavier's. If it's still called that in San Fran. Not sure?

Worth a look, as events in titles like THOR, all the AVENGERS, X-Men are touched upon, an will soon be sweeping all up in Marvel's umbrella story of the villains running things.
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
As with most previous issues, the latest Mighty Avengers leaves me with mixed feelings. On one hand, Slott is hitting his stride and finding his voice (which is more 60s Roy Thomas than 80s Roger Stern, but I'm okay with that.) On the other hand, the puerile behavior of Hank and Reed, bottoming out with Hank's use of painfully trendy slang, is excruciating. This MA vs FF two-parter can't end soon enough.
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
 -
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
AVENGERS THE INITIATIVE #24-- Hardball's plans are revealed. The Negative Zone prison comes into play. Taskmaster recieves an offer. A couple of characters have costumes that are *way* too similar and that similarity isn't helped by the art.
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
NEW AVENGERS #53-- Madame Masque puts up a helluva fight (made the issue, for me). Brother Voo-doo is the new Sorceror Supreme?

Yeah, sure.

He's wearing the eye in his end-of-issue splash page appearance.

Does this character have what it takes to be Sorceror Supreme?
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
Mighty Avengers 25-- The art's not my favorite, but it's made a bit more palatable by the coloring. My favorite bit was the exchange between Amadeus and Cassie. Hope it doesn't exist in a vaccuum.

Hank's blow-up disturbed, his creation confounded and his conversation with Reed irritated.

Would these two characters act like this? I could see it more if they were alone in a room in their respective HQs and had it out. But in front of their friends, family members and teammates?

I've read lots of guessing that this dust-up was part of a plan. Which makes more sense. We'll see. Soon, I hope.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Well, I'm not sure I'm up to the latest issues yet, but some brief commentary on the varous series:

(1) Mighty Avengers - I had high hopes for Slott's run but thus far have been essentially dissapointed. I just don't find it exciting, interesting or enjoyable. I love Hank Pym, but I don't like Slott forcing Pym to be so accomplished, a trick that never works. The stories are not only boring, but kind of annoying. You'd think Quicksilver would bring some really dynamics to the team but thus far that hasn't been shown.

(2) Avengers: the Initative. I dropped this like a bad habit. It was getting incredibly long-winded anyway and the recent change in Dark Reign eliminated any sense of interest I had in the title. I predict cancellation in 8 months.

(3) Dark Avengers - not interested really, better comics out there to spend my money on.

(4) New Avengers - and lo, and behold, this old school Avengers fan has to admit that Brian Bendis is currently writing the best Avengers comnic out there. I think he continues to produce good stories, and if you can get over the fact that he has his own personal favorite line-up and is going at the pace he feels most comfortable with, he's actually writing some pretty intersting and fun stories. I would recommend this comic book to anyone who likes team books. After all these years if people are still annoyed its an Avengers book, just pretend its the Defenders, which is what it essentially is anyway.
 
Posted by Ultra Jorge on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
Well, I'm not sure I'm up to the latest issues yet, but some brief commentary on the varous series:

(1) Mighty Avengers - I had high hopes for Slott's run but thus far have been essentially dissapointed. I just don't find it exciting, interesting or enjoyable. I love Hank Pym, but I don't like Slott forcing Pym to be so accomplished, a trick that never works. The stories are not only boring, but kind of annoying. You'd think Quicksilver would bring some really dynamics to the team but thus far that hasn't been shown.

(2) Avengers: the Initative. I dropped this like a bad habit. It was getting incredibly long-winded anyway and the recent change in Dark Reign eliminated any sense of interest I had in the title. I predict cancellation in 8 months.

(3) Dark Avengers - not interested really, better comics out there to spend my money on.

(4) New Avengers - and lo, and behold, this old school Avengers fan has to admit that Brian Bendis is currently writing the best Avengers comnic out there. I think he continues to produce good stories, and if you can get over the fact that he has his own personal favorite line-up and is going at the pace he feels most comfortable with, he's actually writing some pretty intersting and fun stories. I would recommend this comic book to anyone who likes team books. After all these years if people are still annoyed its an Avengers book, just pretend its the Defenders, which is what it essentially is anyway.

We usually agree on everything. And I do agree with Might Avengers. I expected MUCH better. Plus Bendis' Avengers books got the best artists.

Initiative? I like it because it's something I wanted to see for a long time. I always wanted a second Avengers book where B, C, and D listers make a bigger team ala GIJOE. Ramos' first few issues really turned me off to it but he's seems to have gotten a handle on things a few issues in. I haven't been loving but I still like it.

Dark Avengers - I love this book. Love the art and the story. Didn't think he can pull it off like Ellis did...but he is.

New Avengers - Blah! maybe cause I just hate the lineup of quasi street level heroes meets spies meets the defenders aka the Bronze Age. That is what this book should be called. As a big Dr. Strange fan I am not happy with what's going but not to worried either. Things have a way to work themselves out. Nice art though.
 
Posted by Ultra Jorge on :
 
I wasn't very happy with news that Dr. Strange wouldn't be Sorcerer Supreme any more. I just finished reading every Dr. Strange comic EVER a few months ago. (solo stories not Defenders...yet)

But I get it. He doesn't sell that many comics anymore (who does?). I thought a new younger character and Strange would be his/her mentor might work.

They travel to New Orleans and Son of Satan gets involved. Ok I can buy him as the new Sorcerer Supreme. Kudos to Bendis for having him still in New Orleans after his mini AND using him as a possible sorcerer supreme after the latest Defenders mini mentions that. Oh and I like Son of Satan.

But Click Here For A SpoilerBROTHER VOODOO???? . I mean I kind of defend this character when everybody says he is lame and I think he has potential...but not this much potential.
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
I've decided that MA # 27, the first appearance of the new villain The Unspoken, is going to be the make-or-break issue for me. I just can't keep justifying the expenditure on something which I feel always comes up short on giving me my money's worth. If I do quit, it'll be a shame, because none of the other Avengers books appeal to me (Bendis is hitting a stride of sorts but his dialogue tics and other things get in the way), and there's nothing quite like buying a current Avengers book when it's well done.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
I forget... have they ever done a BROTHER VOODOO collection? I'd love to read all his stories if they were in one nice convenient package. I always thought he was cool. Not "great", just "funky". (His appearance in an issue of MARVEL TEAM-UP, pencils by Jim Mooney, was a fave of mine.)

[Smile]
 
Posted by Set on :
 
I like Brother Voodoo because his traditional power-set screams 'Vampire!' (hypnotism, enhanced strength, animal control, appearing and disappearing in a cloud of mist, etc.) and has nothing to do really with voudon.

It's kind of like someone made a character named Sister Christian and gave her the super-powers of burrowing, turning people into toads and invisibility.
 
Posted by DrakeB3004 on :
 
Hey - that's "DOCTOR Voodoo" to you, sir! [Wink]

I didn't read the storyline, but they didn't happen to mention that contest of sorcerers that was used in the Doom/Strange graphic novel to choose a new Sorceror Supreme did they? (just curious to see if they tried to maintain consistancy)
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Consistency? From Bendis? BWA-HA-HA-HA-HA!!

Well, my wish came true, and the ending to the misguided MA/FF story came out yesterday, just a couple weeks after the beginning.

It's unremarkable overall, and Slott is taking the He-Wasp/Jocasta thing to painful levels.

Slott also has set himself up for a fall if the next issue doesn't deliver on the promised wondrousness of this new dimension, to say nothing of the new villain. I'm not optimistic, especially with Khoi Pham back on art duties.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
So I read the first issue of the FF/Mighty Avengers story. And...WORST ISSUE YET. Slott continues to do something I thought Marvel was making an effort to stop--making Reed (and Hank & Tony) look like an idiot. The dialogue is painful, the pacing is all over the map and all around its pretty damn boring. Its the opposite of exciting. At this point, Mighty Avengers itself feels like a failed experiment creatively. There's no way its selling as good as Bendis' books. And quality wise--its nowhere near as good either.

As for the Brother Voodoo stuff, I actually like the character because of the innate silliness of his name. I'm willing to go with it for now to see where this takes Dr. Strange and "Doctor" Voodoo. I can understand changing Voodoo's name, but why Dr. Strange? He's actually a doctor, after all.

Mark Waid will take over Dr. Strange from here, which is good since Bendis obviously doesn't have a handle on how to use magic-based characters. Still, we'll see what the final product is. First things first, just like Tony Stark, get rid of the damn moustache. Give him a goatee or SOMETHING. The moustaches are not sacred. Its not 1963 anymore, or even 1986.
 
Posted by LardLad on :
 
While I'm not in love with Mighty, it's currently the only Avengers title I'm picking up and the only one I'll consider picking up with the Bendis regime in place. I suffered through around the first 30 issues of New before completely giving up on it. It just wasn't and isn't the Avengers. And from what I saw, Bendis hasn't the foggiest idea of how to write a team book!

Yeah, I suppose there's the most remote possibility that his run improved a great deal after I left, but I'd say giving him 30 issues worth of my hard-earned money was more than gracious on my part. Fool me once...etc. At its core is the biggest flaw--Spidey, and especially Wolverine, just don't belong in the Avengers. Plus, the stories I read were all clunky, and it always felt like what should have been one- or two-issue stories were constantly spread out across around six issues. Bendis has always been guilty of writing for trades, but never were his excesses so evident as they were on New.

If you add in that Marvel books that are too heavily tied into Dark Reign are just taking a huge nosedive in quality for me, maybe you'll understand my view a little better. I'm sorry: Norman Osborn is just not a compelling enough villain to work for me as a threat to the larger Marvel Universe outside the Spider-titles.

Mighty is not an excellent book, certainly. But it's readable and at least feels like an Avengers book with its tone and lineup. It certainly seems to acknowledge the Avengers legacy better than anything else currently going. Yes, the stories are a little thin so far and some of the characterizations a little off at times, but at least it has the right spirit to it.

Yeah, the Reed stuff was definitely puzzling. I felt Reed's stated justification of Pym's past mistakes (Ultron, etc.) believable. But the attitude delivered with it was definitely not Reed Richards. (Couldn't help but chuckle at Hank's infamous, "It's on, bitch!" despite how ludicrous it was, though.)

Maybe, Des, you could share with me/us why you feel New is a superior book? (not just superior to Mighty--it seems clear New is doing it for you)
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Lardy, definitely will respond when work eases up a little this morning [Big Grin]

But I couldn't help but add that "It's on bitch" is the worst line in Avengers history. Awful. Reminded me of Juggernaut saying "I'm the Juggernaut, Bitch!" in X-Men 3, which was a horrible movie (that line being a prominent representation of how awful it was). Just terrible. It actually made me throw up a little in my mouth. [No]
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
I agree that that line was awful. Cringe-worthy. I thought that about the entire confrontation between the two 'brains'.

Then I thought about all the times the team 'strong guys' would meet and fight... usually The Thing vs. Thor or Hercules or whoever.

Why shouldn't the eggheads have scientic, mental duels?

Not that these scenes were so elevated that they lived up to a Thing vs. Hercules brawl...

I quite liked the most recent issue with the introduction of The Unspoken. It was fun seeing the Young Inhumans (though I had a few quibbles about them...) and then reading Quicksilver as the 'go-to' guy when it comes to the citizens of Attilan. Plainly, the Avengers don't know the extent of his recent history.

I wish *somebody'd* voice a little understanding of the Inhumans. As far as I'm concerned, their declaration of war on the U.S. was totally justified. You think we wouldn't be mounting terrorist attacks if the Declaration of Independence or the Liberty bell were stolen? Get real.

I want to see an American superhero realize and vocalize this.

I always wondered about the monarch preceding Blackbolt and what he might've been like... he makes an interesting Kirby-ish antagonist.

The promise of all those Avengers squads coming together is tantalizing. I'm looking forward to that.

What did you think of the new HQ? I don't think it *quite* lived up to the awe the team-members were showing. The prospect of all those doors opening to different places is a good one, though. I can imagine lots of yucks, though. Like- Hercules walking into Bucky and Natasha's bedroom when he needs to go to the bathroom in the middle of the night?

Instant teleportation *sounds* like a great story idea, but I think it can be *very* limiting. If it's that easy to get character A to disaster-point B, then why not have Thor or whoever serve as dues ex machina every single time?

What about Jocasta's new role? I'm disappointed that she won't be 'in the field'. I was looking forward to seeing her become a full-fledged superheroine. Not a housemaid/hostess/Van Dyne appearance fluctuator.

Oh, well.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Read the latest New Avengers for the wrap-up on the Dr. Strange / Brother Voodoo story. All in all, a bit of a let-down, and it showcases Bendis' greatest weaknesses. He can't really show anyone doing anything in a fight. There is just explosions and "oh shit, everything is falling apart!"-isms. Plus he really should stay away from magic; none of his characters know whats going on because its obvious he neither knows or cares.

It leaves both Strange and Brother Voodoo in an interesting place on where to go from here but...will I be buying either mini-series? Only if I feel an impulse at the CBS. I certainly won't reserve a copy for either. Cool to see Hellstrom though.

As for Mighty Avengers, thats at the bottom of my reading pile because its such a steaming pile of crap recently. I'll review when I get to it.
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
As for Mighty Avengers, thats at the bottom of my reading pile because its such a steaming pile of crap recently. I'll review when I get to it.

WHY BUY IT THEN?!

Seriously, why support Slott when he turns out such utter, utter pigswill?

[And isn't there a separate New Avengers thread?]
 
Posted by Titan Lad on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Stealth:
Consistency? From Bendis? BWA-HA-HA-HA-HA!!

Well, my wish came true, and the ending to the misguided MA/FF story came out yesterday, just a couple weeks after the beginning.

It's unremarkable overall, and Slott is taking the He-Wasp/Jocasta thing to painful levels.

Slott also has set himself up for a fall if the next issue doesn't deliver on the promised wondrousness of this new dimension, to say nothing of the new villain. I'm not optimistic, especially with Khoi Pham back on art duties.

His covers have been painful enough... otherwise I am happy to have an Avengers title being written by Bendis! Even though I found his Iniative stint more exciting then what we have seen thus far.

His Cassie has been so annoying, at this point I'd wish Jack of Hearts would come back if not for the sole purpose to kill her off aswell!
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Bah, I use this thread for all Avengers titles.

Like Stealth, I'm buying it for two more issues to see how it develops. That's about all I gave Avengers: Initiatve. But I do intend to drop it if the quality keeps up. I figured I'd give Slott one more storyline but I don't have high hopes.

(PS - I love when you post about Slott [Big Grin] )
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Well, Slott didn't deliver for me. I think he has some good ideas (and a lot of bad ones), but he has neither the craft nor the strong artistic support to pull off the good ideas. And, like Titan Lad said, Slott has completely botched his portrayal of Cassie, who should have been to this book what Courtney was to the early years of JSA. So it's bye-bye, MA. I respect Lardy's desire for a more "Avenger-y" book (him and I respectfully disagree on the merits of the Busiek era) but that's the last thing that I want, because for me The Avengers has always, at its best, been about looking forward, not looking back.

Which brings us to New Avengers. Stuart Immonen is the new artist, and his first issue, #55, has some of the best art of his career. And while some of Bendis's shortcomings and stylistic tics continue to annoy, he does finally seem to have remembered that a story needs a solid foundation and his dialogue is gradually getting less grating. There's still a lot I dislike -- Clint's painfully out-of-character bloodlust, the clumsy portrayals of the supernatural that Cobie mentioned, and the very presences of Spidey and Wolvie -- but overall it's getting more progressive and less amateurish.
 
Posted by LardLad on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Stealth:
Which brings us to New Avengers. Stuart Immonen is the new artist, and his first issue, #55, has some of the best art of his career. And while some of Bendis's shortcomings and stylistic tics continue to annoy, he does finally seem to have remembered that a story needs a solid foundation and his dialogue is gradually getting less grating. There's still a lot I dislike -- Clint's painfully out-of-character bloodlust, the clumsy portrayals of the supernatural that Cobie mentioned, and the very presences of Spidey and Wolvie -- but overall it's getting more progressive and less amateurish.

What the--?!?!?

*faints*

Where's the REAL Stealth and what have you done with her?!?!?!?

[Big Grin]

Honestly, though, after the travesty that was Avengers Disassembled, I'm surprised you'd even buy an Avengers book written by Bendis, much less give it a positive review! It's cool though--I'm just...shocked!

quote:
Originally posted by Stealth:
Well, Slott didn't deliver for me. I think he has some good ideas (and a lot of bad ones), but he has neither the craft nor the strong artistic support to pull off the good ideas. And, like Titan Lad said, Slott has completely botched his portrayal of Cassie, who should have been to this book what Courtney was to the early years of JSA. So it's bye-bye, MA. I respect Lardy's desire for a more "Avenger-y" book (him and I respectfully disagree on the merits of the Busiek era) but that's the last thing that I want, because for me The Avengers has always, at its best, been about looking forward, not looking back.

Obviously, we've discussed this, and I respect your opinion on all of that. I should reiterate that I'm not in lover with Slott's MA, but so far it's maintaining it's buy status with me.

Please don't misunderstand, though...I'm not anti-progress or anything with the Avengers. I just feel that if you're gonna call a group Avengers, it has to feel like the Avengers! It's hard for me to describe with perfect eloquence what I mean, but I guess the biggest part of it is whether the lineup feels like the Avengers.

You don't necessarily have to have Cap, Thor and Iron Man in the lineup, but it's good to have characters with that gravitas they bring. It also helps to have characters who are natural team players. I'm not 100% clear on who all the current New Avengers are, but most I can think of work either better as loners or as part of a small group. Cap/Bucky is definitely more of a behind the scenes/espionage character than Steve Rogers was. Luke Cage was always a glorified mercenary who worked with Danny Rand. Spidey--don't get me started! Our beloved Roger Stern was very wise to resolve that long ago. Dr. Strange? Come on! There's a reason why he only belonged to Marvel's non-team in the past.

Then there's Wolverine, the most over-exposed character in comics, bar none. He should be kept in the X-Verse where he belongs. There are very few characters out there who are a worse fit for a superhero team than Wolvie is for the Avengers. Just...GROSS! [Disgusting]

And Hawkeye should be Hawkeye, dammit! Yeah, I know he was Goliath for awhile, so there's a precedent. But having him dress up like some ninja-wannabe just doesn't fit him at all! No reason to fix what ain't broke!

If nothing else, Mighty has a good Avenger-y lineup going for it. Yeah, maybe it's lineup is a little too retro in some ways, but there's the potential for some yarns to be spun to my liking. I'd grade the series a "B" so far, which is better than a lot of group titles I've read lately. Haven't read the most recent issue with the new storyline yet, but I'll let you know what I think!
 
Posted by Fat Cramer on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Reboot:

[And isn't there a separate New Avengers thread?]

Since this is an All Avengers thread, discussion of the New Avengers has a place here as well as in its own thread.
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by LardLad:
quote:
Originally posted by Stealth:
Which brings us to New Avengers. Stuart Immonen is the new artist, and his first issue, #55, has some of the best art of his career. And while some of Bendis's shortcomings and stylistic tics continue to annoy, he does finally seem to have remembered that a story needs a solid foundation and his dialogue is gradually getting less grating. There's still a lot I dislike -- Clint's painfully out-of-character bloodlust, the clumsy portrayals of the supernatural that Cobie mentioned, and the very presences of Spidey and Wolvie -- but overall it's getting more progressive and less amateurish.

What the--?!?!?

*faints*

Where's the REAL Stealth and what have you done with her?!?!?!?

[Big Grin]

Honestly, though, after the travesty that was Avengers Disassembled, I'm surprised you'd even buy an Avengers book written by Bendis, much less give it a positive review! It's cool though--I'm just...shocked!

Lardy, I'm just as surprised at myself as you are. Disassembled was indeed a travesty, and the few early issues of NA that I read would have gotten failing grades in Writing 101. But post-Secret-Invasion, Bendis really has been gradually improving. He's still got a long way to go, and if not for Immonen I probably wouldn't even have posted about the latest issue, but I think he definitely is on to something good. Better late than never.

quote:
Originally posted by LardLad:
quote:
Originally posted by Stealth:
Well, Slott didn't deliver for me. I think he has some good ideas (and a lot of bad ones), but he has neither the craft nor the strong artistic support to pull off the good ideas. And, like Titan Lad said, Slott has completely botched his portrayal of Cassie, who should have been to this book what Courtney was to the early years of JSA. So it's bye-bye, MA. I respect Lardy's desire for a more "Avenger-y" book (him and I respectfully disagree on the merits of the Busiek era) but that's the last thing that I want, because for me The Avengers has always, at its best, been about looking forward, not looking back.

Obviously, we've discussed this, and I respect your opinion on all of that. I should reiterate that I'm not in lover with Slott's MA, but so far it's maintaining it's buy status with me.

Please don't misunderstand, though...I'm not anti-progress or anything with the Avengers. I just feel that if you're gonna call a group Avengers, it has to feel like the Avengers! It's hard for me to describe with perfect eloquence what I mean, but I guess the biggest part of it is whether the lineup feels like the Avengers.

You don't necessarily have to have Cap, Thor and Iron Man in the lineup, but it's good to have characters with that gravitas they bring. It also helps to have characters who are natural team players. I'm not 100% clear on who all the current New Avengers are, but most I can think of work either better as loners or as part of a small group. Cap/Bucky is definitely more of a behind the scenes/espionage character than Steve Rogers was. Luke Cage was always a glorified mercenary who worked with Danny Rand. Spidey--don't get me started! Our beloved Roger Stern was very wise to resolve that long ago. Dr. Strange? Come on! There's a reason why he only belonged to Marvel's non-team in the past.

Then there's Wolverine, the most over-exposed character in comics, bar none. He should be kept in the X-Verse where he belongs. There are very few characters out there who are a worse fit for a superhero team than Wolvie is for the Avengers. Just...GROSS! [Disgusting]

And Hawkeye should be Hawkeye, dammit! Yeah, I know he was Goliath for awhile, so there's a precedent. But having him dress up like some ninja-wannabe just doesn't fit him at all! No reason to fix what ain't broke!

If nothing else, Mighty has a good Avenger-y lineup going for it. Yeah, maybe it's lineup is a little too retro in some ways, but there's the potential for some yarns to be spun to my liking. I'd grade the series a "B" so far, which is better than a lot of group titles I've read lately. Haven't read the most recent issue with the new storyline yet, but I'll let you know what I think!

I agree wholeheartedly about Wolverine, but I have a feeling that he's not a favorite of Bendis's, either. He was barely in the most recent issue, and I have a feeling that as Wolvie and the other X-Men continue to lose their golden-geese status, he may be gradually phased out. I agree on Spidey and Cage, too, but they're pet characters of Bendis's, so I'm learning to live with them.

And I also agree 100% that Clint should be Hawkeye and nothing else. I have a dislike for Clint-as-Goliath to the point where I think that Roy Thomas's run started to decline right around that time. The way Bendis has been mischaracterizing Clint is just painful, let alone the ninja suit, and that's probably what bothers me the most about NA right now.

I wanted to like MA, and I tried my damnedest to, but I think Slott's just as amateurish as early Bendis and just as guilty of character assassinations -- I already mentioned Cassie, and there's also THAT LINE that Slott put into Hank's mouth, which will undoubtedly take its place in the Avengers Hall of Shame alongside Mad Wanda, Robo-Vision with the sour-milk-colored body, Ms. Marvel's rape, etc.

Now, having gotten all of that out of the way, I want to address a very good point you've brought up, and one that I think should be extensively discussed in this thread: JUST WHAT DOES "AVENGER-Y" MEAN?

I've always taken it to be a fixation on certain heroes (Captain America, Iron Man, Thor, Wasp, Hank-Pym-in-his-various-identities, Hawkeye, Scarlet Witch, Vision, Beast, Wonder Man and Ms. Marvel) to the exclusion of just about everyone else as a viable Avenger, and a fixation on certain villains (Kang, Ultron, Nefaria, Graviton) whose antics get more absurdly overblown every time they're brought back, and, again, to the exclusion of anyone else as a viable Avengers foe. "Avenger-y" is the reason why West Coast Avengers under Englehart/Milgrom outsold Avengers under Stern/J. Buscema, even though I much prefer the latter.

I will admit that my viewpoint has been skewed by bitterness about the continued resistance to giving the Harras/Epting era its rightful place alongside the other great Avengers eras (similar, as I've pointed out before, to the continued resistance to that other controversial run with a passionate cult following, TMK's Legion.) But I'd like to know what defines "Avenger-y" to other people, especially when it's placed in a positive context.

And, Cobie, when you get a chance, please post your thoughts on why you think Bendis has improved. Thanks.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
You know, I think you're dead-on Stealth about something I never thought of before. I don't think Bendis is that big a fan of Wolverine. Its almost really obvious when you see Logan in any of Bendis' stories. All he ever does is get his ass kicked and drink beer. Bendis doesn't know what to do with him but realizes it helps sell his title.

But yeah, he does like Spidey, Spider-Woman and Cage so they're not going anywhere. I've learned to live with it too.

Agree on Hawkeye--thats who he should be. My father, who collected the Avengers back when Clint became Goliath ABSOLUTELY HATES the Clint as Goliath thing. He'd be in complete agreement with you on that.

As to why I think Bendis has improved. There are several and some of them are hard to put into words. But I'll give it a go:

(1) He stopped acting like "I'm so damn cool with my Avengers comics". I think many of us can agree there was a sense of this early on. How can I prove it? Well, I can't, but I felt there was a little of that going on. But by now I feel like Bendis grew up a little. He's been writing an Avengers comic for 5 years and he's pretty much acknowledged he's as big an Avengers geek as anyone.

(2) Instead of shoving Luke Cage down our throats, he's put Luke through some serious situations that have created a sense of empathy, respect and overall general like for the character. I never thought I'd like Luke Cage and Bendis got me to do it--all the while knowing he was Bendis's favorite.

(3) His dialogue is clicking more now. He always walks a fine line on his titles: annoying & jarring vs. realistic and humorous. Lately it feels like the latter. I wonder if that has to do with who Bendis puts in the comic? I think the addition of Bucky/Cap made Bendis sit back and think "I better not screw up the way I write him" and he really thinks through those scenes. Now when Bucky/Cap is in a scene it feels right. He & Spider-Man have totally different viewpoints, disagree and yet are respectful to one another. I think he's done a good job there.

(4) He no longer has the pressure of having the only Avengers book, so he can put the team in situations he's more comfortable with. And obviously, that is street-oriented stuff, spy stuff, etc. And that's where he excels. Now, the latest issues fly completely against that, and I reviewed that earlier: he went for the magic-based battle with Dormanmmu (ha, spelled *that* wrong) and it the end result was a clunky mess that really felt "meh". But he's obviously trying to test himself by going that route. I give him credit for that, now he'll have to step back and make sure his next three stories are better before he ventures off into unknown territory again.

(5) He does things / scenes now that he didn't used to do and no one else is doing. For example: having a team meeting. Electing a leader. Working on strategies. Honestly, those things are about as "Avenger-y" as you can get. Slott isn't doing that stuff and many other teams forget about all that stuff too. It adds a layer of depth to the team that encourages them to *feel* like a team.

I could probably think of other ones but I think those are good.

As for Mighty Avengers, still haven't read it yet; I'm almost cringing. If its as bad as I'm hoping its not, it may be my final issue of the series.
 
Posted by Nightcrawler on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Reboot:
[And isn't there a separate New Avengers thread?]

This one is about "All Avengers" so I don't see why one can't discuss "New Avengers."

I would combine but I don't have enough desire to.

I have to admit that I'm buying all of the Avenger titles out of habit and haven't read a one since Geoff Johns?!? One day I'll start reading them and find out what you're all talking about.
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Nightcrawler:
This one is about "All Avengers" so I don't see why one can't discuss "New Avengers."

Mostly? Because it's so bloody broad! Once a thread with actual content (i.e., not inane one-word posts, etc) gets as long as this thread, it's hard to find anything in it...

[Plus, stuff sneaks in that isn't entirely forum-appropriate, such as the way the "All-Spider-Man thread" has a long series of cartoon-related posts that should be in Anywhere]
 
Posted by LardLad on :
 
I should point out that I'm not anti-Luke Cage at all. I love-love-LOVE his relationship to Danny Rand and how prominent Luke was in the recemtly-ended Immortal Iron Fist series (hopefully soon to be relaunched :crossfingers:). But more urban, street-level characters like Luke, Danny, Daredevil, etc. (even Spidey and Bucky/Cap to a degree) tend not to work too well as Avengers. Sure, there are some good exceptions, I guess, but even then, there's kind of a flash, or even glamour, that you need to have to fit in the group and make it feel more "Avenger-y".

The Avengers just aren't an urban, street-level outfit. So having urban street-level members who often fight urban-street-level menaces seems very far-removed from the core Avengers concept to me. And those're the kinds of stories Bendis does best. But it ain't the Avengers, and that's why he should never have taken the assignmnet.

And, damnit, the costumes should be bright, flashy and garish as hell with bright, flashy garish stories to go along with them!!! [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
And so...as my huge pile of comics twindled down, I'm left with two types: those I was saving because I know they'll be good (like the Dark Tower comics and Unknown Soldier) and those I was slightly dreading and just couldn't bring myself to read. And some of those surprised me, while some were what I expected. But the two worst of the bunch, were Power Girl...and yes, Mighty Avengers. That means out of 87 different comic books, the four worst were Power Girl #2 and #3 and Mighty Avengers #26 and #27.

I tried...I really did try to give it a chance after Lardy put an arguement up for it and I thought maybe I was letting the momentum in this thread alter my perception. But that simply is not the case. Mighty Avengers is an absolutely terrible comic book. And Hank Pym's "It's on Bitch!" is something that cannot be ignored no matter how many issues later.

See...the utterly ridiculous Hank Pym / Jocasta romance storyline! So bad, fan-fiction wouldn't touch it!

See...Amadeus Cho beaten by 2-year old Valeria Storm in a way that makes him look utterly juvenile after Pak and Van Lente have gone to great depths to show otherwise in Hercules's comic. Nice one, Slott!

See...a FF versus the Avengers story so juvenile that it makes me wish Rob Liefield was still writing both titles, because at least he'd do it tongue-in-cheek!

See...an Inhuman threat arise that *might* be interesting...except Slott goes to such lengths to make him seem "so dangerous, we need every Avenger that ever lived!" that I'd rather read the 104th Inhumans vs. Maximus battle instead.

See...Quicksilver written completely out of character as if the last 20+ years never happened! He cowardly runs for cover and considers not standing his ground at all. Why, isn't it pretty much canon that Pietro is cocky enough to battle just about anybody, even if he loses? Since when would he be so scared? Oh, since Slott needed whoever he could to advance his crummy plot.

Then there are the little things, like the fact that the Young Avengers Vision adds absolutely nothing to this comic--he could be replaced by basically any other character in all of fiction. So why is he there? Because he's supposed to remind us of the good old days? That's as cheap a marketing ploy as dissembling the Avengers in the first place--different sides of the same coin.

Just about every character is written poorly, every story fumbles along with no dynamic pacing and no real sense of coherency. The book is terrible, and yes, I am dropping it.

Like my review of the aforementioned Power Girl, I'm of course being overly critical. But like I said, these were the worst two of the entire bunch I've been reading. And that ain't too cool.
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
The book is terrible, and yes, I am dropping it.

[Big Grin Bounce] [Bouncing Boy] [Big Grin Bounce]
 
Posted by LardLad on :
 
Wow, Des--having just read the first part of the Unspoken arc, I'm really not seeing how Mighty is one of the two worst comics in all creation! [shrug] I'm a pretty knowledgeable and discerning Avengers fan, but I'm just not seeing the utter blasphemy on every page that you and Stealth (and apparently Reboot) are seeing.

I'm not here to dissuade anybody from dropping the book, but I'd certainly like to address some of the offending bits as a counterpoint. So...it's on, bitch! [Big Grin]


quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
See...the utterly ridiculous Hank Pym / Jocasta romance storyline! So bad, fan-fiction wouldn't touch it!

Utterly ridiculous? Has it not been established from the beginning that Jocasta's brain patterns were based on Janet Van Dyne's? Is it really beyond reason to see how a man who's lost the only woman he's ever really loved might turn to a being who carries some of her essence? Yes, it's kind of sick and twisted in its own way, but aberrant behavior under duress isn't exactly unprecedented in Hank's history, is it? I know you guys disapprove of some of those past takes on Hank Pym, but they happened, so it's there.

I know some other writers in the past kind of played with this in reverse by saying Vision's attraction to Wanda originated from Wonder Man's brain patterns, and they used it to explore a relationship between Simon and Wanda. Say what you want about those stories, but they didn't exactly come from nowhere. Frankly, this Hank/Jocasta thing makes sense from the perspective of Avengers history and Janet's recent loss. I don't think in any way that Slott is pursuing this without the intent of exploring the ramifications.

I think that the main purpose of this incarnation of Mighty is really to to explore who Hank Pym is and how being the focus of this group of Avengers will ultimately help him help him heal from losing Janet and from all the mistakes he's made in the past. It would be a cop-out if all this was done without some big bumps in the road along the way.

quote:
See...Amadeus Cho beaten by 2-year old Valeria Storm in a way that makes him look utterly juvenile after Pak and Van Lente have gone to great depths to show otherwise in Hercules's comic. Nice one, Slott!
Well, it's always tough in a team book to get characters just right who are appearing in their own monthlies, especially ones as complex as Cho. But, really, you have to take into account the threat level here as being very low and that the tale was intended to be lighthearted. Spidey tends to look really dumb and incompetent in stories with this tone, but readers tend to forgive it easily with the context in mind. But since you hated the story, you probably didn't give that context much of a thought.

I thought it was very creative having Cho use the Ant Man helmet, and a lot rings true in the banter between Hank and Cho as they clash intellectually.

quote:
See...a FF versus the Avengers story so juvenile that it makes me wish Rob Liefield was still writing both titles, because at least he'd do it tongue-in-cheek!
Gawd, I know you were being a little "tongue-in-cheek" yourself in that comment, but that was just WRONG! [Razz]

quote:
See...an Inhuman threat arise that *might* be interesting...except Slott goes to such lengths to make him seem "so dangerous, we need every Avenger that ever lived!" that I'd rather read the 104th Inhumans vs. Maximus battle instead.
"He Alpha Flighted them!" was kind of a disturbing line,but given that Bendis was the source of the allusion, it seemed appropriate. It's really too early to judge how good of a villain the Unspoken will be, but isn't it the writer's job to set up the villain as a huge threat? I guess if the Unspoken is at a Black Bolt-power level, then there's probably not much hyperbole there.

quote:
See...Quicksilver written completely out of character as if the last 20+ years never happened! He cowardly runs for cover and considers not standing his ground at all. Why, isn't it pretty much canon that Pietro is cocky enough to battle just about anybody, even if he loses? Since when would he be so scared? Oh, since Slott needed whoever he could to advance his crummy plot.
I think it's not unreasonable to think that Pietro may have done some maturing after all he's been through, enough at least to know he can't take down someone like this alone. But the specific "fight or flight" gag was just really quick and meant to be humorous, I think. I mean, he did come right back after a moment's panic. After all the time he spent with the Inhumans, Pietro would certainly have a good idea what they're all in for.

For whatever reason, the quick one-off gags seem to get under your skin more than they should. Peter David does gags like this all the time in his comics and is widely praised for them. I'm not saying Slott is in Peter's league, but it's clear he subscibes to some of his writing tools. I'd actually be interested in what Peter thinks of "it's on, bitch", actually.

quote:
Then there are the little things, like the fact that the Young Avengers Vision adds absolutely nothing to this comic--he could be replaced by basically any other character in all of fiction. So why is he there? Because he's supposed to remind us of the good old days? That's as cheap a marketing ploy as dissembling the Avengers in the first place--different sides of the same coin.
I think Vision is clearly there because of the character's pedigree with Hank Pym, same reasons Jocasta and Cassie are there. We haven't seen this explored so much yet in Vision's case, but in a book that is clearly Hank Pym's, it makes sense to have characters there who can support his story. Lots of team books appear to neglect some characters in favor of others until the writer "gets" to them. I suspect this is the case with the Vision.

quote:
Just about every character is written poorly, every story fumbles along with no dynamic pacing and no real sense of coherency. The book is terrible, and yes, I am dropping it.
Well, obviously I disagree. This book is safe with me unless this arc totally fails. I have to wonder, though, on some level whether the reason this book is failing for some of you has to do with the focus on Hank. He's been a controversial character for a long time, and it seems obvious that you guys seem to want him 100% perfect and almost flawlessly heroic. How he's written here seems consistent with what I've read, IMO.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
I'm glad for your counterpoints--honestly, I am.

Also, as you saw, once I got started, I let the momentum carry me into tongue-in-cheek / over the top mode. I'm old school LMB, and that's how we do it, right fearless leader? [Big Grin]

You are probably right about Hank and his usage being a major sore point for me. But I do believe no one story or creative team's arc can be judged in a vacuum. These characters have lots of history and that history influences my feelings on future stories, whether fair or not. Its definitely hurting it here more than anything.

As for now, I will have to see how time progressess and read your reviews of the series in this thread (and elsewhere) and hope that somehow this potentially awesome series can somehow in my mind reach that potential. I'd love to see a consistent artist and someone like Greg Pak, Jeff Parker or Stealth's fave Andy Diggle take over and given a chance to run with things, particularly if they could use Hank in a way I found to be (A) respectful and hopefully redemptive and (B) not going backwards.
 
Posted by LardLad on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
You are probably right about Hank and his usage being a major sore point for me. But I do believe no one story or creative team's arc can be judged in a vacuum. These characters have lots of history and that history influences my feelings on future stories, whether fair or not. Its definitely hurting it here more than anything.

I guess I'm a little curious as to how you'd like to see Hank written. Should the stories from the past that have influenced this take be ignored? Because Hank has been portrayed as unstable in many, many stories. I know there were some stories I haven't read where he apparently got permanently "over the hump", but even so, losing Janet could not be an easy thing for him.

And there's also Secret Invasion, which I never read. Did it establish exactly at what point Hank was replaced? Having that info might help me a bit here.
 
Posted by Titan Lad on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by LardLad:
quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
You are probably right about Hank and his usage being a major sore point for me. But I do believe no one story or creative team's arc can be judged in a vacuum. These characters have lots of history and that history influences my feelings on future stories, whether fair or not. Its definitely hurting it here more than anything.

I guess I'm a little curious as to how you'd like to see Hank written. Should the stories from the past that have influenced this take be ignored? Because Hank has been portrayed as unstable in many, many stories. I know there were some stories I haven't read where he apparently got permanently "over the hump", but even so, losing Janet could not be an easy thing for him.

And there's also Secret Invasion, which I never read. Did it establish exactly at what point Hank was replaced? Having that info might help me a bit here.

I think Slott originally touched upon this on his last issue with Avengers: The Initative. He had Hank Pym having a deep conversation with "Janet" trying to put everything behind him and seeking her forgiveness. Which I don't think she could give him (I am iffy, I haven't read it since Jan died). Of course it was revealed that it was Jocasta, but she has Jan's brain patterns, but at the same time she doesn't have the history with Hank.

And now thinking about it, the skrull that took on his guise is the one that is responsible for Jan's death. So it must be doing a double whammy on Hank. Also Nak was replaced during his time as a Professor at Oxford, him and Jan were going through a rough spot and started to have an emotional affair with another woman. Of course the woman turned out to be a Skrull, and took Hank's role and then tried to regain Jan's trust.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
I believe Secret Invasion went the route of establishing that Hank was switched right at the end of Avengers Dissembled. So while that gets him off the hook for the Chlor mess in Civil War, it doesn't change anything about his long history (hitting Jan being the major thing, but also Ultron, etc.).

I'll give you a little history on my interactions with Hank Pym, though it goes beyond the point and probably will bore most people, but I'll sucker you in with our friendship and get you to read it [Big Grin] . I’ve been reading about Hank, usually as Giant Man, since I first started reading comics at age 11. Giant Man (and prior to that Ant Man) was my Dad’s second favorite superhero, second only to Spider-Man, but tied with Iron Man, when *he* was a kid during the actual 1960’s Silver Age. He was crushed when Giant Man left the Avengers in #16 and then exited Tales to Astonish—so much so that he was still talking about it in the late 80’s when I was old enough to read comics (as you know, I started with the Silver Age Marvels for the first several years). So that always stuck with me; he also loved the return of Hank as Goliath a few years later (still technically Silver Age, but by now the mid to late 60’s when my father was getting older). So with that in mind, my young mind undertook the project to read ALL of the Avengers and his run in Tales to Astonish (which we owned by the time I could read them), and that love of Hank transferred over to me. And so I see him very much as he was in the early to mid Silver Age, or at least, that’s how I want him to be.

But I also recognize he’s had a long history in between, which I am also very familiar with. I too loved the Goliath era, and actually prefer him with that moniker, costume and power set (the blue & yellow works best IMO). I also loved his return to Ant-Man in Kree/Skrull War, and I didn’t mind the Yellowjacket stuff in between, and then again after he’s brief stint in Marvel Premiere (or was it another one of those?) was over. The Ultron thing is forgivable and like Roy Thomas also reiterated, it led to the creation of the Vision, so that made up for it in some small way. But I do hate the Hank hitting Jan stuff that Jim Shooter gave us—so much so that I can’t stand the constant references to it these past years. I loved what Roger Stern did when he kind of brought Hank back from the brink and then I loved what Bob Harras did when he restored Hank as Giant Man in what I believe was a way that made total sense and did justice to the character and his history. Yet, Busiek then began to go through all of that again, almost ignoring those past sequences that already resolved this issue, and put him in the Yellowjacket costume—which should be never be used by Hank again—ultimately leading to Dissembled, etc., etc, and now Slott, which basically feels like yet another rehash of trying to restore Hank when its already been done.

Hank has a long history and I get that; I don’t want to backtrack to the Silver Age and pretend like it never happened because that never works and I believe comic books need to move forward. But I think Stern and Harras did a great job getting that going. I’m not saying Hank needs to be his Silver Age heroic yet tragic self, but I would like to at least seem him getting close to that, or as close he can in this modern era. I think constantly reiterating his mental problems has become redundant and further takes away pieces of the character that become harder and harder to restore.

The constant creation of new identities is something Slott or someone can say “makes sense given his history” but all it does is make him take two steps backwards yet again. He should not have become the Wasp—that’s craptastic. I’d also say he should be done with Yellowjacket permanently. Marvel has another Ant-Man by now. So I’d rather he be Giant Man or Goliath, the latter being a better moniker, and he can use it as a tribute to his now deceased great friend, Bill Foster.

I’ve already read several great stories in which Hank has moved past his problems and matured in several ways. I don’t mean for him to have no problems anymore, but how can he continue to grow and deal with new problems and drama if they keep making him deal with all the old stuff in a continual cycle. Shooter never should have written the damn story but its over by now; just like I hope they never reference that Ms. Marvel was raped or that Tony Stark had a 17 year old version of himself flying around as Iron Man, or Roy Thomas created this vastly complicated reasons for why Thor has blonde hair and isn’t reflective of actual Norse mythology, I hope they stop referencing it completely.

Since Busiek’s run, nothing good has been done with Hank, and its brought him back to almost where he was prior to Roger Stern. Busiek put him back in the Yellowjacket suit, Johns tried to move him forward but came off creepy and weird, Austen made Jan slutty and Hank an idiot, Bendis reminded fans of Shooter’s story (while Millar really showcased it in the Ultimate version) and now Slott has made Hank as crazier than ever. Its been one big pissing contest for 10 years, and I can’t stand it.

I don’t mind his long history being influenced but I think its time they stopped revisiting this plot and took Hank to new places. Keep him away from Jocasta, and yes, even the Wasp, for a good 10 years. No more creating monsters. But also don’t go out of your way to say “Hank Pym is the greatest hero of them all!” like Slott did in his first Mighty Avengers story and in Avengers: Initiative #2, because that rings false too. Move forward, but respectfully.
 
Posted by LardLad on :
 
There was also some work done on the character during Engelhart's run on West Coast Avengers. Hank was nearly suicidal there and emerged as "Dr. Pym" with primarily shrunken gadgets kept as an arsenal of sorts and the red jumpsuit. I had mixed feelings about this take, but I could appreciate what Englehart was trying to do there--move Hank away from shifting identities constantly and get him past all his heartache. A part of this was kind of putting Hank's romance with Janet completely in the past and just making them friends.

Fast-forward to the beginning of Busiek's run (after I'd walked away from the Avengers for years shortly after Larry Hama took over), and Hank's Giant Man again and back with Janet. Obviously, I was and am a little confused about what happened in between Englehart and Busiek. I don't remember Busiek making any great missteps with Hank.

I saw his resumption of the Yellowjacket identity as a way for Hank to redeem it. I also didn't mind a lot because I always thought the costume was the very best looking one Hank ever wore. And this was after we already got to see Kurt revisit that version of Hank in Avengers Forever, so I was kinda primed for it.

As for ignoring Hank hitting Janet in continuity, well, it was just a lot more important and harder to ignore than those other examples you use as comparisons. It's infamous, but at the same time that scene was a groundbreaking one in comics. Certainly, domestic violence was and is a fairly taboo subject in comics. I'd imagine seeing that may have actually had some positive effects on certain readers, just as the Harry Osborne and Roy Harper drug stories are acknowledged to have had. So I'd definitely be against totally ignoring it ever happened.

But the fact is, Hank stopped being abusive after that storyline. Since then, it's been about his guilt over having have done that coupled with exploring some of the underlying mental problems that may have played into them. And I can see Hank exploring all of that after losing Janet. She was too important to him for him not to have issues with it. She was his strength. Having him go through this period with no issues would have made absolutely no sense to me.
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
Short form, Jocasta's NEVER been especially Jan-like before. Occasionally, the *idea* of being a Jan double has haunted her (perhaps most prominently, and certainly most recently, in Marvel Zombies 3 with the strange hallucinations), but she's always been a far quieter and more introverted character, while Jan (both as her usual ditzy self and the leader personality occasionally glue-gunned onto her) was an extrovert.

And, frankly, that's par for the course with the brain-pattern routine. Vision's never been written like Wonder Man (despite the occasional assertion to the contrary, even those comics only claimed it rather than showed it), Alkehma (sp?) wasn't Mockingbird, and ditto the retconned Ultron-has-Pym's brain patterns.
 
Posted by LardLad on :
 
Well, isn't it kinda odd that none of those characters have been anything like the characters whos brain patterns they're based on? Besides, who knows what changes Hank may have made to Jocasta since Jan died to make her more Jan-like? Yeah, it's definitely (and obviously intentionally) kinda creepy, but not totally out of the bounds of possibility for a man grieving the loss of the love of his life. He'd perceive Jocasta as being a piece of Jan that lives on and that could take him down a dark path.
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by LardLad:
Well, isn't it kinda odd that none of those characters have been anything like the characters whos brain patterns they're based on?

Not really. Go and look at the Alex Lipton stuff from the Bob Harras Avengers run (especially the Avengers Spotlight issue which introduced it... I forget the number). That basically established that the "brain patterns" don't actually have anything directly to do with the personality of the mecha - it's all about keeping the android's low-level OS functions running smoothly (without any brain patterns, Vision turned out to be erroring like mad, which is why he was acting like "a toaster". Once he got a new set, his original personality gradually began to reemerge).

Like swapping a red plastic cog for a black plastic cog in a simple machine - the colour doesn't really matter, just that it's there. Or, in a more computer-like metaphor, deleting some key DLLs - copying them from any other Windows PC running the same version of the OS, regardless of how the OS has been customised, would restore normal function.

quote:
Originally posted by LardLad:
Besides, who knows what changes Hank may have made to Jocasta since Jan died to make her more Jan-like? Yeah, it's definitely (and obviously intentionally) kinda creepy, but not totally out of the bounds of possibility for a man grieving the loss of the love of his life. He'd perceive Jocasta as being a piece of Jan that lives on and that could take him down a dark path.

So, basically what you're saying is that Pym has mind-raped Jocasta?

[ August 13, 2009, 05:31 PM: Message edited by: Reboot ]
 
Posted by LardLad on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Reboot:
So, basically what you're saying is that Pym has mind-raped Jocasta?

That's one (particularly disturbing) way of looking at the possibility I brought up, 'Boot. But going in a different direction (largely because I don't think that's where Slott is going with this)...even if you dismiss the brain patterns thing, it's quite possible that Jocasta would view her creator's creator with a certain reverance that could translate into a different attraction unrelated to Janet Van Dyne's influence.

So Hank could be holding on to what he perceives as Jan's legacy, while Jocasta could be mistaking one kind of love for another. It certainly happens.

quote:
Originally posted by Reboot:
Go and look at the Alex Lipton stuff from the Bob Harras Avengers run (especially the Avengers Spotlight issue which introduced it... I forget the number). That basically established that the "brain patterns" don't actually have anything directly to do with the personality of the mecha - it's all about keeping the android's low-level OS functions running smoothly (without any brain patterns, Vision turned out to be erroring like mad, which is why he was acting like "a toaster". Once he got a new set, his original personality gradually began to reemerge).

Well, that was one explanation. But one of the things that causes this kind of debate is conflicting ideas writers have shown about concepts such as the brain pattern thing. Those are among the perils caused by serialized comics published decades on end. I'd argue that the stories stating there is a personality correlation are much more numerous and more prominent than something that happened in an obscure Avengers Spotlight story. I'd be surprised if there were really any references to that story outside of the Harras era in which it appeared. You choose to enter that version into canon, but obviously many other writers have chosen not to if they've even heard of the story.

That's the essential debate at the center of how Hank Pym's portrayal and by extension the Hank/Jocasta thing: what's canon and what should be ignored?
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by LardLad:
quote:
Originally posted by Reboot:
So, basically what you're saying is that Pym has mind-raped Jocasta?

That's one (particularly disturbing) way of looking at the possibility I brought up, 'Boot. But going in a different direction (largely because I don't think that's where Slott is going with this)...
Well, how would you describe rewriting someone's personality to be more like someone else in less disturbing terms?

Telepathy (and its equivalents - and since we're dealing with sentient AIs here, it's directly equivalent) tends to get dealt with too lightly in comics. I mean, you suggest that Pym may have "changed" Jocasta to make her more Wasp-like, but say that it's "not totally out of the bounds of possibility for a man grieving the loss of the love of his life".

Let's transplant that to the real world for the moment. Let's say a man marries a woman, and she dies. And that the woman has an identical twin and/or daughter who looks just like her and are already a bit like her (although there are definitely incest overtones in Pym/Jocasta, let's say the daughter's from a prior relationship just to get that out the way). And the man decides to "change" them so that they act like his dead wife and love him "just like she used to". And proceeds to brainwash them to make it happen.

That's not just "dark". That's downright HORRIFIC, on a scale I can barely even concieve, and the man would deserve to be locked in a very small hole for the rest of his natural life.

[And, of course, let's not forget that Pym originally locked onto Jan because she was a dead ringer for his first wife...]

quote:
Originally posted by LardLad:
...even if you dismiss the brain patterns thing, it's quite possible that Jocasta would view her creator's creator with a certain reverance that could translate into a different attraction unrelated to Janet Van Dyne's influence.

So Hank could be holding on to what he perceives as Jan's legacy, while Jocasta could be mistaking one kind of love for another. It certainly happens.

So, now you're saying Jocasta is sexually attracted to her grandfather?

And yeah, I'm putting bad spins on this... but, frankly, they're the sort of terms I see this whole thing in. I don't see than this whole thing CAN be put in "innocent" terms - especially with Jocasta's personality transplant, which I really find inherently and deeply disturbing. And, yes, maybe that's not what Slott intended - but if he really doesn't mean it so, that just means he hasn't thought it through.

[ August 13, 2009, 06:53 PM: Message edited by: Reboot ]
 
Posted by LardLad on :
 
Y'know, I think this sort of debate is the type of thing Slott hoped to start when he showed there was something untoward going on between Jocasta and Hank. It's supposed to seem a little creepy and make you wonder what exactly is going on. This was reflected in the faces and comments of his fellow Avengers who witnessed them kissing and their other interactions.

There are any number of possibilities including the ones mentioned here and at least a couple others I've thought of: A) What if this isn't Jocasta at all but a new creation that looks like her that Hank programmed to love him? B) What if one of Hank's ememies like Ultron created a new Jocasta or reprogrammed the existing one to manipulate him as part of some grand scheme? Or...

C) In this age of "temporary death" in comics, maybe Jan really is in there somehow as her eventual resurrection solution? Other than Jan not being a Marvel Universe headliner like Capor Thor, is there any reason for us to believe that Jan is really, REALLY gonna stay dead? From the first issue of Mighty, I've pondered this as being the ultimate explanation for what is going on with Jocasta and Hank, and it's still my pet theory. If I'm right, then Jan exists in Jocasta in a state of amnesia as her mind adjusts to being in its new state. Given how Hank used Jocasta to create the new Infinite Avengers Mansion, I'm not entirely sure (if I'm right) that Hank is aware of this fact. I think if he were, he'd go to greater lengths to protect her.

Hopefully, Slott will pay off this very well when he eventually resolves it with whatever spin he has in mind. I, at least, will probably still be aboard to see it.
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
I would be less than shocked to find they were just meant to be reacting to the robosexuality. Isn't Slott the guy who said he was creeped out by Wanda/Vision for that reason?

And Jan's shown in the afterlife in Incredible Herc #129 (along with various others, including but not limited to Blink, Banshee, Darkstar, [Black] Goliath, Puck and U-Go-Girl, Wasp, however, was one of the few ones specifically called out; while Jack of Hearts won on the resurrection slot machine.)
 
Posted by LardLad on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Reboot:
And Jan's shown in the afterlife in Incredible Herc #129 (along with various others, including but not limited to Blink, Banshee, Darkstar, [Black] Goliath, Puck and U-Go-Girl, Wasp, however, was one of the few ones specifically called out; while Jack of Hearts won on the resurrection slot machine.)

Much as I love Hercules and enjoyed that sequence, surely you don't expect Marvel to recognize that as being the final word on Jan or all those other characters being really gone forever? Hell, that slot machine was Pak and Van Lente's commentary on the impermanence of death in comics. I was a little surprised to see Jan included, however, as many of those others you mentioned I'd wager are among those I'd deem less likely to come back. But you never know...
 
Posted by LardLad on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Reboot:
I would be less than shocked to find they were just meant to be reacting to the robosexuality. Isn't Slott the guy who said he was creeped out by Wanda/Vision for that reason?

Dunno about anything Slott may have said about them, but there's nothing all that novel or shocking about the 'robosexuality' in Avengers lore given Wanda and Vision even if you split hairs between what it is to be a robot versus an android. I think Jarvis and the others were reacting much more to the kinds of implications we've been discussing.
 
Posted by Set on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by LardLad:
C) In this age of "temporary death" in comics, maybe Jan really is in there somehow as her eventual resurrection solution?

This would be a fairly standard sci-fi trope, the duplicate / clone of the person becoming the refuge that their real self jumps into when their original body dies.

[tangent] I really thought that was where the Titans were going with Match, that Conner's original soul would have become sort of 'quantum-entangled' with Match's form, and that a combination of Miss Martian's telepathy, Raven's empathic abilities, the light of the yellow sun and Joseph's temporary residence inside of Match would have been able to sort of 'fan the flames' of Conner's traumatized spiritual remains within Match, allowing him to be reborn in this new body (which would then transform to his original appearance, the damage from the cloning attempt being purged by the light of the yellow sun with a little help from Raven). [/tangent]

If Jocasta's personality becomes enough like Jan's, there's a possibility of a psychic / spiruitual connection forming, and Jan 'finding her way back.' Of course, they'll have to grow a new body for her, perhaps using some cloned tissue lying around.

Alternately, and much creepier, Jan rarely used that power, but had the ability to control insects. Imagine if during the trauma of death, a portion of her psyche fled into the tiny minds of the surrounding insect life, which gathered into a form of hive-mind, driven by confused fragments of her original psyche. The insect swarm would be a menace at first, until the cause of their aberrant behavior was found (with clues such as the insects being found in one of her old apartments, or trailing after Hank and proving resistant to his own attempts to control them, etc). The insect swarm might even attack Jocasta, thinking of her as an imposter, channeling frustration and outrage at 'being replaced.' (Primarily subconscious, as Jan's full consciousness wouldn't be present, yet, but would have to be 'jumpstarted' somehow.)

At least temporarily, the new Wasp would be a swarm of insects, able to, at best, assume a human like form. Later, some process would either transfer her consciousness into a new body (cloned from her old one), or allow her to transform her swarm-body into her original body (perhaps using Pym Particles, somehow?) and back again, giving her a new power.

Combining the two alternatives, a portion of her psyche fled to nearby insects, and Hanks 'Jan-ification' of Jocasta has *also* established a connection. The insect swarm attacks Jocasta, not out of outrage, but attempting to free up the remaining spiritual essence of Jan to 'heal' herself and become psychically whole again. The cover could have a freaky picture of a partially dismantled Jocasta, floating in a messianic pose, surrounded by swarms of insects that seem to be pouring out of her and flying around her like a cyclone.
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
AVENGERS INTIATIVE #27: a pretty strong paired-stories approach that lent some gravity to Johnny Guitar (who I don't really remember reading before) and restored Hardball to the Initiative, I think.

I didn't know Dragon Man was in the Negative Zone, but he made for a fun weapon in Hardball's holster.

Tigra's note was chilling. Is Greer veering too far into the dark side?

NEW AVENGERS #56: I enjoyed Mockingbird here, for the first time since her return, really. I'm still annoyed by Clint as ninja-boy, but surely that won't be for much longer?

It's was good to see the Wrecking Crew here, and the way the issue read led to a great cliffhanging moment, I thought.

I look forward to seeing the result of Loki's (still not caught up to the events in THOR? Surprising...) 'gift' to The Hood. I felt sorry for Madame Masque there, couldn't he spare a thought for her with a miracle-in-a-carton in his hand?

Somehow or other I left the store without DARK AVENGERS #9, which is supposed to feature a scene that several readers of this board would be interested in... one featuring a certain former Valkyrior and a statuesque beauty in Las Vegas...

[ August 27, 2009, 12:09 PM: Message edited by: Mystery Lad ]
 
Posted by Arachne on :
 
That scene's in the preview, actually. I knew they were going to make us wait for Exodus.
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
DARK REIGN YOUNG AVENGERS #4: Does anyone else feel a little pang of dread when seeing that cover?

Anyway, for a change, it actually does portray a scene that occurs in the book, or at least the beginning of a scene whose conclusion is left for the reader to infer.

Who would've guessed The Vision had fantasies about girl-on-girl action?

The other characters progress pretty much as they'd started... Enchantress swirls in her fog of mystery. Melter makes a decision which will have consequences for both Young Avenger teams.
 
Posted by Disaster Boy on :
 
NEW AVENGERS #57

loving mockingbord. did anyone get the feeling the tide was starting to turn, how ms. marvel handed iron patriot his butt. also, loving immonen's art, i loved his gestural quality way back in legion of super heroes too.

someone should get monic rambeau captain marvel to come wipe the floor with moonstone.

i was a bit weirded out by

YOUNG AVENGERS #5

really? they beat sentry, daken, and iron patriot?

ULTIMATE AVENGERS #3
hmm? who's spidey? who are gonna be the new avegers on caps side to get rid of these villains?
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
An interesting 'reserve' team whistled up to help rescue Luke Cage... all with ties to Power Man.

Docs Strange and Voo-doo, The Thing, Hellcat and Valkyrie (Nighthawk should've been there- the *real* one!) We got to see some of them in action and that was fun- though I wanted more.

Wonder if any of them will stick around?

The Valkyrie shown here is wearing a pretty ugly new costume (Marvel keeps trying to give her new uniforms-- don't know why, the 'breastcups' she traditionally wears is still the best look they've put her in). I'm still unclear if this is Samantha Parrington acting like Brunhilde, Brunhilde in her own Asgard-resurrected body, or Brunhilde's spirit inhabiting Samantha's body.

I wonder if anyone at Marvel knows? If it's meant to be the gal who was in the LADY LIBERATOR (should be it's own title, written by Peter David!!) story in SHE-HULK, *that* Valkyrie sure spoke and thought like a Viking, not a rich girl!

Hellcat draped all over Doc Strange was kind of weird. Guess she's been lonely up there in Alaska...

The AVENGERS INITIATIVE book's been pretty good- with some good sidebits for Tigra and Justice while the main feature's been Trauma and Penance/Speedball. Finally, that little storyline's going somewhere. I hope it isn't too much longer till Robbie reveals himself to his former teammates.

It seems as if the cast has been cleared for more Taskmaster and co. as DARK REIGN appears to be heading to its end. Will the characters who seem to be making exits still appear in this title?
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mystery Lad:
I wonder if anyone at Marvel knows? If it's meant to be the gal who was in the LADY LIBERATOR (should be it's own title, written by Peter David!!) story in SHE-HULK, *that* Valkyrie sure spoke and thought like a Viking, not a rich girl!

PAD said it was Brunnihilda. And then a Handbook said it was Parrington.
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
Thanks for the info, Reboot. I've seen the Handbook entry, I believe. Can you point me to where PAD discussed Val's ID?
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Catching up on some Avengers Reviews in preparation of Siege:

New Avengers
New Avengers remains, IMO, the best Avengers comic ongoing right now—head and shoulders beyond the rest. While the ongoing plot of Norman Osborn and HAMMER as their antagonist, as well as the Hood and his mega-Master of Evil, might seem like it could be repetitive, I believe Bendis has done it in a way where it is not. His stories are all about character interaction and I feel like he’s really stepped things up a notch in the last few months. The stars lately have been Ronin (Clint Barton), who is taking a more pro-active stance, which is very much in character for him, and Luke Cage, who at this point, I have to say I really enjoy reading about. I said so in my last post, but have to reiterate, Bendis has really made me grow to like Cage quite a lot.

I’m very interested in what this title will look like post-Siege. The idea of the ‘Big 3’ Avengers being on the team seems so likely that I wouldn’t mind being surprised and having Captain America stay on with the New Avengers.

Mighty Avengers
I stopped reading this a few months back. A recent browsing in the CBS made me glad I did so.

Avengers: The Initiative
I also cancelled this a few months back but my CBS guy really likes this series so he gave me a free copy of the Taskmaster issue. While on the one hand, I think the Taskmaster is awesome, on the other hand, I found this issue to be pretty weak. I was hoping it would show some cool behind the scenes interaction between the Cabal but all it did was show Taskmaster talking about how overwhelming it was to be among the A-listers. I’ve grown to hate when writers describe heroes and villains as A-listers and B-listers after seeing so much of that this past decade and this is a clear example of why. It makes the Taskmaster seem like a nerdy high school kid who wishes the seniors would think he’s cool.

Dark Avengers
I’ve collected this on and off and here I picked it up for the Molecule Master story. It was okay, and I see what Bendis is striving for here, a widescreen larger than life type series, but its just not my cup of tea. The art, on the other hand, is simply fantastic, so it didn’t feel like I wasted my money. If only there were a few characters I liked in here, I’d probably just add it to my pull list finally. I hope post-Siege this team is reshuffled and if they can get rid of Bullseye, Venom and Norman Osborn that would be perfect for me. Every scene with those three is painful to read.

Comic Book Review Month Note: There are threads for the individual series in Gym'lls you can check out. I usually use this thread as my catch-all for the various Avengers titles.
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
Wow, I like Mighty Avengers a whole lot more than you do, CK! I thought it did suffer a drop-off in quality after it's debut with He-Wasp and co., but I've liked it quite a bit in recent issues.

I also like the Initiative Avengers book, mostly (though not the art). Mainly for Tigra and glimpses of Cloud-9 and Vance. And Taskmaker, Constrictor and Trauma.

I like the cast of NEW AVENGERS, I just feel like it's contiually treading water, pacing wise. It should be the 'big story' book, and I just don't think that it is, even when it is. I really did like the friends of Luke who popped up the last couple of months, and wish a few of them would join the cast permanently (Valkyrie *deserves* a home, though she's way too bulky here).

I miss YOUNG AVENGERS and look forward to that resuming in the summer, though I won't believe it till I hold it in my hands.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
You know, I'm liking Luke Cage so much in New Avengers I'll probably pick up his miniseries in a few months by John Arcudi who really seems to have a handle on Luke. Looks to be a gritty crime mini.
 
Posted by Lardi on :
 
Unlike Cobalt, I also continue to enjoy Mighty Avengers a good bit. Its tone seems to have settled into a mix of '80s Roger Stern Avengers with a touch of that old JLI interplay thrown in. So far it's working well enough for me that I still continue to buy it off the stands, though it hasn't made it into my official pull list.

Mighty Avengers 32 features the team delving further into finding out the truth about the "Scarlet Witch" imposter. Said imposter, readers know, is Loki and we see Loki manipulating the Mighty team against the Dark Avengers after Osborne tells Loki he wants Hank Pym dead. Instead, Loki fees the Absorbing Man at Project: Pegasus and draws Hank's and Osborne's teams into conflict as both teams attempt to stop this threat. The issue ends on a cliffhanger as the Absorbing Man has absorbed shards of...a Cosmic Cube! Sounds kinda '80s Stern, right? Not a bad thing in my opinion.

In addition there's a great moment at the end where both Hank and Osborne yell, "Avengers Assemble!" Hank and Osborne stare at each other, then Cassie says to Osborne, "Jinx. You owe him a Coke." Next panel and off to the side, Bullseye says to Daken, "during the fight when no one's looking...I call dibs on killing the girl." [LOL] Now, that's bringin' the Bwah-ha-ha!

It looks like this is gonna be a fun, breezy tale, which is much welcomed in the midst of all this Dark Reign crap that takes itself much too seriously.
 
Posted by Arachne on :
 
Previews for next weeks Marvel comics are out. Including ones for Dark Avengers and Dark Wolverine.

That Daken is one sick puppy. Why do I like this guy?
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
I personally don't really care anymore what happens with the Avengers as long as Bendis and Quesada are still in charge, but I'm sure many of you will be interested in this announcement.
 
Posted by Arachne on :
 
I doubt they'll be gone for long. I wonder what this "Heroic Age" will bring. Probably won't mean mush for the X-Titles, though.
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
I agree. Unfortunately, the X-Titles seem to have become Quesada's unwanted stepchildren. As for what "The Heroic Age" will bring, my fear is that it'll just be more of the same Bendis crap.
 
Posted by Lardi on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Stealth:
I agree. Unfortunately, the X-Titles seem to have become Quesada's unwanted stepchildren. As for what "The Heroic Age" will bring, my fear is that it'll just be more of the same Bendis crap.

Whah?!?! I thought you were enjoying that "Bendis crap" over on New Avengers at least. Something happen?
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lardi:
quote:
Originally posted by Stealth:
I agree. Unfortunately, the X-Titles seem to have become Quesada's unwanted stepchildren. As for what "The Heroic Age" will bring, my fear is that it'll just be more of the same Bendis crap.

Whah?!?! I thought you were enjoying that "Bendis crap" over on New Avengers at least. Something happen?
Yeah, I came to my senses.

No, seriously, I finally admitted to myself that even with Stuart Immonen on art, it wasn't worth paying for. It was mildly diverting at best, which for Bendis is quite an achievement as far as I'm concerned.

And, truth be told, if it does end up being one Avengers book written by Bendis, I'll give it a fair chance -- just like I gave Millar's FF, and I hate Millar a lot more than I hate Bendis -- by Byrne-stealing the first few issues and seeing what I think, especially if they retain Immonen.
 
Posted by Lardi on :
 
Y'know, even if I were inclined to try New Avengers (and I was tempted by reviews here), ultimately I didn't because it cost 4 damn bucks a pop! Marvel is pushing the $4 price point (with no extra content) WAY over the top. The only regular-sized ongoing Marvels I'm buying at $3.99 are Ultimate Spidey and Punisher Max. I'm only getting Cap Reborn and Marvels Project as limiteds and Incredible Hercules (with the extra original backup content) as an ongoing. In each of these cases I'm assured by the presence of solid creative teams to make my money worth it.

I would probably be all over many more iof their titles if it weren't for the price point. I'd probably be buying EVERY Ultimate Comics title, Wolverine: Weapon X (because of Jason Aarons) and would have likely tried out New Avengers after reading good reviews here. At least DC has been consistent about giving extra content in all their $3.99 titles; Marvel just can't be bothered or justifies it with "bonus previews" of upcoming titles (that DC gives us for free, btw). In any case it seems every new title that debuts is getting that price point while the list of $2.99 books continues to decrease.

Okay, end rant. [Smile]
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Yeah, the continous raising of prices without any extra (and jeez, skipping $3.25, $3.50 and $3.75) causes me to refer to Marvel's executive team by the nickname that Swearigin from Deadwood most frequently used for people. It's not a nice one.
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
The favourite (or at least most-speculated) scenario for the Avengers titles post-Siege seems to be:


[ January 19, 2010, 07:40 AM: Message edited by: Reboot ]
 
Posted by Lardi on :
 
The only way I would consider trying a thrice-monthly Avengers is if the price is $2.99. If they do this and release it as $3.99, there's no way I'll pick it up.

If they just restart 1 or more new series, I'll evaluate trying them on a case-by-case basis. If they're all $3.99, the odds I'll pick up even one are slim to none. Extra story for the money would help its/their chances. An intriguing creative team and a good character mix would be essential.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
All I'm hoping for is that Dan Slott and Jeph Loeb have absolutely no involvement with any of these titles.

I actually do hope Bendis is involved in some way with the characters he loves.

While I really want Iron Man and Thor together on one team, I'm not opposed to Cap being on another, if they go the multi-team route.

I'm not exactly sure if a thrice-monthly Avengers book would work as well as a single-character driven thrice-monthly book. But it'd be an interesting experiment.

I've got basically 0 interest in Young Avengers anymore. If they all died in Siege I'd probably shrug it off. So Heinberg better deliever the greatest story of the next decade for making us wait this long.
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=24586
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
JUNIOR????

[Disgusting] [Disgusting] [Disgusting] [Disgusting]

Then this is official, too -- they're not getting my money!
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
He's one of my favorites [Big Grin] . I'll definitely be buying any Avengers title he works on. I know he has his detractors on LW but I actually prefer him to any other recent Avengers artist.
 
Posted by DrakeB3004 on :
 
I haven't been crazy about JR Jr for the past several years and I'm not sure why since I liked him before and his style hasn't changed much since the time I liked him. I think his faces are kinda off these days though - that might be it.

We also have Spider-Woman on the lineup, which I think is great, but I'm not a fan of how Jr depicts her mask going around her head, with the hair just coming out the top like that...
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Here's my two cents:

Junior got off to a strong start on his first Iron Man, Spider-Man, and X-Men runs; by the time he took over Daredevil, his style had gotten too weird and angular for conventional superheroes, but it suited the inspired weirdness of Ann Nocenti's Daredevil scripts just fine. After he left Daredevil and went back to conventional superheroes, his work started to look uglier and sloppier and from what I've seen of it over the years, it seems to have gotten progressively worse. I've heard people defend his Thor run, which I haven't read, and his work with Millar, which I wouldn't read even if someone offered me money to, so I'll have to cop to ignorance there.

Ahh, BUT as a true-blue Avengers fangirl, I'll borrow the trades from the library. Luckily, my local library system is good about getting in all the most popular trades.
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Brubaker to write "Secret Avengers" ongoing.

This could go either way, as far as I'm concerned. Let us not forget that he's not infallible -- his X-Men space opera "epic" was a load of utter crap.
 
Posted by DrakeB3004 on :
 
Bru's essentially been writing a "Secret Avengers" type book in "Captain America" for awhile now with Cap's supporting cast and the occassional Avenger. If he manages to keep this book in the same vein (which I imagine it will with the main book being much more "super-heroey") I can see myself picking this up every month.

Any ideas who the first silhouette might be?

[ February 09, 2010, 11:49 AM: Message edited by: DrakeB3004 ]
 
Posted by DrakeB3004 on :
 
Any ideas who the second silhouette is?? Considering the quotation and the cape shape, I'm kinda thinking the Shroud ...?

The "adversity" silhouette I'm going to guess as Wonder Man

[ February 14, 2010, 07:51 AM: Message edited by: DrakeB3004 ]
 
Posted by DrakeB3004 on :
 
The last silhouette seems like a no brainer for Steve Rogers -- but could it be a misdirect? There really seems like no way it's not him,but if not him, then who? And will he be taking a codename? From the silhouette, there might not even be a mask. And if is him, it definitely would seem to put to rest the notion that the Secret Avengers are some sort of Black Ops team a la X-Force. So what would make them so secret?

I'm going to guess that the Secret Avengers will be more like the originals in terms of operating outside the law as vigilantes and operating under their own direction whereas the main team will be public and under a stricter government umbrella.
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Sorry I've been non-responsive, Drake, it's just that I'm more annoyed than intrigued by the ad campaign for Secret Avengers.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
I'm actually pretty excited about the Bendis / JR Jr. Avengers title based on the previews. Like I said, I love Romita Jr's work and it looks great here.

I agree with Drake that Bru has basically used Captain America lately as a spy-team series and if Secret Avengers is like that it should be great. Deodato's moody, heavily inked work (like in Dark Avengers) would be exciting but fitting. If the Falcon and Black Widow are in this title it could be really awesome. I do think agree Bru's Uncanny X-Men was his weakest attempt in a series thus far but I cut him some slack: I actually think he's the single best writer creating comics right now on a monthly basis.

BTW, I'm reading the Siege tie-in Dark Avengers issues with the Sentry. I think they're quite excellent. I believe we're heading towards the downfall of the Sentry once and for all; I want to see it because I've grown annoyed at him and I also think Bendis is crafting a great tale to get us there.
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
MIGHTY AVENGERS #34: Well, this one stunk. It's a SIEGE tie-in and features the team's confrontation with the Scarlet Witch-posing Loki. Pretty much all the work building up Pym comes to nothing, as here comes Thor to talk down to Hank and even side with Loki over his once-teammate... and that's after the obligatory Loki-misdirection-caused battle! Pym is smart enough to capture the God of Mischief, but lets him go and even offers him a spot on his Avengers rosters! The last prompts several existing Mighty Avengers to run for the hills, and who can blame them?

Blech. The dialogue wasn't even entertaining. Or the art. Just a misfire all the way around. There's still a couple of issues to go till the 'Avenger makeover', and the return of Ultron, but I'm afraid whatever good will might've been left for this run has now been used well and truly up.
 
Posted by Disaster Boy on :
 
yeah i avoid "tie ins". in general. when's the last time there was a good one?
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
Hmmm-- Sometimes, though I admit it's few and far between, the tie-ins are better than the main event.
 
Posted by DrakeB3004 on :
 
Has anyone seen the teasers for "Avengers Academy?" First of all, bad enough they have a guy named "Reptil" who can turn his body into dinosaur parts even though the current scientific belief is that dinosaurs are more related to *BIRDS* than reptiles, now they have a girl named Hazmat who's costume is based on the symbol for radiation (great design, btw) but the logo with her name contains symbols for biohazardous materials. THEY'RE TWO SEPARATE THINGS!! It bothers me with that guy from the JSA too...
 
Posted by Blacula on :
 
^^^ Yes. Damage's bio-hazard symbol has annoyed me for a long time as well. That is not his power Mr Dumb Costume Designer. I also find it distracting because I've seen that symbol many times as a tattoo in the gay community - and Damage might be surprised to find out what it means here.

As for Reptil - I could be wrong, but didn't he have his origins in a cartoon or children's book or something. I remember hearing something like that somewhere.
 
Posted by Set on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by DrakeB3004:
[QB] Has anyone seen the teasers for "Avengers Academy?" First of all, bad enough they have a guy named "Reptil" who can turn his body into dinosaur parts even though the current scientific belief is that dinosaurs are more related to *BIRDS* than reptiles,

Thanks to Jurassic Park, pretty much everyone associates 'raptor' with dinosaurs instead of birds, so I'm surprised they didn't use that.

And then he could become a Speedster and call himself Veloci-Raptor!
 
Posted by Dev Em on :
 
http://superherosquad.marvel.com/squad/heroes
 
Posted by Disaster Boy on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Blacula:
^^^ Yes. Damage's bio-hazard symbol has annoyed me for a long time as well. That is not his power Mr Dumb Costume Designer. I also find it distracting because I've seen that symbol many times as a tattoo in the gay community - and Damage might be surprised to find out what it means here.

As for Reptil - I could be wrong, but didn't he have his origins in a cartoon or children's book or something. I remember hearing something like that somewhere.

quote:
Originally posted by Dev Em:
http://superherosquad.marvel.com/squad/heroes

ok i'll bite, what does it mean?
 
Posted by Blacula on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Disaster Boy:
quote:
Originally posted by Blacula:
^^^ Yes. Damage's bio-hazard symbol has annoyed me for a long time as well. That is not his power Mr Dumb Costume Designer. I also find it distracting because I've seen that symbol many times as a tattoo in the gay community - and Damage might be surprised to find out what it means here.

As for Reptil - I could be wrong, but didn't he have his origins in a cartoon or children's book or something. I remember hearing something like that somewhere.

quote:
Originally posted by Dev Em:
http://superherosquad.marvel.com/squad/heroes

ok i'll bite, what does it mean?

The bio-hazard symbol? HIV+.
 
Posted by Disaster Boy on :
 
cheers, i was actually thinking something else. good to know.

so, looks like avengers is changing soon. the original band might be getting back together in siege.

not sure how i feel since the 'new avengers' is the most i've liked the avengers since buscema's art in the 80s. can't really see how a renegade second title 'new avengers' will survive if thor, cap, tony etc. have a legitimate avengers title.


just look at heroic age. hmmm, was thinking more of a cap, thor, wasp, jocasta maybe, and tony.

no ms marvel? no spider woman? and two gorillas.

'heroic age' but black widow can still carry a gun that's worth her weight.

[ March 19, 2010, 10:08 AM: Message edited by: Disaster Boy ]
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
There's going to be 4 Avengers titles. The one with the big three (though it might not be Steve as Cap). There'll be a new New Avengers title, mostly with the cast from the old New Avengers title (why they don't make this the Defenders is beyond me.)

Then there'll be Secret Avengers, which Marvel has advertisied with blacked out figures and a 'revealing' snippet of dialogue. Guesses for who some of the characters are in the light are Cap (Steve), War Machine, Scarlet Witch or Valkyrie, Beast, Moon Knight and just about every Marvel hero you can think of.

There's also an Avengers Academy title, with several brand new characters.

In addition, Young Avengers is supposed to have a miniseries coming out this summer, with a regular run following?

There were four Avengers titles before Heroic Age and there'll be at least four after it.
 
Posted by Disaster Boy on :
 
thanks mystery lad : )

i'm happy to hear young avengers will be back.

worried a bit about the schism between avengers and new avengers..

Defenders would be a good name, especially with Dr. Strage, i like seeing him integrated in the main MU.

sounds like secret avengers and new avengers might be conceptually very similar.

is it so wrong to want one good book with the big three, cap, hank, the spideys, ms. marvel, ronin, mockingbird, power man ?
 
Posted by Disaster Boy on :
 
double post!! bad internet connection bad!

[ March 19, 2010, 11:39 AM: Message edited by: Disaster Boy ]
 
Posted by Stealth on :
 
Thanks for the updates, Todd. I'm so not into the Avengers these days that I'm generally too lazy to post updates in this thread, unless it really pisses me off, like the Romita announcement.

I should be excited about the bi-monthly mini-series Avengers: Prime, since Alan Davis is drawing it. I'm an Alan Davis completist, so I'll buy it for sure. Unfortunately, Bendis is writing it, so it'll probably be all eye-candy with little or no substance.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
While I plan to sample the various Avengers titles and give reviews (and its highly likely I'll collect Avengers, New Avengers and Secret Avengers), I remain as I always do these days by coming news: skeptical. [Big Grin]

What I can do, is review the current Avengers comics I'm reading of which there is only New Avengers. And #62, which wraps up a two-parter that is a kind of prelude/running along side Siege #1 & #2 was quite good. In fact, one of the better Avengers stories in awhile! While not ground-breaking it provided an excellent good ol'fashioned superheroes vs. super-villains battle that showcawed Cap's return to the team; it alos provided a Cap/Bucky team-up which we are for whatever reason not really getting much of yet. The Spider-Man / Spider-Woman team-up was fun, but what I really loved most of all was that Bendis actually provided a pretty awesome role for Mandrill, Griffen and the Living Lightning. Very glad to see him make use of them in ways other than giant splash pages and background players! Mandrill especially was pretty frightening. If Marvel could do any one thing in their upcoming "Heroic Age", it would be restore the seriousness and 'oomph' to their super-villains.

The final pages of #62 actually make a great lead-in to Siege #2 & #3, which I did not expect, revealing how the various heroes assembled come together.
 
Posted by Mattropolis on :
 
I stopped reading Avengers (and most comics really) during the Disassembled! storyline. And now with Janet Van Dyne dead, I plan to continue my boycott...
 
Posted by DrakeB3004 on :
 
SECRET AVENGERS lineup revealed thus far:
- Beast
- War Machine
- Valkyrie
- Moon Knight

If I didn't know better, I'd think this is almost more of a "New Defenders" kinda team incorporated into the Avengers universe. Maybe it's the number of former Defenders or their relative power levels. I'm a big Moon Knight fan so looks like I'll be picking this up to try out....
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
I'm a fan of all four characters so I'll definitely try it out. I also like Beast as an Avenger and it'd be nice to get him out of the X-Men for awhile.

Also glad to see Valkrye on a regular basis again.

And really glad to see Rhodey on a team, interacting with others beside Tony.
 
Posted by Set on :
 
I'm a big fan of the Beast and (at least some interprations of) the Valkyrie, so this is interesting news!
 
Posted by Set on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mattropolis:
I stopped reading Avengers (and most comics really) during the Disassembled! storyline. And now with Janet Van Dyne dead, I plan to continue my boycott...

The latest issue of Mighty Avengers (the Hank Pym-led team) has revealed that Jan's body is in a pocket dimension, and hinted that she's 'only mostly dead' (to steal a phrase from Princess Bride).

I strongly suspect that even if she isn't back next month, she'll be back long before the Avengers movie in 2011, as it might be awkward to introduce the sole founding female Avenger in that movie and then have to explain to the press that she's been killed off in the funny-books.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Having read the final issue of New Avengers and then the annual-sized 'Finale' one-shot, I have to say I'm pretty impressed to the wrap-up of this series. Bendis really delivers an ending here that just felt 'right', bringing a sense of closure to the themes he's put forward over the last few years, while also making me excited for the new Avengers titles in the Heroic Age. I thought the Finale special was one of the best issues he's ever done.

I read through all of the Siege related Avengers stuff today and all in all, I enjoyed it quite a bit. I thought it put a great end to all of the mess that Civil War started in the MU, while wrapping up Dark Reign, the Sentry and so many other things.

Cap's back, Hawkeye is Hawkeye again, Iron Man, Thor and Cap will work together, and yet, so many others are going to be included as well. I like the inclusive nature to the coming Avengers events. It feels upbeat but without being overly 'sunny'.

I thought Brian Hitch's art in the Finale was much better than his Cap Reborn stuff and FF stuff. I guess they really let him take his sweet time putting it together and it showed. Too bad such a great artist (IMO) can't meet a deadline to save his life.

I also enjoyed the wrap-up to the Hood storyline. The Hood is exactly going to make my 'favorite top 50 Marvel villains of all time', but I did like his stature as the New Avengers top enemy during this era and Bendis was smart enough to finish his story off with the end of this volume of the title.
 
Posted by Fanfic Lass on :
 
Avengers Vol. 4 #1

Well, it's a lot better than Bendis's issues of Mighty Avengers, where he had previously tried to be "Avenger-y."

As I've said before, although Bendis likes to cultivate the persona of a maverick, he comes off to me like a desperate people-pleaser. He's trying so hard to please the traditionalists that I could almost smell the flopsweat.

Romita Junior's art is beyond pathetic. The sooner they dump him (and with work that's so bad even by his standards, that's bound to happen.)

That said, Bendis does throw in a very intriguing twist at the end.

Click Here For A SpoilerUnless I've missed something in the Hulk corner of the Marvel Universe, as I don't follow Loeb's Hulk, it looks like Kang is in cahoots with The Maestro, the evil future version of the Hulk that Peter David created in the early 90s.

And that's enough to get me to read the next issue.
 
Posted by Fanfic Lass on :
 
Secret Avengers #1

The question on everyone's lips is, does it transcend the iffy lineup?

My answer would be no.

Yes, it's great to have Beast and Black Widow back as Avengers, but it's not enough. The team's overall lack of chemistry really hurts the book.

Brubaker's big twist cliffhanger is not as surprising or as intriguing as he thinks it is.

Click Here For A SpoilerNick Fury is now heading some rogue shadow organization that is opposing the Secret Avengers. I saw it coming a mile away.

Brubaker and Deodato are expert craftsmen, but there's something missing. Heart, maybe?
 
Posted by Set on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
Cap's back, Hawkeye is Hawkeye again, Iron Man, Thor and Cap will work together,

Much like Quesada's original intent for Sue to forgive Reed for sending supervillain 'cape-killers' after her, Johnny and Ben, because Reed, in Quesada's words, 'would cook her dinner or something,' having Tony, Steve and Thor all just being shoved back together to make 'everything like it was in the good old days' feels hollow to me.

I don't *like* what Civil War / Registration did, but to then to have any *actual* repercussions of the choices that characters like Reed and Tony made just get glossed over because Quesada wants the old team together again kinda bugs me.

Can a hero still be thought of as a hero if they never have to suffer the consequences of their mistakes, but will be magically bailed out, say, by having the world mind-wiped into forgetting the Armor Wars, of by yellow fear entity retcons?
 
Posted by Fanfic Lass on :
 
Preview of Avengers: Prime #1

God, I love Alan Davis.
 
Posted by Set on :
 
Well then, I take back some of my disappointment that this would all be conveniently forgotten. Drama!
 
Posted by Mattropolis on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Set:
quote:
Originally posted by Mattropolis:
I stopped reading Avengers (and most comics really) during the Disassembled! storyline. And now with Janet Van Dyne dead, I plan to continue my boycott...

The latest issue of Mighty Avengers (the Hank Pym-led team) has revealed that Jan's body is in a pocket dimension, and hinted that she's 'only mostly dead' (to steal a phrase from Princess Bride).

I strongly suspect that even if she isn't back next month, she'll be back long before the Avengers movie in 2011, as it might be awkward to introduce the sole founding female Avenger in that movie and then have to explain to the press that she's been killed off in the funny-books.

Oh WOW! I didn't know that! I did wonder about the movie thing...
 
Posted by DrakeB3004 on :
 
I'm excited about the new "Secret Avengers"- moreso than the main Avengers relaunch. I've always been a big Moon Knight and Nova fan, and I have fond memories of the Beast on the team, so this is a pretty good lineup for me. I like Nova's inclusion because the Avengers lineups have usually been about diversity of powers so it makes sense they'd want a heavy gun. I liken Nova to an airstrike the ground forces can call in when things get out of hand.

It wouldn't surprise me if Bru was a little influenced by "Cosmic Odyssey" where Batman makes a call and simply tells the person on the other end of the line, "There's someone named Darkseid on a planet called New Genesis. I need you to keep an eye on him." (that person turned out to be Dr Fate) That was pretty badass.

My one concern would be that this is the kind of series where plot will take center stage and characterization will fall by the wayside. Giving them personalities is one thing, but to go deeper than that might be too afield for a task oriented team book. (especially since my aforementioned favorites Moon Knight and Nova are mainly featured elsewhere) We'll see...

[ June 02, 2010, 11:43 AM: Message edited by: DrakeB3004 ]
 
Posted by CJ Taylor on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Set:
Much like Quesada's original intent for Sue to forgive Reed for sending supervillain 'cape-killers' after her, Johnny and Ben, because Reed, in Quesada's words, 'would cook her dinner or something,' having Tony, Steve and Thor all just being shoved back together to make 'everything like it was in the good old days' feels hollow to me.

I don't *like* what Civil War / Registration did, but to then to have any *actual* repercussions of the choices that characters like Reed and Tony made just get glossed over because Quesada wants the old team together again kinda bugs me.

Can a hero still be thought of as a hero if they never have to suffer the consequences of their mistakes, but will be magically bailed out, say, by having the world mind-wiped into forgetting the Armor Wars, of by yellow fear entity retcons?

In Iron Man's own book, Fraction had Tony's mind rebooted, using a back up from Pre-Civil War. Tony then caught up on current events, and was shocked and appalled by his behaviour. If Tony is still Tony, wouldn't he make the same decisions? It wasn't like the part of him making those calls was under some influence?

The whole happy Avengers family post Siege is a bit off putting to me.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
You would think the tension left over from Civil War could still be useful for storytelling. Things don't need to be extreme on either end: they are all starting to forgive one another and move on, but its going to take quite awhile. That's a pretty realistic play.
 
Posted by DrakeB3004 on :
 
The upcoming "Avengers Prime" series with Thor, Cap and Iron Man is meant to fill in that emotional gap. Apparently they get over all their issues over the course of that mini and reach a place of agreement and (I presume) cameraderie. Whether or not it would have been more interesting to have that resolve itself in the main title is another discussion. What with trades being so prevalent, I can understand Marvel not wanting to bring a whole lot of baggage to the new era.
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
Avengers Prime needs Jan and Hank, and maybe even the Hulk. then i'll be happy. [Big Grin]

i'm glad the spidey's both made it to the second round. i love the humor they bring to the books. im really excited about 'avengers' now. (and maybe maybe maybe thunderbolts ... they need a new cast for me personally)

im really intrigued with were avengers is going, and im liking john romita juniors work for the first time in a long time.

i want to see lots of old avengers make the rounds: justice and firestar for sure. maybe living lightning will get in too.

i like nova, i like valkyrie, i even like beast but i'm not feeling the secret avengers line up together. and why not just call them the defenders. and they're not the most murderous immoral ex avengers i would assemble to be a black ops team.
 
Posted by Fanfic Lass on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by DrakeB3004:
I'm excited about the new "Secret Avengers"- moreso than the main Avengers relaunch. I've always been a big Moon Knight and Nova fan, and I have fond memories of the Beast on the team, so this is a pretty good lineup for me. I like Nova's inclusion because the Avengers lineups have usually been about diversity of powers so it makes sense they'd want a heavy gun. I liken Nova to an airstrike the ground forces can call in when things get out of hand.

It wouldn't surprise me if Bru was a little influenced by "Cosmic Odyssey" where Batman makes a call and simply tells the person on the other end of the line, "There's someone named Darkseid on a planet called New Genesis. I need you to keep an eye on him." (that person turned out to be Dr Fate) That was pretty badass.

My one concern would be that this is the kind of series where plot will take center stage and characterization will fall by the wayside. Giving them personalities is one thing, but to go deeper than that might be too afield for a task oriented team book. (especially since my aforementioned favorites Moon Knight and Nova are mainly featured elsewhere) We'll see...

Drake, you've just helped me figure out exactly what my problem is with this book and its apparent direction. The Avengers is all about characterization; without it, it's just another team book to me.
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
just picked up Avengers Prime, Dark Avengers, and Thor. it's a siege aftermath comics day.

Dark Avengers was pretty cool, character driven, i especially liked the last scene where Norman turns out to be talking to Click Here For A Spoilerhis crazy ass self

and of course Daken lives to fight another day.

I really liked the scene with Thor and Phobos. I'm picturing little Phobos running around wearing an over sized helmet and dragging a really heavy axe behind him.

Avengers Prime, Alan Davis is in great form, the Steve Rodgers fight scene reminds me of the great fight scenes he used to do with nightcrawler in Excalibur. and the panel where Tony is tinkering with his helmet could easily be a poster. btw, i really like that old armor, it is from my era, but i also like how it looks more human or super hero-ish than some of Tony's later clunky gadget armors that look like tanks. i think a stream lined more human looking armor is more sophisticated anyways and would be harder to construct in real life. anyone can build a tank to sit in, only tony stark could build a suit of armor that looks like spandex [Smile]


oh and they're totally Click Here For A Spoilergoing to find jan on their inter-dimensional adventures: since thor was the one who banished her magically with his hammer - she should be in some asgardian dimension .....but mighty avengers i think said she was in some sub micro universe .... which makes less sense to me.

but one thing i was confused about when enchantress is speaking to Thor at the end she calls him Click Here For A Spoilerthe last of the true odinsons? what's that mean. Balder is alive.

and in the follow up story Loki calls Thor his half-brother. but he's his adoptive brother.
 
Posted by Fanfic Lass on :
 
Avengers: Prime #1

Power Boy already spoiled it, so I'll shout it out loud:

THE ENCHANTRESS IS BACK!!!!

Ah, my beloved Enchantress, cruelly cast out by JMS for not being "authentic" enough or whatever. Bless your heart, Bendis.

Davis seems to have brought out the best in Bendis. There's no reason to complain about extended sequences without dialogue when you've got Davis at the helm. And the pacing is brisk and the action is crisp.

Dare I say it, thanks to Davis, Bendis may have turned over a new leaf. Check it out!
 
Posted by Dev Em on :
 
Is Farmer on inks here? Daviss is one of my favorite artists no matter what, but with Farmer...to quote Queen... "it's a kinda magic."
 
Posted by Fanfic Lass on :
 
Cool. Another Queen fan. [Smile]

Farmer, the peanut butter to Davis's chocolate, is indeed on inks. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Dev Em on :
 
I may have to get this for no other reason.

I love Queen. Not the thing touring since Freddy died...but true glam Queen. Possibly my favorite band, but The Police always seem to mix it up for the top spot all the time.
 
Posted by Fanfic Lass on :
 
I just might do a tribute to Queen at my Fantabulous Land of Eighties Enchantment (and of course, I won't neglect their equally if not even more classic 70s work.)
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
AVENGERS PRIME is a pretty good read up to the big 'reveal'. I'm glad Amora's back and that she seems, at least here, to be in big-time villainess mode. 'Cause there ain't no rarer beast than an effective recurring super-villainess in comics.

I read in an article or a posting somewhere (not here) that she was at one time revealed to be Freya and/or Iduna going by different names. That nonsense just needs to be ignored. Maybe there can be a flashback where she's shown to be impersonating those goddesses for some reason or other (earning their enmity?)

I know you can't expect fully authentic mythological takes on these characters, particularly as time goes on, but c'mon! It was bad enough when they made Ganymede a woman...

A preview of AVENGERS ACADEMY had been making the comic site circuit-- it features the character Veil... who is like Gas Girl mixed with Kid Psycho with a little bit of Marvel's Spider Girl thrown in. I liked her immediately and now feel better about this title. I feel sort of proprietary towards her, since I suggested changing Gas Girl's name to Veilmist some time ago. An amusing coincidence, huh?

I liked SECRET AVENGERS #1 lots-- I like the line-up and the m.o. quite a bit. Make no mistake, though- all this title needs is Kyle Richmond to be a new take on THE DEFENDERS. That wouldn't net the numbers a new AVENGERS title will, though.

From what I've read, the Valkyrie here is Brunnhilde, no human host. Which I've long thought is who Peter David was writing in those great Lady Liberator scenes from She-Hulk. I liked the way Val and Black Widow were relating-- they should be a fun duo to read.
 
Posted by Fanfic Lass on :
 
Avengers: Prime #1, and specifically Amora's return, has convinced me even more that Bendis really is a hardcore Avengers fan and it wasn't just a fiction to deflect criticism of his early New Avengers work. After all, only a true Avengers fan would know that Amora was a recurring villainess for the first 100 issues of the original Avengers book.
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Fanfic Lass:
Avengers: Prime #1

Power Boy already spoiled it, so I'll shout it out loud:

THE ENCHANTRESS IS BACK!!!!

Check it out!

sorry i'm so out of it i didn't realize enchantress was gone or it was a big detail she is in the story!

oooppssieee!!!!!
 
Posted by Fanfic Lass on :
 
No worries. I actually enjoyed being able to post it in caps without spoilers.
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
haha. I assumed she was just too clever to be involved in this Siege messiness.

[Wink]
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Okay, so I picked up a big pile of comics yesterday and the first comics I read after Adventure were Avengers #1 and Secret Avengers #1.

You know, I thought they were both great! They've both got me pretty excited about where things go from here.

Bendis' Avengers was a solid introductory issue and the upcoming plotline has me curious. I'm thrilled to see Thor & Iron Man back in the Avengers and like that Bucky-Cap is there as well. I've grown used to Spidey & Wolverine, and I naturally love the inclusion of Hawkeye. I think Bendis has really come a long way these last few years and has learned how to better write a team comic book.

I'm a fan of JR Jr's work and think it looked spectacular here. I know he has his detractors on Legion World, but I think he's a great talent and a definition 'Marvel' artist. Art is all subjective and that jazz, but JR Jr. does many things really well. His heroes are iconic and grandiose looking and he's able to add a sense of energy to Bendis story. A lesser artist might cause this issue to feel like there isn't a lot happening but Romita Jr. makes sure that is not the case.

Over in Secret Avengers, I thought Brubaker did a great job opening up the series, and I think it carried the spirit of his Captain America run really well, in being an ensemble spy superhero comic. I like that Bru has upped the ante in scope and look forward to what he has planned.

Of course, Deodato's artwork is what really shines and I think it was excellent. He's really matured over the last few years and his art has taken on a really moody and atmospheric tone while also maintaining the explosive nature of his sequences and the beautiful depictions of the leads he's always done so well.

I was quite pleased with both of them!
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Fanfic Lass:
Avengers: Prime #1, and specifically Amora's return, has convinced me even more that Bendis really is a hardcore Avengers fan and it wasn't just a fiction to deflect criticism of his early New Avengers work. After all, only a true Avengers fan would know that Amora was a recurring villainess for the first 100 issues of the original Avengers book.

I agree this is the case as well. I think what Marvel has done with the Avengers for the last few years has been a brilliant tactical plan that has paid off dividends. And now Bendis can showcase his love of the Avengers in a way that is different enough from what he's done before that it will feel fresh.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Finally gotten around to reading Avengers Prime #1 and agree with FL's feelings--this was a really great read showcasing some damn fine artwork by Ala Davis and some solid writing by Bendis. Bendis has purposely crafted his writing to fit Davis' style (like any good writer will do) and it really enhances the story in a big way and shows how far Bendis has come.

The story has the right amount of set-up and delves right into things, giving us some nice action-packed sequences.

The interaction between the three is solid and tension-filled but we aren't beaten over the head with it. The three are then soon separated so there isn't bickering all issue. Well played.

Alan Davis' Amora is a wonder to behold--only one panel and she looks ravishing and devious.

This is going to be a great miniseries, me thinks. [Yes]
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
yes Amora looked very fresh and well rested. [Wink]
 
Posted by Fanfic Lass on :
 
Avengers Academy #1

I got this mostly for McKone's art. He's as good as ever, but the youngsters are not engaging to me.

I think Gage has a good handle on some of the trainers -- Pym, Justice, Quicksilver. How I dearly wish Tigra was not there, though. And Speedball seems to me like he's just being set up for more torture, self and otherwise.

Will be Byrne-stealing it in the future...for now.
 
Posted by Dev Em on :
 
Gonna read Avengers Prime #1 now. I have a basic passing knowledge of what's been happening, so let's see how accessable it is to someone picking it up with next to no knowledge of what happened before this.

Comments as I go...I'll assume you know that the art is great, but I'm sure I'll comment on it as well.

Well, lotsa arguing about Tony's role in all this...referencing stories fromt he last several years. Makes sense if you have a passing knowledge of what has happened.

Tony waking up wherever he is was funny. The whole coffin bit. Self repair kit...convenient.

Steve wakes up to two moons, "Well, I misread the room entirely." Good stuff, and Alan's art is just unbelievable here. Shield and blue armor...kinda convenient on the armor thing...

Ooooohhh...She's ba-ack! Too cool.

Not a bad read. Kinda quick, but good nonetheless. Plus a Siimonson art backup - BONUS!
 
Posted by Fanfic Lass on :
 
New Avengers v.2 #1

For all his improvements elsewhere, Bendis is still hopeless when he writes anything to do with the supernatural.

This issue oscillates wildly between bad horror movie and good lite drama.

Immonen draws the hell out of it, good and bad.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
The one Avengers title I was considering giving a pass to was Avengers Academy since I didn’t want to end up getting them all; but I figured, hey, I’m getting the other four titles, I may as well give it a try.

I’m actually quite glad I did. My expectations were pretty low and so they were far exceeded. Kicking off the issue is the gorgeous Mike McKone artwork, who is able to portray teenagers without making it “cuddly” and able to do clear, heroic action artwork while keeping it very dynamic. I hate saying things like “it was like ___ meets ___” but for some reason what jumped out at me was it’s like “Archie Comics meets Perez”; though I admit, that’s still off the mark.

Also really well done was the tight script provided by Christos Gage. I’ve noticed that Gage is a good writer in the past based on various works (an Iron Man annual a year or so back particularly sticks out in my mind) and here he shows he’s only getting better. What I noticed at the close of the issue was just how well paced the story was: there were no wasted scenes, everyone was firmly introduced with insights into their personalities (with 11 characters, no easy feat) and the issue flowed from beginning to end so you were constantly wanting to turn the page. The issue it most reminded me of? Thunderbolts #1 by Busiek and Bagley, which is a comic I’ve always loved. The ending here read the same way, with a very dynamic shift from what you expected the series to be about to something that seems much more exciting than another run of the mill superhero team comic book.

The various new characters are all still too new for me to feel anything for, but I did really like the introduction to Veil who seems like a strong, deep character complete with insecurities and vulnerabilities you would expect from a teenage girl while also having a quiet strength. I also quite liked Finese, the polymath girl who appears as a bit of a ‘know it all’ while also a bit of ‘mildly emotionally underdeveloped’. On the otherhand both Reptil and the big monster guy are complete non-entities as of the end of the issue and so far are a bit boring.

As a longtime Avengers fan, I naturally love seeing most of the staff, so I’m quite glad for Hank Pym, one of my absolute favorite characters and Quicksilver, one of the most dynamic personalities in all of comic books. I feel like Gage is getting them both right so far, unlike Dan Slott who reverted them to their personality extremes over the last year. I’ve only recently grown to become more interested in Tigra and Speedball given all that’s happened to them over the last few years so I’m curious to see more. Justice has been a favorite of mine ever since I first saw him as Justice in that costume when I was a pre-teen.

I was all set to just give this title a pass but #1 was good enough to get me to keep going. A team of totally new characters in the MU or DCU is a tough sell these days, but in the MU I feel that at least they aren’t likely to be killed off like in the DCU so I can really invest myself in them. But beyond that, I really need a solid creative team and story to get hooked like I did with Runways and Young Avengers, and I think there is potential here. (Of course, I have to wonder why I’m not getting good stories with those two teams for yet another new teenage team, but we’ll see how that goes).

Great opening issue with a lot of potential here. Of the 5 Avengers relaunched #1’s, I’ve read 4 and so far its 4 for 4.
 
Posted by Set on :
 
I think I'm gonna have to check out this Avengers Academy, now. Darn you Cobie! You said it reminded you of Busiek's Thunderbolts #1! You might as well have just taken money straight out of my wallet...

[Smile]
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
I know, isn't that high praise? I think the parallel is there, so let me know what you think!

I hold that issue on a bit of a pedestal so I wouldn't say that this is *as good*, but it certainly is trying to be!
 
Posted by Dev Em on :
 
The Avengers #1.

Not bad, sets everything up nice, but doesn't interest me enough to get teh 2nd issue. Plus, as much as I like JRJr's art on the right project, he makes some of these characters ugly as hell.
 
Posted by Titan Lad on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Fanfic Lass:
Avengers Academy #1

I got this mostly for McKone's art. He's as good as ever, but the youngsters are not engaging to me.

I think Gage has a good handle on some of the trainers -- Pym, Justice, Quicksilver. How I dearly wish Tigra was not there, though. And Speedball seems to me like he's just being set up for more torture, self and otherwise.

Will be Byrne-stealing it in the future...for now.

I found Veil to be interesting! Gage is really trying to make a character you can root for with her, and I think he is succeeding (well at least with me).

Tigra is hit or miss, I think Firestar could've brought more to the dynamics.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
I agree with Veil. I found her very likable and interesting. Moreso than some of the Young Avengers even.
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
Avengers 2 was good! seems weird not to have steve rodgers in it tho.

jrjr is better than he has been in a long time.

i liked new avengers last week but it's not as good as it was in it's prime. and immonen's art seemed way off this month.
 
Posted by Set on :
 
So I picked up Avengers Academy 1 today along with LSH 2 (and X-Factor 206 and the Doom Patrol / LSH Brave & the Bold, making it a big week for me).

I loathe Veil's costume and the visual of it unraveling. She turns to mist. That's cool. But the visual they picked for her is dire.

Striker, with his overcompensatory 'alpha male' babble (as Finesse totally calls him on) is fun.

Finesse is fun, although she's, yet again, the 'smart chick with no social skills.' (It would be *far* more interesting if she was deliberately pushing people away with this 'socially abrupt' dialogue, to cover the one place where she isn't hyper-competent, in matters of the heart.)

I like that Mettle is *smart,* pointing out that Speedball, Justice, etc. are the *perfect* people to train teenagers of mass destruction such as themselves.

I guess I was supposed to know Reptil from his previous appearances, because he was a nobody in this issue, glossed over quite quickly, although his powers look pretty cool. His powers remind me a little of my favorite Wild Cards character, Kid Dinosaur.

Hazmat is a bit of a cliche by now. Negative Man, Wildfire, the Human Bomb, Antimatterman, the Radioactive Man, Chemo, etc, etc. How many of these wangsty emo 'I must wear a containment suit or everyone around me will be hurt!' people do we need, really? That well's been tapped a bit too much, IMO.

I like Pym's characterization here better than in Mighty Avengers (where he's a bit over-the-top in the self-love, methinks). This Pym shows some mature and humble self-awareness with the bit about wanting to be reminded that he screwed up, so that he doesn't get complacent and do it again.

There's a lot of self-awareness going on (or, at least, the writing hanging a lampshade on the obvious questions that will come up) with Tigra's comment about Quicksilver switching sides more often than a tennis player and Quicksilver's calm agreement with that assessment.

While it's not explicitly stated, Tigra is also a classic case of someone whose powers were, like Veils, taking her apart at the seams, only, in her case, it was her mind she was losing with the devolution into atavistic behavior in West Coast Avengers.

I wonder if there is some sort of clear parallel between the teachers and the students?

Hank Pym / Striker? - overcompensatory / insecure?
Tigra / Veil - losing herself because of her powers
Speedball / Mettle - worried about misuse of abilities leading to mass destruction
Quicksilver / Reptil - overconfident?
Justice -
 
Posted by Dev Em on :
 
The New Avengers #1

Not a bad issue. I have to agree with FFL that the supernatural stuff was off for some reason. It left me very underwhelmed. aI may check out the next issue...might even buy it as well...not 100% sure yet.
 
Posted by Dev Em on :
 
Secret Avengers #1

Not a bad read at all. I like the team they have here, and the last page has me interested enough for issue #2.
 
Posted by Dev Em on :
 
Avengers Academy #1

Nice reveal at the end, interesting premise. I'll decide in shop on the next issue.

Hank's outfit is hideous.

Speedball and Justice are well written here.

The art, while very competant, lost some of the emotional impact that could have enhanced the story along the way.

Quicksilver - "Super-Speed. Google it."
 
Posted by Dev Em on :
 
Sooo...the verdict of the Avenger books.

Avengers Prime #1: Superb art makess up for any ultra conveniences in the plotting of this book. I'll be back for the second issue here. Plus, as a bonus, The Enchantress is here as well.

The Avengers #1: Not bad, but not engaging enough for me to really think about getting the second issue. The art left a bad taste in my mouth, and I usually really like JRJr.

Secret Avengers #1: Interesting, nice team of players. Last page tease gets me to grab issue #2. Good art, kinda moody.

The New Avengers #1: I like the characters on this team, and it was solid enough to give a shot at #2, but that had better really keep my interest to keep with it. Great art within as well helps.

Avengers Academy #1: I'll check this when it comes out...probably on board for another issue, then we'll see. Good art, but something lacking in several key emotional scenes in the face department.

Thunderbolts #144: I loved this book when it initally came out all those years ago, and this is the best I've seen since before that Jemas reboot of concept years ago. Art is good, not wild about all of the redesigns, but not too bad overall. On board for now.

6 books...3 yes for second issues, 2 maybe's and 1 no. Not bad Marvel.

[ June 27, 2010, 12:10 PM: Message edited by: Dev Em ]
 
Posted by Red Arrow on :
 
I like what is going on in the Avengers books right now. I just wonder about some of the roster choices. Why is Valkyrie in Secret Avengers?
 
Posted by Dev Em on :
 
Reread Avengers #1...I'll probably give the first arc on all the books a try.
 
Posted by Set on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Dev Em: Avengers Academy #1: I'll check this when it comes out...probably on board for another issue, then we'll see. Good art, but something lacking in several key emotional scenes in the face department.
It was a bit annoying that the book was so rushed that we don't even know what Striker or Finesse's real names are yet. Ya think, with a page devoted to pictures of each of them, they could have written their names down?

While Cobie compared it favorably to Thunderbolts 1, I faintly remember there being some *action* in Thunderbolts 1, in addition to a fun surprise ending, not just a single panel of 'action' in the training room.

quote:
Originally posted by Dev Em: Hank's outfit is hideous.
Indeed!

quote:
Quicksilver - "Super-Speed. Google it."
Great snark. Who knew he could be funny, and not just bitter?
 
Posted by DrakeB3004 on :
 
Is there another Avengers book on the horizon?

Cosmic Avengers?
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
So after I hit up the Walking Dead, the first few comics I felt like checking out were some of the new Avengers titles since the first few issues of them got me really pumped up.

I’m glad I did! I read 2 issues of New Avengers, 2 issues of Avengers and Young Avengers and overall, I found them all to be highly enjoyable and was impressed. (And now I’ve got Secret Avengers and Avengers Academy to go…yikes that a lot).

Avengers
I’m really enjoying the Bendis/JR Jr Avengers title quite a bit. I figured Noh-Var was going to show up in one of these titles and I’m glad its this one since he’ll some more dynamic to the title. I’m enjoying the way Bendis is writing Iron Man and feel like after a few years, he’s finally found the character’s voice (with some obvious inspiration by Robert Downey Jr.). The Kang storyline is interesting but isn’t exactly blowing me away, but that’s okay—I’m enjoying seeing the characters interact. Adding Apocalypse to the storyline was a welcome surprise.

Bendis’ Spider-Man is just a fun time to read. In fact, the witty banter is a blast. In New Avengers, Bendis really lays it on thick but here it’s held in check. I think thus far the way he’s done both has been fitting to the characters.

I’m also quite curious as to what the plan is with Wonder Man and appreciate him having a storyline finally.

New Avengers
I was wondering exactly what this title would be and so far it really feels like Defenders with just a free for all sense of Bendis using whatever characters he feels are interesting (it almost feels like a crossover story). And I’m really enjoying that vibe—there is a big sense of fun here.

I love that the Thing is included—why not? Spidey and Wolverine are there, might as well add Marvel’s old ‘second most popular’ character. Bendis writes Luke Cage so well he’s become a favorite. I like that he’s figured out a way to have Hellstrom, Dr. Strange and Dr. Voodoo all there and show each of them a lot of respect. Ms. Marvel, another favorite of Bendis, adds a certain level of ‘real A-list superhero’ the series.

I think the series has been great so far.

The Oral History of the Avengers
When I read the initial description of this in the solicits I thought it sounded uber-lame. I have to say, I was dead wrong. I’m enjoying these quite a bit! As someone who recently has been reading a lot of Silver Age Marvel, I’m delighted (and frankly, surprised) at the level of respect and knowledge that Bendis is showing of Avengers and Marvel history. He’s also at long last found a voice for the Wasp and Hank Pym and is having them portrayed (albeit in interview form only) in a respectful manner, which is refreshing. I like the idea of the Avengers recalling their earliest days and some remembering certain parts and forgetting some. The description of Zemo (the father) was both hilarious and terrifying. These are great…I wish they would do all the way up to the Celestial Madonna Saga.

Young Avengers: the Children’s Crusade
This was a big one for me: did I still care about these characters after all these years? The last time I collected one of their series, I was living AT HOME. That was quite a number of years ago. But I gave in and got it—and man, am I glad I did. I thought it was a terrific first issue and all at once I remembered why I liked Wiccan and Hulking (and hope I’ll feel the same for the rest shortly). Heinberg really is a talented writer.

And the Jim Cheung artwork is simply to die for—man, I forgot how good he was. I’m tempted to go back and reread some of Scion by Crossgen which is how I first became aware of him.

What’s exciting is Wiccan opens up the possibility: maybe the Scarlet Witch was not really responsible for all that terribleness? Like Wiccan, I so desperately want to believe that is true! But I also suspect Heinberg could be opening this story up to be a hard lesson for the kids and thus, the readers. Still, I’m holding onto hope and that is a tribute to Heinberg’s writing. It also makes me realize I want the Vision to be restored to the Vision again, especially if these are his sons. I just want to see that scene of them reunited! Up until right now, I never felt that strongly about it before.

I’m here for the duration of this series and am looking forward to it. Now it better not be late because I’ll complain like a mutha&%&$er.

All in all, I read up on 3 of the 6 Avengers titles thus far. All three are A+. Pretty good, Avengers.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Also, Set, I hope I didn't mislead you with the Thunderbolts comparison! I meant the reveal felt very-Thunderboltish.

While I liked Avengers Academy #1 quite a bit, I don't think it was as good as Thunderbolts #1 (not by a long shot). I hold that issue in high esteem!
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
It also makes me realize I want the Vision to be restored to the Vision again, especially if these are his sons. I just want to see that scene of them reunited! Up until right now, I never felt that strongly about it before.

I wouldn't want to see Vision Jr. (hereafter Jonas) killed off to bring back Vision Sr (hereafter VSr). Sure, by all means bring back VSr - I'd love to see a Visions series with the "father"/"son" team running a Robot Rescue business to reflect the raw deal artificial life gets in the MU. Send them after VSr's "sister"/Jonas' "aunt" Tara from New Invaders for the first arc to expand the artificial family a bit more - but NOT at the expense of Jonas.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
^I can totally get behind that idea! I'd love to see them go that route. And bringing back the original Vision (Vision Sr.) shouldn't have to mean killing off the Young one, I agree.

A Visions series would space-rawk!
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
Vision and Vision Jr could be very different.

Vision Jr is based of the destroyed operating system of the old vision but, also some strange future Iron Lad armor, and the brainwaves of a kid that becomes Kang. all makes for the possibilities of a very different vision.

now that i think about it they're not doing enough with the possibilities!! maybe young vision has repulsor rays, is reckless, has a red and gold costume instead of green and gold!

btw, young avengers the childrens crusade was quite cool, im on team wiccan when he says scarlet witch might be innocent.
or it could be more complicated.
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
^I can totally get behind that idea! I'd love to see them go that route. And bringing back the original Vision (Vision Sr.) shouldn't have to mean killing off the Young one, I agree.

It's just that you seemed to suggest it was necessary in the "let the Vision be the Vision again" line [Smile]

[And I was desperately trying to avoid typing "original Vision", since that's a GA alien who's been turning up in all of Alex Ross' recent Marvel projects.]

quote:
Originally posted by Power Boy:
Vision and Vision Jr could be very different.

Vision Jr is based of the destroyed operating system of the old vision but, also some strange future Iron Lad armor, and the brainwaves of a kid that becomes Kang. all makes for the possibilities of a very different vision.

Indeed. VSr has four "fathers" - a despotic robot, a hero from the past, a failed businessman and a murdered cop; whereas Jonas has only two-and-a-half - VSr, a future despot, and the despot's idealistic younger self.

When they bring VSr back, I'd like them to take him all the way back to his original conception as an artificial human, not a robot. He should eat and drink (early on, he was knocked out by drugged wine!); if you cut him, he should bleed some sort of sealing resin rather than sparking; and if he exerts he should get tired & need to rest. And contrast that with his "son", who's all shiny, hollow, shapeshifting metal & circuitry.

And VSr should be bitter about his treatment - they could have rebuilt him long ago, they just didn't want to spend the time & money to do so (this after the previous time when they rebuilt him as an albino earless eunich "toaster". The only time they've bothered to fix him after major damage is when he was still technically online enough to supervise the job himself). That's where the "robot rescue" idea came from.

Hell, have Doom rebuild him in passing JUST to distract the Avengers while he does something elsewhere and show how easy it was in the process.

quote:
Originally posted by Power Boy:
now that i think about it they're not doing enough with the possibilities!! maybe young vision has repulsor rays, is reckless, has a red and gold costume instead of green and gold!

Nah, just stick VSr back in his Steve Epting suit. They're different enough already - more so than most of the New Mutants currently are, for instance.

 -
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
I love the Steve Epting costume myself and would love to see the Vision come back in it, while the younger Vision could keep his current costume.

The Doom idea is a good one, 'Boot! You should be writing this series!

And I absolutely, totally agree that the Vision (Sr.) should be played as an 'artificial human'. He was always much more than just a robot and it was a shame that somewhere along the way in the late 70's/80's that was forgotten.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
As a little update, I also read #2 of Secret Avengers and I continue to be intrigued by this series. It may not have the 'wow' factor of the two Bendis titles, but the writing is very tight by Brubaker and Deodato's artwork is simply stunning. What is a delightful surprise is this series feels a lot less 'spy series' so far and much more pure science-fiction. Bru is able to keep a lot of the same elements of his writing that fit so naturally into the spy genre, but its nice to see him flex his muscles in a good way with sci-fi space drama and with a team setting.

Deodato's rendition of Valkyrie may be enough to restore her popularity once and for all. [Love]

Reading Bru write Cap (and Sharon) is just so much fun. This series makes me feel a big 'welcome back Steve!'.

So far the set-up has been a bit slower, and I'm still hoping for more shining moments for most of the team, but it's solid enough to keep me invested. I do hope Bru keeps the respectful powerhouse treatment DnA have established for Nova firmly in place.
 
Posted by Dev Em on :
 
Money being what it is...I'll not be following much outside of Thunderbolts right now. This of course being the exception...

http://comics.ign.com/articles/110/1109668p1.html
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
The Doom idea is a good one, 'Boot! You should be writing this series!

Ta, but I have a 21CL "miniseries" to finish writing first [Smile]
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Reboot:
quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
The Doom idea is a good one, 'Boot! You should be writing this series!

Ta, but I have a 21CL "miniseries" to finish writing first [Smile]
Looking forward to it! [Smile]

I also read Avengers Academy #2 recently and thought it was a solid story and good enough to get me to buy #3. Finese, who had the most screen time in #2 is interesting enough to want me to read more. Her attempted seduction of Hank Pym was a great scene in making her scary to me and also allowing Hank to act in a heroic manner in the way I've wanted him to for a long time. I think Gage gets Hank much more than Slott did (and lets face it, Slott sucked at writing Hank [Razz] ). Her then immediate switch to Plan B, in getting Quicksilver to help her--now that was fascinating.
 
Posted by Ultra Jorge on :
 
Avengers Prime. Wow. I'm a huge Alan Davis fan...my favorite all time artist. Pretty good story by Bendis also. Didn't think he could pull this off.
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
A-Prime wasn't bad in and of itself... But if the twist ending is to be taken at face value, then the continuity went from bad to horrendous.
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
loving the new avengers right now.

it's got good guys who fight bad guys.

very low on the i'm evil, emotionally tortured heroes, or used to be evil, or political thriller etc.


but:

Click Here For A Spoileris the ancient one really a match for dr. strange, i mean, by now i'm sure dr. strange has averted way more apocalypse's and fought with other heroes to have a more impressive resume than the ancient one. if it is the ancient one.
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
SECRET AVENGERS- I'm liking this. Though I think putting the team in uniforms other than their own in the first arc is a mistake. Lots of readers from the '90's on might not be familiar with Valkyrie at all. Or get Beast as an Avenger.

Ant-man, in particular, had a good scene, I thought. I wonder what the deal is with Nick Fury. LMD, mark 50321?

This is a title in which ongoing subplots would be welcome. That's sort of been absent from Avengery books lately. Other than ones dealing with Luke Cage and family, anyway.

I wonder who Nova's replacement will be? Who are the likely candidates? I hope Richard Ryder comes back for a more Nova-as-Avenger story or series of stories. But, I'm curious about who will take his place.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Set:
Avengers Academy 3
*Remember Teen Titans 1, with action *and* teen drama? We're on issue 3, and still, drama, no action. Training sequences, IMO, are no substitute for the real deal.

Set posted this in the "what did you get this week thread" and I think he sums up the major problem of Avengers Academy. There just isn't enough happening yet from a plot/action perspective on an issue to issue basis. I may be done with this title.

Meanwhile, I'm enjoying the hell out of the two Bendis Avengers titles, which are at the top of my read pile. The main Avengers title is all over the map in terms of the threat they are facing but in a good way. And New Avengers is just a fun solid read with Bendis writing characters he loves. As you'd expect, Bendis loves the Thing and naturally writes him in an awesome way--it made me suddenly wish there was a Marvel-Two-in-One title with the Thing teaming up with someone every month; New Avengers will suffice in capturing that.

(I've not yet caught up on Avengers: Prime or Secret Avengers).
 
Posted by Set on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid: And New Avengers is just a fun solid read with Bendis writing characters he loves. As you'd expect, Bendis loves the Thing and naturally writes him in an awesome way--it made me suddenly wish there was a Marvel-Two-in-One title with the Thing teaming up with someone every month; New Avengers will suffice in capturing that.
I've made no secret of my loathing for all things Bendis, and yet, for once, I look at a character he has dragged into an Avengers book (Spider-Man, Wolverine, Spider Woman, Luke Cage, Dr. Strange) and, this time, I heartily approve.

Ben is a great choice to be an Avenger, and I am reminded of those behind-the-scenes poker games that used to happen between Ben, Nick Fury, Simon Williams, Steve Rogers and Hank McCoy.

(Sue might have also been an interesting choice.)

As for Avengers Academy, the writer has already spoiled online that at least one of these characters goes on to become a villain. Finesse and, to a lesser extent, Hazmat, are being foreshadowed for this. Veil and, to a lesser extent, Mettle, are being 'pushed' the other way. Veil would therefore be the most shocking choice. Striker would be too easy. Finesse, too predictable. The 'big mystery,' I find not terribly riveting. I don't really care about these kids enough. Three issues of little more than talky-talk, and none of them have 'stuck' yet.

About the only thing that has really stuck out in this last issue is Danny Rand / Iron Fist giving a training lesson and spouting off some eastern philosophy, and the asian student snarking that he wishes he was born asian... (And, the wrap-around-irony that he does indeed know more about eastern philosophy than her, regardless of her heritage, so while she's dissing the white guy for talking the talk, she's hardly walking the walk.)

[ September 01, 2010, 11:20 AM: Message edited by: Set ]
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
Thought I'd share a post from another board...


It took Buscema awhile to really "get" THE AVENGERS. His first batch of issues, the characters don't really look or "feel" ("act"?) like themselves. It's nice, but it's as if from one episode of a TV series to another, ALL the actors were recast. Roy wasn't much help, his plotting and dialogue were both of the annoying "fanboy" variety. Roy had the exquisite advantage of LEARNING ON THE JOB. He got better. I'd say the issue that introduced The Vision was when it all finally "clicked". Plus, George Klein (FIRED from DC because Carmine wanted to "weed out the old guys") was one of Buscema's BEST inkers, ever. And Buscema was one of the pencillers Klein's inks meshed with BEST, right up there with Curt Swan!

When I re-read that entire run of AVENGERS, and when I look back on it now, thumbing thru pages, I can't shake that DON HECK-- yes, DON HECK's version of the characters is somehow more the "definitive" one. The problem-- and boy is it a BIG one-- is that the longer he stayed on the book, the WORSE the inks got. Early-on he had Dick Ayers, who wasn't doing him any favors, but then in quick succession you had WALLY WOOD, JOHN ROMITA, and Frank Giacoia. I mean, EVEN Frank Giacoia, teamed with Heck, and the results were GORGEOUS. Wanda NEVER looked so good. Heck (with the right inker) made Wanda look MUCH BETTER than Jack Kirby!!! (Yes, that's what I said.) But when Don started inking himself... AAAUGH! Let me put it this way, when George Roussos is an improvement, you can see how bad the problem was.


Imagine if Heck had stayed on the book, with inkers like GEORGE KLEIN and TOM PALMER. Hell, Buscema could have gotten on X-MEN and tried to make it fly. It AIN'T right to kick a guy off a book he's been on for so long and shove him onto something else, but that's what happened to Don... TWICE. (3 times if you count CAPTAIN MARVEL, and I do.)
 
Posted by Fanfic Lass on :
 
Sorry, Prof, but I have to disagree. In my opinion, John Buscema's choreography and sense of dynamics were always far superior to Don Heck's, and I think that Buscema found his footing as early as the second half of the Red Guardian story. Towards the end of Heck's run, his pencils were deteriorating at the same rate at the inks, if not even faster, and even at Heck's peak (the Wood/Romita issues), his layouts and figures were stiff and unimaginative. I think Roy and Stan made the right decision by taking Heck off the book. John Buscema not only defined the look of the Avengers, but also the look of all team books from the late 1960s on.
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
picked up Avengers Prime, was pretty good, liked the witty banter.

few things i find fault with.

a) Tony's goatee.
b) Enchantress' poses by the brilliant Alan Davis are looking a bit been done before many times by the brilliant Alan Davis ...
Click Here For A Spoilerc) I don't think Tony would be cringing so much about showing his privates, who cares about vanity when you're gonna get killed by trolls .... and half the women in the marvel universe have seen it already.
d) why are Asgardians so week lately in the marvel universe?

but overall great fun. I'm so dying to see WASP, HANK, and even the Hulk!!!!
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
quote:
Originally posted by Set:
Avengers Academy 3
*Remember Teen Titans 1, with action *and* teen drama? We're on issue 3, and still, drama, no action. Training sequences, IMO, are no substitute for the real deal.

Set posted this in the "what did you get this week thread" and I think he sums up the major problem of Avengers Academy. There just isn't enough happening yet from a plot/action perspective on an issue to issue basis. I may be done with this title.
Well, the "Scared Strait" issues of this comic gave the title a reprieve on it's cancellation. I think it was a great step in the right direction and there is still hope for this comic.

Knowing Hank is ditching the ridiculous 'Wasp' persona to become Giant-Man again is a big bonus for me.
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Power Boy:
picked up Avengers Prime, was pretty good, liked the witty banter.

I've got a big "Has Bendis ever read a Thor story, especially from the past ten years? A clue: No." vibe from this series. Amora was last an ALLY of Thor, Hela's been virtually depowered and trapped in Vegas...
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Brushing up on all things Avengers:

Avengers Prime
As the series moves on, I'm enjoying this miniseries more and more. Continuity aside (which Bendis possibly addressed with a potential fix in the latest issue involving time travel), this mini has been very well done. Two things specifically are excellent: the incredible Alan Davis, whose work here IMO has the master back to his best work and Brian Bendis' ability to showcase the camaraderie between Cap, Iron Man and Thor return to prominence. He even has both Tony and Cap joking around in a way that feels natural and easy; it's like the Silver Age all over again when both would do that casually from time to time. For the first time, Bendis seems to get Tony & Thor (he's always had a handle on Cap).

Avengers
The main Avengers title is one I'm enjoying as well. While I wouldn't rank it in my top 10 favorite comics, I certainly think it's one of the stronger superhero team comics on the market. The artwork by JR Jr. is top notch and I think is absolutely stunning. The writing is fun and fast-paced, with a hugely grandiose storyline that feels like it absolutely matters to the future of the Marvel Universe. I also like how Bendis has a handle on the Avengers he's chosen to use here: he especially is using Iron Man, Spider-Man and Spider-Woman well; Noh-Var is a welcome addition; his Thor is part of the team but still grandiose; and his Hawkeye is the excellent every-man relatable character he always was.

New Avengers (should really be called Defenders)
New Avengers, out of all of them, is the one that is pure off the wall fun. It's absolutely the Defenders with another name and a tribute to all the team and team-up comic books of the 70's if there ever was one. The storyline is epic, though it involves magic and IMO is a bit hokey. But that's okay because the comic is really about this cast of characters interacting with one another, and I think it works well. Each one has a moment to shine each issue: The Thing, Spidey, Wolverine, Cage & Jessica, Iron Fist, Ms. Marvel, Mockingbird and the three magic users: Strange, Voodoo and Hellstorm. Marvel should be doing something to try and promote this title as something to give to younger readers, because it certainly has that appeal.

Oral History of the Avengers back-ups
I'm still loving these! The 4-5 page text pieces in back of the Bendis Avengers comics are a lot of fun and for Avengers history buffs they are such a cool bonus.

Avengers Academy
I decided to give this title a stay of execution and I'm glad I did. It seems to really be picking up steam as we go and now is hitting a point where the characters are becoming more developed and much more interesting. If anything, it reminds me of the original New Mutants comic. Finese has emerged as my favorite but Hazmat and Veil are a close 2nd. I'm also liking the recent revelation in #5 about one of the boy's motivations for being on the team and what he is willing to do. I fully expect by #12 the team will have changed with 1 or 2 members having moved on to villainhood or at least disgrace. But I'm hoping the others are able to make it. Christos Gage does a good job at making every issue feel like it contains somewhat of a revelation, and I like that feeling. I can't wait to see Hank Pym as Giant-Man and I hope Quicksilver has some more screen time. This is also Mike McKone's best artwork perhaps EVER.

Secret Avengers
I love Brubaker, love Deodato and I love the majority of this team but for whatever reason, I'm feeling like Secret Avengers is the weakest of the bunch. Whereas the "Team Cap" stories in Captain America in recent years IMO were excellent, SA seems to be picking up a few of Bru's bad habits from his Uncanny X-Men run in which it takes him multiple issues to advance the plot even slightly; it's almost like he's overwhelmed by the sheer number of characters. The LMD Nick Fury twist is 'okay' for me but it's not really a plot I'm thrilled about. He's paid tribute to Steranko so much in his Cap run that I feel like by going back to the Steranko run of SHIELD again here he's started to milk it a little too much. In a way Bru owes Steranko quite a lot for his Cap/SA work much like Bendis owes Miller quite a lot for his DD run. But there is a point where it starts to move a bit towards 'too much so' so Bru needs to be careful. The artwork, however, is absolutely incredible on this title. Deodato is just fierce in his composition and character shots these days!
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Some stuff:

New Avengers
I really liked the latest issue, #7, of New Avengers which helps establish the status quo for the series after the initial story-arc. It was definitely a welcome slowing down of the pace that focused on character interaction and what the series will be about. Having Squirrel Girl & Wong join Victoria Hand as the supporting cast makes the set-up all the more enjoyable.

I enjoyed a lot of the in-jokes, particularly Nightwind saying "I don't get it; this is clearly the Defenders but you're calling yourselves Avengers?". I also like Dr. Strange permanently becoming a member, making it all the more like the Defenders.

Oral History of the Avengers
I'm loving these still. I hope they go on forever. Bendis really seems to be rereading those old stories and those of us who have read the entire Avengers run are getting a treat.
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
SPOILERS


whoah lots of well read Avengers fans here. I've never really followed the Avengers ... I've got a bunch of West Coast Avengers by Byrne and The Avengers by Buscema from the 80s. (which is awesome) but I'm a fair weather Avengers fan.


That disclaimer, here's a review of The Avengers #8:


'Return of The Illuminati'
by Bendis and Romita


Medusa is on the cover with 5 other members of the Illuminati, a secret group of super hero manipulators that meet to deal with major evils. so ... on the cover is Medusa (who's husband black Bolt is usually the member of the Illuminati) Dr. Strange, Prof. X, Mr. Fantastic, and Iron Man. No Namor on the cover, seems to be reasonless 'cause he's in the book. (ftw)


Long story short:


the Illuminati are meeting because several of them have secreted the Infinity Gems away and the Hood has punked Mr. Fantastic and Black Bolt, and is now in possession of the gem for power and the gem for reality. (Black Bolt just left the reality gem in the Himalayas when the Inhumans relocated to the Moon. This allowed the Hood (Parker Robbins - former host of Dormamu and later holder of the Norn stones) to easily grab the Power stone from Mr. F, defeating his defenses and the Thing.

Moving on: The Illuminati meet, surprised to see Medusa ... she tells them Black Bolt is dead. Apparently she just found out about this group. Oh and we get to have LockJaw the pet teleporter in this book.

Snarky comments go all around for about 4 to 6 pages. The Iron Man breaks it down that the Red Hulk crashed into Avengers tower EARLIER saying he got beat down by 'a guy' (our latest uber villain Parker Robbins, the Hood)

Apparently, the Red Hulk is stronger than the Hulk. ( I have no idea who the Red Hulk is)

Red Hulk said the guy had one or two gems. So Red Hulk ran to tell the Avengers (not the Illuminati - our pals spidey, spidey woman, thor, steve rodgers, iron man, hawkeye, wolvie, etc.) so of course Iron Man runs away to the Illuminati first thing.

Back to the present, the Illuminati take off to the Himalayas to investigate, they find dead bodies (the Hoods pals whom he killed)

LockJaw is barking .... and here are a lot of Avengers and Steve Rodgers asking 'Tony ... What are you doing?'

so ....................................................................................


The big deal with this issue is the Illuminati, a secret organization of our heroes, who've been meeting - in secret - to be crazy manipulators (yeah ... it's the big thing now ... sleazy heroes). Anyway, now all their friends and colleagues know. They're upset.

Unless page one or two of Issue 9 is a mind wipe by Charles Xavier or a spell by Dr. Strange.


This issue kinda drags if you're caught up on your recent Avengers books. no action besides a flashback to the Red Hulk's beating. lot's of talking ... and half of that is people being catty to one another.

that's about it. John Romita JR. is still kicking butt. IMO his best work since he was doing X-Men in the 80s.

If I gave out stars I'd give this like a 2.5, get it for the art not the story. I'm sure if anything happens in Issue 9 you can just read that first page summary to find out hat happened in this issue.

This issue reminds me of an afternoon soap opera. 1/3 catch up 1/3 new material, 1/3 commercials.

I mean the Red Hulk getting beat down flash back is over 5 pages of no text .... in the middle of the book. Even JR jr is not that good.
 
Posted by MLLASH on :
 
I refuse to read any Avengers team that has Wolverine on it.
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
good luck with that. he's on two Avengers teams now ... that I know of. He's even got several appearances in Young Avengers.

The Avengers #8 was actually very low Wolverine content. only one line, pictured in two panels and the intro page headshot.

AND he's not even on the cover!

maybe it should get another star.

[ January 04, 2011, 06:12 PM: Message edited by: Power Boy ]
 
Posted by Set on :
 
For random review month;

So, three different books with 'Avengers' in the title have made it onto my pull-list, which is a total first for me.

Avengers Academy #7 is *still* not firing on all cylinders. It's been seven months, and the book has some good wit, and some good character moments, but lacks something. The action, such as it is, tends to be particularly meh. (Granted, given a choice between good action and good characterization, I'll take good characterization every time, but is it too much to want both?)

A sharp comment regarding Tigra's toddler;
Hank - "Look at him. You did something amazing!"

Tigra - "No. I procreated. Any idiot can do that. If I raise him to be happy, healthy, responsible, to do good things and live a good life, *then* I'll have accomplished something."

Long term effects of the sort of 'keep them unconscious' technology used on criminals is explored. (The Absorbing Man describes it as being like an endless nightmare where you are struggling to remember who you are, and can't ever wake up, and pleads with Pym to come up with a containment system that doesn't trap him in this waking death.)

Hank changes his codename from The Wasp back to Giant-Man, and, thank Thor, changes that godawful costume he was wearing.

He also gets over his obsession with restoring Jan to life, which this fan, at least, has been expecting ever since he mentioned in the Mighty Avengers that he'd designed 10,000,000 Jocasta's, insinuating that they were functioning as neurons maintaining the brain activity of the 'mostly dead' Janet. He decides that restoring her before he's able to ensure that she isn't traumatized by the process is more important than restoring her *now,* and that he has to stop living for the day she returns, and get on with just living.

All in all, Avengers Academy 7 is a great Hank Pym story, but doesn't really deal much with the kids in the 'Academy.' (Although Veil, suffering the same sort of fate that Jan has suffered, leaving this world behind, is seen in the last scene, possibly questioning if Hank is going to give up on her as well, and let her fade away...)

IMO, it's a stronger Pym story than what we saw in Mighty Avengers, which, for all that I like the character, felt a lot like Gary Stu fanfic, with Hank Pym as the fluffed up centerpiece. (Especially, the whole Scientist Supreme crap.)
 
Posted by Set on :
 
Random Avengers review 2.

Avengers: the Children's Crusade is up to #4, and while I love seeing the team again, there's just way too much guest-star going on.

Quicksilver, Magneto, the Scarlet Witch (kinda), Doctor Doom, and now the Avengers (Wonder Man, Wolverine and some other people who don't get to talk much, including Iron Man, Ms. Marvel, Iron Man, Luke Cage and some version of Captain America. I can't even tell anymore, is it Steve? Is it Bucky? Do I care? Not really, I don't think he even got a speaking line.).

Good grief! Speaking of no speaking lines, Vision and Stature get none. Two of the actual Young Avengers, and they get to stand around, and then be seen doing stuff in a fight scene involving Young Avengers, New Avengers, Quicksilver, Magneto, Doom and some Doombots.

Wolverine continues to act like a chode, boasting about how he's gonna kill Wanda, for 'wiping out the mutant race,' which she didn't do. She took away their powers. Some of them died later in various other incidents, but none of that is on Wanda. Wolverine is acting like a mutant without powers is some sort of un-person, and that by depowering people, Wanda pretty much destroyed the only part of them that he considered important, which is pretty damned racist of him.

A surprise appearance by Iron Lad at the end is very welcome, because I've always wanted to see him back (and, frankly, never much cared for this version of the Vision they've had as his replacement), but in this book? Yeesh, he's gonna be competing for face-time with Doctor Doom, Magneto, Quicksilver, Wanda, Wonder Man, an entire team of Avengers, and Wolverine, who will not shut the hell up about wanting to kill Wanda (and Wiccan, just in case he could become a threat, because apparently that's how he rolls these days, killing people who *might* be powerful someday).

I love the team. The art kicks all sorts of ass (much better than Avengers Academy, which is a flat-out better story, and wisely sidelines the characters who are not central to what is going on), and is full of little details, like the swirly fingerprint patterns on Wiccan's headband, or the fancy patterns on the corset Wanda is wearing (before she changes into her wedding dress!).

Yeah. The Scarlet Witch marrying Doctor Doom? Yikes. And I thought the Black Panther / Storm wedding came out of nowhere...

Good luck getting Magneto to give away the bride!
 
Posted by Set on :
 
Random Avengers review 3.

From the Chaos War crossover, it's the Dead Avengers!

Oh wow. Captain Mar-Vell, the Vision (the real one), the Swordsman, Doctor Druid, Yellowjacket (Rita deMarr) and some Image-looking chick I've never heard of (Deathcry?).

The first issue starts with a six panel spread, showing us the last thing seen by the six main characters before they died, and then they wake up, unharmed, surrounded by comatose Avengers. The Chaos King has destroyed the barriers between the worlds of the living and the dead, so that the dead have returned to Earth, and, at the same time, knocked out every living person, leaving them helpless and at the mercy of his minions, with only the 'dead' heroes active to stop them.

That's kind of a funky concept. We don't have to deal with how the living would react to the return of their dead comrades, since only the dead heroes are active, and every character beat is saved for them, and not what Spider-Man, Iron Man or Wolverine thinks of them being back.

The Vision is coldly logical, and yet practical and heroic, just like I like him. Captain Marvel takes charge, and there are some great flashbacks to both his days and Deathcry's, in the first two issues. (The Swordsman also has a flashback, but it's not as awesome.)

Presumably, Rita and / or Druid will have some sort of flashback goodness as well in the third issue, although I'm not sure if they've been established enough to have one as compelling as Mar-Vell's. OTOH, I could have said the same of Deathcry, and her flashback was some powerful juju, showing her expulsion from the Shi'ar royal family by her cousin, the Empress Lilandra, who has never looked more empress-y.

The art is the best of the three books I've reviewed, which is interesting, because it's hands-down better than the Chaos War: X-Men book. I'll smack-talk Bendis till the end of time, and the echoes of my contempt may last a bit longer, but the Avengers are finally being treated like a real property, and not some third tier book behind the juggernaut X-franchise, and he certainly brought the spotlight back on Earth's Mightiest Heroes.

I didn't know Deathcry, and I can tell that I'd pretty much hate her on sight after seeing her in action, but she's playing a pretty important character role, and I understand her value in the narrative. She's the fool in the horror movie who does something stupid and dies first. Every movie has to have one of them.

Unfortunately, as often happens in real-life, it's not the fool who dies, but someone else who attempts to save her, and gets cut down because of her recklessness. That's a pretty strong condemnation of her, right there, that a better hero bought the farm because she, again, screwed up. It could be a real growth moment for her, if she learns from this, a lesson that she apparently failed to learn in life. Perhaps this is her second chance (third chance, whatever) at redemption.

Also, the heroes are already dead, and so the one who died saving her might well not be 'really dead' quite yet. (On the other hand, this happens at the end of issue two of a three issue series, and I'm pretty sure they'll all be dead again for good at the end of issue three, so it would be pretty pointless to waste a page explaining how that person miraculously survived, only to die again twenty pages later anyway.)

Doctor Druid, I remember as being a bit stuffy, but nothing like the jerk he is being here. And yet, like Deathcry, it's a bit refreshing. These are not the best Avengers ever (for the most part), but the ones who died, in a couple of cases, before they ever really got to shine (Swordsman, Deathcry, Yellowjacket), so some rough edges and less-than-well-oiled-machine teamwork are probably the exact right characterization.

Vision - "We former and / or auxiliary members are listed as.... deceased."

Druid - "Even you, Vision. As a synthezoid, you have no life to lose - nor soul to outlast it. How can you be here?"

Vision - "Doctor Druid. How very pleasant to see you again, too."

Heh.

And later, Druid is expounding upon death being the natural order, and nothing to fear, and how pointless it is to fight what is happening and then someone outside screams and the 'Dead Avengers' fly off to start saving them. (Souls of the dead, being annhilated by the servant demons of the Chaos King.)

Druid - "What you are doing is pointless and stupid! It's stupid!"

Yellowjacket - "Wait a minute. I remember you now. You're a $%&#. You were always a $%&#. And now that you're dead, against all odds, you're an even bigger $%&#."

Again with the 'heh.'

I've always thought that Rita got a bum rap, dying so quickly, without a chance to make her mark. The Swordsman and Doctor Druid also, IMO, died before their stories were really ever explored, and so it's nice to see them back, even if only in this limited engagement.

(And who knows, the Chaos War: Alpha Flight storyline has strongly suggested that Shaman has the power to ensure that the dead Alpha Flight members either don't fully die, or remain alive. Doctor Druid might be able to similarly cheat death, for himself and for any of the other 'Dead Avengers' who don't feel ready to pass on yet. Mar-Vell, in fact, seems like the only 'Dead Avenger' present who has come to terms with his death, and is ready to move on, despite Druid's protestations, I think he is 'protesting too much.')

I'm not in love with the whole Chaos War thing, and I've always loathed crossovers, but this is very self-contained, just six 'Dead Avengers,' with no interaction save with each other, random civilians, and the villains of the piece, serving the Chaos King, and attempting to break through the defensed position held by the 'Dead Avengers' to slay all of the currently comatose current Avengers, consisting of The Grim Reaper, Nekra Sinclair, and a small army of demons.

As Nekra is the person who killed Doctor Druid, she's the one person that can draw him out of his nihilistic funk and make him participate in this 'stupid' struggle against oblivion.

As Rita quips, as Doctor Druid distracts Nekra from a plan the others are enacting, "Glad there's someone around here the Brit hates more than us!"

I also picked up Chaos War: Alpha Flight (because I've always been a huge Flight fanboy), and Chaos War: X-Men, almost entirely because of the strength of this Dead Avengers storyline, and I find that neither of them even comes close to how good this book is. Whatever quirks these particular six 'Dead Avengers' have, they are far more compelling a team than the others, and the care taken in the crafting of the story, the characterization, and the beautiful Grummet art makes all the difference.

So, three Avengers titles in a single month, and it's probably a sign of my own personal quirkiness that none of them are based around classic Avengers like Iron Man, Captain America or Thor, or new wannabe Avengers like Luke Cage, Spider-Man or Wolverine.

This probably explains my excitement about this Legion Academy stuff. I've always preferred the B-team / Lower Decks people, to the big brand names... [Smile]
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
Cap is Steve- the writer wrote this much closer to the events of 'No More Mutants', so Steve's in the wrong costume, something acknowleged by the writer in publicity- though not in the book. Wolverine is behaving the way he did then rather than how he is in other titles (not that you can really tell all that much).

I'm not sure why they didn't take the time to update and 'match the times'. I guess it'd been delayed so often already.

Gotta disagree about Wanda- there were many (hundreds?) mutants who were using their abilities at the time of her spell and died because of it. Fliers, swimmers, etc. Magma's boyfriend was with her in the heart of a volcano- so there was that death and collateral emotional damage that Amara suffered (not that that's been written about at all- sigh).

I liked this heaps more than you did, but Bendis pretty much killed The Scarlet Witch for me in DISASSEMBLED, probably the comic I hated most in all my years of reading. At least the end of LEGION LOST was written well and made good use of Lightning Lad and others. Can't say that about any aspect of DISASSEMBLED

I hope Wanda never gets any sort of superpower again ever, but realize that's something that will happen eventually. Maaaaybe if she comes back with the Hex Sphere and Hex Sphere only- with no real control over it, then I might like her again.

It is overcrowded. Never a good thing when present members of the 'main' cast don't get any lines. Even so, I still wish Crystal, Luna and Lorna would show up to meet their 'nephews'/cousins and greet the 'new' Wanda.
 
Posted by Set on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mystery Lad:
Gotta disagree about Wanda- there were many (hundreds?) mutants who were using their abilities at the time of her spell and died because of it. Fliers, swimmers, etc. Magma's boyfriend was with her in the heart of a volcano- so there was that death and collateral emotional damage that Amara suffered (not that that's been written about at all- sigh).

I guess that makes sense, but Wolverine explicitly says that she 'wiped out an entire species,' which, even if every depowered mutant died instantly, she didn't even come close, because Wolverine's still flapping his mutant trap. [Smile]

That's a problem with today's writing. Every event has to have a huge chunk of collateral deaths, just to be taken seriously, and then, later, people want to use a character again, (see Jordan, Hal, or Grey, Jean) and have to retcon the hell out of all the murders they committed to 'explain' why they can suddenly be a usable hero character again.

Lame.

Howsabout save the trouble and not have the superheroes kill bunches a people in the first place, neh?

Marvel is really doing a number on their female characters.

Of the established 'old-school,' Jean and Janet are dead, Wanda is ruined and Sue is on the short list to be killed when the FF loses a member in a few issues.

Second generation heroines like Spider-Woman (Spiderman with boobs), She-Hulk (Hulk with boobs) and Ms. Marvel (Captain Marvel with boobs) are still around, but none of them are exactly original characters.

Is that all we are going to have left at Marvel, female knockoffs of male heroes, as all the original female characters are dead, retired or sent off to Wakanda to be Mrs. Panther?

Will Stature, Thor Girl and X-23, the She-verine, be the future? Meh.
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
Or, worse, comics could look like the upcoming ANNHILATORS book with nary a single female character included
(though a mysterious figure on the last page of DEVASTATION might be female- the character wasn't included in any marketing).
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
I was bummed about the Annihilators. can we revive Frankie Raye for this ... she had a mini series recently (though i missed the final issue and the conclusion)

also think the Annihilators name is lame, is Guardians of the Galaxy as a title sooooo bad?

I did like YOUNG AVENGERS 4 though. (4 of 9 seems long for a mini but i'm glad to at least get 9 of these)

So i would agree with Set's review pretty much in it's entirety.

Great Art, Wolverine is even acting more 'chode' than normal, too many characters ... at least Wiccan gets a lot of screen time.

OF COURSE DR. DOOM HAS FOUND WANDA AND CONVINCED HER TO MARRY HIM. hahaha


I am unclear on the return of Iron Lad though since .... wasn't this young Vision made from Iron Lad?? I mean i guess a new Iron Lad suit is not hard to find in the future but .... oh well i'm not so hot on this Vision. What's gonna happen when Young Vision meets the Scarlet Witch?? will their love snap Wanda out of it and he'll return to normal and ditch Cassie?? (I think he has Iron Lad's personality now and not one based on Wonder Man's though) seems very confusing.

Or will Wanda be grossed out by this young partial version of her husband. she might even freak out!!!

"No More Synthezoids!!" and then lots of white pages ..... [Wink]

I always liked Quicksilver ... even when he was a sociopath.

I still like Wanda too , maybe it's because I don't like very many of these 'Heroes' she's been attacking. They kinda deserve it. before for messing with her memory and now for being douche bags.

This Wanda IS acting a lot like a former Avenger despite her memory being changed.


Regarding Wolverine's attitude .... he was really distressed way back when they were going to depower jean lest her Phoenix power return. (original john byrne and cc story) and it is very traumatic for a mutant to loser their powers maybe it would be better equated to Wanda robbing them of a sense or two or physically disabling them.

while that's awful I don't think it's 'slaughtered her friends and wiped out and entire species' bad. [looking at you Wolverine]

she may have stagnated the evolution of a species (big if though it is the Marvel universe), disabled about a million people (were there a million mutants before ... ), killed a hundred mutants who were unlucky enough to be surviving on their powers at that moment, and killed a few friends. yeah she's got a lot to answer for but Wolvie's been a drama queen.

Maybe she will get her powers back and utter something like 'Bring back the mutants' or 'resurrect Ant Man' ?


I also read the Avengers 5 of 5.

short review .... it was a venue for Steve and tony to make up and not the 'getting the band back together' book complete with Wasp and Hank or even Hulk that I was hoping for.

Great Art ....

Thor had the opportunity to fix A LOT of things with a magic sword and said some such BS about that would make him a tyrant or something so that the writers could continue with their current stories.

[ January 07, 2011, 02:05 PM: Message edited by: Power Boy ]
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mystery Lad:
Or, worse, comics could look like the upcoming ANNHILATORS book with nary a single female character included
(though a mysterious figure on the last page of DEVASTATION might be female- the character wasn't included in any marketing).

Click Here For A Spoilervery happy to see the return of any space knight!

Gamora and Medusa are on the cover too but, medusa is really not in this power class.
 
Posted by Set on :
 
[tangent about cosmic level female heroes]
There have been a few cosmic gals that could work if the Annhilators need some balance.

Adam Warlock had an even more powerful female version, called, imaginatively, 'Her.' (Which, to be fair, follows from his pre-Adam Warlock name of 'Him.')

Frankie Ray / Nova is currently dead, but Heralds of Galactus are notorious for getting over that condition (as much as any comic-book character, I suppose).

Moondragon's pretty darn cosmic, since she can mind control a planet and read Galactus' mind. She's also a stone-cold wench, of the sort that makes Emma Frost look like a Vegas showgirl copping a 'tude.

Crystal may not be 'Queen of the Inhumans / Grand High Poobah of All Kree' or whatever Medusa is this week, but she's got super-powers that could allow her to hold her own on a team with people like Quasar (although Gladiator and Silver Surfer are on another level).

Sersi totally belongs on a team like this.

Clea is pretty darn cosmic, when she's all Flames of Faltine'd up, as ruler of the Dread Dimension.

Mantis, although it's hard to tell what she brings to the table on any given day. (telepathy, precognition, martial arts, some sort of plant-human physiology?)

Snowbird already seems to be hanging with the God Squad, and, really, isn't all that cosmic. Technically, she's supposed to stick to Canada, per terms of her contract with her family, although she seems to play hookey quite a bit...

Others might be suitably powerful, but not play so well with others, like the Enchantress, Moonstone or Rachel Summers (assuming she even exists anymore...).

Plus there are the usual mythological goddesses, like Artemis or the Morrigan or Freya.

Star Dancer - "I'm cosmic! I'm like, an Elder of the Universe, the patron of dance! I've spent *millenia* mastering the dances of a thousand alien cultures!"
Selection Committee - "We'll get back to you. Next!"
[/tangent]

Topic? Four of these cosmic ladies, Crystal, Mantis, Moondragon and Sersi, have been Avengers!
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Set:
Four of these cosmic ladies, Crystal, Mantis, Moondragon and Sersi, have been Avengers!

And three of them were used by Abnett and Lanning in Guardians of the Galaxy and the other cosmic-related stuff. Mantis and Moondragon were Guardians of the Galaxy members and Crystal's the wife of one of the Annhilators (Ronan).

Sersi's wrapped up in the CHAOS books surrounding Hercules and co. (as are Athena and possibly Snowbird).

So any one of the first three could *easily* be striding like a badass in the adds for Annhilators alongside the 'big' boys. Maybe one or more of them will appear, but who knows?

I don't think Frankie Raye *is* dead currently. She was in that mini that had a somewhat nebulous ending, as I recall.

Rachel Summers is in the same limbo that Havok and Polaris are in. (Are they on Earth? In space? En route? Nobody seems to really know.)

I'm not sure of the status of Her and Clea. I don't remember anything about Marvel's Artemis at all. Has she really been in any stories? Same for Freya and the Morrigan. I'm not familiar with Star Dancer.

Your points plain, though. There's no shortage of powerful women who wouldn't be out place fighting alongside the men chosen as Annhilators.

Imperial Guard members like Oracle and what's her face- the female that's like Gladiator- could also accompany the Shi'ar emperor.
 
Posted by Set on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mystery Lad:
Imperial Guard members like Oracle and what's her face- the female that's like Gladiator- could also accompany the Shi'ar emperor.

There's a girl Gladiator? Neat!

A pet peeve about the Imperial Guard is that they aren't just random superheroes, but are actually the best-of-the-best from an entire civilized galaxy, with technology light-years ahead of earth. Gladiator lives up to that status, but much of the rest of the team come across as chumps. I mean, really, what did 'Smasher' do to qualify for this honor? Or Hussar (a red-skinned person with a whip that shocks people? yes, clearly *that* belongs on a team with a Superman-analogue)?
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
one thing i liked about Grant Morrisson's X-Men (and little else) was he made Smasher more like Ultra Boy. Smasher would download new powers for new situations. It was barely realized as Smasher only had a few panels.


MoonDragon would be cool .. she is ruthless. or Her or Nova. or Sersi. would be nice to have a female represented an unrepresented segment of the galaxy ... but alas. [ A female Super Skrull ]

I'll settle for the apparent new character though!

Binary / Ms. Marvel would be great (IMO) i always preferred her as the star powered Binary.
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
CHILDREN'S CRUSADE #4: Nice cover. Also nice use of Dr. Doom- demonstrating some shades of gray, which I appreciate. Though, in this case, deeply distrust. I love that shot of Wonder Man flying over Latveria with all manner of flying craft sharing the sky with him.

Dr. Doom's interaction with Wiccan was quietly seductive and menacing. I was shocked at the line "... the spell I cast to heal you... also relieved you of your powers." I actually gasped out loud when I read that.

Quicksilver, Speed, Magneto, Patriot and Hawkeye- did we really need any of the other characters, aside from enough Avengers to fight them? Maybe their moments will come...

Wiccan's history lesson, told to an amnesiac Wanda, ends up with a bit of fulfillment of that history-- Wolverine attacking a wedding dress gowned Wanda. His killing blow is blocked by Click Here For A Spoiler the return of Iron Lad!!!.

A second big surprise-- nice treats in an issue crowded with characters and beautiful art.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Set:
For random review month;

So, three different books with 'Avengers' in the title have made it onto my pull-list, which is a total first for me.

Avengers Academy #7 is *still* not firing on all cylinders. It's been seven months, and the book has some good wit, and some good character moments, but lacks something. The action, such as it is, tends to be particularly meh. (Granted, given a choice between good action and good characterization, I'll take good characterization every time, but is it too much to want both?)

A sharp comment regarding Tigra's toddler;
Hank - "Look at him. You did something amazing!"

Tigra - "No. I procreated. Any idiot can do that. If I raise him to be happy, healthy, responsible, to do good things and live a good life, *then* I'll have accomplished something."

Long term effects of the sort of 'keep them unconscious' technology used on criminals is explored. (The Absorbing Man describes it as being like an endless nightmare where you are struggling to remember who you are, and can't ever wake up, and pleads with Pym to come up with a containment system that doesn't trap him in this waking death.)

Hank changes his codename from The Wasp back to Giant-Man, and, thank Thor, changes that godawful costume he was wearing.

He also gets over his obsession with restoring Jan to life, which this fan, at least, has been expecting ever since he mentioned in the Mighty Avengers that he'd designed 10,000,000 Jocasta's, insinuating that they were functioning as neurons maintaining the brain activity of the 'mostly dead' Janet. He decides that restoring her before he's able to ensure that she isn't traumatized by the process is more important than restoring her *now,* and that he has to stop living for the day she returns, and get on with just living.

All in all, Avengers Academy 7 is a great Hank Pym story, but doesn't really deal much with the kids in the 'Academy.' (Although Veil, suffering the same sort of fate that Jan has suffered, leaving this world behind, is seen in the last scene, possibly questioning if Hank is going to give up on her as well, and let her fade away...)

IMO, it's a stronger Pym story than what we saw in Mighty Avengers, which, for all that I like the character, felt a lot like Gary Stu fanfic, with Hank Pym as the fluffed up centerpiece. (Especially, the whole Scientist Supreme crap.)

Set’s review of Avengers Academy is a good one as it gets at my feelings of the title too: I like it, and I think it’s good, but it’s definitely lacking *something*. It just needs to pop a bit more each issue. And I think Set nails what it is: we want both characterization AND action each issue, not one of each.

The latest issue was a good one for me because Hank Pym is one of my all-time favorite comic book heroes (he’s on of my father’s top three with Spider-Man and Iron Man). I thought this was a really great Hank story that is much better than the Mighty Avengers issues and the other Hank-related stuff in recent years. It moves Hank from point (A) to point (B) in a good way, getting him past his feelings towards Jan (including the guilt he still harbors). I personally feel Giant-Man and Goliath are the two best personas for Hank so I’m glad to see him Giant-Man again, with the right color-scheme and all. And I hope that is his permanent identity, or at least he gets a solid 10 years out of it. It’s always where he shines the best—once he goes from Giant-Man to something else, things always seem to go wrong for him.

Like Set, I thought the Absorbing Man pleading with Hank to help him find a better containment unit that isn’t so traumatizing was a nice touch and Hank’s decision to do so was also nice.

Mike McKone’s artwork here is probably the best he’s ever done before; he really is fantastic.
 
Posted by Set on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Power Boy:
[QB] one thing i liked about Grant Morrisson's X-Men (and little else) was he made Smasher more like Ultra Boy. Smasher would download new powers for new situations. It was barely realized as Smasher only had a few panels.

See, now that's cool. I've not gotten to see much of the Imperial Guard, and what I've seen has been, unfortunately, pretty crappy. They sorely need a writer who wants to expand them and not just dump stuff on them.

quote:
[ A female Super Skrull ]
That would be very cool. I remember *tons* of male Super Skrulls in the last skrull attack on earth storyline, but I don't remember seeing any females. Plus, IMO, they dropped the ball pretty hugely on the concept, since they all had pretty generic super-powers. It would have been much more impressive, IMO, if they want all 'Mimic' with them and picked recognizable heroes to emulate, in interesting combinations.

quote:
Binary / Ms. Marvel would be great (IMO) i always preferred her as the star powered Binary.
I kinda like her new 'flying brick with energy blasts' powerset (and liked her 'Warbird' name just fine, even if it was pretty soundly loathed). The Binary powerset and name were cool (not so much the visual), but the artist at the time made her look pretty awful (to be fair, he made everyone look pretty awful), so I tend to knee-jerk against it.

First appearances count for a lot, to someone as shallow as me!
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
The latest issue of Avengers is the Bendis follow-up to the Illuminati subplot that’s been ongoing for a few years, as Bendis at last has the rest of the MU learn about them. This should be a good story because Bendis really seems to have a handle on the characters and the interaction alone should be great. I personally don’t think it’s a big deal—have the Illuminati done anything that is all that bad? But I appreciate Bendis resolving this in light of the “Heroic Age” since it kind of is just hanging there and needs to be addressed.

The issue is beautifully done and so much of that is Romita Jr.’s art. I feel I have to say this everytime: JR Jr haters, it’s not for everyone (but you’re still wrong [Razz] ). A lot of this issue was very Kirby-esque as well; the way JR Jr draws Lockjaw is so Kirby it hurts—and that’s a good thing. As Lockjaw’s creator, Kirby’s depiction is the right one. I also love the way JR Jr. draws Iron Man. Moreso than anyone else currently doing it.

The Hood having the Infinity Gems should make for a good story; I’m not exactly jumping out of my seat to see it, but I expect it to be solid.

Love Medusa’s role in a big way here.

PS - STILL loving those text back-ups!
 
Posted by Set on :
 
So, just got Dead Avengers 3, the final issue of this crossover, and we went into it knowing that all six of these characters were already dead, and, at least in some cases, very, very unlikely to not end the story in the same condition...

Still, amazingly good wrap up.

The team loses it's most inspiring, most heroic figure in scene one, panel one, and spends the rest of the issue not just fighting a massively powered up Grim Reaper and Nekra, and their army of Chaos King-following mortal souls and demon-creatures, but also their own inner demons of doubt and shame and insecurity.

We get to see the backstory flashes for Doctor Druid and Yellowjacket, not seen in the previous two issues, and Dr. Druid's is appropriate, but not nearly as character-defining as Rita DeMara's, which is just perfect as an ending coda to her story.

We see the Vision cut down by Grim Reaper.

We see Dr. Druid on the ground, incapacitated by the sheer intensity of Nekra's hate, pounding him through their brief psychic connection, as an army of demons, and Nekra herself, advance on the helpless Avengers.

We see Yellowjacket accidentally leading the bad-guys into their sanctuary, where the living Avengers lie helpless, and quitting the fight, despairing that she's screwed up and now everyone is going to die.

We see a wounded Deathcry despairing that she's failed her third chance to control herself, and, once again, it may be others who pay the price for her lack of self-control.

We see the Swordsman leap into a fight with an endless horde of demons, resigned to at least being able to choose his death, this time.

And none of these characters stories end with these scenes, which makes it all the cooler, as they get taken to the brink and are forced to find the hero within themselves.

Awesome story, with a bittersweet ending, even if we never see these characters again.
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:

The issue is beautifully done and so much of that is Romita Jr.’s art. I feel I have to say this everytime: JR Jr haters, it’s not for everyone (but you’re still wrong [Razz] ). A lot of this issue was very Kirby-esque as well; the way JR Jr draws Lockjaw is so Kirby it hurts—and that’s a good thing. As Lockjaw’s creator, Kirby’s depiction is the right one. I also love the way JR Jr. draws Iron Man. Moreso than anyone else currently doing it.

[/QB]

The funny thing is ... The first thing I thought was that Romita's LockJaw looked just like Jae Lee's LockJaw!! It was actually distracting since it looked like it was photocopied into the panel and then before and after JR JR went back to his style. (not a criticism as I love Jae Lee and JR)

... and now that i think of it Jae Lee's work is totally influenced or similar to Kirby! I never connected them before even though Jae Lee DREW THE INHUMANS. lol.

anyhow, LockJaw looks perfect.

I think JR JR is definitely ON right now. (I haven't liked his art since X-Men. personally) and his work suits Iron Man's blocky costume. (I still think his women can turn out too construction blocky)
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
AVENGERS ACADEMY 8: The Hood's vicious attack on Tigra awhile ago gets follow-up, as she discovers the students watching the attack on the internet. It's gone viral.

She at first uses it as a training point. But even she doesn't buy her own words. Three of the students decide the episode needs to be 'avenged'. Striker, Hazmat and Veil(!) deliver that 'avenging', unwittingly spurring The Hood to renew his 'career' over in the New Avengers title (I think). Meanwhile, Tigra has a nightmare and then decides to go on a talk show to discuss the now-viral video of her beatdown. Giant-man calls her confessional/inspirational appearance "the bravest thing I've witnessed in my career as an Avenger. And I've been there since day one." I don't know if it's intentional, but Tigra's expression while Hank delivers that ridiculous line seems to express a "yeah right, b.s." kind of reaction, which somewhat mitigates the hamfisted, treacly moment.

Striker seizes that moment to show the video the students made of their 'avenging'. Guess what? It's viral too!

Tigra's numb for a sec, then explodes. Her anger rises, culminating in her expelling the trio from Avengers Academy.

This issue certainly held my attention, though the 'avenging' scene should've been longer. And Tigra's more than a little long-winded. Hank's going out of his way to be supportive- parental empathy at work? I note that Finesse talked up the idea of attacking The Hood, but didn't put herself in the line of fire.

I like the tightrope the cast is walking. Who's gonna fall? Who's gonna soar? Who's gonna just keep on walking the same ol' tightrope back-and-forth?
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Catching up on the latest issue of Secret Avengers, my immediate reaction is that I’m literally blown away by how incredible Mike Deodato’s artwork is. He is absolutely peaking right now and it’s so good that sometimes I have to stop mid story just to look at it.

Meanwhile, the story-arc is pretty good, featuring Shang-Chi, which gives it a spy/kung-fu mash-up feel. Frankly, the story isn’t exactly blowing me away, but it’s certainly a very solid one that is fun to read, and that’s all I ask in comics. I wasn’t a Shang-Chi fan in the 70’s (I wasn’t born [Wink] ) so I have no great love of seeing the Marvel Fu Manchu, especially if he isn’t actually going to be Fu Manchu. I also would like to get the John Steele / Cap showdown going already. But I give Bru credit for making each issue interesting on it’s own.

I’m certainly digging Price of Orphans and wanting to see more of him.

I realize this title is really a way for Bru to keep writing Cap & Sharon Carter while also adding in other characters he likes, so I don’t mind that it’s so focused on Steve. But I do hope that Valkrye, Beast and Rhodey get some more screen time soon.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Bendis & Davis wrapped up Avengers Prime and I’ve got to say I really enjoyed this little miniseries, which was a lot of fun and a nice little side story by two creators who you could tell were just letting themselves enjoy themselves while doing the story. This was a more fun, light-hearted Brian Bendis who reveled in being partnered with Alan Davis, who he provided tons and tons of great things for him to draw. They really infused the sense of fun for the Big 3, which frankly, they needed.

Davis really just nailed Fafnir, Amora, and the epic scope of armies battling. And I really dug the D&D-type costumes for Iron Man and Cap.

Bendis did what he set-out to do, namely provide a story that very subtly and not in an overly dramatic fashion, provides the first steps in restoring the friendship of Tony & Steve. It’s not done wholesale and tidily wrapped up, but you feel it’s starting down that path and it feels natural. You also get the sense that Thor being there helped mediate that process.

I really enjoyed when they started joking with one another a little, especially talking about Hellcat, which is a side of them you hardly ever get to see. (The early Avengers stories used to have Iron Man & Giant Man joking all the time with Cap and Thor). It was especially nice to see Thor make the two of them laugh, rather than Tony.

This story showed Bendis isn’t just about ‘event comics’ and using his favorites. He can really do great things with long-standing Marvel characters he doesn’t already love when he sets his mind to it. Especially with a partner like Davis, who excels at grandiose battles as well as the quiet moments.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
As usual, I'm staring out another major upgrade at the SA Marvel site by replacing the "Thumbnails" pages. I didn't like the color, there were unnecessary links to get rid of, and the spacing was all "off".


I'm also adding text paragraphs, which Nick Simon had in a lot of the "Western" and "Humor" sections. It's fun to comment in only a few sentences about an entire part of a run (25 issues, generally).


I had to LOOK UP exactly what it was Stan YANKED John Buscema off the book for. See, Don Heck did this mostly-amazing run, very consistent, never missed an issue, terrific storytelling, great characterization in the faces & body language. Then Roy decides, hey, here's this hotshot with a MUCH bolder, more dynamic, more explosive style... so while Don is cranking away at the ANNUAL, he gets Buscema to "fill in". Except, when Don comes back, it's only for one issue and part of the next ANNUAL. Roy shoves Don Heck onto X-MEN, which causes Werner Roth (who apparenlty got even LESS respect than Heck) to lose his regular slot.


Don't you HATE when editors do this?


Well, Buscema did a PILE of issues, and a PILE of covers, but all of a sudden, he was OFF the book... because STAN wanted him to draw SPIDER-MAN!!! (And by all accounts, Buscema HATED Spider-Man!!!)


So instead, we got 3 issues by Gene Colan, 3 issues by Barry Smith, and then a PILE of issues by SAL Buscema. (Or, "John lite")


While most AVENGERS fans think of Buscema as the "DEFINITIVE!!!" artist on the book, looking back, what I see was, Don Heck lost his regular gig for nothing.


Better had Buscema done X-MEN. That whole book screams "exagerated" characterization. (At least, it has since Neal Adams got on it. And Buscema is WAY better than Adams.)

http://www.samcci.nostromo.no/
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
Well, for a day when I was feeling really tired & depressed, I managed to get 6 pages of "Thumbnails" upgraded so far. This includes AVENGERS #1-100, MARVEL TRIPLE ACTION #1-47 and MARVEL SUPER ACTION #1-37.


Originally, the reprints were accessed separately via the "TITLES" page (they still are, since they just barely qualify as "anthologies" because of the whacked-out inclusion of FANTASTIC FOUR in 4 issues, DAREDEVIL and DR. STRANGE in 2 issues, MARVEL BOY in 1 issue, and CAPTAIN AMERICA in 12 issues). But now the tiny links at the top of the pages have them all inter-connected, which makes it easier to flip back and forth between them.


Still got the "Misc. REPRINTS" to go, but that's the one that's gonna be a challenge, as I've barely started adding the multitude of MILESTONES, MASTERWORKS, ESSENTIALS, OMNIBUSES and other stuff, of which I'm sure there's a ton of after all these years.


http://www.samcci.nostromo.no/
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
Here's a couple of covers I just added, MUCH nicer scans that I think you'll find anywhere else...

http://www.samcci.nostromo.no/avengers/AV%20KSW%2001.jpg
http://www.samcci.nostromo.no/avengers/AV%20KSW%2001%20back.jpg
http://www.samcci.nostromo.no/avengers/AV%20KSW%2001%20wrap.jpg

http://www.samcci.nostromo.no/avengers/AV%20KSW%2002.jpg
http://www.samcci.nostromo.no/avengers/AV%20KSW%2002%20back.jpg
http://www.samcci.nostromo.no/avengers/AV%20KSW%2002%20wrap.jpg
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
The latest restoration... AVENGERS #1 !!!

http://www.samcci.nostromo.no/avengers/AV%20001.jpg
 
Posted by Dev Em on :
 
Great work as always Prof.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
Thanks. Right now, it's a toss-up between which section at the SA Marvel site has the worst covers... SPIDER-MAN, X-MEN or AVENGERS. That's ONE down... 99 to go!

[Frown]
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
Just posted at the site. Despite George Roussos' horribly-rushed inks, these contain some of Jack Kirby's MOST EXCITING panels ever!!


http://www.samcci.nostromo.no/avengers/AV%20004%20p01.jpg
http://www.samcci.nostromo.no/avengers/AV%20004%20p04.jpg
http://www.samcci.nostromo.no/avengers/AV%20004%20p07.jpg
http://www.samcci.nostromo.no/avengers/AV%20004%20p18.jpg
http://www.samcci.nostromo.no/avengers/AV%20004%20p19.jpg
http://www.samcci.nostromo.no/avengers/AV%20004%20p20.jpg
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
The latest restoration really started back in July 2005. I dug it out today and did some additional adjustments (levels, hue/intensity, removing all the color from the gray buildings, skin tones, etc.).


I had previously used airbrush on the white areas. Normally this would make it impossible to use "levels" after-the-fact, BUT, there was a tiny sliver of the yellowed page left behind in one spot, and that was all I needed to FIX the whole damn cover color in seconds! After that, the rest was easy.


There had originally been some creases and damage along the bottom edge, and the buildings, as I recall, took extensive copy-and-paste, and airbrush, to repair. Also, the ENTIRE LOGO area was missing. Yep, this was one of those "returns" that wasn't destroyed. The logo came from another scan, which is why, looking real close, it's a wee bit fuzzy compared to the rest. Oh well, maybe I can re-do the logo area in another 6 years...?


One of my very favorite JOHN BUSCEMA covers...


http://www.samcci.nostromo.no/avengers/AV%20A03.jpg
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
The latest restoration! This is an odd one, as the images are filed in the
AVENGERS section, but until I expand the run up to #150 (which I may not do for
some time yet), the only place it appears so far is in the ASTONISH section...
because, in the back, Roy Thomas put a reprint of a WASP story! (Go figure.)


John Romita did a lot of 2nd-rate covers around this time, but this, I think, is
one of his better AVENGERS efforts. (Too bad Roy found it impossible to edit
himself as far as the amount of TEXT involved...)


http://www.samcci.nostromo.no/avengers/AV%20G01.jpg


The left edge, the "MCG" banner and the "GIANT-SIZE AVENGERS" logo were at 3
different rotations. NOT anymore!
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
The latest restoration... GIANT-SIZE AVENGERS #2!


http://www.samcci.nostromo.no/avengers/AV%20G02.jpg


This is apparently the work of Ron Wilson & Frank Giacoia. If so, it's one of
my favorite Ron Wilson covers. But I still wonder to this day... WHY didn't
they have DAVE COCKRUM to his own cover??


For the 2nd issue in a row, the reprint filler in the back isn't an AVENGERS
story. but this time, at least the choice is a sensible one. It's FANTASTIC
FOUR #19, the 1st appearance of Rama-Tut. This was the first time I ever got to
read that story, after having seen Alex Toth's 1967 cartoon adaptation of it
(still a favorite).
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
Annnnnd another restoration! GIANT-SIZE AVENGERS #4...


http://www.samcci.nostromo.no/avengers/AV%20G04.jpg


This one's by Gil Kane & Al Milgrom, with touch-ups by John Romita. This issue
was the last time for about TEN years that Mantis appeared in any Marvel Comic,
as apparently nobody wanted to write her other than Steve Englehart.


The reprint back-ups were from (oddly enough) TALES TO ASTONISH #38 (Ant-Man)
and AMAZING ADVENTURES #1 (Black Widow).
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
The latest, and the final GIANT-SIZE AVENGERS, this one the reprint of KING SIZE-SPECIAL #1. John Buscema, Don Heck and George Roussos.


http://www.samcci.nostromo.no/avengers/AV%20G05.jpg


This was an unusual one. The left edge was not aligned with ANYTHING, but the banner was perfectly aligned with both the bottom edge and the text box atr the bottom. So I rotated it to match that. Then, strangely enough, both the left AND right edges needed "filling in"-- BOTH near the top, whihc just goes to show how SCREWED UP that left edge was. No doubt the result of a TERRIBLE paste-up job down that side.


Further, I wound up rotating only the LEFT section of the banner, as once you got past "68 BIG PAGES", that section was NOT in the same rotation as the rest of it! Bizarre, and suggests the upper-left corner was a separate piece, especially when you add to that the width of the banner does NOT exactly match the rest of the banner's width.


Lots of scratches and "wear", or maybe they just used CHEAP ink that came off easy, I dunno. I could do a lot more... maybe I will. But for now, this is how it is.


HEY! Doesn't Don's version of The Enchantress look just like HONOR BLACKMAN??? (His Executioner looks like Theodore Marcuse.)
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
As with several sections before it, the AVENGERS "Misc. Reprints" page is the MOST complex & confusing of the entire section. And the MOST complex & confusing part of that, no doubt, is the MASTERWORKS, especially the early volumes, as there have been so many different printings and DESIGNS.


Just added: 2 DEAN WHITE paintings. "Overdone" color is one thing, but in this case, I kinda like the results, since the guy actually has done FULL paintings right over the original pictures, totally obliterating the line-art. So it's not excessive color fighting with linework-- there ARE no lines... so it "works".


http://www.samcci.nostromo.no/avengers/AV%20Mast%2001%20TPB%202009.jpg

http://www.samcci.nostromo.no/avengers/AV%20Mast%2002%20TPB%202009.jpg


I haven't even TOUCHED the FANTASTIC FOUR or THOR sections on this score yet! And while there are a ton of SPIDER-MAN reprints set up some time ago, this latest set of Masterworks TPBs still need to be added.
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
AVENGERS ACADEMY #9: The issue starts right where the last one left off: mostly a good think for following up a cliffhanger, but not so great when just what the reader thought would happen does.

Tigra relents. The kids stay- on probation. That decision's only reached after a *very* interesting conversation between Quicksilver and Greer. Really, it's one many Avengers fans would appreciate, I think.

At issue's end, Tigra watches the bit where The Hood says 'I'm sorry' over and over...

Oh, yes- there's another little cofab that's of interest. Finesse talks Pietro into taking her to a place Taskmaster has been known to frequent. Quicksilver leaves her there when it appears empty. Which is, naturally, the cue for Taskmaster to reveal himself.

They fight- Finesse gets p.o.ed. Then things get worth reading. Turns out Taskmaster thinks Finesse could be his daughter, but can't remember. He tells her that in order for his memory to hold all physical muscle memory stuff that's his schtick, he doesn't have room for the more personal data. Like who he's slept with.

Is that an established bit for him? I wasn't sure whether it was 'confession ' time or if he was playing Finesse here.

He thought he might remember her if he fought her- that he'd recognize her 'moves'. Which are, follow the logic, someone else's. So he doesn't.

There's undercurrents here of a possible father reaching out to a possible daughter in decidedly untraditional manner. Since Taskmaster wears a full face mask, there's only the shifting of his eyes to reveal what he might be thinking.

His dialogue is ambiguous as can be. Is he telling Finesse to remain an Avenger? Or to find out lots of stuff so that she can sell out? What does 'getting better' mean? Would it mean the same to her as it does to him?
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
Okay, I need help here... can anyone identify the artist(s) who did this cover?

http://www.samcci.nostromo.no/avengers/AV%20Battles.jpg
 
Posted by Emily Sivana on :
 
I have a question for longtime Avengers fans. Was Hank Pym ever punished for the Ultron incident? And if so, what exactly was it and how severe was it?
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
He never was. Personally, I think that after years of re-reads, the only Ultron stories that still hold up well are the ones from the Silver Age. If it weren't for lazy writers bringing Ultron back for the 455356567th time, he would have justifiably been forgotten. But I digress. I think that Hank's treatment at the hands of mean-spirited and irrationally hateful writers has been punishment enough. Every time it looks like Hank is going to finally put his mistakes behind him and move on, those blasted writers dredge up the skeletons in his closet and drag him through the mud yet again. "My" Hank was the early-mid 90s Hank, the one who rose to the occassion when the Avengers were short-handed and embraced his destiny as a costumed hero. I haven't seen him for a long time, and probably never will again. [Frown]
 
Posted by Set on :
 
Avengers Academy 10 is pretty decent, although the cover has *nothing* to do with what goes on in the book itself. (Indeed, it's almost like a one page teaser of story that needs never be told, which is kinda fun, making it like that five minutes of action at the beginning of a James Bond movie that may or may not have anything to do with the plot of the movie, but is meant to just kind of start the show with a bang.)

I love how the book is pulling in people (and concepts) from all over the marvel universe. This issue, we get to see the totally logical use of the morlock boy Leech, to shut down someone's uncontrollable powers so that they can have a normal day. Nice to see that Leech is still around, and that the writer is really thinking about the stuff he's working with, drawing logical characters into play as they are called for by the situation.

(Kind of the opposite of other situations, like the 'why is Oracle still a paraplegic, despite having two dozen friends who could heal her?' question burning up the DC messageboards.)
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Fanfic Lady:
He never was. Personally, I think that after years of re-reads, the only Ultron stories that still hold up well are the ones from the Silver Age. If it weren't for lazy writers bringing Ultron back for the 455356567th time, he would have justifiably been forgotten. But I digress. I think that Hank's treatment at the hands of mean-spirited and irrationally hateful writers has been punishment enough. Every time it looks like Hank is going to finally put his mistakes behind him and move on, those blasted writers dredge up the skeletons in his closet and drag him through the mud yet again. "My" Hank was the early-mid 90s Hank, the one who rose to the occassion when the Avengers were short-handed and embraced his destiny as a costumed hero. I haven't seen him for a long time, and probably never will again. [Frown]

I feel that way about a lot of characters.

"MY" Hank was the one who loved Jan, but was too "serious" to tell her. Who KNEW she was a lot smarter than she acted... but acepted her as she was.


ROY THOMAS got the black-ball rolling. First he made Jan GENUINELY stupid by having her hire a chauffer without checking his references (remember THE HUMAN TOP???). Then he had Hank create Ultron. WHAT THE F*** is a scientist with his specialty doing messing around with ROBOTS??? And how the F*** did he somehow manage to create "Skynet" decades before THE TERMINATOR movies? (Built robot, turn it on, it IMMEDIATELY develops sentient consciousness, and then for NO G**D*** reason whatsoever, decides to MURDER all human life on the entire planet. I mean, WTF?????) Then Roy has Hank have a temporary nervous breakdown, develop a 2nd personality, pretend he's KILLED himself, and marries Jan while he's unhinged. I mean... WTF???

A**H***s like Jim Shooter no doubt figured they were totally justified doing what they did. And Roger Stern, much as I liked most of his writing, clearly was TOWING THE COMPANY LINE. (In other words, "Don't cross Shooter.")

Steve Gerber treated Hank better in DEFENDERS long before that. Steve Englehart treated Hank better in AVENGERS (before Gerry Conway got in the G**D*** way). But what Steve did to Hank in WEST COAST AVENGERS-- completely out of the blue, have the guy try to COMMIT SUICIDE-- I mean, honestly... W-- T-- F!!!!!!


Pardon my ramble...
 
Posted by Dev Em on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by profh0011:
Okay, I need help here... can anyone identify the artist(s) who did this cover?

" target="_blank">http://www.samcci.nostromo.no/avengers/AV%20Battles.jpg[/QB][/QUOTE]
the first name that jumped into my head was Dan Panosian...but I have no idea if that is right.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
quote:

the first name that jumped into my head was Dan Panosian...but I have no idea if that is right.

Thanks! I've run across his name, but don't know his work enough to know if that's him or not. I found that cover at the GCD, but no one had done the index yet.
 
Posted by Dev Em on :
 
I'm not sure if it's him...just thought it might be. It's odd that nobody has it identified on GCD.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
Oh well, TONS of covers get posted there without the person posting them bothering to do the INDEXES.


Also, it's rare for someone to add a reprint book and ALSO add the pertinent information to the indexes of the original comics being reprinted. (I guess that takes too much thinking.)


I was just noting elsewhere how MANY of the covers I posted there a few years ago have since been replaced by VASTLY-inferior images so DARK and dirty it's almost impossible to see what you're looking at. One more reason I stopped "contributing" over 3 years ago.
 
Posted by Dev Em on :
 
Never understood that about GCD. Why replace a scan if it is better than the one you just scanned?
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
In recent months, I've seen dozens-- maybe HUNDREDS (thousands?) of scans of old books replaced. I know they must be replacements, they just had to be books that had already been there for years and years. And I look at the new versions, and they're dark & dirty. And in many cases, these are NEW books, not anything that would have been around in someone's collection long enough to turn "yellow"!


It's just incompetence with scanning & processing.


When I started doing this stuff, it was like a toss-up between which site had "worse" scans-- the GCD or Mile High.


Best bet is almost always to scan my own copies and process them myself. I also get hi-res scans from other collectors, or from the Heritage Auction site, and sometimes, MyComicsShop (only about 600 pixels wide, but you do what you can). And in pretty much EVERY instance, I always process the images to make them look as good as possible.


Someone at the Masterworks message board severely objected to my scans... first it was because I sometimes "sign" my work (if I've spent SEVERAL HOURS, sometimes DAYS, cleaning up a single image, as happens with really old books, I feel justified in doing that), later it was when I started posting interior pages. My feeling was, whatever they SAID, the REAL reason they objected was, that site is set up to promote Marvel Reprints. And my scans were making them look bad.

[Smile]
 
Posted by Dev Em on :
 
You're at the masterworks forums? I'll have to venture out of my forum and find some of your stuff there.
 
Posted by MLLASH on :
 
I finally read that first 3-issues collection of AVENGERS ACADMEY

AND LOVED IT. I'll be trading-buying this, I think.

Would prefer a continuance of this 3-issues reprint format, though. That was awesome, and all for $3.99. Y'know, every 6 issues release a 3-issue collection, or something.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Dev Em:
You're at the masterworks forums? I'll have to venture out of my forum and find some of your stuff there.

No, I USED to be there. Some obnoxious TROLL named "Aussie Stu" started hassling me a year ago, along with 2 or 3 of his brain-dead cronies, and BOTH of the Moderators stood up for them, and began hassling me as well!

Too bad, lots of interesting threads there, when they aren't being derailed for pages at a time. (Especially, "Movies" and "Doctor Who".)
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
Just found out a few hours ago that a TPB edition of AVENGERS MASTERWORKS Vol.3 just came out this month. And so, I have now already added it to the AVENGERS Reprints page!


I LOVE the color on this thing!


http://www.samcci.nostromo.no/avengers/AV%20Mast%2003%20TPB%202011.jpg
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
I was totally into the new Fear Itself arc, especially because it's drawn by Immonen.

Issue 1, follows an anti-Thor goddess of Fear (or so I thought) she turns out to be 'sin' in issue 2. (which does not seem very Asgardian since they are fairly hedonistic)


however issue number 2, reminded me of the power rangers.
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
^PB, I feel the same way. Fear Itself curdled into cheese very quickly. What a waste of Immonen's talents.
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
So after avoiding new comics in general for the past six months, I've caught up on the most recent issues of the main Avengers books.

Avengers v.4 hit a new low with the conclusion to the Infinity Gems arc. Junior's art was crap as usual, and Parker Robbins was a snivelling twerp as usual. And...

Click Here For A Spoiler...Steve Rogers would NEVER join the Illuminati, nor would he ever cut the Red Hulk the amount of slack he's cutting him.

Issue 12.1 had nice art by the team of Bryan Hitch & Paul Neary, but the return of the Spaceknight turned out to be a red herring...

Click Here For A Spoiler...which sets the stage for Bendis' upcoming Ultron "epic." I remain unconvinced that there's any way to make Ultron relevant, and I doubt Bendis will surprise me.

And the thing with Spider-Woman was just tasteless, but all too typical of Bendis the misogynist.

Issue 13, a Fear Itself tie-in, was mostly talking heads. Chris Bachalo drew it, so it looks even worse than when Junior's drawing the book. Bendis is bringing back the soap opera into the Avengers, but, as usual, he's doing it in a clumsy way.

Click Here For A SpoilerHawkeye and Spider-Woman? Meh. And as gal pals go, Spider-Woman and Ms. Marvel are no Wasp and She-Hulk.

New Avengers, on the other hand, has been a pleasant surprise of late. Or rather, the flashbacks to 1959 starring Nick Fury's Proto-Avengers have been a pleasant surprise. Howard Chaykin seems to be putting his heart and soul into the art. The present-day sequences are less involving. Mike Deodato's art is nice, but Bendis continues to write Hawkeye abominably, almost to the point where I wish the character had stayed dead. And I'm skeptical whether Superia can be re-invented as a viable villainess.

Bendis is so frustrating, because in some ways he's the most progressive Avengers writer since Harras, and I do give him begrudging credit for proving that a non-traditional approach to the Avengers can sell truckloads. But while he's just about stayed on the right side of interesting for the last couple years, he still hasn't delivered a story that I find wholly satisfying. And he's going into his seventh year as Avengers scribe. Talk about a learning curve!
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
That 12.1 was bizarre ... they should've released it closer to the Ultron epic since I read 12.1 and went promptly into the evil Asgardian hammer wielding 'breakers' epic.

what thing with Spider Woman was tasteless ... nudity?

the Fear Itself tie in was also pretty tasteless Click Here For A SpoilerSpider Woman getting all girl with Hawkeye. Combined with the art the issue seemed like it was about pre teens. I don't buy it, and Hawkeye has been with almost every female avenger by now! is he over compensating for his lack of super powers! sad that t humanize spider woman and ms. marvel they are made to be like boy crazy pre teens. Really Jessica Drew and Carol Danvers are standing in the corner talking about who they are going to date?

I buy Carol and Jessica as close friends because they're both kinda ruthless tom boy seasoned pros. I don't buy them in this story. I liked the issue sort of over all even despite the cheap story telling tricks to create tension without ever TELLING A STORY!!

(the interviews where every says how incredible the thing was that happened to them but no one says what happened except that it changes everything and is a really really big deal!

I dunno, I'm buying avengers regularly even though I didn't really growing up consistently ... (although i will put my hands in the air for some Wasp and She Hulk gal palling)

the banter in New Avengers is usually pretty amusing, and Immonen's art is better than even his Legion days. He draws a rockin Iron Fist.
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Power Boy:
what thing with Spider Woman was tasteless ... nudity?

For readers with sensitive stomachs, I'll put it in a spoiler box.

Click Here For A SpoilerThe villains stripped her naked, which implies that they did things to her I don't even want to think about. It's sickening.
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
I didn't quite get that, I just thought they wanted to disarm her ... I did think there was some sort of impending threat of that, which i found distasteful and unnecessary.

At the time of reading the book I also didn't want to think about it.

Yeah, it adds a lot of grossness to the story no matter what is implied or happened.
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
Just read through Fear Itself book three Click Here For A SpoilerBucky bites it. quite horrifically! And all the villains have Thor type hammers and 'Breaker' in their names.

And I can't help but notice the chris hemsworth and anthony hopkins resemblance in Thor and Odin now. This bugs me, as I think the movies should be about the comics not the other way around.

Same thing with Tony Stark looking like Robert Downey Junior. It's a great look but ... It's troubling to so blatantly see the tie ins rather than autonomy.

oh and an appearance by Hermod! Haven't seen him in a while. at least I haven't.

I think Marvel is pulling a DC with this Fear Itself business.

Also, There are many powerful characters in the Marvel Universe but we see a lot of time being shown on characters like Cap, Black Widow, and Falcon facing an evil Thor godess. in Washington DC no less while Ms. Marvel is off in some jungle with Marvel Boy fighting the Hulk. <--- another character transformed into an evil Thor. These panels seem a little out of relation to a realistic reaction to 7 evil Thor's popping up. We've still got characters like Wolverine, Wonder Man, Namor, Red Hulk, and Dr. Strange etc. that could handle these evil 'Thor's' much better than the Black Widow, Falcon, and Bucky.

Absorbing Man and Titania were already Thor class-ish, and Hulk goes a little crazy now and then ... the heroes have always dealt with them before

The writers are just being 'drama'. [Wink]

I do like the new kid Loki loads!

Poor Immonen is working his butt off for this story ... the art is pretty great. The backgrounds especially.

and Click Here For A Spoilerwe've got the return of Thor who was sequested on Asgard - In Space - Issue 1, we are on 3 now lol - while all this was going on

[ June 01, 2011, 06:31 PM: Message edited by: Power Boy ]
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
June's SECRET AVENGERS featured a much-needed spotlight on Valkyrie. The story focused on Brunhilde's origin as Odin's chosen symbol told against the actions surrounding a couple of rank-and-file soldiers caught in the events of FEAR ITSELF.

It's a fine issue, but I can't help wishing that writers would concetrate on Val interacting with her teammates or with current Asgardians, villains, etc. She seems to be one of those characters whose pasts keep being labeled as complicated and therefore similar ground keeps being covered again and again. (See Donna Troy and Hawkman for other examples. Hmm... all particular favorites.) I don't deny the complexity, but are their stories really all that much more challenging than most superheroes? Stories firmly rooted in the fictional present are the best way to present the 'complicated'. Origin storiescare great, but they aren't everything.

Anyway, this particular story does examine a facet to Val's beginnings that I enjoyed seeing examined.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
So while the Fear Itself mini sucks (itself), there have actually been some well written tie-in issues throughout the MU that focus on individual characters while only barely relating go to the overall crossover. Brian Bendis' two Avengers titles have done a good job producing some well done tie-in issues, though some are better than others.

Avengers #16 is one of the better ones. It focuses mainly on Cap (Steve Rogers) and what is jokingly called his 'avenging angels', the three major SHIELD female agents / Avengers liaisons: Sharon Carter, Maria Hill and Victoria Hand. Seeing them work together is a lot of fun; beyond the obvious homage to Charlie's Angels, we get to briefly see how different they each are from one another.

Cap is mourning Bucky here (see: worst death in years), but Bendis smartly is very subtle in showing it. He's much less subtle in his "Avengers speak directly into the camera" bits which he's been doing throughout this crossover, which sometimes works and sometimes is a little much. Overall though, I thought it was well done.

Besides, kudos for using the Exiles, the Silver Age era pals of the Red Skull.

Johnny Romita Jr fans like myself will love seeing him do his here. When Bendis doesn't have him doing taking head shots, you can tell he just draws what he likes, regardless of what was in the script.
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
What up! As I said elsewhere my CBS was SOLD OUT of DC today ... bleh! So I picked up two comics. IZOMBIE and ...


NEW AVENGERS ANNUAL #1

The cover is a nauseating violet with Simon Williams/Wonder Man looking like he just brought the Avengers Mansion down.

You might know that Wonder Man has come into conflict with the Avengers after the initiative and the Scarlet Witch events. Basically Wonder Man still believes super heroes are dangerous and should be registered/retired/imprisoned.


New Avengers Annual starts off with a 13. YES 13 page monologue by Wonder Man ... and it's awesome!

Click Here For A Spoiler He goes over several reasons why the Avengers need to be put out of business and these reasons such as the mishandling of the Scarlet Witch, The invention of Ultron, The Civil War, Hulk rampages, and the Sentry are accompanied by ... fantastic splash spreads. They could all go straight to posters

The Scarlet Witch spread is especially fantastic and sent chills up my spine. It looks satanic!

Click Here For A Spoiler At the end of this monologue, We get to see a team of heroes and anti heroes that Simon has assembled to take it to the Avengers. Lots of guys I don't recognize but also lots of power on this 9 person team. (Goliath, Atlas, Captain Ultra, and some others I don't recognize) I really enjoy that these guys aren't well known to me, not the typical dark avengers or masters of evil

Anyway, they stalk the Avengers, we get some cute stuff with Jessica and Luke for a mere two pages .... and then. BAM!!

Click Here For A Spoiler Simon's team attacks with authority. Atlas leads the charge with a 3 page tackle of the mansion that dosn't come off as cheap since each page is filled with detail and energy.

Then the fight begins. Ms. Marvel and Wonder Man take each other out of the game while the rest fight in the mansion.

Jessica Jones finally gets her fight on! Not usually in on the action of the New Avengers ... this time Jessica is breaking faces! Victoria Hand also shines as she tries to organize the team during the fight.

Wolverine dosn't get much spotlight but he does have a funny line.

The house collapses, Thing is the last one standing and he goes down hard. Wonder Man finally gets the better of Ms. Marvel.

Simon's team leaves everyone on the ground ... (which is one of my only criticisms since the Avengers weren't killed or imprisoned. Does Simon think a butt whipping is enough to change the world order? ) ... and they head off to kick the crap out of the Avengers in Avengers Annual #11.


This review may seem like a retelling of events but this Annual was really just .....

butt kicking + canvas worthy pages

I find Simon' motivation entirely believable. What I find almost unbelievable is that the Marvel Universe went back to the status quo after the events of Civil War, (which is one of Simon's reasons) I think there would realistically still be a schism between some big name heroes. More than Cap and Tony hugging it out.


I personally liked this annual a lot, it was intense, I suppose we will have to grab Avengers Annual #11 to have the story come into focus and to get some resolution on the Wonder Man vs. Avengers plot line.

I will also be paying attention to where the artist GABRIELLE DELL'OTTO is going next.

(The coloring by IVE SVORCINA is also fantastic BUT some pages have a hue cast over them in their entirety making them a bit dim. )

[ September 08, 2011, 12:59 AM: Message edited by: Power Boy ]
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
With so many Avengers comics these days, its probably hard for some of them to find their audience. That is probably the case with the best of the best among them, Avengers Academy. There are good Avengers comics (both Bendis ones *are* good) and ‘meh’ Avengers comics (Bru’s recent Secret Avengers run was pretty meh); this is a great comic book. Fans of the original New Mutants, the New Warriors or the 80’s Teen Titans are very likely to like this comic.

With #18, the Avengers Academy students are embroiled in the Fear Itself war, though one clearly does not read to read that mini to understand events here. Essentially, the build-up of the first year and half is about to reach a big turning point (which you can feel by the pacing of the series). I’ve come to really care about these kids now, and I’m really anxious to see what happens. I’m certain at least one of them isn’t going to make it (although that may not mean dying).

Writer Christos Gage really has done a fantastic job. He captures youthful superheroes better than any of his peers right now in comics. On top of that, he can write a damn good story, whether single issue or multi-issue. Each character has a distinct, quirky personality with the usual teenage hang-ups enhanced by their powers and tragedy, and each one elicits some empathy from the reader.

On top of that, the usage of the faculty has been excellent. Paramount among them are Giant-Man, who is being written better here than he has by anyone since Bob Harras and Roger Stern. LWers may know I’m a major Hank Pym fan and I’m thrilled to see it—its long overdue. Tigra is also written really well, and she’s a character I’ve never cared about before; suddenly I do. Lastly, Quicksilver really shines as well in a big way and his usual abrasive self is pure fun on the page as written by Gage. To a lesser extent, Speedball, Justice and Jocasta are also used well.

This large cast is enhanced by the artists on the series: the incredible Mike McKone, who has only gotten better with age, and Sean Chen, who is equally as exciting and dynamic. Their styles are great examples of fun, yet serious superheroics.

This is a fantastic series and I highly recommend it. Its one of the most original, ‘new’ things going at Marvel and probably the best ‘teen’ comic out there by the big 2.
 
Posted by Future on :
 
Just read NEW AVENGERS ANNUAL #1 ... well, the second Annual #1. So NEW AVENGERS v2 ANNUAL #1. Anyway! I reflect a lot of Power Boy's opinions - pretty art spreads and lots of action, but not much else to offer.

I liked the issue but at the same time don't feel satisfied by it. Wonder Man, becoming even more zealous over the idea the Avengers are a detriment to society, gathers together a team to ... pretty much beat up the Avengers. That'll teach them to stop, sure.

My summation reflects how I felt about the overall idea and execution of the story. The set-up and initial parts of the story I enjoyed. I was excited to see Simon, Atlas, Century, and other forgotten heroes in action. I was interested in learning Simon's rationale and could even agree with it to an extent. Even as cliched as hero vs hero battles are, I enjoyed some of the banter New Avengers has become known for (love it or hate it) and liked seeing some of the match-ups of powers and skills. It was great to see Jessica Jones scrap a bit. However, I kept waiting for there to be a point. When Goliath mentioned "the lab," I thought maybe the Revengers were after something and all the mayhem would make sense.

Nope. At the end of the issue, Click Here For A Spoilermostly thanks to structural damage landing a hand, the entire New Avengers are defeated and the Revengers leave them in the ruin of their HQ to go after the Avengers proper at Stark Tower (...wait, wasn't that destroyed...?). The story I was more or less enjoying kind of derailed when I was left with the feeling of, "Wait, that was it? What was the point?"

I like the Revengers premise. Wonder Man makes some great points in the beginning of the issue, especially about the Civil War. The execution of their mission though just bothers me - the hypocrisy of causing mass destruction and beating up the Avengers to get them to stop doing the same thing. I'd almost be more interested to see Wonder Man's cause as a subplot, with him rallying legal action against the team or other, more practical means to get them to desist. Short of killing them, which he won't, I'm unsure what Simon hopes to do to make the Avengers reconsider their ways.

I'm curious to see how this will all end in the Avengers annual if only to see if there'll be more rationale to Wonder Man's methods. If not, I'm afraid the whole story is coming up short for me. I wouldn't be so let down by that fact if the initial premise of the story wasn't so good. Hopefully the next installment and Wonder Man live up to their potential.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
I second a lot of what's been said about the recent New Avengers Annual: great to see so many long unseen faces, awesome fight scene, but pretty sketchy game plan for the Revengers. Just beat them up?

What I like about Bendis' Wonder Man subplot is that he does give him a decent motivation for opposing the idea of the Avengers. They've made some stupid moves and some dick moves and now the current status quo is largely the same. Wanda suffered, the Sentry suffered and so did many innocents. I hope Bendis doesn't go the cheap way out and make Simon out to be crazy--it's a reasonable POV. Where Bendis does fail however, is explaining why the rest of these heroes are along for the ride. Maybe thats to come in part 2.

Other than that, this was a great fight sequence, masterfully drawn by sometimes Bendis collaborator Gabrielle Dell'Otto. That's about all it was--one big fight--but at least done well. For an annual, you usually expect a little more. I mean jeez, give D-Man or Wong or Mockingbird a subplot or something.

Could've been a bit more substance. Still, what was there was fun, albeit not long-lasting.
 
Posted by Set on :
 
Does the Wonder Man characterization flow with how he's being portrayed in Children's Crusade? (In that one, he's not so much anti-Avengers, as anti-Wolverine's plan of killing Wanda, because he's on Wanda's side, which follows with his previous characterization as being in love with her.)
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Its kind of like the next evolution of his viewpoint as his opinions grow increasingly extreme. So yes to an extent and then no since they take it to a whole new level.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Secret Avengers has kind of been the weak sister of all the Avengers comics for the last year and a half. While Ed Brubaker is one of the best writers in comics, he just can't find his full mojo on team comics.

That all changes now, with #16. Warren Ellis has stepped in as writer for 6 issues promising to deliver a fantastic run, and the first issue already lives up to that promise. This is all the good of Ellis, with none of the bad.

Each issue stands alone using different members of the team. The missions are serious and high stakes so they aren't filler; yet they are totally accessible to new readers. The plot for the first issue is, frankly, brilliant, combining bits of Marvel continuity with awesome science-fiction. The pacing was fantastic, the characters crisp and capable and the plot great. Just good writing.

The artist on this issue was Jamie McKelvie, who I dont recognize, but did a bang-up job. His depiction of Moon Knight is especially awesome, even evoking bits of Michael Golden and John Cassidy.

I'm actually quite impressed. I'm not a big Ellis fan at all, but I can't deny this exceeded expectations. Ellis loads the story with tons of spy stuff and sci-fi stuff that even they previously used ideas, they still are just fun.

I'm suddenly looking forward to the next 5 months of Secret Avengers.
 
Posted by Legion Tracker on :
 
Thanks for the SECRET AVENGERS update, Cobie. I had been reading it until around Valkyrie's spotlight, then I let it go. There were some things I really enjoyed about it, but it just wasn't taking off enough for me. I'll give it another look.
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
Fear Itself 'book six' of 7.

[shrug] I don't know why I'm still on board ... I don't really care how this ends ... the solicitations have already shown how it will end.

This series has been very high drama ... This issue is no exception ... Captain America's on the cover with a shattered shield ... and the first few scenes are the Avengers carrying an injured Thor to Asgard.

Once there Captain America tells off Odin ... which actually was pretty cool ...

Tony Starks in Asgard making some magic power rangers weapons to fight the magic power rangers hammers of the villains.

Click Here For A SpoilerAt the end of the issue Iron Man dives into the molten smelt to presumably turn his armor into enchanted Uru.

otehr than that we are kinda at the same spot we were last issue ... Click Here For A SpoilerThor gets some special armor and a special sword. and Odin tells him he loves in a tv hollywood fashion.

Even Immonen's art seems a bit stale and cramped.

I'd really pass on this whole thing unless you're a huge immonen fan.

I think this Fear Itself business will be ending my short love affair with the Avengers. I only started following the Avengers fairly recently because immonen was doing the art of New Avengers and bendis was funny sometimes ... and now i got roped into the whole Avengers proper/prime relaunch and both these titles were tied into the fear itself stuff. So I think it's time for me to quit the Avengers books. So much good stuff out there I'm adding like Powers, Scalped ... and probably a couple new DC titles.

(I almost think this Fear Itself business was just an ad hoc event to mess with DC's event. )

They're not all good reviews. [No]
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Fear Itself has been pretty awful. So was Flashpoint (I'd say they are equal in terms of quality) but FI has 2 more whole boring issues to go. It's hard to find anything redeemable about the miniseries.'
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
It IS boring! Despite all the melodrama it is just ... boring.
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
damn .... I just dropped the Avengers YESTERDAY.

Guess i'll have to start reading it again ... I love Daniel Acuna.

http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=34522

Although I think there is some sort of marvel engine where artists on these big titles are moved to change their style. Immonen and Coipel's art seems to have 'mainstreamed' (become more classical, less gestural) since they've got these big titles.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Power Boy:
Fear Itself 'book six' of 7.

[shrug] I don't know why I'm still on board ... I don't really care how this ends ... the solicitations have already shown how it will end.

This series has been very high drama ... This issue is no exception ... Captain America's on the cover with a shattered shield ... and the first few scenes are the Avengers carrying an injured Thor to Asgard.

Once there Captain America tells off Odin ... which actually was pretty cool ...

Tony Starks in Asgard making some magic power rangers weapons to fight the magic power rangers hammers of the villains.

Click Here For A SpoilerAt the end of the issue Iron Man dives into the molten smelt to presumably turn his armor into enchanted Uru.

otehr than that we are kinda at the same spot we were last issue ... Click Here For A SpoilerThor gets some special armor and a special sword. and Odin tells him he loves in a tv hollywood fashion.

Even Immonen's art seems a bit stale and cramped.

I'd really pass on this whole thing unless you're a huge immonen fan.

I think this Fear Itself business will be ending my short love affair with the Avengers. I only started following the Avengers fairly recently because immonen was doing the art of New Avengers and bendis was funny sometimes ... and now i got roped into the whole Avengers proper/prime relaunch and both these titles were tied into the fear itself stuff. So I think it's time for me to quit the Avengers books. So much good stuff out there I'm adding like Powers, Scalped ... and probably a couple new DC titles.

(I almost think this Fear Itself business was just an ad hoc event to mess with DC's event. )

They're not all good reviews. [No]

So I cancelled Fear Itself after #4 because, frankly, it sucked (I go into more detail elsewhere), but somehow my CBS must have accidentally pulled #6 for me and I ended up buying it unknowingly. This happens when you let 4 weeks of comics build up. [No]

So I read it, and as I thought: it was just awful. Whereas I’ve been saying that it and Flashpoint were equally awful throughout, I now am ready to commit to the notion that Fear Itself is the *most* awful of all the recent big 2 crossovers. Why? Because it’s the most boring, unnecessary and pointless crossover I can remember. It’s like Marvel’s Millennium.

Fraction has Captain America, Thor and Iron Man doing some stuff—none of which is interesting or emotion-provoking. They don’t seem too far out of character, but it all feels like its going through the ‘high stakes, oh shit’ motions. The big bads are a combination of Asgardian mythological bad guys and Nazi’s, two of the most over-used tropes at Marvel since, oh I don’t know, 1962.

Meh. Its hard to feel outraged at this since it all feels so ‘blah’ to me. Huge waste of $$.
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
AVENGERS ACADEMY #19: An exciting wrap-up to the team's battle with the 'fear-hammer' wielding Titania and Absorbing Man set initially in the expanding-from-less-than-tiny HQ built by Henry Pym. The idea's a good one, if somewhat abstract. And it leads to a quite dramatic Decision That Must Be Made scene. It kind of reminded me of the sacrifice of Ferro Lad in ADVENTURE.

Luckily, the unconscious Dr. Pym comes to in time to play cavalry, with Quicksilver, Justice, etc. in tow.

There's some really great moments for Finesse, Mettle and Hazmat here. Followed by the somewhat abrupt (but not if you think of the past couple of issues...) departure of Veil, as she announces that she's quitting the team.

Figures, she's my favorite of the initial Academy students. New ones are coming, though. I wonder if any will capture my superhero-loving heart, and take her place? I kind of doubt it.
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
SECRET AVENGERS #17: I didn't care for the art, at first- and still think the characters didn't look 'right', but the action scene was great. They should have just started with the team in pursuit of the monster-truck, since the opening pages were less than they could have been. Once in action, though, the issue takes off. Cap, War Machine, Valkyrie one by one face the speeding machine. It's sort of old-fashioned and fresh, all ot once. Nice job.

Reignited my interest in this title, which flagged a bit with the solo tales (though I sort of liked, with reservations, the Valkyrie one).
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Well, Daredevil has joined Luke Cage's New Avengers team, being probably the last of the MU heroes that should never join the Avengers to do so. But with Spidey and Wolverine on the team, it's clear nothing is sacred. Expect Ghost Rider and Cable shortly.

That major annoyance out of the way, it was a nicely done issue. DD was heroic and awesome with Deodato drawing the hell out of it. Bendis even pokes fun at crossovers in general by DD and Luke's dialogue at the issues end where DD doesn't know or care about what happened with Fear Itself (welcome to the club).

With a Defenders series on the horizon, its hard not to admit that this is the best Defenders series in 30 years right here. That new series--written by Matt Fraction--will have a tough time measuring up (and I don't think it will).
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mystery Lad:
SECRET AVENGERS #17: I didn't care for the art, at first- and still think the characters didn't look 'right', but the action scene was great. They should have just started with the team in pursuit of the monster-truck, since the opening pages were less than they could have been. Once in action, though, the issue takes off. Cap, War Machine, Valkyrie one by one face the speeding machine. It's sort of old-fashioned and fresh, all ot once. Nice job.

Ditto. To me, it suggested a pop version of Global Frequency, by the same writer.

Meanwhile, the Bendis Avengers continued to bumble along semi-amiably, with the occassional jarring lapse of taste. Membership shake-up ahead -- will comment if it doesn't bore me.
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
I jumped off the Avengers boat ... BUT I did get the Ant-Man and the Wasp Origin one shot ...

and it was nice, above average art, a couple nice moments between Jan and Hank ... and a retelling of an origin I'm not sure I ever got to read. (has it been written?)

I sure wish they were going to be in the new movie.

I love the Wasp period. Always will ... unless they have her shoot people in the head like they did Professor X.

(That said I hope she dosn't come back as an evil psycho! egad!)
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
Personally, I like the Black Widow better than the Wasp, so I'm happy with the movie's roster. And Hank, IMO, has become such an unworkable character that it's probably better he's not in the movie(s) at all.
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
Secret Avengers #18 was almost as good as the previous issue, and had better art, courtesy of David Aja, who turns in a neo-retro hybrid of Wally Wood and Peter Snejbjerg.

I'm really going to miss Ellis when he's gone from SA. I never thought I'd find myself saying that about Ellis, who I used to hate before I read the best of his WildStorm work.

Ellis will be replaced by Uncanny X-Force writer Rick Remender. I'm not familiar with his work, but I've got the UXF trades on inter-library request based on Cobie's reviews and the additional recommendation of a non-LW friend.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
I'm going to miss him too. These have been really great stories and a much needed break from the Bendis Avengers style of story-telling. This could have either been fantastic or awful and luckily it went the former.

Like you though Fanfie, I'm pretty optimistic about Remender coming on. He has all the right qualities for this kind of series.
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
I'm waiting for the TPB.

Btw, I picked up the Vision Avengers Origin (#2 or one shot)

I quite liked it! Good art, pretty good story, a battle with Ultron, a trite yet satisfying explanation of why he's called the vision. (which goes against canon but it was cute)

... and we got to see lots of the heroic Wasp. I'm hoping she will be featured in many of these since she is currently dead in the MU.

(I just said 'currently dead' as if it's a lunch break.)
 
Posted by Set on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Power Boy:
[QB] I jumped off the Avengers boat ... BUT I did get the Ant-Man and the Wasp Origin one shot ...

and it was nice, above average art, a couple nice moments between Jan and Hank ... and a retelling of an origin I'm not sure I ever got to read. (has it been written?)

Not since Tales to Astonish, IIRC.

Simon Pegg (Scotty in the new Trek reboot, star of Sean of the Dead and various other funny movies) was being floated to be part of a not-entirely-serious Ant-Man movie, but that fell apart (if, indeed, it was ever more than gossip!) because he was too busy with other projects. Presumably the Wasp would have been introduced in that movie as well, setting them both up for an Avengers appearance.

Marvel's kinda scary right now when it comes to their original female characters. Jean Grey's dead again. Scarlet Witch is only now being ressurected, and it's still not clear if she's gonna stick, since a ton of people want her dead. Wasp is dead. That leaves, of the original Marvel femmes, the Invisible Woman.

The Black Widow taking the Wasps place as a founding Avenger, for the movie, mildly annoys me, but it might be amusing if they make a nod to the Russian spy teaming up with Captain America, whom other team-members might expect to have some anachronistic problem with her, only to realize that Russians and Americans were allies, back in Cap's day, and he slept through the entire 'godless communist' Red Scare / Cold War and has no idea why an American wouldn't trust a Russian...
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
Let's take the Avengers movie discussion over here...

http://www.legionworld.net/cgi-bin/ultimatebb.cgi?ubb=get_topic&f=9&t=003142
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
Several posts in this thread, which if you have not been to, you must pay a long visit ASAP have led in a roundabout way to having a new discussion about the Bob Harras/Steve Epting Avengers era in this thread.

quote:
Originally posted by Fanfic Lady:
Avengers 375
It was the end of an era, and all too symbolic for Crystal to be weeping in the final panel. Bob Harras & Steve Epting were wrapping up their grand Avengers vs Gatherers epic, which I had been following religiously. It didn't disappoint me in the least. There hasn't been an Avengers issue since then that has fully satisfied me.

quote:
Originally posted by Dev-Em:
Darlin, I love your taste in Avengers comics.

quote:
Originally posted by Fanfic Lady:
Thank you, kind sir.

quote:
Originally posted by Fanfic Lady:
A little addendum to the Avengers 375 story...I remember a Superman discussion in this forum where Lardy said he loved the Ordway/Simonson/Stern/Jurgens era of Superman so much that he honestly couldn't see himself ever loving Superman that much again. That pretty much sums up how I feel about that Avengers era.

quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
When this issue came out, it was the single most important comic to me that I'd ever waited for in 'real time'. The Dane / Crystal romance essentially inspired my perception of tragic love. And the complications! Sersi, Pietro, even the Vision. Every time Sersi or Pietro did something to make me hate them, they redeemed themselves.

By now I was engrossed with the series and had even write Bob Harras a letter (and even called my Dad at work to tell him Hank was Giant Man again).

Those final panels broke my heart...but oh, how Dane was so noble!

Also, best Herc EVER including the Silver Age and Stern. They even got me to like Thunderstrike (I'd grow to like Eric in later years when I read the entire Thor run).

The revelation of Proctor in the issue prior blew my pre-teen mind!!!

This was my Uncanny X-Men #138.

quote:
Originally posted by Fanfic Lady:
Well said, Cobie. I agree 100% with everything in your post.

quote:
Originally posted by Power Boy:
After all these recommendations, I may have to hunt this down ...

hmmmm

quote:
Originally posted by Fanfic Lady:
Yay Peebs!

I would recommend, though, reading the entire Harras/Epting run chronologically. Leaving out the fill-in issues by other creators, the run consists of: 334-339, 343-351, 355-369, and 372-375. They're all easy to find cheap. Happy reading.

quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
Fanfie will know the issue number, but an even better issue than the above one, which occurs about mid-run, is the one with the huge confrontation with the Kree soldiers that have a nega-bomb. Dane, Crystal & Herc are all captured and its when Hank becomes Giant-Man again for the first time. It may just be my single favorite Avengers issue of all time. That's the issue that made me write Bob Harras a letter (with pen and paper--I was 11 years old).

quote:
Originally posted by Fanfic Lady:
Avengers 366.

A great issue. Cobie once again summed it up quite nicely, and I'd only add that if every attempt to rehabilitate Hank was this good, his sins would have been forgiven by fandom a long time ago.

quote:
Originally posted by Thriftshop Debutante:
Maybe this Avengers saga discussion could be a thread?

Another case of this thread (possibly) bearing fruit! I *love* it.

This may sounds like a strange comparison coming from me, given my...reservations about Legion 5YL, but I really believe that this era of Avengers is the Marvel equivalent of 5YL. Both dark, complex, and challenging, both met with great hostility and poor sales upon publication, both kept alive in fandom's mass consciousness, despite lack of trades, by a passionately devoted few.

I'm exhilirated that Power Boy has expressed interest in this era. I'm always looking to introduce this era to people who missed it the first time around.

So I'm calling on fans of this era -- myself, Cobie, Dev, Pov, Tempest, Reboot, and Mystery Lad have all expressed positive feelings about this era in this forum in the past, either in this thread or in others -- to stand up and be counted and remind others of why this era is a treasure worth searching for. Now is the time to expand this era's fanbase.
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
I liked that era very much. I can see your comparison to 5YL in terms of tone and storytelling. There isn't the total separation from what went before happening, though.

I wish they'd release stories from this part of Avengers history in trade, as I'm not sure where my old issues are (my collection's regressed into a mess, I'm afraid) and I'd really like to reread the stories.

You think the Essentials will make it that far? It'd be years though, wouldn't it?

Anyway, readers interested at all should give them a try.
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
AVENGER'S ACADEMY #22: The X-men guest star. This issue contains some very good scenes between Magneto, Quicksilver and Finesse. Which take unexpected turns that are fun to follow. Emma gets a good line or two. I still miss Veil, and the old setting- but the West Avengers compound is a good substitute.

When asked about arranging meetings between the youngsters of this Academy and Utopia, Cyclops makes one of his more 'endearing' statements about survival and doom and gloom. How moronically short-sighted of him. At least he mentioned the Jean Grey Academy. No doubt there'll be crossovers in the offing. Should be fun.
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
The new lineup for the official AVENGERS is Click Here For A Spoiler Captain America, Red Hulk, Protector, Iron Man, Hawkeye, Storm, Spider-Woman, Vision, and Quake (Daisy Johnson(?)). Are Quake's powers as straightforward as her name suggests? I remember her using them, but I don't recall the details. Is she more or less a female Rictor?

What do you think? I wish the character contacted here that didn't join, would. Along with a return visit to his former stomping grounds that resulted in a return to the former status quo.
 
Posted by Set on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mystery Lad: AVENGER'S ACADEMY #22: Emma gets a good line or two.
I love when Emma looks at Tigra, in her two piece bikini, and says, "Love the outfit. Don't let anyone tell you it's inappropriate for a teacher."
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mystery Lad:
The new lineup for the official AVENGERS is Click Here For A Spoiler Captain America, Red Hulk, Protector, Iron Man, Hawkeye, Storm, Spider-Woman, Vision, and Quake (Daisy Johnson(?)). Are Quake's powers as straightforward as her name suggests? I remember her using them, but I don't recall the details. Is she more or less a female Rictor?

What do you think? I wish the character contacted here that didn't join, would. Along with a return visit to his former stomping grounds that resulted in a return to the former status quo.

I'm not sure what I think .... seems like the Avengers were just reformed ... with a big to do ...

They said they were leaving the New Avengers alone but, Click Here For A Spoiler I think I'd put Ms. Marvel on this team, and since they took Spider Woman ... from New Avengers, I might switch Spidey and Spider Woman since Spidey is more popular for the BIG team.

Also, I think Storm is a great great addition, why she hasn't been before, except in an alternate dimension story is beyond me.

She's great for this big public team, she's now a queen, uber powerful, and since she's still heroic ... she's a great one to be the token mutant. Everybody trusts Storm.


I didn't like the character contacteds ... costume ... I prefer the less military more seamless look.

It IS funny how so few of the originals or early era Avengers are still around ....

I would've liked to see an attempt to get some other early Avengers back in the mix. (Starfox, Sersi, She Hulk, Photon, etc.)

I don't know, maybe they are all dead or something ...
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
I have just returned from the CBS, with a stack of Avengers comics (from Fanfie's list) ...


It's a rainy day and they turned out to be 80 cents each because of a sale!! What else am i gonna do? (well actually I have some work too LOL)
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mystery Lad:
I liked that era very much. I can see your comparison to 5YL in terms of tone and storytelling. There isn't the total separation from what went before happening, though.

I wish they'd release stories from this part of Avengers history in trade, as I'm not sure where my old issues are (my collection's regressed into a mess, I'm afraid) and I'd really like to reread the stories.

You think the Essentials will make it that far? It'd be years though, wouldn't it?

Anyway, readers interested at all should give them a try.

Thank you for chiming in, Todd. Good point about the lack of a gap, I hadn't thought of that.

I know from reading other posts of yours in this forum how much you like Crystal, and I was wondering if you'd care to share some thoughts on her in this thread.

Sadly, I doubt they'll ever be collected, even in the Essentials, for the same reasons 5YL has never been collected -- too much fan hostility, not enough demand.

quote:
Originally posted by Power Boy:
I have just returned from the CBS, with a stack of Avengers comics (from Fanfie's list) ...


It's a rainy day and they turned out to be 80 cents each because of a sale!!

YAY!

I very much look forward to your thoughts on them.

As for the latest Avengers lineup, I feel nothing but...numb indifference. Bendis has been writing them for what, six years now? No one but Roy Thomas has written the team for that long, and even Roy overstayed his welcome. I think we've seen Bendis' entire bag of tricks, and it's time he stepped aside. Does anyone know how Avengers sales have been over the past year-and-a-half or so?
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
The remain pretty strong. Maybe a slight dip but basically dominating everything else save this recent DCnU. You'd think Bendis would burn himself out by now.

I've enjoyed his run enough to continue to buy it (and like it), though I wouldn't rank it among my favorite runs of the series. A lot of what fandom complains about is IMO nonsense; however I could use a change of pace on some of his lesser mentioned bad habits such as the roster effectively being the entire MU every six issues (whether Marvel makes it official or not) and his lack of any antagonist with any real depth. (One might argue Norman Osborn but that was Bendis piggy-backing on Ellis' interpretation and even them making him quasi-Lex Luthor).

Time for a change. I'd prefer it to be someone unexpected.
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Fanfic Lady:
Sadly, I doubt they'll ever be collected, even in the Essentials, for the same reasons 5YL has never been collected -- too much fan hostility, not enough demand.

In recent times, Marvel have/are collected/ing the Clone Saga, CapWolf and Spider-Man Chapter One.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
If they collected Capwolf, they can collect this Avengers era.

I need to dig my issues out and reread them...plus the appropriate crossover stuff.

I will say that part of my enjoyment of them comes from Dane being my favorite Avenger (except for Hawkeye at times) and his role in these stories. Never enjoyed the book as much once he left.
 
Posted by Invisible Brainiac on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Power Boy:
[QUOTE]Originally posted by Mystery Lad:
[qb]The new lineup for the official AVENGERS is Click Here For A Spoiler Captain America, Red Hulk, Protector, Iron Man, Hawkeye, Storm, Spider-Woman, Vision, and Quake (Daisy Johnson(?)). Are Quake's powers as straightforward as her name suggests? I remember her using them, but I don't recall the details. Is she more or less a female Rictor?


Click Here For A SpoilerDaisy has seismic powers, so like a female Rictor. She has a lot of control, though - she was able to induce a vibration in Magneto's head once that KOed him. Not sure if Rictor's that adept.

I haven't followed the Avengers religiously, but I did look in on them from time to time, like during Operation Galactic Storm. I think they're like the Justice League, in a way. Membership keeps changing, and sometimes they just have to invent silly reasons for some members not wanting to rejoin/ not being invited to rejoin.

Firebird, for example, once really wanted to get an invite. Where is she now?

Monica Rambeau/Photon once led the Avengers, and during the Kang War IIRC, when her team was trapped by the pyramid thing, her "fantasy" was becoming Avengers chair again. So... why not make a try for it now?

Would be nice to see them again.
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
I managed to make it through Avengers issues 335, 337, 338,339, and 342.

334 The Collection Obsession Part 2

Starts off very much like the current Avengers series, I have to say, and the art is a bit wonky ... suffering from the anatomically incorrect 90s.

The first few pages had me thinking:

"What did I get myself into ? Those holographic covers of the 90s WERE a sign of bad interiors! I was right to drop comics in 1991! "

But I kept reading.

We've got som log entries int he beginning by some Avengers, they are fighting an alien warrior race called the "Brethren" led by "Thane Ector", his babe "Sybil Dorn" and his fool. They're blue. and seem to be midway to conquering the world.

There is TONS of "Sybil Dorn ... you dare" and "I, Captain America leader of the Avengers a ... blah blah blah organization" tons and tons of characters explaining other characters to us. So even jumping in midstream I was a bit fatigued by it all.

I really appreciate those little bubbles now, that tell us everyone's names and powers. (although we don't seem to get any more, but less story nowadays)

Ok, The Avengers engage: White Vision, Captain America, Sersi, Hercules, Black Widow, and Rage. (there've been worse Avengers teams RIGHT! and weaker ones too.)

They fight, Thane Ector takes them down, Captain America gets to show how valiant he his, Thane Ector falls for Sersi. (as so many have in history)

Thane Ector defeats Cap and the Avengers (which at this moment I was very disbelieving) AND KIDNAPS SERSI. hmmmm
I'm thinking "COME ON" "this is the avengers ... who is this guy."

(wait for it)

The 2nd half of this issue is inked by TOM PALMER .... and he has the magic to spiff up Eptigs panels to make them look Buscema-esque. Not as good but still ... I love Buscema so that's a compliment.

The second story involves the Black Panther, Hank Pym, and Beast, along with Quasar using their considerable brainpower to try to wake the Collector to figure out the mystery and determine a way to defeat the Brethren.

First of all, The Beast comes to life! Best Beast voice in ... like ... forever ... maybe since he was in The New Defenders.

They get the Collector up and running, in a clever way I might add by using the resources of the Titanese Eternals, and he promptly attacks them. A clever battle scene ensues, they take the Collector down through team work ...

later ... it turns out the Collector has captured/collected many whole civilizations and .. the Brethren is one of them, the Brethren have escaped! and are conquering the Earth now.

One of the nice things, since Hank Pym is not so coincidently included, is that the Collector shrinks down his conquered civilizations for storage ... three of the Avengers set off with the Collector to explore this micro verse while Hank stays behind (because at this time he can't shrink).

The Collector promptly leads them into a trap.

END OF THE FIRST ISSUE I READ

and half way through I was like .. "There's a lot of text." "maybe I should get my glasses."

While I wasn't quite sold at this point, I was interested for more, there was enough story in this one issue for a 4 parter by today's standards.

--------------------------------------------------


337

Has one of the best opening scenes i've read in a long time. It's Shakespearean. We've got the Brethren "fool" giving "Thane Ector" a tour of the sewers of Earth.

We're introduced to the dichotomy of the Brethren, Thane Ector is a warrior/leader with designs on glory and raising his species to heights but the fool keeps explaining that they are at home in the muck and myre. and appears to eat sewer. after a several page debate, the fool tempts Thane Ector with sewer water ... and it's cringe worthy .... when Thane Ector finally submits to drinking the sewer water ... with passon!

"What the hell is going on!" After this scene i knew, I'd have to finish this story line. at least.

....

Cut back to the off world team exploring the Collectors minaturized realms to find a weakness for the Brethren.

i missed an issue, they picked up an alien friend, oh yeah AND the Water Uatu has shown up ... "you know you're in trouble when..."

.....

Back at the Ranch:

Crystal appears to have shown up just in time to save everyone's hash.

Crystal says she wants to make up for her past by being an Avenger. As far as I remember her past includes lots of poor boyfriend choices. The Black Knight reminds us that she's a former member of the FF, and an Inhuman royal coming through for them in their hour of need. I'm glad Harras got THAT out of the way, "no flighty melodrama Crystal will be in these books!" he says.

.... cut to Sersi "Imprisoned". I confess, if there was one thing that made my skeptical butt want to revolt and whine ... it was seeing Sersi "imprisoned". Not only is she super super tough BUT she can transmute .... anything ... even PEOPLE.

She gets in a fight with Thane Ector's babe, they fight, and "Sybil Dorn?" ('cause we're still intorducing everyone every time they show up)

And sybly turns into this weird blob, Thane Ector rescues Sersi.

I've almost had it when ... Sersi convinces Thane Ector to tell him the Brethren's secret. They're bonding a bit over both being augmented races by the Celestials when .. Thane admits ... they were not augmented humans BUT augmented Bacteria!

(which may have been more gross in '91, but I don't find it out of the box now, having origins in bacteria is allright with me [shrug] )

It is an interesting take on a warrior species though, (even today 20 years later) they are 'cleansing' and moving along the decay process by conquering and destroying worlds. That's some sci fi s***.

....

back to hank, beast, quasar, and controller. the Watcher is subtly helping them. They have found the Brethren's homeworld ... and it's devastated.

the alien friend they picked up dies immediately.

I also want to just say, all this story is coming out in a bi-weekly format. Harras is on a two week schedule and the book is crammed FULL of dialogue and plot. with a huge cast of characters, in at least three different venues.

-------------------------------------------------

338 "The True Enemy Revealed"

Beast, Hank, Quasar, and Collector take time to burry their friend they barley knew 'cause they 'respect all life'. (listen up kiddies) and they find an elderly Brethren ...

...

Sybil Dorn, Thane Ectors betrothed is plotting to kill him because he's all hot for Sersi. (who can blame him, she's the Sersi of myth?)

...

ok HUGE FLASHFORWARD.

Beast, and Hank's team are with Captain America's team, and plan to interrogate the Brethren elder to find a weakness to the Brethren.

.....

Thane Ector's fool is up to something, he's been spying. He plans to stop Sybil's coup on Thane Ector.

which is currently ongoing. The fool reveals the Collector is with the Avengers ... the Brethren all go psycho and take off to kill the Collector.

....

Back at the Avengers, someone kills the elder Brethren that the Avengers are interrogating ??? The Brethren invade Earth. Jarvis is scared.

There's a big fight ... and Hercules' dialogue made me rejoice.

"I say thee most assuredly nay, creature of germ and things most foul."

"you are NO warrior."

gotta love Hercules when he's written well.

so, there's a BIG fight, and it turns out ... the Collector is .... super evil ... and kicks Thane Ector's butt. (after pretending to be weak ... that psycho) and he transforms into a much less *photogenic* Collector.

----------------------------------------------------

Issue 339

At this point, I'm like "What the hell is going on, I need to finish this!"

and ... there are some Mcaulley Culkin Home Alone ads in the inside cover.

The Avengers throw down with the new suped up Collector.

He explains, he let the Brethren escape ... to conquer Earth, in order to kill most Earthlings, so that the Collector can kidnapp the remainders for his collection ... and it would make the remaining Earthlings even more valuable.

He's always wanted the Earth apparently.

....

FINALLY. Sersi clocks the *fool* saying she's just been playing them this whole time! "Oh shut up!" "You lived up to your name fool, when you bought my shrinking violet routine!"

yessss. Sersi bring it home!!

...

We get the Collector explaining in detail that the brethren are just evolved bacteria by the Celestials.


(i don't mind, we all gotta evolve from somewhere)

But the proud warrior race of the Brethren don't like being called germs.

The Collector then devolves them all into germs.

The Avengers run around trying to prevent these germs from spreading.

The Vision and Sersi come up with a plan (more complicated than I'm willing to summarize) to use Thane Ector and the Fools telepathic link with the Brethren to .....

fortunately ....

turn into their version fo a frickin UNI MIND. which attacks the Collector ... and

"ARGGHHH" Collector go bye bye.

Sersi summarizes, she dosn't understand how she could've cared for Thane Ector, or that a destructive race could've saved the all.


...

My summary of this story arc is while I wish the art was a bit better, there's enough story in one issue to fill a TPB by todays standards!!

The dialogue is great, (there are clunky parts but Harras is great when he stops introducing and lets his characters speak)

I can *hear* characters like Sersi, Crystal, Hercules, and Beast especially well.

The plots are jammed packed with twists and suspense.

INTENSE!

......

I did read #342 (which is not on fanfie's list) but I did enjoy it enough.

art was ok, cover was amazing, it's a story about the Hate Monger using his powers to cause racial tensions ... the Avengers and the New Warriors get involved.

We find out Rage is 14 and the Avengers know ... and they say it's ok to train him.

We get a message about tolerance, while a bit heavy handed, I'm happy the book at least has a message.


...

This review is soooo long because there is sooooo much to review!!!!

Don't know when I'll get to the next arc, these reviews may take me f o r e v e r.

In a good way.

[ November 21, 2011, 02:12 AM: Message edited by: Power Boy ]
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
Peebs, WOW!! Thank you so much for the long and detailed reviews. More, more, more!

I'm a bit short on time right now, but I'll give them a more considered read later, and comment appropriately.

quote:
Originally posted by Invisible Brainiac:
Firebird, for example, once really wanted to get an invite. Where is she now?

Monica Rambeau/Photon once led the Avengers, and during the Kang War IIRC, when her team was trapped by the pyramid thing, her "fantasy" was becoming Avengers chair again. So... why not make a try for it now?

Firebird, as far as I know, has been MIA since Civil War. Shame, I like her.

I like Monica, too, and I agree she needs a second turn at Avengers leadership.
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
Thanks FL, I thought I would jog people's memories with the script ... plus I think Harras put so much effort into the mystery of the Brethren and how he told that story it was worth reciting.


A couple more things I liked ... in one of the first issues the Avengers discover the Brethren killed some people by removing all of their bacteria, and humans need bacteria and are full of it ... this is a clue as to the nature of the Brethren but also ... I just liked it, I thought it was smart and Harras had researched his story well.

I just started chuckling to myself, about Sersi's "capture" and how I wasn't buying it ... SHE CAN TELEPORT ... lol, so funny I didn't think of that before ... but Harras made it clear she was just using her capture to fish for information and manipulate Thane Ector ... she even "had to pull her punch" when she escaped so she didn't kill the Fool. LOL.

...

I have #348 waiting for me ...
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
I decided to provide running commentary on each issue that Peebs reviewed.

335

Yes, Epting's Avengers debut was less than stellar, but that was because of abysmal working conditions -- originally Epting was supposed to alternate with Andy Kubert, but then Kubert flaked out or something after he'd drawn part 1, and Epting suddenly had to draw five issues, shipping on a bi-weekly schedule! That's also why Palmer didn't ink the entirety of Part 2.

I agree that Harras really got the Beast's voice. Everybody sounded like a distincitive character, as it should be in a team book but so rarely is.

337

The scene in the sewer is a classic for sure.

Crystal was the one established Marvel character that Harras brought into the book. FYI, Crystal's main source of guilt was her cheating on Pietro, in the Vision & Scarlet Witch maxi-series. Harras did an amazing job of taking a character who had been such an oft-unappealing little princess and evolve her into one of my all-time favorite Avengers.

The origin of the Brethren was pretty wild and ahead of its time.

338

Totally agree on the way Harras writes Hercules. THAT is what Hercules is ALWAYS supposed to sound like, as far as I'm concerned.


339

That scene between Sersi and the fool is IMO where Sersi first comes alive as a character. I didn't like her at all in her pre-Harras, and for that matter, post-Harras, appearances.

Glad you enjoyed the story overall.

And I agree that it packs more stuff into one single issue than most modern stories do in a whole trade.

What comes next is even better, but I think it is necessary to read the whole run chronologically in order to appreciate what Harras achieved.

342

The only reason 341 and 342 weren't on my list was because Harras didn't write this two-parter, Fabian Nicieza did, so even though I think it's a pretty good story, it's not essential other than explaining how Rage left the Avengers and joined the New Warriors.

It seems you liked 342 well enough, so you might as well get 341, too, if only for two scenes: one where Namorita smacks Rage and calls him a "hyper-thyroid side of beef," the other where Falcon gives Rage some words of wisdom (one of my favorite Falcon scenes of all time.)

quote:
Originally posted by Power Boy:
Don't know when I'll get to the next arc, these reviews may take me f o r e v e r.

In a good way.

Take all the time you need. This is a thrill for me, someone sharing their thoughts as they read these beloved stories for the first time.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
Okay, grabbed issues 334 - 344 tonight while at the parents. Gonna start reading them this weekend, for the first time in years.
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
Awesome, Dev. Looking forward to your thoughts.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
So the new Avengers line-up. I'm actually quite enthusiastic about it!

Click Here For A SpoilerThe best surprise was the return of the Vision! How it happened was a little underwhelming but WHATEVER--he's a favorite and has been sorely missed! Its about time he's become essential to this era, and he is a major powerhouse and distinct voice. I was expecting this but figured Young Avengers would tie it in.

I've been expecting Storm to join the Avengers for years, even pre-Bendis. Lets face it: of all the X-characters, she's the best fit. She's probably Marvel's single best female hero in terms of grandeur, power, leadership, diverse make-up and a host of other things (and please no one even think Carol or She-Hulk can even compare). Most importantly she's been woefully and criminally under-used for 20 years and it's about time he cut from X-land and shined. I was surprised she's still married to T'Challa though--they didnt retcon out that lame stunt?

Speaking of the Black Panther, I love the character and would have enjoyed his rejoining.

Daisy Johnson is another one who obviously Bendis would have join the Avengers before his tenure ended. He's been building to it for years since his Secret War mini. I'm ambivalent--stories depicting her going forward will decide for me if I like her. For those that dont know, she's the daughter of Mr. Hyde.

Perhaps the biggest news is no Wolverine and Spider-Man! Woohoo! Thats huge! About time! Sure, they're still in New Avengers but that's really 'the Defenders' (likely more so than the upcoming Defenders relaunch which unfortunately is written by Matt Fraction).

Now I really hope Bendis can do something with The Protector, who just looks cool in the background most of the time.

My big prediction? Scarlet Witch joins before 2012 is out.

 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Btw, wish I had my issue handy to reread with you guys! Perhaps even more fun, I'll sit back and enjoy the hell out of posts!
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
Well said, Cobie.

Sometimes we just have to relax and look back wistfully.
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
I'm totally on board with the new member :

Click Here For A Spoiler Storm, being on the Avengers. It looks like the X-Books are getting better BUT I'm happy to have her away from them ... even if she is still in Cyclop's X-Men as the token "good guy". In fact, I was trying to think of what other mutant might join the Avengers and I really couldn't think of one that was popular and a good person. Maybe Kitty or Ice Man. [shrug] Storm just dosn't fit in with the X-verse anymore. I have been waiting for her to grab the reigns away from Cyclops for years and years ... .... the X writers seem to have forgotten she led the X-Men through some of their worst times and for decades!!! It's actually rather obnoxious how side lined she has been. The only thing I'm a little "eh" about her is her being married to T'Challa and being a queen of a non democratic country. Besides she's always been such a great single female as Dr. Doom and Namor have both tried to woo her. As a longtime X-Men reader I always wanted her to end up with a mellowed out Forge
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
So the new Avengers line-up. I'm actually quite enthusiastic about it!

Click Here For A SpoilerThe best surprise was the return of the Vision! How it happened was a little underwhelming but WHATEVER--he's a favorite and has been sorely missed! Its about time he's become essential to this era, and he is a major powerhouse and distinct voice. I was expecting this but figured Young Avengers would tie it in.

I fear this bodes ill for Jonas at the close of Children's Crusade. As I said before, I want to see them interacting, not swapping...

quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
Perhaps the biggest news is no Wolverine and Spider-Man! Woohoo! Thats huge! About time! Sure, they're still in New Avengers but that's really 'the Defenders' (likely more so than the upcoming Defenders relaunch...).

Is it? Fraction has Strange, Namor & the Surfer (and while Hulk's apparently ruled out by events in his own book, he still appears in #1). And of other ex-mainstays of that book, Valkyrie's in FI: Fearless, and many of the rest - such as Hellcat, Hellstrom & Nighthawk - are MIA.

As of now, what makes NA likely to be more "Defenders" than the actual Defenders book?
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Power Boy:
I'm totally on board with the new member :

Click Here For A Spoiler Storm, being on the Avengers. It looks like the X-Books are getting better BUT I'm happy to have her away from them ... even if she is still in Cyclop's X-Men as the token "good guy". In fact, I was trying to think of what other mutant might join the Avengers and I really couldn't think of one that was popular and a good person. Maybe Kitty or Ice Man. [shrug] Storm just dosn't fit in with the X-verse anymore. I have been waiting for her to grab the reigns away from Cyclops for years and years ... .... the X writers seem to have forgotten she led the X-Men through some of their worst times and for decades!!! It's actually rather obnoxious how side lined she has been. The only thing I'm a little "eh" about her is her being married to T'Challa and being a queen of a non democratic country. Besides she's always been such a great single female as Dr. Doom and Namor have both tried to woo her. As a longtime X-Men reader I always wanted her to end up with a mellowed out Forge

Click Here For A SpoilerKitty and Iceman are good examples IMO. How about Rogue? I think she's evolved tremendously during Mike Carey's X-Men Legacy run...PLUS, she was on the cover of Avengers 18 among the possible candidates.
 
Posted by Set on :
 
I didn't read a ton of Avengers during those days, but I've always been impressed with the raw power of the lady Avengers of that era.

Crystal is no slouch, and many cool characters get by with a quarter of her powers. (Earth - Terra, Elysion, Fire - Human Torch, Sun Boy, etc., etc., Air - Wind-Dancer, Red Tornado, Cyclone, Water - Mera.)

And Sersi? Good grief! I remember during the JLA/Avengers crossover, they kept showing the JLA up against the Avengers, and there were JLA members present who could have wiped out the entire Avengers roster, and, on occasion, *multiple* JLA members that outclassed an entire Avengers lineup.

And then there was a scene were a dozen super-villains flew in all directions, scattered like toys flung by an angry child, and one of the DC characters looked stunned and said, "What was that!?!" and one of the Marvel characters said, "Sersi." That was her only appearance in the crossover, and she didn't even appear on panel, IIRC, but it was cool that a group with people like Superman and Captain Atom and Martian Manhunter on their team was impressed by her.

Of all the Eternals, it helped that Sersi had the most personality. The others often came across as too serious, or too involved in their own drama, while she was more actively integrated into human society, and 'doing her own thing.'

She's particularly intriguing since it's been stated over and over that molecular transmutation is the most difficult of Eternal disciplines and *ridiculously* hard to master, which suggests that she hasn't always been quite the party girl, and has, at some point in her past, quite possibly spent *centuries* locked into a training regimen so intensive and demanding that every other Eternal on the planet has thrown up their hands and said 'screw that.'

Given the nature of her powers (and his, for that matter), I remember that the big showdown between Sersi and Exodus seemed a bit anticlimactic, since neither of them used their signature powers, they just floated above the city chucking energy at each other, which is *neither* of them's actual specialty (although, obviously, neither of them suck at chucking energy around...).

I kinda wish there had been a less unified look in that era. Both Crystal and Sersi are strong personalities, and would have benefitted, I think, from more individual expression and less of the tights-and-jacket uniform look.

.

As for the spoiler-y bit, I like that choice. I haven't liked where the character has been for the last few years, and have gotten a little bit more used to the Avengers being a title that has members of other teams (or other traditionally not-Avengers) front and center like the Thing and Wolverine and Spider-Man. (Granted, Wolverine is close to the last X-Men I want to see on the Avengers, since I miss Beast in that role...)

Iceman has always felt like he was wasted in the X-books, and never really found his niche. He could make an interesting Avenger, as well.

[ November 21, 2011, 09:06 PM: Message edited by: Set ]
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
Oh, yeah, the Sersi/Exodus fight and the issue it was in marked the low point of that era for sure. Bloodties (the Avengers/X-Men 30th anniversary crossover) was a real lost opportunity overall.

I get so angry at writers who fall back on the "party girl" persona. At least Neil Gaiman set up a potentially good character arc for her in the Eternals mini-series by hinting that she had become AFRAID to be herself and was insisting on hiding behind the party girl facade. But ever since then, the appearances of her's that I've read have portrayed her as a generic super-woman. I skipped Chaos War because I generally don't like Fred Van Lente, so I don't know if she was any closer to herself there.
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Fanfic Lady:

I know from reading other posts of yours in this forum how much you like Crystal, and I was wondering if you'd care to share some thoughts on her in this thread.

I didn't miss this- I'm formulating those 'thoughts'.

By the way- in Marvel's Feb. solicits, an upcoming omnibus of The Crossing was listed. Surely, if they'll print *that* (and in an omnibus, no less) they'll print the 300's of The Avengers!! With a movie coming out, and all.
 
Posted by Invisible Brainiac on :
 
I haven't read a lot of Avengers comics, but in general the Avengers women are certainly something. Crystal, Sersi, Scarlet Witch, She-Hulk, Firestar, Ms. Marvel, Photon... even the less powerful ones have strong personalities, like Tigra, Wasp, Moondragon and Mockingbird.
 
Posted by Set on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Invisible Brainiac:
I haven't read a lot of Avengers comics, but in general the Avengers women are certainly something. Crystal, Sersi, Scarlet Witch, She-Hulk, Firestar, Ms. Marvel, Photon... even the less powerful ones have strong personalities, like Tigra, Wasp, Moondragon and Mockingbird.

Moondragon does indeed have a strong personality, but she's definitely not one of the less powerful ones!

A powerful enough telepath to mind control an entire planet and to penetrate the psychic shields of Galactus, she's also a little bit telekinetic, a world class martial artist and scientifically capable enough to give other people super-powers!

There are very few Avengers women I don't love. I even liked Silverclaw (who doesn't seem very popular)! The Dead Avengers mini gave me new respect for Deathcry, as well (and I always liked the short-lived Rita DeMara Yellowjacket).

Mantis? Not so much. I never got Mantis.

[ November 24, 2011, 11:41 AM: Message edited by: Set ]
 
Posted by Invisible Brainiac on :
 
Moondragon moves up from "less powerful" to "awesomely powerful"!
 
Posted by Set on :
 
Yeah, she's no Sersi, but Moondragon rocks!

Her and Snowbird and Madrox are in a three-way tie for my favorite Marvel characters.
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
<----- had a big stack of avengers comics to read and review while at moms house for thanksgiving ... And I just found out I left them on my desk at home. 4 hours away!


[Mad]
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
Click for fullsize image

Okay, read issue 334 (The Collection Obsession Part 1) today.

The good - Man, comics should go back and take note of how to move things along. This would be an issue and three 3 issue mini's nowadays.

We're introduced to all the major players, given the thrust of the story, and left with a surprise ending.

Andy has some good art here throughout, although...more on that later.

The Bad - Nothing much really. There is a little bit of clunky dialog for exposition purposes, but nothing too distracting.

On a personal note, I hate the Watcher when he shows up in stories like this. I do not remember his full role here as it has been a long time since first reading this. He shows up and says how cannot interfere...and yet somehow always manages to do so at some point.

The Ugly - Not to uch here either, just as some of Andy's figures are great, a few are just woof ugly. Sersi's entrance on page 8 is way out of proportion...Liefeldesque in some ways. There are a few panel layouts that leave me scratching my head as well.

[ November 30, 2011, 03:21 PM: Message edited by: Dev - Em ]
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
Nice review, Dev. Thanks.

IMO, Andy's worst artistic sin is the foreshortening on Thane Ector's arm in one panel. I don't know the exact circumstances of his departure from Avengers, but it appears his heart was just not in this story.

Thank God for Steve Epting.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
Yeah, most of the issue is solid work from Andy, there are just a few spots where it looked like he gave up halfway through the panel or something.

Having Steve step in and take over is a good thing to be sure...keeping in mind the shopping schedule and the situation he came into will help with some of the artistic shortcomings of the next few issues. Flipping through the next two, he turned out some impressive work given the circumstances.

One thing, I forgot how much I loved Herc in these stories. He's such an ass at times (pushing Rage with more weight, and then leaving him to flirt with Sersi), but the guy you want backing you up in a fight.
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
Harras "got" Herc the way that no writer before or after him has.

One of my favorite thing about Harras' Herc was that he genuinely seemed like someone who had been through hell and back (his brutal beating by the Masters of Evil during the Stern/Buscema era) and had learned some lessons.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
Click for fullsize image

Avenger #335 (The Collection Obsession Part 2)

Peebs summed up the issue pretty well in his post. Again, the issue moves along at a decent pace. It is split between the Earth bound Avengers Fighting Thane Ector and those on the Moon trying to revive The Collector.

The Good - Good plot movement with both sides of the story, and we're left with some good cliffhangers. Sersi kidnapped, and Cap down...with Rage crying over his body. The Moon Avengers being attacked by a creature that the Collector led them too...possibly by accident, since he is indeed with them and in peril himself.

Also, Herc is a joy to read, and the Beast...as well as the others in the Brain-trust on the moon are written very well. The Beast is especially written with a fun joking personality that he should have imho.

The Bad - The art is a bit uneven, but as Fanfie has pointed out, Steve Epting was thrown a bi-weekly series after Andy Kubert bailed after completing only one issue.

The Ugly - The amazingly ease at which the Vision and Quasar are taken down by their opponents. These are two of the arguably strongest members at this point, and they should not really be taken out that easily. Cap lasts longer against Ector than the Vision.

[ November 30, 2011, 03:20 PM: Message edited by: Dev - Em ]
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
Yeah, I'd put down Cap's endurance to sheer tenacity and never-say-die, but in the end, it's not convincing, especially as Dev has pointed out that Vision and Quasar didn't last nearly as long as they should have.

A side note: Quasar has always been defeated way too easily throughout his entire existence. It's a shame that he exited Harras' lineup just as Harras was hitting his stride. Can anyone confirm whether Mark Gruenwald ordered Quasar removed from the Avengers so that he could send Quasar on that interminable shark-jumping cosmic quest?
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Loving the Harras era anecdotes guys--keep 'em coming!

In the meantime, a little rundown on my feelings regarding all the various Avengers series:

Avengers by Brian Bendis and artist of the month is undergoing yet another line-up so I'll withold any type of grade for it and just say I'm looking forward to seeing where this goes.

New Avengers continues to entertain me and I like the way Bendis writes this line-up of obvious favorites of his combined with all the biggest fan favorites in Marvel history. It's an odd thing--I could easily hate this comic if the stories weren't good but I feel Bendis does his best Avengers work here. Plus, Deodato brings it home each and every issue. The latest Norman Osborn issue where he assembles a plethora of Marvel U villains (yay Monica Rappaccini!) was pretty awesome.

Avengers Academy is a really solid series that never gets any of the hype or praise it deserves. It's also had a slight shuffle in its cast but IMO in a good way (it appears to me that Veil will remain a part of the series albeit not a team member right now). Not only does Gage write the best Hank besides Harras, he writes the best Tigra PERIOD and the best Pietro since...Stan the Man? It's also the best superhero comic starring teeangers around.

Secret Avengers has really been a revelation these last three months. Warren Ellis & friends are proving to me that all that hype about Warren Ellis actually does pan out from time to time. His simply yet brillaint approach to each issue works on every level for me and he has a masterful ability to respectfully showcase each hero every issue. They are competent, intelligent and courageous and Ellis has me rooting for them. Surprisingly, this is my favorite of the four.

The Young Avengers series has its own thread and its probably my favorite of any Avengers related series too.

So all in all, I think the entire Avengers franchise is pretty good across the board with some series actually being truly terrific. Certainly worthy of its place as the top 'franchise' in comics prior to the DCnU--and we'll see if it regains that spot over the next 6 months.
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
Gage write[s ...] the best Pietro since...Stan the Man?

 -

No love for PAD or Harras?
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Oh I love them both--in fact, they wrote the definitive Quicksilver after many years before (and since) of Pietro being a character who made no sense or was impossible to relate to. But I think Gage is really doing a fantastic job keeping the tradition going! (And yea, my post devolved into hyperbole...)
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
Click for fullsize image

Avengers #336 (The Collection Obsession Part 3)

The Good - The plot moves along at a decent pace, although the concept of defeat after defeat of the Avengers against the Brethren forces kid of makes any eventual victory seem unlikely here. The problem with setting up your villains as totally unbeatable, is that when you reveal the way to defeat them...it seems contrived most of the time. I'll save final judgment until I get to that point in our story.

Once again, Harris has a great grasp on most of the characters. His Beast is delightful (top Hank - "Did anyone ever tell you that you have the most heavenly blue eyes?").

Everyone else comes across good as well. It's great to see Dane waltz into the Avengers again...even if he does get taken down rather quickly...although to be fair, so does everyone else.

The Bad - the aforementioned ease that the Avengers get taken out against the Brethren forces. I'm not against my heroes facing near impossible odds, but let them do something constructive and take down at least one of the Brethren on their ow.

The Ugly - Nothing that I can see. Art is very solid throughout, and a huge improvement over last issue. Giving me the impression that this issue was in the bag and Steve had to rush to get the last issue in to Marvel.

[ November 30, 2011, 03:20 PM: Message edited by: Dev - Em ]
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Dev-Em:
The problem with setting up your villains as totally unbeatable, is that when you reveal the way to defeat them...it seems contrived most of the time. I'll save final judgment until I get to that point in our story.

I think that applies to a lot of Jim Shooter's Avengers stories (Korvac, Nefaria, Graviton.) Why those are considered by many to be the golden godhead of Avengers stories is beyond me.

I do think Harras pulled it off with The Collection Obsession, but I won't spoil anything.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
I also think of most of the Thanos appearances. Wasn't it once said to, or about, him that he was the one allowing the heroes to win...because he really didn't want to.
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
Oh, yeah, I think that was the ending of Infinity Gauntlet -- one of my least favorite villains starring in one of my least favorite "events."
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
Kinda makes the other appearances by him seem really pointless. The heroes never actually had a chance, so their fighting was really useless...it was all just him being a DB and letting them win.
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
The problem, as I see it, is that Starlin really had only one Thanos epic to tell, so each one was an inferior copy of the original (which I think holds up really well. The Avengers/Captain Marvel/Thanos crossover issue, #124, is excellent.)
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
A trend repeated with way to many villains. They're good for an epic battle, and then...not so much.
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
This might make for a good separate thread: "One-Trick Villains," or something like that. Care to do the honors, Dev?
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
Give me a day or so...I'm working on Part 4 right now.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
Click for fullsize image

Avengers #337 (The Collection Obsession Part 4)

The Good - We learn a lot in this issue, if you catch all the references to what the Brethren are. It came back to me as I read it, and Fanfie is right...this is a good use of a almost unstoppable villain. Evolved as the Eternals were...but from bacteria and not humanoid stock It is an extremely interesting origin for them, and makes them totally unique as far as I know.

Other than that, we get Crystal joining up with the Avengers. We also see Hank being given hints by that ever meddling, 'I cannot interfere' Watcher. They (Hank and the Microheroes) are moving closer to finsing out the truth as well.

The Bad - Not much action this issue apart from Sersi and Sybil throwing down, with Sybil turning into a muddy looking blob.

Also, there is some clunky dialog here and there due to the exposition necessary...but that's life.

The Ugly - The aforementioned brown blon that is Sybil Dorn.

[ November 30, 2011, 03:19 PM: Message edited by: Dev - Em ]
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
The midpoint of a long story is always the hardest to write. I think Harras succeeded because the revelations and exposition were so surprising, so interesting, so different from most of what was being published in mainstream superhero comics at the time.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
Click for fullsize image

Avengers #338 (The Collection Obsession Part 5 - even though it says 4 on the cover.)

The Good - "Methinks I have learned a lesson here...if only I didst know what it was." - and this sums up what I love about Herc here. He is a brawler, a party guy...but he seems trying to be so much more. Sometimes succeeding and sometimes not.

One thing that I failed to mention was the covers. From Kubert on the first part of this journey, to Ron Lim taking over for the rest, the covers have been solid and nice to look at.

Art and story are tight here, no complaints in either aspect.

We learn who the true villain is, and really...it's no surprise. Fanfie is correct in that Harris played fair and created a seemingly unstoppable group to fight the Avengers, yet made their downfall easy...yet believable.

The Bad - Not a thing that I can see, outside of random name dropping where it seems a bit clunky...but you have to introduce everyone each issue for those that have not been following along. So that is not a bash at Harris, just an observation of a unfortunate necessity.

The Ugly - Not much, unless you count Olar's appearance.

[ November 30, 2011, 03:19 PM: Message edited by: Dev - Em ]
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Dev - Em:
Avengers #338 (The Collection Obsession Part 5 - even though it says 4 on the cover.)

I was confused by that too, they've got two number 4s i think.

the covers are spectacular, if i was reading comics at this time, i would've picked these books up from the rack.

This story arc IMO, did get much better in every way as it progressed.

( the first issue I got was the one where Cap gets that extended several page fight scene but Sersi is easily kidnapped .. and that was the one they had the two different pencillers IIRC. I think a problem with the marvel universe is that Captain America and Spider Man must be taken seriously in these huge cosmic battles and it's really unrealistic ... maybe that's why 'Gods of Evil' like Thanos comes off as a big thug with super science. I also thought Eros never got his grandeur as a 'god of love' or even Thanos' equal ... which he should be or almost be since he's fought him for centuries. (right?) )
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Dev-Em:
"Methinks I have learned a lesson here...if only I didst know what it was." - and this sums up what I love about Herc here. He is a brawler, a party guy...but he seems trying to be so much more. Sometimes succeeding and sometimes not.

Dev, have you ever read Thor 356? It's a fill-in issue where Herc tells tall tales about himself and Thor to a group of kids. That was the first time Harras ever wrote Herc, and even then he had the perfect handle on the character.


quote:
Originally posted by Power Boy:
I think a problem with the marvel universe is that Captain America and Spider Man must be taken seriously in these huge cosmic battles and it's really unrealistic

I agree. And it's even worse at DC, where Batman has to be a know-it-all jerk to hold his own in the cosmic battles.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Fanfic Lady:
quote:
Originally posted by Dev-Em:
"Methinks I have learned a lesson here...if only I didst know what it was." - and this sums up what I love about Herc here. He is a brawler, a party guy...but he seems trying to be so much more. Sometimes succeeding and sometimes not.

Dev, have you ever read Thor 356? It's a fill-in issue where Herc tells tall tales about himself and Thor to a group of kids. That was the first time Harras ever wrote Herc, and even then he had the perfect handle on the character.

Fanfie...I do not have that Thor issue, but will jot it down and look for it. I never collected Thor on any kind of basis, just getting crossovers and the like.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
Click for fullsize image

Avengers #339 (The Collection Obsession Part 6)

The Good - Harras gives us a nice tidy wrap up to the story. Everything is explained, and within the confines of the Marvel Universe...an acceptable resolution that plays fair with the concepts used.

The Brethren are taken care of, the Collector is taken care of...and the Watcher gets to strut around feeling he has done his part (interfering when it's his place not to. Although he does it constantly.)

The Bad - Nothing outside of the Watcher as a whole in this and just about every other appearance he has. Not against Harras in any way, this goes back to his first appearances. He is obligated to watch and observe only...yet he constantly meddles. He is a useful tool for writers when they have no way out of a situation...Harras has him provide hints, but also has our heroes discovering everything on their own.

The Ugly - Not a thing.

Overall Observation - A very well done story that gets better as it moves along. Harras plays fair with the story and follows the rules. What strikes me is the fact that with this being a 6 issue story, it was packed with info. Nowadays, it would have been at least 8 issues and had 10 - 15 spin off one shots and mini's.

On to a few fill in's and then the Big One.

[ November 30, 2011, 03:19 PM: Message edited by: Dev - Em ]
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
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Avengers #340 (Clay Soldiers)

The Good - The cover. Really, that's about it.

The Bad - Everything else. From a terrible plot, terrible dialog to sheer stupidity in the writing.

A woman gets hoit by a car running across the street to get to the Avengers (we'll leave the fact that not one of them moved in time to stop the car) and Cap runs over to her and lifts her off the ground. Now anyone of Steve's experience (and a whole lot below that) knows that you do not move someone if there is possible neck trauma.

The Police think the Avengers don't give a damn about the little peoplle, when they have proven time and time again that they do.

Although, maybe they're right...because Cap mulls over things by training...instead of, oh wait The Wasp and Jarvis did some basic research and found out the rest of the story. Cap...if you wonder who someone is and what they may have been talking about, maybe you should go and check it out.

Jarvis is sent in undercover, and shoves some ten year olds around. Albeit they are carrying guns...but still.

Then there is Bulwark. Who, if Cap is 6' something, then he is at least 10' - 11' tall.

Then, they're inside, but Cap throws and gets the rebound of his shield from outside. Not sure how that works.

Then...then...the villain says 'momma?' at the end. wth.

The Ugly - The art...'nuff said.

Skip this book if you don't already have it. It's a pointless fill in, and while some fill ins can be really good (The Krypto issue of Superman right before the reboot), but this is bad all around.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
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Avengers #341 & 342 (Rage of Angels/By reason of insanity)

The Good - This is a good two issue fill in by Fabian N. It's really a New Warriors story, but that's alright as The New Warriors was kicking all kinds of arse at this point in their existence. Rage ends up off the Avengers in this issue, due to the little fact that he is 14 years old. He does end up in the New Warriors after this, and is really realized a lot better than he is in the Avengers.

Also, the return of Steve Epting to the Avengers with these issues. A really welcome site after the last issue.

The Bad - Not really a bad thing, but the Avengers aare background characters in their own book, but the story itself is used well to remove Rage and set him up for the New Warriors.

The Ugly - There are a few really bad face shots of Namorita here...but ah well.
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
I remember those Namorita shots, I didn't know who she was.


I still LOVE that second cover.
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
It's a good 2-parter, and a necessary one to get Rage out of the Avengers. He really did fit in better with the New Warriors. I especially loved his odd-couple bromance with Speedball.

Two scenes from this story stand out for me. I think I mentioned them already, but they bear repeating:

- I think Falcon's speech to Rage is one of the greatest moments in Falcon's history.

- I laugh every time in re-read the panel where a Hate-Monger-influenced Namorita punches Rage and says, "Don't insult me, you hyper-thyroid side of beef!"
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
Fabian had the characters form the New Warriors down...although, to be fair...he either created them, or took cyphers and gave them a voice.

I did think it was a little 'convenient' that the Falcon was around, but his verbal smack-down on Rage was worth looking past it.

Can't wait for the next two issues, and then the big Operation Galactic Storm. Which I won't have until Friday, when I go and reassemble it from my comics at my folks house. Then I'll bring home the remainder of this Harras arc (through 375).
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
No comments on the train wreck that was #340 Fanfie? [Wink]
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
LOL

All I can say is, if the fill-ins made it possible for Bob & Steve to do the best work they were capable of, then I can tolerate their awfulness. [Smile]
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
I can agree. 340 was terrible, but I thought 341 and 342 were good (better if they would have just been in the New Warriors run) and served a purpose at least.

I've got a good run ahead of me (story wise) with Operation Galactic Storm, so well see how the rest of the fill in stuff fares.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
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Avengers #343 (First Night)

The Good - ...but, you're DEAD! Always a good way to catch a prospective buyers eye. This is the second Epting cover (last issue being the first) and it's a great one.

Thor and Crystal are put through their paces as the newbies. Thor (Eric) is not happy, and I love Herc's line to him here. "That's right good Thor, vent your spleen! 'Tis most godly!" This may draw some ire from people, but I kind of see Herc along the lines of (sounding like anyway - more than acting like) Aquaman from the recent Brave and the Bold cartoon. A bit over the top, but the guy you want watching your back in the fight.

The Black Knight get's some good play here, which is part of why I love this run of the Avengers. Dane is one of my favorite Avengers, matched really only by Hawkeye at times.

And the reveal of you know who at the end...awesome!

The Bad - The Black Knights 'lightsaber.' I know why they did it, but it still was cheesy to me.

The Ugly - The Nanny (not being mean here), she was purposely drawn to be strange looking, and has a personality to match.

Next issues cover will have a little something extra for Fanfie. [Wink]
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
Cool. Can't wait.

I liked the "lightsaber." I thought it was a good way to circumvent the Comics Code.

As for Herc's "voice", I've always imagined the late, great Roger C. Carmel (Harry Mudd on Star Trek TOS and Cyclonus on Transformers G1; he also played a Russian spy on an episode of Hawaii Five-O, where he had a full beard and I swear he even LOOKED like Hercules!)
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
I've never actually read the fill-in issue. I always skip it when I reread this run. (which after all these posts I may have to do soon)
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
Cobie, I recommend skipping it. It's a few minutes of your life that you'll never get back.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
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Avengers #344 (Echoes of the Past) - yeah, that's Steve's signature there...

The Good - It's a no holds barred fight between The Black Knight and The Swordsman!!! What else do you want?!?!?!

Seriously though, a blast seeing Dane take on the Swordsman, and come away with a 'win' as it were, he did take advantage of an opening...like anyone would.

Jarvis and Marilla butt heads in the kitchen.

Sersi's back...and there's something brewing there.

The Bad - Once again, most of the Avengers are taken out of the fight with little to no effort. Thor get's blasted out of the sky, Vision gets tossed for a loop and Herc gets pummeled, Only Dane and Crystal really do anything productive in the fight.

The Ugly - Apparently whatever Sersi saw in the mirror. Not necessarily ugly in and of itself, but bad enough somehow to waylay her from trying to help.


This one also sets up the beginning of Operation Galactic Storm...more to come once the issues are at home...
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
I've never actually read the fill-in issue. I always skip it when I reread this run. (which after all these posts I may have to do soon)

Skip 340 to be sure...but 341 and 342 at least give explanation as to why Rage is not on the team...and are not a bad read themselves.
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
LOVE the Dane/Philip battle! Philip was so much cooler than the first Swordsman IMO. Of course it helped that he was clean-shaven. Nothing against guys with 'taches, but the first Swordsman had a very cheesy one.

quote:
Originally posted by Dev-Em:
Once again, most of the Avengers are taken out of the fight with little to no effort. Thor get's blasted out of the sky, Vision gets tossed for a loop and Herc gets pummeled, Only Dane and Crystal really do anything productive in the fight.

Yeah, but Magdalene kicking Herc's ass shows what a badass she is. I love Magdalene (who, if anyone was wondering, was a Marvel analog of Big Barda.)
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Fanfic Lady:
I liked the "lightsaber." I thought it was a good way to circumvent the Comics Code.

As for Herc's "voice", I've always imagined the late, great Roger C. Carmel (Harry Mudd on Star Trek TOS and Cyclonus on Transformers G1; he also played a Russian spy on an episode of Hawaii Five-O, where he had a full beard and I swear he even LOOKED like Hercules!)

Like I said, I understand why they changed Dane's sword. My thing comes in that as soon as they did it, they had him fight someone with a real sword. Ah well...it wasn't a big thing to me really.

Personally, I just always imagined Herc (in the Marvel Universe anyway) to be very bombastic and always pushing the edge of being over the top. Harras gave him some of the best lines no matter how you view him.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Fanfic Lady:

quote:
Originally posted by Dev-Em:
Once again, most of the Avengers are taken out of the fight with little to no effort. Thor get's blasted out of the sky, Vision gets tossed for a loop and Herc gets pummeled, Only Dane and Crystal really do anything productive in the fight.

Yeah, but Magdalene kicking Herc's ass shows what a badass she is. I love Magdalene (who, if anyone was wondering, was a Marvel analog of Big Barda.)
No doubt she was proven a bad ass in this issue. She took on Herc, the Vision and Crystal...and bounded away from them with nary a scratch. Good intro for her, but another bad showing for the powerhouses on the team.
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Fanfic Lady:
I know from reading other posts of yours in this forum how much you like Crystal, and I was wondering if you'd care to share some thoughts on her in this thread.

Well, at first it was her exotic, yet girl-next-door looks and her very underrated, and understoried, super powers that caught my attention. She was a favorite of mine before the Harras era of AVENGERS that's recently been discussed.

In fact, I can't quite remember just when she became a 'pet' character. In the 70's, Marvel reprinted stories from the 60's quite frequently. So, appearances of Crys in 'contemporary' Marvel (like her wedding to Quicksilver) might be on the stand next to her introductory stories in Lee/Kirby FANTASTIC FOUR issues.

There, I discoverd a girl who escaped the constraints of her somewhat oppressive (too strong a word, I suppose) family to satisfy her curiosity and sense of wonder about the world. I identified with that. There's a bit of the princess from the movie ROMAN HOLIDAY in her- though I don't think she's at all like Audrey Hepburn.

Her close relationship with one of comic's best 'superpets', Lockjaw, also made me her fan- since I'm a definite animal-lover. I always think of him as 'her' dog, more than Black Bolt's, who is always identified as his owner.

That old thought that people who animals like and are drawn to must be good folk is one I kind of believe. Though not the opposite of that adage.

Later, her sexuality became pretty much the sum of her characterization. I disliked the limitation placed on her- though I think three or four partners is hardly prolific. I miss her sunny, flirtatious side.

In a way, I think of her as Marvel's character counterpart (definitely *not* in the superheroic sense) to Donna Troy. Niceness is a big part of her character, or should be. A lot has happened to her over the years- resulting in a certain stern note to her. There's a little bitterness and world-weariness to her. Integrating the seemingly disparate qualities would make her a very captivating character, I think.

I'm a fantasy novel reader, so her earth/air/water/fire powers appeal to me. I can imagine so much potential for her as a superheroine. That's a common theme for a lot of characters I 'champion'. Imagining creative uses for their powers or characterization. I guess that fosters a certain sense of investment.

Across the board, I find I really like almost all the gals who became 'one girl to a team' crashers. Polaris, Scarlet Witch, Hellcat, Lilith Clay, Black Canary (on two teams!)... I really like this crop of heroines. And find it sad that 2/3s of them have been so very underused.

Her relationships to Invisible Girl, to her sister, Medusa, her former sister-in-law, the Scarlet Witch and most recently to Polaris have been pretty interesting. I kind of hate the way the sweet status of Crystal babysitting for Sue turned into a hotbed of resentment. I like that the way she relates to Medusa is complicated and melodramatic. There was a graphic novel featuring the Inhumans where Crystal helped hide her sister when she gave birth. She also finally purged herself (at least for awhile) of that pesky vulnerability to pollution weakness by turning it into a sort of strength. We haven't seen her do it since, but in that story she created a monster from all the toxins around her. That could be handy- with Reed, Hank(s) and Iron Man's input. Crys and Wanda, unfortunately isn't associated with much other than Crystal's worst moment (cheating with the realtor) and acting like she'd never even seen Wanda before during the dreckfest, AVENGERS DISSASSEMBLED. Crys and Lorna shared some great scenes when they were both relegated to outer space- I hope there's follow-up.

Earlier, I mentioned the Quicksilver/Crystal wedding. That's a strange couple of issues. The various teams- the FF, the Avengers, the X-men and the Inhumans-- interrelate to each other in a way they never do elsewhere. I kind of loved the spectacle of the pre-wedding events. But it doesn't really seem to fit in with anything published around it. I loved the art, but Crystal really isn't presented all that well, here.

This is making me want to dig out some old issues and have a rereading festival. With the mess my collection's in, that'd be a much bigger chore than it sounds like, though.
 
Posted by Invisible Brainiac on :
 
I'm not familiar with the Avengers, but Crystal (along with Monica Rambeau) are two of my top "pet" avengers too. Underutilized, powerful, and heroic are three words that would sum the up.

With Crystal, her scenes in Operation Galactic Storm and its What If two-parter play a big part in why I'm such a big fan. She had to mourn the Black Knight in the What If, but she was still an Avengers mainstay to the end. Her line to Cap - "If you let Dane's sacrifice be in vain, I'll kill you" - was chillingly powerful and showed how much love she had to give.
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
Thanks for sharing thoughts on Crystal, guys. Both of you are very insightful.

Mother, warrior, princess, elemental, heroine. She's always been such a potential star, but even moreso since her stint with the Avengers. She evolved and matured in ways that subsequent writers have ignored.

I'm waiting for her to reveal that she kept the bomber jacket out of sentimental value.
 
Posted by KidChaos on :
 
The Harras-Epting run of the Avengers were the very first comics I read waaay back when I was 10 or 11. I didn't come in till the later issues, when the whole gatherers storyline was in full gear, so I missed most the issues discussed so far...

But as far as Crystal goes....am I the only one who thought she was kind of... well... a bitch? Sure she *seemed* sweet, but she came off to me as passive-aggressive and manipulative. Always talking about how she wanted to patch things up with her "estranged" husband while she literally threw herself at Black Knight. Sersi had dibs on him anyway.

Through the whole Crystal-Dane-Sersi triangle I was rooting for Sersi. But then I always, preferred Veronica to Betty.

(not trying to rustle the feathers of any crystal fans, just playing the devil's advocate)
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
Thanks for chiming in, KidChaos, and no offense taken.

Crystal could be passive-agressive and manipulative for sure -- she was a princess after all -- but I think when the chips were down, she rose above her faults, like a true heroine. I do think her sweetness was genuine, though. She was complicated, that's what I loved about her.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
Okay, one almost dislocated disk later (stupid boxes...this is why I need to get these things bound) I have all the Avengers and other related issues to finish the run through 375.

Aside from just the Operation Galactic Storm and Blood Ties crossover stuff, I also grabbed the 2 issue What If...? OGS issues. I'll actually cover those right after I finish the main story.
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
Cool. Looking forward to your reviews.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
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Captain America #98 (Operation Galactic Storm Part 1)

The Good - Mark Gruenwald gives us a good introductory step into this undertaking. Rick Jones has a dream of Hala being destroyed, and somehow Cap is there...but he isn't.

The rest of the issue is setting up Rick and Cap having a talk after years of not talking, and then they are attacked by Warstar. Rick escapes but is then taken by Oracle (no, not that one...the other one, the Imperial Guard one.)

One thing that I want to mention here is that I enjoyed that the Avengers had staff that they interacted with at this point besides Jarvis. It was a nice touch that gave them a broader feel to me.

The Bad - Not the greatest art in the world, but passable...definitely not the worst art I've seen either.

The Ugly - The Supreme Intelligence and Supremor pretty much have that covered.
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
My favorite thing about that issue was that Gruenwald gave Peter David's Hulk a plug. We even got a cameo from Delphi, the Pantheon's seer.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
That was a nice touch, and gives you a mental picture of other aspects of the Marvel Universe at that time.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
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Avengers West Coast (Operation Galactic Storm Part 2)

The Good - To quote Keanu ...Woooooah. Massive info dump in the first three pages regarding Rick's history with Capt. Mar-Vell. All good info that is relayed in an easy to understand manner.

We're then introduced to the Avengers that operate on the West Coast (More on this topic a little later.)

Cap gives them a call and Iron Man and the rest (sans Mockingbird) are off to pick him up. From there they track down Rick and fight not only the Imperial Guardsmen that took Rick, but also a Kree Sentry.

Guardsmen get what they want, and get away with Rick. The Avengers beat the Sentry, but loose Rick. Quasar is brought into the story, but cannot catch up to the IG in time, and they're off.

Good story pace is continuing. New characters being introduced pretty smoothly, and after two issues of info dumping, I still do not feel overwhelmed.

The Bad - The idea that the Avengers located on the West Coast are somehow inferior to those on the East Coast always bugged me. Seemed counter productive and invariably leads to lots of stupid 'arguments' between the two teams by characters that should be above petty crap like that. Always felt forced.

The Ugly - Not much really. A few wonky panels here and there, but a overall solid effort throughout by everyone.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
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Quasar #32 (Operation Galactic Storm Part 3)

The Good - There is someone after the Nega Bands located in Mar-Vells tomb.

After a quick side trip to the sun, Quasar goes to help Starfox with whomever has breached the tomb of Mar-Vell.

After being attacked by what seems to be the entire Imperial Guard, Ms. Minerva and Capt Atlas (of the Kree, natch), get hold of the Nega Bands. Capt. Atlas bangs them together, and as soon as you can say 'holy switcharoo', Rick Jones is now in airless space.

The Bad - Not much. Plot moves along nicely (aside form a couple panels to keep Quasars own regular stories going.)

The Ugly - Not much - Greg Cappullo provides some pretty clean art here.
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
Avengers West Coast #80

To the "ugly" I would add the excess of cheeseball comedy lines, and the very presence of Living Lightning, whom I've always found an offensive stereotype.

Quasar #32

I love that most of the issue takes place in outer space.

Capullo did a decent job. It looks kind of like John Romita Junior circa 1984 with a really good inker.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
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Wonder Man #7 (Operation Galactic Storm Part 4)

The Good - I'm going to admit something right now, I have a soft spot for Simon. He's probably third on my list on fave Avengers. So my thoughts here are a little biased.

The art is very good here, as Jeff Johnson puts in a nice effort.

The story is basically one huge battle between Wonder Man and Capt. Atlas. Things get tricky for Simon when Atlas figures out how to use the Nega Bands to his advantage. No big surprise that Simon gets the better of him in the end.

Liked that Wanda stuck up for Simon when Rick was ragging on him.

Nice to see little tings like Simon getting ready to be gone for an extended period of time. Something that always seems to be overlooked...not that it needs to be shown constantly, but every now and then it is nice to see.

The Bad - Ricks attitude towards Simon seems a bit misplaced. It's not like he hasn't hung out enough with heroes to know that wonky things happen...especially with the Nega Bands involved.

The Ugly - Nothing here. Art is good, Story is sound, if not feeling like a tiny bit of filler, but it is entertaining enough to compensate for that.
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
Wonder Man #7

Sometimes I go by the old adage that if one hasn't got anything nice to say, one shouldn't say anything.

This is one of those times.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
Different strokes.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
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The Avengers #345 (Operation Galactic Storm Part 5)

The Good - Part 5 and our heroes are on their way to try to stop a war. Like any good plotting, the first third is setting everything into place, and getting ready for the second act.

The Shi'ar launch a fleet into Earths system and are met by Thor, Sersi, Quasar and Vision. They deal with the threat, but not really in a way that Capt. America likes.

The plot moves our heroes into three teams. Earth, one for the Shi'ar, Kree and Earth based teams.

Hawkeye get's stuck on the Earth team, but gets hold of the growth formula and becomes Goliath again and get's to go along with the Shi'ar group.

The Bad - Not much.

The Ugly - Some attitudes flying around, but that's also the sign of great characterization, as not everyone sees eye to eye here.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
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Iron Man #278 (Operation Galactic Storm #6)

The Good - The Kree contingent makes it into Kree space and comes across a vessel. They board and are attacked by Shi'ar soldiers who disintegrate upon defeat.

All while Iron Man hacks the system.

Shatterax is activated by the Kree and Iron Man fights him, and then surrenders on behalf of the Avengers.

The Bad - Kind of stretched out issue of a simple fight and surrender.

The Ugly - Iron Man's armor at this point...not a fan.
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
Avengers #345

Good observation about proper plotting, Dev.

Now might be the time for me to mention that Fabian Nicieza was an uncredited co-plotter (with Harras and Gruenwald) of the overall OGS arc. And X-Cutioner's Song, the X-Men event from the same year, was mostly Fabian's baby. I don't think it's a coincidence that they're my two favorite events of all time.

Epting's drawings of all the Avengers' faces in rigid panel grids as Captain America puts together the lineups are wonderful.

And Harras really "got" all the characters, even the ones he wasn't writing on a monthly basis. Even John Walker came alive for me here.

Iron Man #278

I liked this issue more than you, Dev. This was the beginning of Len Kaminski's run on Iron Man, which I consider the most underrated Iron Man of all time. Even at this point, I think Kaminski's already showing a knack for tightly plotted hi-tech thrillers. But, like you said in a post above, different strokes.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
Re: Plotting - this is a lost art for some event writers today (looking at you Johns). It is very plainly at least a 17/18 issue story (with the one official Cap aftermath issue.) 5 issue in and we have the main plot laid out, the characters heading to their destinations...explaining what the next steps are, and even some new mysteries popping up. Her showing up at the end and talking to Quasar.

Totally agree on Harras. He gives them all distinct voices that are true to their characters. His characters are dynamic.

Re: Iron Man, it's not a bad issue, just felt a little drawn out to me for what they actually accomplished... [shrug]
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
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The Mighty Thor #445 (Operation Galactic Storm Part 7)

The Good - We pick up with the Shi'Ar bound group of Avengers as they come across a Shi'ar settlement under attack. Things then go from bad to worse.

Nice way to jump right into the thick of things. The issue is paced well, giving both Wonder Man and Thor get a shot at Gladiator. Thor finally emerges victorious and sends Gladiator on his way by throwing him through the stargate and closing it...trapping them here without a way home. The others are less than thrilled.

The Bad - Simon's attitude towards Thor in the beginning is childish, but then again Thor is being played very heavily as a hero that has no clue what he is really capable of. I understand the 'new hero' thing, but for a character like Thor, it seems a little out of place. Then again, I didn't read Thor much, so maybe it was better over the whole thing than it seems here.

The Ugly - Outside of everyone looking like they have their 'O' face on throughout half the panels, the art is decent.

Also, I haven;t seen dialog like this from a Hispanic character since Vibe...and this is not a good thing.

[ December 06, 2011, 01:02 PM: Message edited by: Dev - Em ]
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
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Captain America #399 (Operation Galactic Storm Part 8)

The Good - The plot continues apace, and the coordination between the writers of the various books really shined through as this saga moves along.

The Kree contingent is captive, but not for long as Sersi gets them out of this pickle.

...and someone is gathering a force to be reckoned with for the Kree.

The Bad - Not much outside of Tony's attitude. It's funny how rereading something years later, without the current context of what was happening to the characters at the time in their own books makes certain characters come across differently than it did back in the day. Without the knowledge of what Tony was going through leading up to this, he comes across very different.

The Ugly - Not much really. Art is competent, writing is good. Solid installment.
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Dev - Em:
Click for fullsize image

The Mighty Thor #445 (Operation Galactic Storm Part 7)

The Good - We pick up with the Shi'Ar bound group of Avengers as they come across a Shi'ar settlement under attack. Things then go from bad to worse.

Nice way to jump right into the thick of things. The issue is paced well, giving both Wonder Man and Thor get a shot at Gladiator. Thor finally emerges victorious and sends Gladiator on his way by throwing him through the stargate and closing it...trapping them here without a way home. The others are less than thrilled.

The Bad - Simon's attitude towards Thor in the beginning is childish, but then again Thor is being played very heavily as a hero that has no clue what he is really capable of. I understand the 'new hero' thing, but for a character like Thor, it seems a little out of place. Then again, I didn't read Thor much, so maybe it was better over the whole thing than it seems here.

The Ugly - Outside of everyone looking like they have their 'O' face on throughout half the panels, the art is decent.

Also, I haven;t seen dialog like this from a Hispanic character since Vibe...and this is not a good thing.

Hmm I'd like to see a Thor / Gladiator battle. I'd put money on Gladiator though.

Which Hispanic character ?
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Fanfic Lady:
Avengers West Coast #80

To the "ugly"...snip...and the very presence of Living Lightning, whom I've always found an offensive stereotype.

This would be the one.
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
ahhh ... yeah I've only got one comic with him in it, and I don't think he gets one whole sentence ... maybe a few words. and he lights something up ...

during the fight with the spider team.

I like his powers though.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Fanfic Lady:
I liked this issue more than you, Dev. This was the beginning of Len Kaminski's run on Iron Man, which I consider the most underrated Iron Man of all time. Even at this point, I think Kaminski's already showing a knack for tightly plotted hi-tech thrillers. But, like you said in a post above, different strokes.

I also really enjoyed it when it was coming out (have not reread since). In fact, Iron Man and Hulk were my two favorite non-team Marvel Comics during this era.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
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Avengers West Coast #81 (Operation Galactic Storm Part 9)

The Good - We get to see what's happening back on Earth. Problem is, it's mostly in fighting until some Imperial Guard members show up to rescue their captive members.

Which they do, and they also get Capt. Atlas by using Chameleon Bo---I mean Hobgoblin impersonating Dr. Minerva.

The Bad - Lots and lots of cliched dialog. I love Roy (and Dann) Thomas, but some of this was pretty cheesy.

The Ugly - US Agent hitting on Mockingbird, and her putting him in his place right before they got clobbered by Shadow La---crap, I mean Nightside.
 
Posted by MLLASH classic on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Power Boy:
ahhh ... yeah I've only got one comic with him in it, and I don't think he gets one whole sentence ... maybe a few words. and he lights something up ...

during the fight with the spider team.

I like his powers though.

I like that he's gay, as was revealed in the GREAT LAKES AVENGERS miniseries.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
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Quasar #33 (Operation Galactic Storm Part 10)

The Good - Lot of stuff happening in between Quasar fighting with various Imperial Guard members. Bands are sent to the Shi'Ar empire. Capt. Atlas is thrown around like a football in a championship game...he goes from captive to rescued to captive again.

It was nice to see Binary again.

The Bad - Not bad bad, but the Legion of Super Lackeys was a pretty 'bad' pun.

The Ugly - The art is extremely uneven. The totally non believable pose he has Lilandra on page 26 is laughable at best...strike a pose.
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
Thor #445

I don't like DeFalco's writing. Everybody's in hysterics, and Oliffe's art just makes everyone look even more hysterical. The battle promised on the cover is a wet firecracker.

Captain America #399

This one doesn't do much more than move the plot along. I have no problem with Tony's attitude, and I hate the "influenced by Immortus" retcon.

West Coast Avengers #81

Roy and Dann Thomas just seemed to have complete contempt for this event, and it's not like the stories they were telling independent of it were anything special. I especially dislike when Nightside says something like, "Admittedly, my power is not very impressive. That's why I carry a gun."

Quasar #33

Despite the weak art (shame that Capullo didn't draw this or #34) I like this issue. It's colorful and has a lot of things going on at once.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
Totally agree on the whole Immortus retcon Fickles (There, Lardy should be happy.) Well, the less said about that whole debacle the better.

Yeah, these issues seem to just plod along serving the plot...setting things up for the final run. Middle of the crossover even problems, but at least they move the event along unlike some middle issues of more recent events that just stagnate in themselves.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
Click for fullsize image

Wonder Man #8 (Operation Galactic Storm Part 11)

The Good - Ummm...The Starjammers listen to reason and do not take the Nega Bomb to the Kree Galaxy.

The art is nice too.

The Bad - Simon is a jack-hole here for the majority of the issue. I like the character, and a little angst with him is alright now and then,. but the way they have him constantly pining away over Wanda drove me nuts.

The Ugly - Simon's attitude.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
Total side step for me right now...but:

BENDIS IS GOING TO LEAVE THE AVENGERS IN 2012!!!!!!

http://blog.newsarama.com/2011/12/06/bendis-says-hes-leaving-the-avengers-in-2012/

yay...
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Fanfie and I were just speculating that he might leave. I'm looking forward to what's next!
 
Posted by Lard Lad on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Dev - Em:
Totally agree on the whole Immortus retcon Fickles (There, Lardy should be happy.)

[Big Grin] :nod [Big Grin] [Yes]
 
Posted by Lard Lad on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
Fanfie Fickles and I were just speculating that he might leave. I'm looking forward to what's next!

[Big Grin]
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
Click for fullsize image

Avengers #346 (Operation Galactic Storm Part 12)

"Oh my stars and garters!" The Beast (on any number of occasions.)

The Good - The whole thing moves at a wonderful pace as the heroes are on the verge of defeat by Starforce. Deathbird makes her move and the Supreme Intelligence once more takes power in the wake of her assassinations. Then...the reveal on the last page...oh dear!

Avengers not seeing eye to eye on how to handle their situation...this could lead to trouble later. [Wink]

One other nice touch is that Iron Man and Clint did not ride in at the last second to save the day.

Another thing of note...this is about the 2/3rds mark of the crossover, and things are all in place for the final gambits. Beautiful plotting and storytelling here folks. S0o very well laid out.

The Bad - Nothing bad about this issue for me.

The Ugly - Nothing.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
Click for fullsize image

Iron Man #279 (Operation Galactic Storm Part 13)

The Good - We wrap up a good portion of the Kree Avengers fate in this issue, at least all but Cap are accounted for.

Clint gets to do something this time around, and finds Deathbird and frees the others (sans Cap...gotta leave something for his big issue coming up.)

The Bad - I don't dislike Tony here, but he is a bit of a dick to Clint, but it's not like Clint doesn't deserve it most of the time...he is pretty bull-headed.

The Ugly - I just cannot get into this version of the armor...but I say that a lot in these...
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
Click for fullsize image

The Mighty Thor #446 (Operation Galactic Storm Part 14)

The Good - This is better than the last Thor issue. The Avengers are able to help save Lilandra from the Starforce's assassination attempt.

Lilandra realizes what she has done and orders the Nega Bomb be brought back...but there's a problem with that...the Skrulls have hold of it at this point/

The Bad - Thor is a complete dufus.

The Ugly - Not much really. Story is a good wrap to this part of the event...although more is to come, at least the misunderstanding is out of the way.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
Click for fullsize image

Captain America #400 (Operation Galactic Storm PArt 15)

The Good - Ummm...not much really.

The Bad - This is Caps 400th issue, and most of it is a 'hallucination' brought about by the Supreme Intelligence. They're in the middle of a galactic war and that is the best that they could come up with. It really all amounts to Cap being knocked out...hallucination...and then being knocked off of something, which makes no real sense because he was in a room at the time. Oh, and the Avengers feel bad.

The Ugly - US Agent and Falcon go on a mission to rescue D-Man. Really? This is the best they could do for Caps big 400?
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
Click for fullsize image

I think Fickles is right in thinking that Roy and Dann hated having to participate in this crossover.

The Good - We find out that the one giving Lilandra advice is a Skrull.

The Bad - Inane dialog and actions that lead to yet another round between the Avengers and the Legio...I mean the Imperial Guard. ...and my God do they all write Thor as a complete idiot. The character learns nothing from his experiences...like things that happened a day or so ago. Whatever.

The Ugly - It's drawn alright...the story leaves a bit to be desired.
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Dev - Em:
The Ugly - I just cannot get into this version of the armor...but I say that a lot in these...

Just remember if you wonder how he eats and breathes and other scien--, it's Space Armour, not his standard armour of the time!

[Also, I wondered last time I read this if any of the writers except Kamanski actually knew Tony was dying...]

quote:
Originally posted by Dev - Em:
This is the best they could do for Caps big 400?

Well, of course, it isn't really his 400th. Depending on how you count it, it's actually one from #301, #342, #379 or #420 [Wink]
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
YEah, I know it's his space armor...I just think the thing is ugly. I do remember that he was dying at this point, and I think you may be right about nobody else really knowing (or at least caring for this story.)

Re: Cap 400 - rassin frassin kids nowadays. It still say 400 on the cover...now get off my lawn!!!

[LOL]
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
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Quasar #34 <Mine says #3 on the cover - I seem to remember there being a reason for this...but I do not remember why> (Operation Galactic Storm Part 17)

The Good - The sun is saved!!!

The Bad - The Nega Bomb is on to the Kree Galaxy. Binary is hurt saving the sun.

The Ugly - While the art is still a bit wonky, it's better than last issue, and has a really odd JRJr vibe happening.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
Click for fullsize image

Wonder Man #9 (Operation Galactic Storm Part 18)

The Good - The Avengers (sans Cap) are back together...for the most part.

The Bad - The Vision turns into a sacrifice billions to save Earth kind of guy here...huh? I realize they took the emotion chip out, but c'mon.

Oh yeah, the bomb blows up.

The Ugly - As much as I do like Jeff's art, there are some ugly panels here and there.
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Dev - Em:
The Bad - The Vision turns into a sacrifice billions to save Earth kind of guy here...huh? I realize they took the emotion chip out, but c'mon.

Also his ears. And his penis.

[No, I'm *not* joking! Byrne literally as well as figuratively castrated the character. One wonders what Anti-Vision made of it when he found out after their bodyswap...]
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
Click for fullsize image

Avengers #347 (Operation Galactic Storm Part 19)

Woo boy, this one has it all.

The Good - Sersi saves our heroes through some old Eternal trickery, that Starfox picks up on.

The real plan behind it all is revealed...and wow, it's a doozy.

The Supreme Intelligence is repaid for his actions by a group of Avengers that go against Cap. This will lead to more problems later.

The Bad - Billions of Kree die...due to the Supreme Intelligence.

The Ugly - Not much, this is a solid finale to the story.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
Overall impression of the crossover proper (still have the Cap follow up issue to go.)

This is how crossovers should be handled. Not the 15 3 issue minis to go with the drawn out mini series that ties into 3 monthly books type crap that we have now.

Most of the crossover issues here focus solely on the main story, while a handful have one or two pages to continue a story line, or try to interest the new reader to continue picking up the book after OGS was done.

I can argue both sides of the Supreme Intelligence debate here, and that would be boring. I think that the ones that chose to Avenge the Kree had sound reasoning, just as Cap and his 'side' did. Sometimes in war, there are no easy answers.
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
Wonder Man #8

The Starjammers almost always liven things up when they guest star somewhere. This is no exception. I like that Corsair refused to participate after he found out the truth about the cargo.

Avengers #346

A really good issue. I loved the bomber jackets introduced here, I loved Crystal and Dane's kick-ass new attitudes, I loved the battle against Starforce, Deathbird is very well used, and the Supreme Intelligence's soliloquy on the last page is blood-chilling.

Iron Man #279

I like this issue. The battle between Iron Man and Ronan delivers in a way that the battle between Thor and Gladiator did not, although it could have been even better if they'd had a more dynamic artist.

Thor #446

Even though most of the characterizations are still shrill, this issue has another good battle against Starforce, and the banter between Thor and Smasher (Ultra Boy by any other name) is surprisingly decent. Also, Lilandra shows a rare amount of spine.

Captain America #400

This COULD have been good, if the Supreme Intelligence had done something like put Cap through warped versions of his origin (that would have made the anniversary timelier.) But what we got was not good. At all.

Avengers West Coast #82

The story arc almost loses momentum here. Thankfully, the next issue sets things right.

Quasar #34

Carefully judged coloring makes the solar flare sequences spectacular, and its nice to see Carol Danvers save the day. I also think Quasar came off better overall than just about any of the A-and-B-list characters involved in this event.

Wonder Man #9

Really just setup for the masterpiece that is Avengers #347.

Avengers #347

If the people running Marvel at the time had had any sense, this could have been as seminal a comic as, say, Swamp Thing #22. It could have made the entire Marvel Universe more adult and sophisticated, rather than just Avengers and a handful of other titles. Instead, as we'll see when we get to the epilogue, Marvel lost its nerve. Shame, because we could have had the Civil War 15 years earlier, with better writers. And by the time Marvel did capitalize on it with Force Works, it was too little too late. But as a stand-alone issue, this is as good as 90s superhero comics ever got.

Re: Bendis announcing his imminent departure, I'd rather save most of my thoughts for the post-mortem on his run once he's actually gone. What I will say right now is that I think even his most loyal defenders would agree that he peaked with Siege and Avengers Prime, and it's all been downhill from there.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
Next up after the After the Storm issue of Cap, I will hit the two issue What If? story that covers this story.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
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Captain America #401 (After the Storm)

The Good - Everyone is back on Earth, and none the worse for wear physically. Nice to see Steve and Clint out as just Steve and Clint, but...

The Bad - Cap is way to whiny here, just because he wants the group that 'killed' the Supreme Intelligence to face disciplinary action and the majority voted against it. He then tries to step down.

He also tells them that he's like them to attend a seminar on Superhuman Ethics...only four people end up showing up...and Thor is the only one that comes that was on Tony's team during the final gambit.

Tony shows up at the bar Steve and Clint are at and asks forgiveness for his actions.

The Ugly - Hawkeye bouncing on Caps bed.

There is so much potential with this issue, and they squander it. Cap should not be that despondent because some of the Avengers followed Tony...and Tony should not be there all but begging for forgiveness.
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
It was very poorly done, metaphorically trying to put a band-aid over a massive wound. Gruenwald almost always wrote terrible dialogue IMO, and this was one of his worst showings. Harras or Nicieza should have guest-written this issue.

If you all will forgive the self-promotion, I tried a couple years ago to posit an alternate timeline where the potential repercussions of the disagreement were followed to their logical conclusion. Regrettably, after writing the first seven installments in a blaze of confidence, I succumbed to self-doubt, and I don't know if I'll ever finish the project. But if any of you are interested, here's a link:

http://ninetiesredux.blogspot.com

And if you have any comments (which, as always, are welcome), please PM them to me instead of posting them on the blog.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
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What If? #55/56 (What if the Avengers Lost Operation Galactic Storm?)

This story diverges with Avengers #346 (Operation Galactic Storm Part 12). On that issue, Deathcry assassinates the Kree leaders and the Supreme Intelligence takes command back.

Here, Cap stops her, and she is killed by Ael-Dan, one of the two Kree leaders. He then proceeds to kill the Supreme Intelligence and the other Kree leader. This leaves him in sole command of the Kree.

The Avengers, save Cap are taken to a camp, and Cap is forced to watch as Ael-Dan orders the destruction of Earth. Earth is destroyed and Cap is sentenced to death.

Iropn Man and Hawkeye hatch a plan to free Cap and are successful...even though neither of them really know it in the end.

The Shi'Ar are devastated by the Omni-Wave that destroyed Earth.

The remaining Avengers (including those that were on their way to the Shi'Ar galaxy) then form an underground resistance with the remainder of the Imperial Guard.

There are lots of sacrifices along the way, and the heroes go out as that...heroes.

There are several surprise guest stars along the way that were nice to see.

In the end, Cap, Quasar, the Scarlet Witch and Simon (of a sorts) are left to carry on.

This is a very heart wrenching alternate universe, as are most of the What If...? universes.

I thoroughly enjoyed these issues and the send off several of the heroes received.

Recommended for those that want to see a different ending than we're used to seeing.

I avoided spoiling a lot of the twists and turns (including how people die) on purpose, as this is probably less read than the regular issues of the crossover. It's worth tracking down, if you like the What If...? style takes on these things.

[ December 08, 2011, 11:35 AM: Message edited by: Dev - Em ]
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
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Avengers #348 (Familial Connections)

The Good - This is a nice little one off story about the Vision, who goes to the 'deathbed' of Prof. Miles Lipton, who helped the Vision by using his sons brain pattern to restart him before. Whether he obliges the mans last wish however...

There is also some progress in the Proctor subplot.

The Bad - No Steve Epting this issue, but I will say that I enjoyed Kirk Jarvinen's art here.

The Ugly - Nothing much really.

[ December 08, 2011, 05:01 PM: Message edited by: Dev - Em ]
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
I recently read this one too, I thought it was a nice one off story, It reminded me very much of the Data stories from TNG.

I thought for sure that the guy was going to be a villain and was going to take control of the very powerful Vision.


but no ... and I wonder why Crystal is the one going on this journey with the Vision, maybe because she is his former sister in law. and seems quite sweet.


I also thought that was Wanda on the cover, and that it was depicting some sort of love triangle. Crystal seems to be seeing people kiss a lot, like that weird scene where Sersi returns (I think a few issues before this) and kisses Dane yet Dane really likes Crystal.

So ... IMO the Vision should have found his humanity promptly after this issue, maybe within the year and that would be a done deal ... we get the point ... back to red and green vision ... I didn't like the Vision being regressed for so long. I almost think it was laziness ... that by crippling the Vision they've give him a way to grow as a character ... yet can't a good writer make any character grow ... and not through trauma.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
The Dane / Sersi kiss happens in the next issue, I think.

I also thought that this should have been the start of the return of a more 'human' Vision.
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
Not much to say about this one that hasn't already been said, except that I think Vision does make progress under Harras. It was Busiek who re-regressed the Vision, probably because he's so bereft of original ideas.

And I think Crystal became friends with the Vision because she wanted to reconnect with someone at a platonic level after the self-centeredness she had shown pre-Harras.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
Rereading, so I am guessing that he did make some progress, as did all the characters so far. Harras is criminally under-rated from everything I've read here so far.
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Dev-Em:
Harras is criminally under-rated from everything I've read here so far.

Amen to that, Dev.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Fanfic Lady:
Bendis announcing his imminent departure, I'd rather save most of my thoughts for the post-mortem on his run once he's actually gone.  What I will say right now is that I think even his most loyal defenders would agree that he peaked with Siege and Avengers Prime, and it's all been downhill from there.

I'll have a lot to say too but can add the preview that I'm actually in complete agreement. And I think Bendis knows it too.

I actually think he's stuck around for two more years to indulge himself with the things he always meant to get to, like Daisy Johnson, Daredevil, etc.
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
Took him long enough.

But then, that's nothing new for him, is it? [LOL]
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
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Avengers #349 (Death Wager)

The Good - Again, a nice little one off for Herc this issue. I would love to see a Herc series by Harras. Long story short, Herc is the victim of a game between Hera and Ares. Thor gets dragged into the fray, as does Crystal to a fashion.

The Bad - Not much, a little annoying with third person references by characters, but it is what it is.

The Ugly - Ares and Hera involving innocents in their games...but, they are gods though. [Wink]

[ December 08, 2011, 06:29 PM: Message edited by: Dev - Em ]
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
I like this issue, but it's bittersweet when I read it, because when Harras finally resolved this subplot (in #384), it was a very unsatisfying resolution and was the final straw for me in the book's post-Epting decline. I didn't buy another Avengers issue for many years.

quote:
Originally posted by Dev-Em:
I would love to see a Herc series by Harras.

Me, too. I have a feeling his current experiences at DC are going to leave him so frustrated, it'll re-ignite his fire as a writer.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
Is it sad that I do not remember the resolution to this at all?

The current plan is to go to 375...then I may revisit some other issues later. Lots of stuff I want to reread.
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
It's not sad. You're lucky. I have a psychic scar from it.

If you want to read past 375, it's fine, but as thread-mistress I would ask you to please not post about it, because it would be too depressing.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
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AVengers # 350 (Repercussions)

The Good - Epting does a phenomenal job with this issue. Prof. X, Cyclops and Quicksilver show up to alert the Avengers of a possible problem from the Acolytes. The Starjammers show up as well...but why?

Dane avoids seeing Crystal and Quicksilver, but it is inevitable. He bows out as fast as possible.

Sersi returns after a few weeks away, and puts the moves on Dane as he is brooding over his feelings for Crystal.

The Bad - Hepzibah and Raza of the Starjammers take a contract on Dane from a former Kree Admiral.

The Ugly - Seeing Raza finish his attack on Dane at the stories end.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Fanfic Lady:
It's not sad. You're lucky. I have a psychic scar from it.

If you want to read past 375, it's fine, but as thread-mistress I would ask you to please not post about it, because it would be too depressing.

No problem...
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
A few comments about the state of the Avengers at this point in Harras' run.

-I loved the leather style jackets here, a lot more than I did when the X-Men had some characters with that look.

-This run is what cemented my being a fan of the Black Knight.

-This may not be the most powerful, or popular Avengers line-up, but it is for me.
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
I love the jackets, too. I'm still waiting for the revelation that Crystal kept her jacket out of sentimental value.

It'll never be the most popular lineup, but it could be argued that it was, for a while at least, one of the most powerful. Crystal controls all four elements, Herc is a demigod, Sersi controls molecules, Vision has always been a powerhouse, and later addition Giant-Man was very powerful too.
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
Avengers #350

This is one of my favorite issues of this era. I love the fallout from Operation Galactic Storm, and Epting draws the Starjammers beautifully.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
It was very refreshing to see that there were consequences to their actions, especially after the let down that was the Cap follow up.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
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Avengers #351 (Retribution)

The Good - A surprisingly well done wrap up to the Starjammers (at least two of them) assassination attempt on The Black Knight.

Carol is used very effectively here, and I like the way the resolution came about...just as 'controversial' as what the Avengers did.

The Bad - Really, I would have loved to see this played out a little more somehow...but that's just a side thing.

The Ugly - It's not Epting, but I guess the art was decent for this issue.

The other bad thing is we're going into a 3 issue fill in...
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
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AVengers #352 - 354 (Fear the Reaper - an act in three parts)

The Good - The Black Knight moves to the 'unofficial' position as field leader. Zombie villains are always fun, and so is seeing the Grim Reaper, even if he is kind of wasted here.

The Bad - Len Kaminski gives is a cliched story that uses way to many liberties with dialog and situations. Herc takes not one step back in this story, but several...thankfully Harras all but ignores the events here and moves on with his next issue with nothing more than a passing reference to this. Threats are brought to bear (Dane being bit by one of the ghouls, but this is taken nowhere and ignored by the next time he appears on panel (not that I want Dane to be hurt more, but when someone chomps on your side, you should show some effect a panel or so later.)

The Ugly - M. C. Wyman's art is a big let down from Steve Epting. There are worse artists out there, but following Steve and the other fill art by Jarvinin, is just a difficult task.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
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Avengers #355 - 357

The Good - Lovely art and a great story building here. They cram a lot into these issues.

We learn more about Proctor and his Gatherers. The 'gather' the Coal Tiger, bring him to 'our' universe, and attempt to get rid of the Black Panther (the Coal Tigers dupe here.)

The Avengers fight the Gatherers several times and eventually stop them from killing the Black Panther, and are also successful in capturing the Swoerdsman (who helped in saving the Black Panther after some goading from the Coal Tiger.)

There's also more with Sersi, both on a mysterious front as a man she went out with is found dead (we learn that there have been several others found dead as well), we have a dinner party to hook up Herc and Taylor. The triangle between Dane/Sersi/Crystal starts to get interesting.

Oh yeah, there's a party crasher (or two) during the Avengers party.

The Bad - Not much as the team moves the Avengers along at a pretty good clip here.

The Ugly - Nothing.
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
I recently read those grim reaper ones, that finger cover actually creeped me out!!

I thought the story was pretty run of the mill as an in between big story arcs story. I thought Hercules had sooooo many hilarious lines though.

i thought the zombie battles were a bit of a let down, and awkward, some situations i thought the Avenger was very outclassed and should be dead and other situations i though they would easily defeat their zombie counterpart.

and then the end where the zombies are *defeated* was extremely abrupt and ... cartoon-esque.
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
356 was the point where I came in. Even though it was in the middle of a story, I loved it and I wanted to know more, which led me to following the book faithfully as well as buying the back issues.

357 is, in my opinion, Epting's finest hour on the Avengers. Palmer's inking could be heavy-handed on the issues before and after this one, but here he gives Epting's gorgeous pencils room to breathe. This, to me, is the issue where Epting went from "The New John Buscema" to a formidable artistic force in his own right.
 
Posted by KidChaos on :
 
Ah, the Gatherers saga begins. One of my all time favorites.

Some might say the book became too cluttered at this point, but I loved that swordsman, magdeline and deathcry stuck around. I like books with big supporting casts.

Love Sersi's sexy new red and black costume. Note that Crystal would get a more revealing black and white costume a few issues later. (see? Passive-aggressive!)

Anyone else notice that Black Widow never really did much during these Harras run? It's easy to forget she was a member, let alone the leader.
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
Big supporting casts rock!

I love the red and black costume, too.

I'd like to think that the Black Widow did all the stuff that was too boring to show on panel, and she did it very efficiently.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
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Avengers #358/359 (Arkon)

The Good - This is a decent story in and of itself. The Avengers run upon Arkon, Thundra and Astra. Arkon is trying to save Astra from being sacrificed. The Avengers are transported back to Polemachus. They are given 24 hours to solve the overheating problem the world is facing, or the girl will be sacrificed. I'm not going to spoil the ending...but it was not what I was expecting.

The Bad - It feels like a flll in by the regular creative team.

The Ugly - Oh yeah...Sersi does something bad.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
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Avengers # 360 (Alternate Visions)

The Good - The Vision is captured and replaced by another version of him...the one that the Swordsman freaked out about when he initially saw our Vision.

Sersi goes bonkers (technical term) and the 'ner' Vision knocks her out.

The Bad - Big trouble brewing for our heroes.

The Ugly - Sersi taking out her team.
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Dev - Em:
Click for fullsize image Click for fullsize image

Thing that strikes me here - compare the type treatment of the covers. You've got the logo-quality "Assault on Arkon" on #358, and the fairly pathetic type "...one shall {fall}" on #359. Was the letterer sick that day?
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by KidChaos:
Ah, the Gatherers saga begins. One of my all time favorites.

Some might say the book became too cluttered at this point, but I loved that swordsman, magdeline and deathcry stuck around. I like books with big supporting casts.

Love Sersi's sexy new red and black costume. Note that Crystal would get a more revealing black and white costume a few issues later. (see? Passive-aggressive!)

Anyone else notice that Black Widow never really did much during these Harras run? It's easy to forget she was a member, let alone the leader.

I loved the crowded feeling of the book, I mentioned earlier that I really liked the inclusion of the support staff outside of Jarvis as well in this time frame.

The costumes that Sersi has here (red/black) with the jacket is awesome.

The Black Widow is something I noticed as well. A shame really, but as Fickles said, she was playing a huge role behind the scenes.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
God I love this era. From here on, IMO the issues are close to perfect.

The Widow played an interesting role (never followed up on again) of being the rock of the team. She provided moral support and reassurance for the others; particularly Herc and his romance with Taylor.
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
Glad to see Dev and Cobie agree with me about the Widow.

358-359 were shocking to me back in the day, and even in re-reads they pack quite a punch. Dev didn't spoil them, and I won't either.

By this time, Harras & Epting had achieved that elusive perfect creative synergy, and 360 was another winner. Putting Vision in an awesome new/old body that was NOT an exact copy of the original -- great stuff. The Byrne Vision design, which I've always likened to a large bottle full of sour milk, was more than fitting for a soul as ugly as that of the Anti-Vision.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
I'm moving at lightning speed today...so the content is a little lower.

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Avengers #361 - 363

The Good - The plot of Sersi moves forward as the Eternals visit and force the role of Gann Josin on Dane. Dane turns to Crystal for comfort (or at least to share his true feelings.)

The Anti-Vision stands revealed and meets his fate.

They find Proctor and the Gatherers. That base is destroyed, and Magdalene is taken with the Avengers as they escape.

Deathbird also shows up to help.

The Bad - Whooo...Dane goes all insane on Cap thanks tot he Gann Josin thing with Sersi.

The Ugly - Nothing here. All good solid fun.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
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Avengers #365 - 367

The Good - The Kree make a move against the Earth and the Avengers. Nice to see a little more fallout from OGS...don't remember much after this, and hopefully there wasn't much...if any. Natasha takes a definite lead in this story, which is nice, especially when Cap and Dane are on the team as well.

Also nice to see Hank Pym on board as well.

The Bad - Wiping out humanity with a nega bomb seems a bit anti climactic at this point...we know nothing will come of this. Honestly, a smaller more terrorist approach would have felt better. Don't get me wrong, I liked the story, just couldn't feel the danger.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
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Avengers #368/X-Men #26/AWC #101/UX-MEn #307/Avengers #369 (Bloodties)

The Good - Not a bad crossover, and it flows naturally from the events in both the Avengers and X-Men universes.

I am thankful that it is not overloaded with every X-Men and Avenger character that ot could have been.

The Bad - AWC ends right after this, and this felt a little shoehorned into that overall story of what was happening there. Included only for the Scarlett Witch's involvement, and that they wanted another issue to include. Just glad they didn't frag X=Factor into the mix.

Fury is a DB here...just following orders is not an excuse for trying to stop them from rescuing Luna.

The Ugly - Luna in jeopardy (because honestly...she was at risk. Thankfully this was done in a time where kids were usually left alone...with the Vision & Wanda's boys being just written out of continuity in a horrid story.)
 
Posted by Set on :
 
Wow, in that X-Men 26 cover, the more I look at it, the more I wonder what sort of agony those four characters must be in, to hold those poses!

Cap's arm is all messed up, and both of Cyke's shoulders appear to be dislocated. Wanda's leg ends at her boob, and the less said about butt and breasts being almost on the same horizontal level, the better!

As for the story, I only remember part of it, and thinking that Sersi should have kicked Exodus around like a hacky-sack. Or, using her transmutation powers, *literally,* as a hacky-sack...

Sersi's kind of oddly used. Her big 'thing' is her transmutation powers, which are legendary even among her ridonkulously powerful people, and instead, she is often relegated to shooting energy at people, which is Ikaris and Thena's specialty, not hers. Sometimes I see that and wonder why she's not using her big gun.

It's like 'I'm the Human Torch, and I can shoot you with my Fantastic Four flare-gun!'

'Uh, dude, you also can throw fireballs at people...'

'Oh yeah!'
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Set:
Wow, in that X-Men 26 cover, the more I look at it, the more I wonder what sort of agony those four characters must be in, to hold those poses!

Cap's arm is all messed up, and both of Cyke's shoulders appear to be dislocated. Wanda's leg ends at her boob, and the less said about butt and breasts being almost on the same horizontal level, the better!

Wanda's hip is almost as enormous as the alien trying to burst out of Cap's side.
 
Posted by KidChaos on :
 
I really hated that they made AWC #101 part of the bloodties crossover. It bugged me Mockingbird died in issue 100 and it wasn't even mentioned in issue 101.

And don't even gat me started on issue 102, the final issue...
As far as I'm concerned, AWC ended with #100.

As a whole though, bloodties was a well done crossover.
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
Avengers 361

Epting's depiction of the Eternals is stunning. But I don't like Cap returning to the team. I suspect this return was forced on Harras.

Avengers 362

Sersi kicking the synthetic $%$ out of Anti-Vision is oh so satisfying.

Avengers 363

I wonder if Dane is acting as Harras' avatar when he attacks and badmouths Cap?

Avengers 364-366

I love this arc, although some of Epting's art seems a little "off", as if he was starting to burn out. Still, Sersi smashing the Sentry (say that ten times fast) is a classic moment, as is Giant-Man coming back, better than he ever was before -- if only Harras had been able to explore Hank further, there would have been no falling back on his past sins. The Kree renegades are like a twisted alien version of the Howling Commandoes -- their leader even has a cybernetic eyepatch!

Avengers 367

A good spotlight on the Vision, with a GREAT Epting cover (if only he'd done the interior art, too.) Vision makes significant progress, and I think him and Deathcry made a cute couple.

Avengers 368

Sersi after Crystal tears Fury a new one: "It seems our little kitten's developed claws! I love it." Great line, and a promising start to Bloodties.

X-Men 26

Andy Kubert trying to be Jim Lee when he should have just been himself...painful. And Fabian Nicieza trying to be Chris Claremont when he should have just been himself...sad. Amid all the verbiage and bad anatomy, the story loses momentum.

Avengers West Coast 101

Roy and Dann Thomas + crossover = phoning it in.

Uncanny X-Men 307

If Cobie and other JR Jr fans think I'm too harsh on him, they should take another look at his early 90s UXM run to see how bad he can sometimes be. By this time, the story is just stumbling around looking for some kind of direction.

Avengers 369

For the concluding issue, the story finally regains some much-needed focus. Crystal and Quicksilver both get some great moments. Epting's art is wildly inconsistent, though, and the Duursema fill-in pages are just awful. Thankfully, Epting would pull himself together for the 4-part conclusion to the Gatherers Saga.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Fanfic Lady:
Avengers 361
Epting's depiction of the Eternals is stunning. But I don't like Cap returning to the team. I suspect this return was forced on Harras.

Avengers 363

I wonder if Dane is acting as Harras' avatar when he attacks and badmouths Cap?

I totally agree about Cap coming back, but I like that Natasha never once really faltered in the fact that she was in charge.

You may be right about Dane being Harras' mouthpiece (I actually think he was the character that he put the most of himself into throughout his tenure as an Avenger.) But I may be reading too much into it.

I finished the run through 375 last night, so my final thoughts coming today...as I put these grand issues away and pull out some X-Force and New Warriors goodness.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
[Big Grin]

I love JR Jr's 2nd X-Men run. Just reread them about 2 years ago. Love the way he depicted the Acolytes.

I like that his style is so his own and he's been one of Marvel's favorite sons for so long that he makes not even the slightest attempt to be more commercial or traditional.

[ December 11, 2011, 04:14 PM: Message edited by: Cobalt Kid ]
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
Of course, another way of looking at it is that favorite sons often grow complacent. [Razz]

[Big Grin]
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
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Avengers #370/371

I do not have much to say about these issues. The art is pedestrian at best, the story is filler.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
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Avengers #372 - 375

This is great stuff. From the resolution of the Proctor and the Gatherers storyline...to the revelation of who Proctor actually was.

Dane breaks free of being Sersi's Gann Josin...but in the end, does something even more.

Epting is great here, and Harras is solid in wrapping things up.

In thinking about what happened after this, I lost track of the Avengers even though I continued to collect it. I followed Dane and Sersi into the Ultraverse, and back (in fact, I have the issue where they return to the Marvel Universe with me to review later.

I also wonder if Dane was indeed someone for Harras to speak through, as I think his run lost a little something after this. Dane being one of my favorite characters not taken into account.

One other thing, the headset things bugged me.

Overall, this is my favorite run of the Avengers ever...and there are some other pretty good runs out there. It suffers only with the majority of the fill in stuff...Fabians two issue New Warriors / Rage story being the only bright spot of those.

I think this run deserves the binding treatment...maybe next year.
 
Posted by Invisible Brainiac on :
 
Never followed the Avengers, but I have to say that this lineup (Cap, Dane, Crystal, Sersi, Widow etc.) remains one of those I'm most interested in reading about.

To be honest, there are a lot of Marvel characters I dislike - but none of them are in this lineup.

Too bad Crystal and Sersi in particular have been criminally underused recently.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
I think what we need is a buddy book with Herc and Dane, written by Harras and drawn by Epting.
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
Glad we've piqued your interest, IB.

Crystal's appeared quite a bit in the cosmic titles and more recently in FF, but she rarely shows the spunk she had as an Avenger.

The 4-part wrap-up of the Gatherers Saga remains a high-water mark of 90s superhero comics. As I said a few posts ago, Epting seemed to be burning out a few issues earlier, but maybe knowing that this was the full flowering of the seeds he and Harras had sown helped Epting find his second wind.

Like I said earlier, even though I love the Avengers, I've had to admit to myself recently that the Harras/Epting era will probably always be the Avengers era that I'm most enthusiastic for, and it's not likely that any Avengers era to come will engage me as much.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
I'd hate to see how long (or how many tie in comics) writers like Bendis or Johns would create for something like what Harras did.

There is more packed into any one of those issues than what a lot of writers of today do in an arc.

I do believe that there is a happy median between the two styles. There are stories that need to breathe a little, and others that are allowed on life support for months on end.
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
 -

This may be one of the worst comic books I've ever read ... if not THE worst.

I'm reading through a bunch of these before I post reviews but I just had to pop in .... and condemn this one [LOL]

mostly, It's about the Delta Force, a group of Deviant super heroes who Sersi assembles to rescue the Avengers who are taken hostage by Deviants ... most who I think are professional wrestlers ... not sure from the story actually ... one of which is a set of twins that combine, after the female is nearly raped and the brother gets stabbed ... to become a four eyed four armed amalgam.

This issue is actually really comical to me. The scene of the hero 'who's not a hero' from Peru is especially funny ... it's SO bad!

and Sersi gets her arm blown off and Ghaur kidnaps the Avengers. At the end Ghaur says it was all part of his plan to get Sersi to assemble a new team to bring to him to use to start a uni mind ... In that case, blowing off her arm was cutting it a bit close.

The cover is very misleading in quality. because it's actually ok.

[ December 14, 2011, 02:35 AM: Message edited by: Power Boy ]
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
Totally agree Peebs.

quote:
Originally posted by Dev - Em:
Avengers #370/371

I do not have much to say about these issues. The art is pedestrian at best, the story is filler.


 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
and the really sad thing is I thought this issue was superb:

(But this book would have been really hard to follow at the time with the huge leaps in quality for two ro three months at a time)

 -

It was just great! I think this is the one where Ikaris just comes out and says "Sersi is the most powerful of us." ha!

I thought this was a very satisfying issue in the grander story line and in the 30 pages of itself. A lot happened, we got some resolution but then also some teasers and new stuff to keep us going.

I feel bad for Dane being turned into Sersi's *soulmate* without being asked ... but at the same time I don't hate Sersi ... Somehow I think Dane has been giving her mixed signals on and off panel ... it reads a bit like a real relationship that Dane dosn't want to be in but he still lets Sersi kiss him ... and well ... Sersi is losing it through no fault of her own.

This issue also reminded me of Sersi's (first?) previous appearances and her character's premise where she really dosn't want to be an Eternal, she wants to do her own thing and live in the world.

p.s.: evil Vision is creepy.

[ December 14, 2011, 09:46 AM: Message edited by: Power Boy ]
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Dev - Em:
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Avengers #358/359 (Arkon)

The Good - This is a decent story in and of itself. The Avengers run upon Arkon, Thundra and Astra. Arkon is trying to save Astra from being sacrificed. The Avengers are transported back to Polemachus. They are given 24 hours to solve the overheating problem the world is facing, or the girl will be sacrificed. I'm not going to spoil the ending...but it was not what I was expecting.

The Bad - It feels like a flll in by the regular creative team.

The Ugly - Oh yeah...Sersi does something bad.

These were ok for fill ins, although I'm not very invested in Arkon and I thought the second issue was implausible and really stretched out. (but the second issue was better than the first IMO) I did really enjoy the last page with Sersi.

Anyway, this fill in was better than the Grim Reaper one but, was still just so so. 359 is a great cover though!

Still not a lot of transmutation coming out of Sersi which I believe is her main power set.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Power Boy:
p.s.: evil Vision is creepy.

I know. I actually wish he had stuck around longer than he had. It could have been like Data / Lore in ST:TNG.
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
Um...Peebs, I believe I warned you not to get #370-371.

And BTW, #358-359 were not fill-ins. That shocking scene at the end was pivotal to the issues that followed.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
I know where he's coming from though, it did feel like a fill in from the regular creative team. I know it wasn't, but was a set up for what came next. It just seemed to come out of left field and have no bearing on the current storyline, until Sersi does what she does at the end...then it all makes sense.

...and yeah...she did warn ya on the whole 3700/371 thing. I tried to to with my review.
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
Dev, fair enough regarding #358-359, although I did think it was nice that Harras dug up an old Avengers villain as a change of pace.
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Fanfic Lady:
Um...Peebs, I believe I warned you not to get #370-371.

And BTW, #358-359 were not fill-ins. That shocking scene at the end was pivotal to the issues that followed.

ahhh not fill ins exactly then sorry ... tangents or segways or something ...

370 was SO bad. so bad! my head hurts ... it's beyond so bad it's funny ... it's just bad. It's kind of like the super friends cartoon. 'Enter the realm of the Deviants' !

355, 361 were really cool. 364 was ok ... I liked the 2nd story focusing on Sersi. and I'm in the middle of 368, I have a couple problems with but it's enjoyable so far.

[ December 14, 2011, 03:12 PM: Message edited by: Power Boy ]
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
AVENGERS ACADEMY: One of the original students comes out to Lightspeed-- if only my real gaydar was as accurate as my comic book superhero one. X-23 joins and it isn't as annoying as I thought it'd be. An old X-men villain I vaguely remember infiltrates the team in a cleverly done fashion. The circumstances surrounding Reptil and his connection to the future will be the ground this book will be treading for awhile.

With these machinations from the future, a team-up with the Young Avengers and that team's connection to Kang would seem to make sense. Will we be reading it?

As a reader, I'm enjoying the tenterhooks the future AAers are putting me on, but I hope that after a not-too long-lasting period, the 'current' students can claim their futures as their own, without the sense of 'fate' hanging over them like the sword of Damocles.
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Dev - Em:
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Avengers #372 - 375

This is great stuff.

That crazy detective is smoking ALL THE TIME ...even in the morgue!! [Razz]

Anyway, I love the mystery and build up of 372.

Pietro and Crystal ?? By this time, I'm all about them breaking up. In a nice mature good way but, really going their separate ways. I want Dane to be with Crystal and to suck it up and tell Sersi he just dosn't want her. BUT at the same time I LOVE the 'Sersi of Myth' with the time travelled 'Black Knight'!

*le sigh*

Anyway, well done issue, I love the guys new armored boots. (I do have to laugh about how there are so many mullets in 1994!! What was it with comics fashion in the 90s?? And Palmer draws a lot of hair in people's faces ... especially that one long 80s strand that hangs over the forehead. [Big Grin] )

Gatherer's attack! I think Dane unreasonably takes out one hulk like member with a kick.

Poor Sersi is framed for murder.

----------------------------------

373 confused me at first when Sersi and everyone, even her rival Crystal, keeps going on about how she's not a murderer!!! [LOL] There is one especially funny scene where Sersi freaks out and destroys the mansion shouting 'I am no killer!'.

But then Epstein pulls it back and much later has Dane confront her about killing that guy on Arkon's planet.

BTW, I love how Sersi is written here, she gets so many awesome one liners!

Sersi and Dane fight the Avengers, Sersi destroys the Brooklyn Bridge.

What I also love about Sersi and Cystal is that they're still friends really, despite being rivals, they've really got each others back in combat and Crystal really tries to *save* Sersi here by bringing her back from madness.

TWO GREAT COVERS SO FAR.

and i've been noticing how much Sersi seems like the Scarlet Witch in red, and I like the homage!!

---------------------------------------------------

374

Pietro figures it all out. Sersi is captured by the Proctor but manages to tell him off so bad he should've just slunk away ...

'What in the name of Zuras are you talking about?! You're a self-pitying MADMAN, Proctor! Release me now!"

[Smile] she's a diva even in captivity.


anyway I don't want to go through too much, but I suspected who Proctor really was and I LOVE IT.
also, it seems Epstein was deteriorating the chances of a Crystal Dane romance for a while ... which I find realistic. It's bad timing as they say.

--------------------------

375

thunderstrike joins in. I kinda like the Black Widows back seat throughout this era, she's resigned herself to leadership and dosn't get much free time or characterization spotlight. but i like seeing her in charge and professional. The others can be all dramatic, we like our leaders to have it together.

Love Proctor's surprise weapon! and the explanation for how he became so powerful.

*Sersi's STILL not a killer btw* LOL. I think she's awesome though. I enjoyed the Eternals here as well.

well, I really enjoyed the ending, I liked the Black Knight and Sersi ending up together, for awhile at least, I wish we got a spin off of this and their adventures through some sort of medieval other dimensional place(s).

It's a bit of a bummer the Crystal and Dane thing didn't work out but it makes sense to me.

-------------------------------------------------

Overall, I really enjoyed this era of the Avengers!!! I'm an even bigger fan of characters like Sersi, Crystal, and Dane than I was before.
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
I lost my reviews of 364, 365, and 368.

364 and 365 were kinda short, I didn't love Deathcry, and 365 had a nice crystal Vision scene, and a Sersi Dane scene.

---------------------------------------------

368 was pretty cool, The beginning of Bloodties. I didn't love it, but it had about four issues of today's comics worth in text!!! Fury came off as a jerk. Luna got kidnapped. It really set everything up .. wish I could track down the rest of these. There was a nice bit with Prof. X and Hank McCoy. Of course these big crossovers are gonna side line the regular Avengers programming.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Power Boy:
well, I really enjoyed the ending, I liked the Black Knight and Sersi ending up together, for awhile at least, I wish we got a spin off of this and their adventures through some sort of medieval other dimensional place(s).

The actually ended up in the Ultraverse, and on the team Ultraforce, until returning in The Black Knight: Exodus one shot.

I'll be reviewing those issues at some point.
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Power Boy:
Overall, I really enjoyed this era of the Avengers!!! I'm an even bigger fan of characters like Sersi, Crystal, and Dane than I was before.

YAY!!

One more Harras/Epting convert...so many more to go.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Dev - Em:
quote:
Originally posted by Power Boy:
well, I really enjoyed the ending, I liked the Black Knight and Sersi ending up together, for awhile at least, I wish we got a spin off of this and their adventures through some sort of medieval other dimensional place(s).

The actually ended up in the Ultraverse, and on the team Ultraforce, until returning in The Black Knight: Exodus one shot.

I'll be reviewing those issues at some point.

As a side note, Dane's and Sersi's (for part of it) travels go a little like this...

ULTRAFORCE 8
ULTRAFORCE 9
ULTRAFORCE 10
ULTRAFORCE/AVENGERS PRELUDE
AVENGERS/ULTRAFORCE
ULTRAFORCE/AVENGERS-FB
ULTRAFORCE/AVENGERS
ULTRAFORCE V2 1
ULTRAFORCE V2 2
ULTRAFORCE V2 3
PHOENIX RESURRECTION: GENESIS
PHOENIX RESURRECTION: REVELATIONS
FOXFIRE 1
FOXFIRE 2
ULTRAFORCE/SPIDER-MAN 1A/1B
ULTRAFORCE V2 4
THE ALL-NEW EXILES 4
ULTRAFORCE V2 5
ULTRAFORCE V2 6
ULTRAFORCE V2 7
ULTRAFORCE V2 8
ULTRAFORCE V2 9
ULTRAVERSE: FUTURE SHOCK 1
ULTRAFORCE V2 10
ULTRAFORCE V2 11
ULTRAFORCE V2 12
ULTRAVERSE UNLIMITED 2
Black Knight: Exodus

Then he goes into the Heroes for Hire book.
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
ah! Thank you DEV! I will look those up!

I was trying to google Ultraforce actually ... and not succeeding.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
They're a bit different from the Avengers stuff, and some of the story telling is a bit strange.

I collected the Ultraverse comics back then, so I have all of these comics.

They're not the worst comics ever, but they're far from great.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
...and I just thought of a new set of books to get bound. The Black Knight volumes, collecting his major appearances as far back as I can afford (I have quite a few of them already.)

It may take some time to finish the issues I need, but not that long...and I have stuff getting ready to go anyway, so no rush.
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
All the people reading this thread who haven't attempted this simple question, thee disappoint me!
 
Posted by Set on :
 
Avenger's Academy continues to be a good read.

X-23 appears in this 23rd issue, appropriately, and is used well. Personal drama resulting from Mettle killing someone during Fear, Itself crossover is dealt with, instead of being, as it would be in some other books, ignored or abandoned, and something that's been foreshadowed for pretty much the entire run is revealed about Stryker.

The current line up of the 'core' team appears to be Mettle, Hazmat, Finesse, Reptil, Stryker, Lightspeed (Julie Power), White Tiger 2 and X-23.

Having Finesse, White Tiger 2 and X-23 on the same team should prove interesting (particularly with Tigra as teacher / combat instructor). That's a lot of concentrated emotionally distant ninja ass-kicking morally ambiguous kung-fu chick going on! I'm not terribly interested in White Tiger 2 yet (we haven't even seen her with her mask off yet), but I have high hopes for interactions (and fight-training!) between Finesse and X-23 (who may or may not be Taskmaster's Daughter and Wolverine's Clone, respectively).

I'm possibly in the minority here, but, perhaps as a result of her being the focus / POV character of the very first issue, I never cared much for Veil. While Stryker and Finesse, and to a lesser extent, Hazmat, were heavily foreshadowed to be potential villains-in-training, Veil, the 'good girl,' seemed to me to be the one most inclined to make disastrous and selfish (and utterly understandable and character appropriate) decisions based on her own fears, so I'm kind of not missing her as much as I perhaps should have.

There's a few 'outings' in this issue, and, somewhat like Northstar (and very much unlike DC's Bunker), one of the gay characters turns out to be kind of a dick. I think Marvel has an advantage over DC here, in that they now have enough high profile gay characters that they can get away with making some of them not-very-likable. Where sometimes a writer has to tiptoe around presentations of characters to avoid 'dead lesbian cliches' or whatever, I think the presence of totally likable Hulkling and Wiccan allows them to mix it up with snotty Northstar and this jerkish Academy student (who, we find out this issue, has some deep-seated reasons for his traditionally obnoxious behavior).

A real blast-from-the-past villain is re-introduced. One born in the pages of Rom, Spaceknight, and who starred in a crossover involving the X-Men and Alpha Flight, IIRC!

There's a pretty heavy subplot used as a framing device involving time travel and treachery, that includes a fairly surprising glimpse at how the memory issue alluded to by the Taskmaster in a previous issue (where he admitted to Finesse that she may or may not be his daughter, and that he doesn't remember stuff like that, because almost all of his memory is filled up with fighting techniques and combat maneuvers) could affect Finesee, in the future.

X-Factor and Avengers Academy are the only two Marvel books I'm still buying, and I'm glad I gave Avengers Academy a shot, since it was an impulse buy.
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
yes i am still getting Avengers ...

# 20 ...

was ok. Started off with some attempts at humor with Norman Osborn ... was ... kind of funny.


Norman is the current villain, and he seeks to use Hydra to discredit and destroy the Avengers.

They team splits up into twos to track down Norman ... and I think this was just done for the story as Click Here For A Spoilerhawkey and spider woman end up on a team ... where they end up fighting hulk clones ... were as storm and hulk end up on a team together ... and iron man and protector ... of course iron man becomes compromised ... and fights protector ... it seemed obvious and contrived

I'm still in Acuna's art is beautiful but it's looking a little stiff for these super heroes I think he does better in a more *realistic* environment and with less limber characters.

Anyway, It's got Storm, it's got some action, it's pretty ... but the drama just comes off as drama ... maybe Bendis is tired .. or maybe Hydra and super clones just dosn't seem like a big deal after all the melodramatic over the top world shattering events lately.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Secret Avengers #20: it simply doesn't get any better than this. One of the best, well-written stories I've read in years. Ellis. Black Widow. Complex time travel. All in 22 pages.

Brillaint.
 
Posted by Dev - Em on :
 
When did the done in ones start on Secret Avengers? I may have to track some of these issues down.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
I think around #15 or 16 kicks off the Warren Ellis issues. They've all been fantastic and each one tops the previous.
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
so Avengers 21 ...

has Storm on the cover, and has been circulated as advertisement as "Storm joins the Avengers".

Too bad she only gets four panels in which she lies passed out, and one she even has vomit coming out of her mouth, and no lines of dialogue not even an ... "Aargh!"


boo!

and what's with Acuna taking a break already, he just started drawing the book, in fact i was so certain he'd be drawing the insides i didn't flip through it ... to notice it was drawn by someone else.

I don't think I would pick up this issue again as it makes little progress from the last issue.

last issue, the avengers get ambushed and you know they're going to be captured. This issue they spend the whole book *getting captured*, they could easily have skipped ahead to the next point in the story where they are captured and the story moves forward.

I feel kinda ripped off.
 
Posted by Set on :
 
And I've now seen everything. (NSFW language)

Avenger's themed cologne.

I do love the blogger's speculation about other Avengers colognes, such as;

'Doctor Druid's cologne would be patchouli, old D&D sourcebooks and failure.'
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
SECRET AVENGERS #22... I'm quite impressed with the tone that Rick Remender and Gabriel Hardman achieve. It's got the mix of humor, character and action that I really enjoy. Captain Britain's a bit out of left field, but I always like that in a new Avenger. I'll miss Steve (though I suspect not for all that long), but Hawkeye's a replacement that should propel story. What direction said propulsion will take remains to be seen. I though Captain Britain's misunderstanding of Captain America's introduction of him to his new team (Brian thought he was brought on to be leader, when Hawkeye was who Cap A meant) to be funny. How long it took for the light to dawn in Cap B's eyes even funnier.

Have Beast and Captain Britain interacted somewhere before? I can't place a story or title that really featured the pair. They come off as old friends. God knows, Hank doesn't have as many of those as he once did.

Ant-man and Giant-Man on a team together? Lots of potential there... Val and Black Widow have a moment in this issue that I enjoyed, though it is somewhat familiar and old-fashioned (they pretty much turn their noses up at 'icky boys' and stomp off). It made me chuckle, though.

I don't see much truth in the 'secret' description of this team of Avengers, any longer. But I'm looking forward to this run. It's somewhat 'off to the side'. Recently, the divisions between the Avengers teams have come to mean less and less. In a way, a good thing- though I imagine it drives the 'what purpose does this team serve' people nuts. A side benefit, I suppose.
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
I regret to say I didn't like SA #22 nearly as much as Todd did. I found it rather uninspired and dull, although the cliffhanger was enough to keep my interest in the next issue. It's probably unfair to compare Remender's SA work unfavorably with Uncanny X-Force when Remender is probably trying for a different flavor with SA, but the dynamism and unpredictability of UXF are exactly what I loved about Avengers during my personal Golden Age (1992-94), and I had hoped to see more of the same in SA.

As for the Bendis Avengers books, the Osborn-strikes-back arc has had some of Bendis' worst writing since the early years of his run. It's so painfully obvious that this arc is pure filler until the AvX event gets under way.

And speaking of the AvX event, I have zero interest in it. I have a feeling it's going to make Bloodties look like Operation Galactic Storm.

God, this is not a good time to be an Avengers geek. I only hope that the movie might be where the franchise pulls itself out of rock bottom.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Haven't read S.A. by Remender yet, but I will say Ellis is going to be a tough act to follow. I also like Remender's Uncanny X-Force for all the same reasons you do, Fanfie. I hadn't realized the similarity to our fave era of the Avengers but now that you point it out its painfully obvious.

Regarding Bendis & the Osborn returns story. Doesn't it feel like he had a timeline written out years ago in advance and had put "Osborn Returns!" somewhere towards the end. And now by the time he's gotten to it, he totally has no enthusiasm to actually do it but feels obligated to go ahead and put it in there. Almost as if he's a slave to his own plans. I know that happens to me sometimes when I write. Then again, I'm not paid to write comic books with an editor to stop me from doing things like that. I can't help but feel its a classic fan-fiction blunder that someone should have stopped him from making. Because, getting back to the point, I'm totally with you--it's feeling like a big low point of his whole run (which has had a number of them already).

Feeling the same on AvX. Right after it was announced, I decided "you know what? I'm not collecting any of this." And that felt really good.

The Avengers have just gone through an era that I think gets an unfair wrap and has actually been for the most part pretty good. But its definitely time to move on. The welcome has been overstayed.
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
Yeah, Warren's struggles in UXF were very similar to Sersi's in Avengers back in the day, and yet not retro in the least. Which only makes it more disheartening that Remender seems to be going for a retro-80s flavor with SA (although that's still preferable to the retro-70s flavor of Busiek's Avengers.)

I agree that Bendis probably feels compelled to try to throw in everything he wanted to do before he leaves. After the relative amount of progress he had made in the last three years, suddenly it's amateur hour again.

quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
Feeling the same on AvX. Right after it was announced, I decided "you know what? I'm not collecting any of this." And that felt really good.

[Cheers]
 
Posted by Set on :
 
I feel like we haven't even really gotten over the hero vs. hero Civil War thing yet, so A vs. X just feels like more of the same.
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
I guess this would be the appropriate place to discuss FEARLESS. Anyone else reading this? It features Valkyrie and Sin, the Red Skull's daughter in a dueling quest to recover the hammers from the FEAR ITSELF storyline. The follow-up is much better than the event that spawned it. I'm a big Val fan, and find myself really enjoying her here, while at the same time somewhat concerned/perplexed for/by her. It's great seeing glimpses of her long past, but all the "I'm tired", giving up her immortality, semi-defeatist stuff's a little hard to swallow. I think it makes sense in the story, and is fairly well-written. But where will it leave Val when the series is over?

Son of Satan (among dozens of other guest stars) takes a turn that's perhaps difficult to reconcile with his concurrent appearance in JOURNEY INTO MYSTERY.
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
I didn't like the second issue of Remender's SECRET AVENGERS as much as the first. Mainly because I'm just over heroes dying. Especially ones that are struggling to live up to their 'calling', as the character in question was. What a waste.

At least it wasn't a through away piece of writing. The story itself, was pretty strong. The robot villains are pretty compelling, at least in potential.
 
Posted by Sarcasm Kid on :
 
With the Runaways appearing in Avengers Academy, I sent a letter asking if there was a possibility of the Livewires (from the Adam Warren and Rick Mays miniseries) appearing in the Academy.
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
AVENGERS VS X-MEN: here or its own thread?

This week sees Vision finding out about he 'died' and then turning Wanda away from Avengers Mansion, not even letting her in the door. Pretty cold.

Again, we see an android cry.

He also attacks Magneto, but that character doesn't let guilt guide him. Viz gets a sort-of well-deserved slapdown.

So, the Phoenix Force is on the way-- and Hope thinks she's ready for it. That's going to turn out well.
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
FEARLESS #11: That last page with the white feather floating down on Val's open staring eyes-- that better not be what I fear it might!

I'm pretty sure we've seen post-Fearless stories for Val... but none for Aragorn! They better not be about to kill that flying horse again!!! Grrrrrr!!!!!
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mystery Lad:
AVENGERS VS X-MEN: here or its own thread?

There's so little buzz, we might as well just do it here instead of starting a new thread which will most likely go inactive after less than five posts. Thanks for asking, though.
 
Posted by Spellbinder on :
 
So are the Avengers still pretending that they are the Defenders, or have the real Avengers returned? I refuse to read the Avengers with members like Wolverine, Spider-Man and Luke Cage. Give me the 70s Avengers, or the Busiek/Perez Avengers. Y'know... Earth's Mightiest Heroes. Not soloists and psychopaths.
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
It's all up in the air at this moment. Bendis is leaving in a few months, so I'd say Spider-Man and Cage et al exiting is a safe bet.

They haven't announced his replacement yet.

From where I'm standing, all signs point to the pendulum swinging to the opposite extreme of where it was in 2004, and a return to the traditional-style team. But as someone whose favorite lineup is a far from traditional one (i.e. Harras/Epting) I would be very displeased if a Busiek/Perez approach was taken. Busiek and Perez indiscrimately pissed all over everything they didn't like about what came before them, and that's just rude. I'm not saying that what Bendis did was any better -- hell, Bendis pretty much pissed all over Busiek and Perez's work; karma in action. I just wish the Avengers wouldn't keep going from one extreme to another. It's not that hard to find a middle ground.
 
Posted by Spellbinder on :
 
Well, I was talking more about line-ups then storylines. I'm a classics kinda person. The ultimate JLA lineup for me was satellite era (Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, Black Canary, Green Arrow, Green Lantern, Elongated Man, Atom, Red Tornado, Zatanna, Firestorm, Hawkman, Hawkwoman, Aquaman). The defining Avengers lineup will always be (for me at least): Captain America, Iron Man, Thor, Scarlet Witch, Vision, Hank Pym (in some form), Wasp (yeah, I know she's "dead"), with maybe a Wonder Man/Black Widow extra thrown in.

And I'm not saying that having Wolverine, Spider-Man and Luke Cage on a team is a bad thing, and I know that there are alot of people who like them together. I just don't feel they make very good Avengers, especially Wolverine. He takes the Avengers too far into the grey area between hero and vigilante.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
I can't help but feel Spider-Man is an Avenger for the long haul, but hopefully this crossover reverts Wolverine back to the X-Men.
 
Posted by Candlelight on :
 
Ummm, I haven't read the Avengers or the X-Men in ages.
Sarc told me about the Wanda 'thing', although I don't know why she's doing hero stuff again.

I don't know what the Phoenix story is about yet, but I'm going to follow the one book for awhile since the Scarlet Witch and Phoenix are in my top 5 female favorites of all time.

My hope is similar to Scott, I'm afraid.
Put things back the way they were, for the most part.
I'd skip Wanda and Vision together again and Magnus as an old man, but I'd like the mutants back, all of them.

So, this is the first of my posts on the arc/series.
I rather liked #0 and #1.
The snake villians were kind of interesting visually/conceptually and should have appeared in the Legion books and I like Hope's childish eagerness and Scott's fear and hope.

I'm going to have fun with it and I don't know Bendis from Pop Goes the Weasel, so I'm okay.
For now.
[shrug]
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
I'll be looking forward to your perspective on this, Shady!

I personally dont want the line-up to repeat any era. I want something a little fresh with some old favorites included. What I really want to stop is the Avengers being Grand Central Station for the whole MU.
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
Shady, thanks for chiming in. I, too, look forward to what you have to say on upcoming issues.

quote:
Originally posted by Spellbinder:
Well, I was talking more about line-ups then storylines. I'm a classics kinda person. The ultimate JLA lineup for me was satellite era (Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, Black Canary, Green Arrow, Green Lantern, Elongated Man, Atom, Red Tornado, Zatanna, Firestorm, Hawkman, Hawkwoman, Aquaman). The defining Avengers lineup will always be (for me at least): Captain America, Iron Man, Thor, Scarlet Witch, Vision, Hank Pym (in some form), Wasp (yeah, I know she's "dead"), with maybe a Wonder Man/Black Widow extra thrown in.

And I'm not saying that having Wolverine, Spider-Man and Luke Cage on a team is a bad thing, and I know that there are alot of people who like them together. I just don't feel they make very good Avengers, especially Wolverine. He takes the Avengers too far into the grey area between hero and vigilante.

quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
I personally dont want the line-up to repeat any era. I want something a little fresh with some old favorites included. What I really want to stop is the Avengers being Grand Central Station for the whole MU.

Both points of view are valid. However, I lean closer towards Cobie's.

The problem, in my opinion, with sticking to a certain lineup is that there's only so many things writers can do with the dynamics of that particular lineup. The risk of stagnation and redundant storylines is ever-present when this approach is taken.

My personal favorite lineup consisted of a couple members of the old guard (Vision and Hank Pym as Giant-Man,) longtime ancillary members finally moved up to the first rank (Black Widow, Hercules, Black Knight) and fresh new blood (Crystal and Sersi.) Now, I wouldn't want this exact same lineup to have a second go-round (especially because I don't like the changes that Hercules and Black Knight have been through.) What I would like is a lineup that challenges the preconceptions of what makes up a team like the Avengers (something which goes all the way back to Cap's Kooky Quartet, which, according to Cobie's dad, was very controversial at the time) while at the same time respecting what came before, instead of taking a Howitzer to it. That, in my opinion, is the only way to keep the Avengers fresh and exciting, even if it ends up stepping on a few toes.
 
Posted by Set on :
 
Having an X-Men, a Fantastic Four member, a Hero for Hire and Spider-Man on the team does make it feel to me kind of like the Avengers are turning into a dumping ground for members of other teams, instead of their own team, with their own legacy.

I do like the idea of an Avengers line-up that includes a classic or two, one or two B-tier Avengers, and a new character or two.

Then again, I'm a huge fan of B and C-tier Avengers like Stingray and Moondragon and Doctor Druid and Rita DeMarr/Yellowjacket.
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
I love Rita. I didn't read Dead Avengers or the core Chaos War mini, but from spoilers I've read and things I've been told, her status is currently "unknown." It's so annoying when Marvel or DC do things like that.
 
Posted by Set on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Fanfic Lady:
I love Rita. I didn't read Dead Avengers or the core Chaos War mini, but from spoilers I've read and things I've been told, her status is currently "unknown." It's so annoying when Marvel or DC do things like that.

Dead Avengers was amazingly good. The status of Rita and the Swordsman was left vague enough that one *could* consider it a possible 'get out of death' card, or just take it as a happy ending for the two characters, having, at least in death, managed to become the heroes that they felt somewhat cheated out of in their short times as living heroes.

I haven't read the core Chaos War stuff, although I did get the Dead X-Men and Alpha Flight stories, and found both of them to be, at best, forgettable.

Each of the six 'Dead Avengers' (Swordsman, Rita/Yellowjacket 2, Deathcry, the Vision, Doctor Druid and Captain Mar-Vell) got a page or two of flashback to their lives that were, in most cases, intriguing, and, in some cases, probably did more to humanize them / flesh them out as characters than their original appearances did!
 
Posted by Spellbinder on :
 
I think one of my biggest problems with having Wolverine on the team is his gross overexposure. I don't think he's a good fit for the Avengers, either, but mostly he's just in everything! He's the Morgan Freeman of the Marvel Universe. I understand he's popular, but I think the more you have of something, the less interesting it becomes.

It's the same with Spider-Man. he already has a bunch of his own titles, then he's a member of the Avengers and the FF. Nobody has that much free time [Smile]
 
Posted by Future on :
 
Dead Avengers was definitely better than Dead X-Men. Much like Alpha Flight was resurrected after Chaos War, I too always hoped that Yellowjacket (Rita) would resurface alive afterward. I never knew a lot about her before, but I love her history and I loved the characterization presented in the Dead Avengers mini series. Perhaps she's a loose end Vision could try to find since he too was dead with her but now back to life?

Doubtful, but you never know.

I like that Spidey and Wolverine were finally removed from the Avengers proper title. I liked them better in New Avengers anyway and I think a lot of people would rather New Avengers be New Defenders than vice versa. While I like the idea of Storm on the Avengers, it's about five years too late. Back when she was just on Wakanda and didn't swing by San Francisco or the X-Men a lot, she would have been perfect. Now she's the co-ruler of a nation and starring in three different team titles. It's too much.

Looks like the Hawkeye/Spider-Woman romance is heating up. I'd love to see Mockingbird's opinion or have her find her own new man.
 
Posted by Candlelight on :
 
I don't know about the Dead Wars stuff but I DO know that the line-up for the Avengers seemed bloated beyond belief and there were almost no X-Men.
The Thing needs to go back home and so does the Wolverine, imo.

Spidey doesn't seem to have a home, but I think I'd like him some place besides the Avengers.
He was in them before and it didn't last very long, IIRC.

Anyway, other than Spirder Woman and Ms. Marvel, I really mostly saw Cap, Iron Man and Thor, who are pretty classic.

I don't like the Vision, so I hope he gets in a huff about the gals wanting Wanda back, and leaves for outter space or something.

I'd be happy with just a few active members with lots of others on call.
I'd go with Wanda, Cap, Stark, Thor and Carol as the permanent core with others coming in for arcs.

But, that's just me.
[shrug]

I just want lots of the depowered mutants brought back.
Those that want their powers back, anyway.
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
The Avengers are really three teams lumped into one here. Vision's newly back from the dead, so I doubt he'll be going anywhere.

Speaking of back from the dead, SECRET AVENGERS features a welcome development along those lines.

Come to think of it, so does the concluding issue of FEARLESS? Click Here For A Spoiler Valkyie briefly dies, fulfilling her deal with Odin. She has a short reunion with her long dead lover, but quickly grows bored and is relieved when Dr. Strange effects her return to life

The All-mothers mandate the creation of a Midgard born corps of eight new Valkyrior to ward the hammers that have been what everyone's fighting about. We don't see who is chosen, or when they might be chosen and we aren't told editorially when follow through might occur. But itl's fun to speculate.
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
AVENGER'S ACADEMY is a book that I'm surprised more people here aren' t reading. This sees the conclusion of a guest appearancewith The Runaways. With Devil Dinosaur abd Moon Boy also cameoing.

There's a quite nice, if bordering on corny, sequence of a mystical 'walk in each other's shoes' POV shift. Sometimes corn's the only vegetable that befits the meal.

A romantic connection is made, unwise decisions are unmade, wiser ones reached and a most welcome reunion is effected. A further one appears to be in the offing.
 
Posted by Candlelight on :
 
I was looking at Marvel micros on a site and there are hundreds, just in the S'!
I'm not sure how many of them are 'mutants' but with that many characters, maybe I should rethink my desire for Wanda to repower all of the mutants!
Amazing!
 
Posted by jimgallagher on :
 
I prefer Spiderman and Daredevil as solo heroes. They can team up with the Avengers occasionally but I'd prefer they not be regular members of any team. I agree that Wolverine is not a good fit for Avengers either. Send him back to X-men or let him go solo. The Avengers seem too establishment for a maverick like him.
 
Posted by Set on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by jimgallagher: I prefer Spiderman and Daredevil as solo heroes.
I liked their appearance in the big battle with Galactus in the pages of the Fantastic Four. The FF, the Avengers and Dr. Strange are in the thick of it, and Spider-Man and Daredevil are watching from a nearby building, with Daredevil telling Spider-Man something like, 'Face it, if they need our help, Earth's doomed anyway...'

(That being said, Spider-Man's power level is well above classic Avengers like Captain America, Hawkeye or the Black Widow.)

I don't really like Spider-Man as part of the Fantastic Four, either, although I've always liked temporary team-ups of Spider-Man and the Human Torch, or whomever.

If there was a team that Spider-Man might not feel too out of place on, I could almost see him fitting in with some of the more eclectic Defenders line-ups, or even, in a whacky 'Spider-Man: Menace or Threat?' situation, where J. Jonah Jameson has well and truly succeeded in painting him as a villain, pehaps even the Thunderbolts...

Maybe even Heroes for Hire. Just not the Avengers.

And if the Avengers needs a token mutant, I'd rather they ditch Wolverine and use a mutant who has already been an Avenger, like Quicksilver, the Scarlet Witch or the Beast.

Or, someone completely out of left field. Kitty Pryde, for instance, might make an interesting Avenger!
 
Posted by Candlelight on :
 
Yes, Kitty would fit in. But, I like her just about anywhere.

Maybe she can become one of those new Valkyries that Mystery Lad was talking about.
She already has the perfect power for the job.
And Lockheed would make a great fly ahead type of character for her.
[Yes]

[ April 08, 2012, 03:25 AM: Message edited by: Candlelight ]
 
Posted by Set on :
 
Ooh, Valkyrie was always a favorite Defender!

The Avengers have had a few male god-types, with Thor, Hercules and Ares, and a strong female character with mythological ties would be an interesting change-up.

Her cameo a year or three ago in Avengers Academy was amusing. [Smile]
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
The new Valkyrior are supposed to be Midgard (Earth) born and female and would have the purpose of replacing Asgardians who now are guarding a set of ancient, powerful hammers.

I think Valkyrie's choices might look like:

Hellcat
Black Widow
Jane Foster
Dani Moonstar
Monica Rambeau
Thundra
Clea
Veil (or another Avengers Academy student, but since Veil quit the Academy, she wouldn't leave a hole)

If Marvel editorial does the choosing, it'd look like:

Storm
Ms. Marvel
Electra
Emma Frost
Spider-woman
She-Hulk
Jessica (Jewel)
Red She-Hulk

and I wouldn't buy it. Storm, Carol and green She-Hulk would all be fine. Even Emma (though I'd hate it). The rest? No.

If I picked characters I'd just want to see interact:

Polaris (Hey- she *was* a Defender for a Day)
Crystal
Darkstar
Magma
Hellcat
Mantis
Deadly Nightshade
Madame Masque

Who would you pick? Who do you think Val would pick? What about Marvel editorial?

[ April 09, 2012, 12:11 PM: Message edited by: Mystery Lad ]
 
Posted by Candlelight on :
 
What's the point of guarding hammers?
[Confused]

I'd want them to take dead warriors to Valhalla, for goodness sake.
[Frown]

I always love to see your creativity, ML and Set!

Marvel is owned by Disney now, isn't it?
So, I don't have a clue what the Marvel editorial would pick, I'm afraid.
sigh

For the group doing Valkyrie stuff, I guess I'd pick:

1. Shadowcat & Lockheed - yes, I'm sticking with them, [Yes]
2. Dani Moonstar - I'd like to keep her as one of the 'sisters'
3. Iridia - a different Inhuman but beautiful, my childhood favorite Inhuman
4. Meggan - <3 this character and haven't seen her in forever
5 a&b. The two Power Pack girls - they should be in their middle to late teens by now. They'd ride the same horse, one for the excitement/joy of the battles and the other for the gathering in of the heroes.
6. Hope - after the Phoenix thingy that's going now
7. Electra - sorry, but I think that she might be great working with the dead [Smile]
8. Nightside - the Shady from the Imperial Guard, even though I know that she's not Earthborn, she can get a special calling, to bring in heroes from the greater universe.

Alternate if Nightshade can't join - Wanda - she needs a bunk and this would be a good place for her, I think.
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
Hmmm. Guess I have to go more into what led up to the Midgard Valkyrior. The hammers cause whoever wields them to become stronger-than-Hulk class. They also are intensely corruptive.

The back story of Valkyrie, the former Defender, was told throughout FEARLESS. Odin made her a promise that one day she could rejoin Sigmund (I think it's Sigmund) in Valhalla after honoring the terms of his offer to lead the Choosers of the Slain.

By the time of the events of FEARLESS, Val was world-weary and ready for Odin's promise to be made good. This was on the back of her mind as she fought through Avengers, Fantastic Four members and X-men and, especially the Red Skull's daughter (and company), in quest of the hammers- an extension of Odin's charge. Sin merged the hammers into herself and Val died fighting her.

Odin's promise was granted, but Val was immediately bored in the afterlife and welcomed Dr. Strange's effort to return her to life and finish off Sin and etc.

The new purpose the All-Mothers offered was the creation of this new Valkyrior corps of Midgard-born women, one for each hammer (presumably). Valkyrie and, by extension, her Valkyrior, is no longer a chooser of the slain.

It's not clear yet if she still *could* take a soul to Valhalla, or if she still has the death-sense. What is certain, is that she's no longer obligated to do so. Her contract with Odin is concluded.

So, just what 'Valkyrie stuff' they'd be doing on Earth/Midgard remains to be seen. Though it might at times include bearing souls to Valhalla, that wouldn't be this group's primary purpose.

Before you say that they should be called something besides Valkyrior, remember that Marines don't just fulfill water-related missions.
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Candlelight:

1. Shadowcat & Lockheed - yes, I'm sticking with them, [Yes]

I'd quite like this- especially seeing Lockheed and Aragorn interact.

quote:
Originally posted by Candlelight:

2. Dani Moonstar - I'd like to keep her as one of the 'sisters'

This, to me, would be the 'gotta be' of the whole thing. I'd be pretty disappointed if she isn't included.

quote:
Originally posted by Candlelight:

3. Iridia - a different Inhuman but beautiful, my childhood favorite Inhuman

I love this idea! I liked Iridia, too (just not as much as the Amalquin sisters). I'd be great if Iridia became connected to the Norse goddess of spring- maybe getting 'spring' powers. Or something.

quote:
Originally posted by Candlelight:

4. Meggan - <3 this character and haven't seen her in forever

This character's currently appearing in X-FORCE. And I imagine she could turn up in SECRET AVENGERS, since her husband's now a member of that group.

quote:
Originally posted by Candlelight:

5 a&b. The two Power Pack girls - they should be in their middle to late teens by now. They'd ride the same horse, one for the excitement/joy of the battles and the other for the gathering in of the heroes.

The oldest is in AVENGERS ACADEMY and the younger girl (still Franklin-aged) is in FANTASTIC FOUNDATION book.

quote:
Originally posted by Candlelight:

6. Hope - after the Phoenix thingy that's going now

Not fond of her. A poor replacement for Jean, for me, anyway.

quote:
Originally posted by Candlelight:

7. Electra - sorry, but I think that she might be great working with the dead [Smile]

Not the purpose of these Valkyrior. I think she's overexposed, anyway.

quote:
Originally posted by Candlelight:

8. Nightside - the Shady from the Imperial Guard, even though I know that she's not Earthborn, she can get a special calling, to bring in heroes from the greater universe.

Cool and quirky idea. Iridia and Nightside- fun choices.

quote:
Originally posted by Candlelight:

Alternate if Nightshade can't join - Wanda - she needs a bunk and this would be a good place for her, I think.

I have a feeling Wanda will end up elsewhere, but if Marvel *has* to 'double book', she'd be a good choice. Plus, Valkyrie should have Barbara Norriss's memories of working with the Scarlet Witch before. I'm not really clear about whether Brunnhilde still has that kind of recall, though. At one time, she did.
 
Posted by Candlelight on :
 
Aragorn from the book(s) and movie?
I didn't know she was in the Marvel universe!

And who are the Amalquin sisters?
gads
Other than flying, I don't know what powers, if any, that Iridia has. Given her rebirth in the mists, I thought that she might be interested in bringing warriors to a comparable experience.

Thanks for the info on the PP gals, I'm glad to know that they're being utilized.
[Yes]

I'm not sure when Jean died, this time, or who Hope is, but I liked her in the A xs X books I've just gotten.
And I like her kidness.

I know that the original idea was to guard hammers but, I think that that's a pretty silly thing to do, even if they're Moljor type weapons.
Let the boys guard that crap.
imo
[Smile]

My group ideas are for a classic group of Valkrior.
[Yes]
And I didn't know that Electra was over used.
She's been around forever and has only been in a handful of books, that I know of.
She's in everything now I take it.
sigh

I just like Wanda and would like to see her used at a power level that makes sense and keeps the character on panel, ya know?

You certainly know them all better than me.
:forsure:
 
Posted by Set on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Candlelight:
Aragorn from the book(s) and movie? I didn't know she was in the Marvel universe!

Aragorn is the name of the flying horse that Valkyrie used to ride. No relation to Viggo Mortenson's character. [Smile]

quote:
And who are the Amalquin sisters?
Crystalia Amalquin and Medusalith Amalquelin Boltagon, I think are their full names.

*

With the hammers granting Thor-like strength and toughness, and being inherently corrupting, there's quite a few I wouldn't want holding them, because it either feels 'wrong' for that particular character to become a 'tank,' or because that particular character has a history of 'going dark.' Ilyanna, for instance, or Moondragon, might be poor choices.

Firebird, formerly of the West Coast Avengers, seems like someone who might have the strength of character to resist corruption, and yet, adding Thor-like strength and toughness to her pre-existing powerset feels a little odd.

Thundra, while occasionally over-the-top in her depictions, is both strong-willed and already a 'tank' character, based on strength and toughness. A hammer would just be more of what she's already got, and she's often used some sort of bludgeoning weapon, so it would, IMO, 'look right' with her visual aesthetic (partiicularly the chained hammer that the Absorbing Man used).

Patsy Walker / Hellcat already has some experience with corruptive influences (between her own experiences, using Devil-Slayer's cloak for awhile, and marrying the Son of Satan!), although her becoming a Thor-class brawler would, IMO, radically change her look and feel.

Mantis might fit, but I hates her, precious, I hates her sooooo much...

Snowbird might think that she's perfect for the job, and, who knows, she might actually be. The sight of her with a Thor-hammer would be jarring, at first, but she'd be an interesting fit, since she represents a completely different mythology than the Asgardians, which has some story potential (an Asgardian Valkyrior who is *also* an Inuit demigoddess? Whee!).

Jessica Drew / Spider-Woman has had a wild run of strangeness, losing her powers one by one, and then having them restored, bouncing around the Marvel Universe in an odd fashion. I could see Bendis trying to get either her, or Jessica Jones, assigned to one of the hammers. Jessica Jones, who, IMO, has always felt like a fifth wheel, might be a better choice, at least visually. Spider-Woman with a hammer would feel odder, visually, and an inevitable image of Jessica Jones with a Thor-hammer in one hand and her baby in the other hand, preparing to dispense an epic smack down to someone who threatened her family, could be cool.

From the X-folk, there are a few already strong and tough ladies out there that would look thematically okay with a hammer. Frenzy/Joanna Cargill would be my first choice, although she doesn't exactly scream 'incorruptible,' given her past allegiances. Monet could be another interesting choice, but I'd rather not, just because she's in X-Factor, and it's one of the two Marvel books that I *do* read, and would rather not have tied into this hammertime business. [Smile]

Of the Avengers Academy, Finesse seems like an interesting choice. She's coldly logical, and as unlikely to be seduced into evil as she is to be won over to good.

Sersi needs more cosmic god-like power like the Beyonder needs another wide-lapelled baggy trousered pimp-suit. :/

Clea would be a top choice, if she's not currently running the Dread Dimension. Other interesting sorceress choices could be Amanda Sefton or Jennifer Kale, both of which have fought off some evil corruption in their day.
 
Posted by Candlelight on :
 
Ahhh, Crystal and Medusa.
K.
And Valkyrie's horse.
[Yes]

I hates Mantis, too, and Moondragon, I'm afraid.
Clea isn't a favorite, either.
[Frown]

After Set's examples, I see what the idea is.
I certainly wouldn't want Iridia mucking about with a hammer, or the PP kids.
I'll have to think about it.
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
I just reread the issue because something was bugging my memory. The eight Earth Valkyrie wouldn't be the ones warding the hammers. They're replacements for Asgardian Valkyrie who have hidden them and will presumably guard them.

Freya's charge "And yet my sisters Gaea and Idunn agree it is time for the Valkyrior to ride once more... and this time with a calling greater than simply ferrying the fallen to Valhalla.

Eight women... selected as symbols of valor and honor and reward for those who adhere to their standard. Eight heroes... vigilant in their post against evil... fearless in the execution of their duties.

But this time... they will not be chosen from the realm of Asgard.

As our kingdom in now upon Midgard, so too shall our shieldmaidens be chosen from among the heroes of Midgard.

Chosen and commanded by you." ("you" being Valkyrie)

Sorry for my spotty memory.
 
Posted by Set on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mystery Lad:
I just reread the issue because something was bugging my memory. The eight Earth Valkyrie wouldn't be the ones warding the hammers. They're replacements for Asgardian Valkyrie who have hidden them and will presumably guard them.

Eh, it was a fun digression thinking of which mighty Marvel femmes would look hawt with a Thor-hammer!

For just hiding them somewhere and serving as 'guardians,' characters with some sort of access to a secret stash-away place would seem ideal.

Magick, for instance, could tuck her hammer away in Limbo. Monica Rambeau could keep hers hidden somewhere in space, or even inside the sun, that she can get to at lightspeed, and most other people couldn't get to at all. Clea's got the Dread Dimenion on call. Now that Dagger has Cloak's powers, she could absorb a hammer into the Darkforce Dimension. If Thundra can still get to and from Arkon's dimension, or Patsy Walker can still get her hands on the Devil-Slayer cape, they've also got option.

Others mentioned, like Elektra or Kitty Pryde aren't as well-suited to that sort of thing (although something could be cobbled together, such as giving Elektra a spiritual link to K'un-Lun, or Kitty being able to store a hammer out-of-phase inside herself).

The Wasp, if she weren't dead at the moment, could shrink a guarded hammer down to microscopic size and store it under a fingernail or something, while the Scarlet Witch could, in theory, just re-arrange quantum probabilities and go all Schrodinger's Hammer and cause it to 'not be' until she calls it back into existence.

Regardless, Moondragon probably shouldn't be trusted with one. [Smile]
 
Posted by Candlelight on :
 
Yeah, [Razz]

I was intrigued by the visuals that you mentioned, Set, combining myths and things.

So, I gathered all of the team pics that the 3 of us made, including ML's pics that he thought that Valkyrie would make.
Then, I looked them all up, sigh, and picked some that I liked.
[Yes]

These are the first 3, hammers or not (they're not visible anyway), that I've gotten pretty well to the satisfactory stage.

The originals are by Razor, with some adjustments from Blancett and from the Micro-Heroes Conpendium with combining and coloring and some graphics of my own (especially Kitty.)

These are Byzantine designs, rather than Asgardian, but they're so beautiful I had to go with them.
I added various froms of Thor's helmet wings, to indicate the Valkrior status and Asgardian connections.

They are Magma - suggested by ML, Snowbird, from Set, and Shadowcat with Lockheed, my pick.
Edit: Had to rework Snowbird, Kitty and Lockheed.
sigh
 -

[ April 18, 2012, 05:18 AM: Message edited by: Candlelight ]
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
Someone at another board asked people's opinions of the period reprinted in ESSENTIAL AVENGERS #8. Here's mine...


I always thought the outfit Wanda had when she was "possessed" was the hottest one she ever wore. Kinda wish someone had adopted it as her regular costume, but nobody ever did.

It's a shame there was so much chaos on the bookj, behind the scenes. Seems like they couldn't hold onto any artists for very long, or the ones they got kept missing issues. And then of course there's all that horrrendously bad inking by Dan Green...

On top of everything else, I can never shake the feeling that we lost something really wonderful when Gerry Conway ran Steve Englehart off the book, because HE wanted to make extra money writing on the side while being Editor. And then he didn't even stick around that long. In retrospect, the best thing I can say about Jim Shooter is, when he first got on the book, he WAS an improvement over Conway. But that doesn't make his work better than Englehart's. Conway had a lot to answer for.

I also think it's a shame George Perez hadn't gotten over the bad influence of Rich Buckler back then. that is, doing 3-4 books at once, and blowing deadlines on ALL of them. My favorite work of Perez back then was AVENGERS (with F.F. coming in a close second-- but if I had to choose, I feel he was better-suited for AVENGERS). Imagine if that entire period had been wall-to-wall Perez work, without all those fill-ins.
 
Posted by Candlelight on :
 
I wish I'd seen the Perez work on the Avengers and the FF.
sigh

On the Valkyrior, sorry if what inspired me doesn't inspire anyone else, but that's the way it goes most of the time, anyway.
sigh

Here's my version of my candidate, Nightside.
Still based on Razor's work, but this is mostly mine, with some help from JR and Future:
 -

I have another that's almost done that should be interesting for Dani fans.
I hope.

[ April 15, 2012, 12:29 AM: Message edited by: Candlelight ]
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
Shady, I love your little valkyriors! I particularly like Nightside and Magma. I wonder if all the heroines would embrace the Asgardian costuming?

Would they have the choice? Hah!

I also wonder if they'll all get winged horses... they wouldn't seem like valkyries without them. Though if a character can fly on their own...

Anyway, I'm looking forward to Dani. Thanks for doing these.
 
Posted by Candlelight on :
 
[Yes]

I'm going on them all using the new costumes, but possibly, only when they're performing Valkyrior duties and going to Valkyrior meetings and talking with Valkyrior gods and goddesses.
[Smile]
Sort of like Masons or Girl Scouts or Knights of the Round Table?
Hmmm, or maybe like fireman?
 
Posted by Candlelight on :
 
Here's the second group, I updated my Nightside.
I like her better with the darker wings.
I added Amanda Sefton for Set and Darkstar for ML.
None of them have Razor micro's so I used other characters both from him and from Super-Hero Compendium.

Sefton is first, then Nightside and finally, Darkstar.
[Yes]

 -

[ April 28, 2012, 02:24 AM: Message edited by: Candlelight ]
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
Gorgeous micros, Candle. If you have any more, feel free to share them here.

Meanwhile, my latest hiatus from new comics has left me in something of a quandary. I read the first two issues of the Bendis/Bagley Avengers vs. Zodiac arc in the new title Avengers Assemble, and thought they were actually not bad, thanks largely to Bags' art, but not great, either. Apparently # 3 hasn't even come out yet, usually a sign of behind-the-scenes hysteria, and Bendis appears to have spoiled his own story, making a calculated remark that hinted the Zodiac are the puppets of...

Click Here For A Spoiler...Thanos.

If so, I don't think that's particularly inspired, but then, that villain has never been a favorite of mine anyway, kind of a one-trick pony.

Meanwhile, I haven't been reading the regular Avengers books, so I don't know how Walt Simonson's art mixes with Bendis' writing, or if Remender has improved any after a disappointing start on SA.

Point being, if any of you have read any or all of the above, your comments would be very welcome in this thread.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Simonson's art has taken a mediocre Bendis script and made it above par; it's not great yet--but may get there. What's noticeable immediately is Walt has injected some energy to the story which otherwise might be another slow burn.

Whenever there is a crossover, Bendis seems to revel in giving us the 'secret backstory' of what's going on. Now that it's the fourth time around it feels predictable and boring.

Luckily Walt is making it visually exciting. A scene where Thor returns to the team to greet Cap was majestic.
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
Thanks, Cobie. Much as I love Walt, I think I'm going to continue to pass on Avengers until Bendis is gone.

Of course, depending on his replacement, I may continue to avoid Avengers even after he's gone. I guess Marvel's waiting til the San Diego con to make the announcement. [sigh]
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Yeah, I can't in good conscience recommend it. Same for Secret Avengers so far--while 'not bad', its still not leaving me in a happy place.

The next era can't come fast enough.
 
Posted by Candlelight on :
 
Well, tinypics hasn't been letting me crop lately, so I decided to just do a page of amalgamated Valkyrior micros.
I used one of Future's backgrounds, so they should fit without messing with the spacing or the pixal size.
:crossed fingers of hope:

 -

Row 1 - Valkyrie, Dani Moonstar, Aragorn, Jocasta, Nightside, Amanda Sefton and Darkstar.
Row 2 - Magma, Snowbird, Shadowcat & Lockheed, Frenzy, Deadly Nightshade, Gloriana, Jennifer Kale, Mantis.
Row 3 - Polaris, Power Woman, a Lockjaw sired puppy I call Liloksy(Lily for everyday) & Iridia, Hellcat, Thundra, Photon, Black Widow.

All of the costumes originated with Razer's Byzantine Heroes.
Some he had already done, like Magma, Mantis, Hellcat, Black Widow, Photon, Jocasta and others.
These I added pants(horse riding for any distance or time, demands covered bottoms and legs, I'm afraid [shrug] ) and the Asgardian/Valkyrie head wings to everyone as a base.
The rest of the design elements I just played with, adding capes or hair or changing hands/eyes, tiara's, etc..

A lot of them were formed from other Byzantine micros and character's from the Micro-Heroes Compendium site, especially if I didn't know the character I was going for, like Frenzy or Power Woman.

Razer made a Kitty but without Lockheed, so I found one with him and adjusted her to add him.
I made the arm and added the hands from one of Blancett's many characters.
She's amazing, as is kat, JR, TC, GI and many others found at Compendium.

Aragorn began as an uncredited Comet, one set of Razer's many wings and another set from Compendium. The jewelry and tack came from Dani's various outfits.
She also started as Mirage, a DC character.

I added Jocasta and Meggan to my list, since I dropped the others.
I separated the grill work on the Razer original and added lips and a nose. She also got a cape.

Night Shade started as a completely hooded Razer Night Shade, a caucasian DC character, but I added a Compendium Nightshade head and went from there.
From what I read, she's a Marvel villian, so I'm not sure why ML listed her.
[Confused]

I hope I got the characters right and they're fun for everyone to look at.
They're such a beautiful idea, I couldn't let them languish on an island site, by themselves.

[ May 16, 2012, 11:51 PM: Message edited by: Candlelight ]
 
Posted by Sarcasm Kid on :
 
...there. There are no words for this.
 
Posted by Candlelight on :
 
Well, I hope that's a good thing.
[shrug]

My favorites of my suggestion are Iridia and Nightside.
My favorites of Set's picks are Power Woman and Frenzy.
Of ML's, I like Polaris and Dani best.

Darkstar was the hardest because I started with Dinah Soar, a non-humanoid character.
Why?
[Confused]

Well, Aragorn was hard, too.
He took the most time and decision making and putting together.
sigh
 
Posted by Set on :
 
Very cool!

I like your Black Widow and Hellcat costumes the best. The colors on Hellcat just pop, and Black Widow's spider-legged chest-piece is funky!

I have no idea who Gloriana is, but the coloration makes it look like the Enchantress as a Valkyrie, which is a scary thought!

Magma, with her yellow and red coloration, might look more distinctive in a black suit of armor (or a dark blue one, or something). The white ends up being overpowered by her own colors, I think. If she went to a full red coloration for her fiery body, and wore golden valkyrie armor, that would keep her 'traditional' colors, and possibly look awesome, too.

Love Valkyrie and Polaris' cloaks, but the coolest thing ever has to be Lockheed!

[ May 19, 2012, 12:21 AM: Message edited by: Set ]
 
Posted by Set on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mystery Lad:
I also wonder if they'll all get winged horses... they wouldn't seem like valkyries without them. Though if a character can fly on their own...

Random aside;

While the Marvel valkyries have traditionally just used winged horses, the valkyries of Norse myth have been alternately portrayed as winged women, wingless women capable of flight anyway, women riding winged horses, women riding wingless flying horses, and, most intriguingly, women riding horse-sized winged wolves.

I'm not sure which female hero would look most awesome riding into the fray on a super-strong immortal Asgardian winged wolf the size of a bear (Patsy Walker would be my number one choice, for this), but, gosh, that would be a crazy cool visual!
 
Posted by Candlelight on :
 
Glorian(n)a is code name that Meggan had finally picked for her code name, according to wikipedia.
ML said that she's now in X Force now.
[Yes]

I'm doing something with the flying steeds thing, it'll just take me awhile, since I have to keep them in the micro mode.

The winged wolf is a fun idea. Razer has a couple on his site, actually, not winged, just wolves.
That should be interesting to play with.
T

Thundra has her platform, and I can't see her with an animal, really.
[shrug]
Natasha would us something tech like, too.
Or a flying alien like she did in the movie!
lol

And I assume Lorna Dane, Darkstar, Photon, Power Woman, Snowbird and the magic users would use their own flight methods.
Mantis levitates, I assume.
Meggan is a shapeshifter and Jocasta uses some Iron Man or Vision thing for flight, IIRC.

Valkyrie's horse is winged and white, like Aragorn, so I won't make another one, proably.

That just leaves Kitty with Lockheed, Frenzy, Nightside, Magma and Deadly Night Shade, if I go for Hellcat on a wolf [Yes] .

Magma and Nightside I'm already working on, Kitty, too.
I won't say what, but they're not like Aragorn.

Frenzy, too, if she doesn't fly on her own.
Does she?

If I can find a Veil, I might do her instead of Night Shade, whom I think would go techie, too.
I don't see Madame Mask on an animal, either.
sigh

And there's Iridia, who has wings AND the baby sired by Lockheed!
I love him/her, like you, and had to include her.
So, Iridia has 2 ways of getting someplace unusually fast!
 
Posted by Candlelight on :
 
I've decided to group these characters differently so I've deleted this one, here and on Bits.
I like them much better in the following panels.
[Yes]

[ October 05, 2012, 03:04 AM: Message edited by: Candlelight ]
 
Posted by Candlelight on :
 
Well, Nightside isn't flying yet.
But, she will be, soon.
[Yes]
If, like, she was real.

[ June 02, 2012, 10:14 PM: Message edited by: Candlelight ]
 
Posted by Sarcasm Kid on :
 
Photon is incredible.
 
Posted by Candlelight on :
 
She's a combination of 5 characters + my input.
But, Nightside was so much more complicated and difficult, even more so with her steed.
sigh
Glad you like Photo, though, SarK.
[Yes]
 
Posted by Candlelight on :
 
I posted this on Bits . . . as well but it was made for this thread and partly about Set's comments.

 -

Set suggested wolves,specifically, and Razer had already done wolves, Dire Wolves I think, for his Artemis Byzantine Knights.
So, here they are with Hellcat and the Black Widow, two Valkyrior micro candidates that Set commented on.

The Valkyrie steed was one I found after I made my own Aragorn for Dani.
This one was on the Compendium site and credited to JR. He added the wings, anyway, and the little scalloped edge around the horse's chest.
Rat is credited with Comet, the horse base used.
I don't know if Rat made the horse or if he used as a base for his Comet, though.

I added tack to go with Valkyrie's costume, gave her a sword that I designed from her clothes, and stood her up, since she would look cool with that cape flying out, another thing that Set liked.
[Yes]

Edit: I saw something that needed fixing.
Then, I decided to put Photon and Thundra here as a grouping.
I'll change the Nightside/Iridia grouping as well, to reflect my picks, like the Mystery Lad grouping that I added.

Set's will be like these, too.

[ July 13, 2012, 02:35 AM: Message edited by: Candlelight ]
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
http://www.bleedingcool.com/2012/06/12/the-great-marvel-switcheroo-after-avengers-versus-x-men/
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
So, as per Bleeding Cool:

Jonathan Hickman will replace Bendis on Avengers v.4 sometime this fall.

I'm not sure how I feel about this. Hickman is, in many ways, a better superhero writer than Bendis, but his tendency for bittiness and dragged-out subplots kept me from ever fully embracing his Fantastic Four/FF. OTOH, maybe Hickman has learned from his mistakes and I'll like his Avengers better. Either way, I'm willing to give the first arc a fair chance.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
This is great news for me! I'm a big Hickman fan and his latest stories on Fantastic Four & FF seem to be the best ones he's done so far. His SHIELD has been my favorite Marvel title for years (when it comes out). Meanwhile, his creator-owned stuff is by far his best stuff out there, and some of the very best stuff in the marketplace right now from any company or in any genre.

The best thing we can expect is a restoration of the 'grandiose' element of the Avengers. Bendis took the Avengers and really brought it down to the street level, and maybe that was 'cool' for a minute (psst: [No] ), but it's far time for the Avengers to regain the stature it once had.

Plus Hickman loves utilizies concepts and characters from deep in a series' mythology, so we can expect all kinds of stuff from Avengers history to be present, and revitalized.
 
Posted by Set on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid: The best thing we can expect is a restoration of the 'grandiose' element of the Avengers. Bendis took the Avengers and really brought it down to the street level, and maybe that was 'cool' for a minute (psst: [No] ), but it's far time for the Avengers to regain the stature it once had.
That would be awesome, if true. I *like* many of the 'street level' Avengers (Cap, Hawkeye, USAgent, etc.), but the way he tossed Dr. Strange, who used to hang with Silver Surfer, the Hulk and Namor, and be a 'big gun' (who once took out a weakened Galactus with one spell...), and made him unable to teleport across the street, just bugged me.

Bendis really needed a street-level mystic for that, and totally could have taken Brother Voodoo, or Amanda Sefton, or one of the other mystics lying around unused, rather than de-power Dr. Strange for that concept. (Marvel doesn't really have a John Constantine analogue, does it? That really seems to be around the level that Bendis was looking for...)

quote:
Plus Hickman loves utilizies concepts and characters from deep in a series' mythology, so we can expect all kinds of stuff from Avengers history to be present, and revitalized.
Ooh, that's inspiring! I loved how Busiek went all 'continuity porn' with his run, bringing back all sorts of classic elements.

I'd love to see a non-deus ex machina Scarlet Witch back, some day (and a return of the Wasp!). The last decade or so, it really seems like there's been a concerted effort to make Wanda unusable as a character (same as happened to Jean Grey, really), and it kinda bugs me.

With the push into new media (movies, especially, but also animated shows), it's about time Marvel started highlighting some of their classic female characters (Jean, Wanda, Janet, Sue), which is kinda problematic, since they keep killing them (or making them omnipotent, crazy and / or evil)...
 
Posted by razsolo on :
 
I liked Hickman's run on Fantastic Four to start with, but I felt that his stories took too long to pay off so I dropped it pretty early on.

I would be willing to give him another try on Avengers; his FF cast has grown pretty huge and I have heard a lot of good things from fans so I assume he can work well with a large cast of characters (which is a completely different thing to just HAVING a large cast of characters with only one or two of them having any real voice....)

I also really like his sensibility when it comes to how he approaches superheroes. A lot more than Bendis' anyway who always seems to write the Avengers as a pretty unlikeable clique of bullies a lot of the time.

It would be nice to be able to read an Avengers comic all the way through without putting it down in disgust or rolling my eyes at the lousy characterisation again....
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Set:
Marvel doesn't really have a John Constantine analogue, does it?

They don't. But I tried to create a female Constantine analog a couple years ago, retconning her into untold stories from the 616 universe:

http://iammilk-milk.blogspot.com/2010/09/fanfic-west-coast-avengers-in-burdens.html

http://iammilk-milk.blogspot.com/2010/08/fanfic-avengers-in-something-about-mary.html

http://iammilk-milk.blogspot.com/2010/08/fanfic-black-knight-in-choice.html
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
Hellstorm!
 
Posted by Set on :
 
Avenger's Academy continues to be fun. They've been sucked into the A vs. X event, but done so in a way that suits the book and it's themes.

Hercules as a teacher is all kinds of hilarious. (His first history lesson is teaching about Greek wrestling, by taking off his clothes and demonstrating the poses, since Greek wrestling was in the nude. Nobody takes him up on his offer to help him re-enact various famous wrestling matches...)

The X-folk are generally less than impressed that one of the Academy students is a boy who rescued a Sentinel from the scrap heap, and has his own pet 'iron giant,' particularly when the Sentinel ocasionally says 'Destroy all mutants!' when it's scanners pick up a mutant. As Juston explains, "He doesn't mean that! He just says it when he gets overstimulated!"
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Power Boy:
Hellstorm!

I disagree. He's not down-to-earth enough to be a Constantine analog. Plus, he was created a decade before Constantine.
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
He used to be more down to earth as the Son of Satan, the super fire control is recent. Constantine does have occasional big tricks up his sleeves that are equal in power.

Alastair Stuart founder of W.H.O. would also be interesting, from Excalibur fame. I always liked that guy. And his sister but she seems to have gotten some gory treatment.

and he was created closer in time to Constantine. [Wink]
 
Posted by He Who Wanders on :
 
If anyone's interested, my latest blogpost analyzes Steve Englehart's "Avengers/Defenders Clash" in terms, from a writer's perspective, of what makes a successful crossover.
 
Posted by Cobalt Kid on :
 
Steve Epting, a major favorite on LW including me, joins Hickman on the second (monthly) Avengers series, New Avengers. The only other news I've seen so far is the Vision is included.

This could really be awesome. My fellow Epting fans Fanfie and Dev could end up with an Avengers comic they can get behind...
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
Thanks for the wonderful news, Cobie. Epting did draw the best Vision.
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
I just posted the following at the CAPTAIN COMICS board...


A very, very long discussion thread about AVENGERS at LEGION WORLD put forth the idea that, once Roger Stern had Hank Pym BEAT Egghead, and then Steve Englehart had him join the West Coast team, the whole "mentally unstable" thing should have been done and over with. (I'd like to go on record that I was utterly bewildered at the time when Englehart-- without any warning whatsoever-- had Pym TRY TO KILL HIMSELF!!! What the F***?????) And further, tha Bob Harras had Pym evolve and grow way past his problems. So when first, Chuck Austen, and then Kurt Busiek BOTH had to retread old news that way... it showed a lack of imagination, coupled with a lack of respect for earlier stories that had already covered what they were supposedly trying to cover (AGAIN) themselves.

Personally, I think Pym has been getting repeatedly screwed over ever since Roy Thomas took over the book way, way back when. (He also made Jan look really stupid while he was at it, and Hank Pym would be the first to tell you, SHE WASN'T.)

I'm really glad the entire ANT-MAN run has been collected both in B&W and color, because these days fans can very easily read "the good stuff" without having to put up with the CRAP that came later (if they choose to ignore it).
 
Posted by Set on :
 
Pym, IMO, suffers from the same problem that Aquaman suffers. Author du jour wants to 'address the fans perceptions of the character' instead of just friggin' writing a good story with the character.

I don't need to have Pym's past actions rationalized to me, any more than I need to have the writer explain to me why Aquaman doesn't suck. If I thought that Pym was a waste, or that Aquaman sucked, I wouldn't bloody well be reading the book, now would I?

It's gets all meta-textual, and self-referential, and feels more masturbatory than anything else.

Tell a good Pym story. People who judge the character based on more than one panel in his past will continue to draw their own conclusions. People who judge the character only based on that one panel, will *also* continue to draw their own conclusions. Don't waste another panel (or decade, for that matter) trying to change their minds.

Mighty Avengers, IMO, went way, way overboard in trying to fluff up Pym, with the Scientist Supreme bit perhaps being the most epic bit of wankery. Avengers Academy, on the other hand, seems to be doing a much more down-to-earth presentation of the character.

If, 10 years ago, someone had suggested that Pym would back-to-back lead a pair of Avengers teams, I'm not sure I would have believed that he could be brought back from where they had left him. And here we are.

If he never has another breakdown or crisis of confidence or total freakout again, so much the better.

Tony and Reed are way past due, anyway. [Smile]
 
Posted by Candlelight on :
 
Well, I'm glad I missed all of that Pym stuff, especially wife beating, suicide and stupid Jan.
She was rather vapid, in the early days, anyway, but never stupid.
At least, that I remember.

That kind of stuff seems to happen to all of the soap opera stuff in comics, with the same characters going on and on.
[shrug]
 
Posted by Reboot on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt Kid:
Steve Epting, a major favorite on LW including me, joins Hickman on the second (monthly) Avengers series, New Avengers. The only other news I've seen so far is the Vision is included.

Where did you see the Vision news?
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
From CAPTAIN COMICS... enjoy!


"Your chronology isn't quite right, Henry."


To be expected. I read the Busiek run, not the others. This doesn't "excuse" what Steve Englehart did in my eyes. Steve was my favorite writer in the early-mid 70's. But when he came back-- working for 3 companies at the same time-- the quality of his writing was shockingly erratic, sometimes from one issue to another. Not like the old days at all.


The writers who SCREWED Hank Pym over, initially, were Roy Thomas, then Jim Shooter. And then, Jim Shooter AGAIN. In between, Steve Gerber, and then Steve Englehart (yes, IN that order) told some really good stories about him and Jan, in DEFENDERS, then AVENGERS. It's sad that Gerry Conway screwed over Steve Englehart (and Marvel in general) during his brief run as EIC. Who knows what Steve might have done if he hadn't been kicked off the book, because (like every other book Conway took over from someone else at the time), Conway wanted to write it himself (so he could make extra money on the side)?


Thomas didn't seem to think he was doing anything wrong when he messed with both Hank & Jan's personalities. With Jim Shooter, it seemed a deliberate act of character assassination. But then, he did that with just about every character (created by other people) that he wrote. Chris Claremont, at the time, wrote several stories specifically designed to REFUTE this kind of character assassination perpetuated by other writers. Chris is NOT my favorite writer by any means, but between AVENGERS ANNUAL #10 and that 2-part MARVEL TEAM-UP with Yellowjacket & Wasp (where he upped their power levels and reaffirmed their love for each other), it's clear he didn't like it when some other writer would come along and just try to destroy long-running characters. (Then again, considering what he did in so many of his own stories, maybe he figured, "Hey, that's MY job!")


To summarize: all that later damage control NEVER should have been "neccessary". But, like the families that got rich helping Hitler to re-arm Germany, I'm sure the trouble-makers will never pay for what they did. (Yes, I do love making outrageous comparisons like that...)
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
Set:
"Pym, IMO, suffers from the same problem that Aquaman suffers. Author du jour wants to 'address the fans perceptions of the character' instead of just friggin' writing a good story with the character."

I LOVE your attitude!!!


"People who judge the character only based on that one panel"

Did you happen to read where, recently, Jim Shooter tried to "EXPLAIN" how the story that got published got COMPLETELY out-of-hand and was NOT what he "intended" AT ALL? He tried to blame the artist for "misinterpreting" what he gave him in a script. YEAH, RIGHT. This, the guy who spent his entire career in comics, since high school, going out of his way to DESTROY other people's characters. (This is the guy, remember, who had Matt Murdock have a nervious breakdown.)


Candlelight:
"Well, I'm glad I missed all of that Pym stuff, especially wife beating, suicide and stupid Jan.
She was rather vapid, in the early days, anyway, but never stupid.
At least, that I remember."

The so-called wife-beating (IT WASN'T) consisted of him slapping her ONCE (ONCE!) when he was under extreme pressure and didn't know what he was doing. I'm sure far worse things happen in many families without criminal charges being brought up. So many calling it "wife-beating" ever since makes it sound like it was something he spent YEARS doing on a regular basis.

Sometime when Kirby, Heck, Ayers or someone else was doing their regular series, there was at least one scene that sticks in my mind, where Hank either thinks, he doesn't understand why Jan acts so air-headed, when HE KNOWS she's not that way, that she IS smart-- or, he says it right to her face.

But during Roy Thomas' run on AVENGERS, he had her hire a chauffer without checking references. The guy turned out to be a super-villain with a grudge against her husband. I MEAN REALLY. And it took YEARS before anybody figured it out! Talk about a "National Security" problem.

The suicide attemp came in WEST COAST AVENGERS. This was after Shooter destroyed Yellowjacket's career, had him arrested, brought up on charges, and made sure that Roger Stern was onboard as far as making the absurd statement that Hank & Jan were "NEVER" right for each other. So after he beat Egghead and cleared his name, Hank & Jan still went their separate ways. Later, he joined the WCA. And about a YEAR later... out of NOWHERE... he tried to off himself. When I read it, it was like... WHAT??? There had been NO warning. Unless of course, you'd been reading Jim Shooter's 2nd run on AVENGERS. Which was like, already 2-3 years in the past by then.


It wasn't until decades later I got ahold of ESSENTIAL ANT-MAN and was finally able to read the entire run of their series. Those are some of my favorite stories from that era these days.
 
Posted by Candlelight on :
 
A slap?
That's it?

When I was a kid, a tornado came by our place after dark.
I went out to check my horses that were in the basement of the barn.
The barn was gone and something was screaming in the night.
I ran back in the house and told my family, who laughed.
I decided to get slightly hystarical, just to get my point across, you understand.
Dad slapped me.

So, he should be labeled a child beater?
gads
 
Posted by Set on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Candlelight:
A slap?
That's it?

I think it was a backhanded punch, actually, from a dude who was, at the time, psychotic and dissociative (this was during the time when he honestly believed that he was some other dude who killed Hank Pym and stole his stuff, which, minus the killing Pym part, is the origin story for at least three other superheroes, suggesting that Pym really needs to keep better track of his stuff...).

Reed and Peter, without the benefit of psychosis, have slapped Sue and Mary-Jane, respectively, and somehow escaped the 'wife-beater' label, and gone on to do fun stuff like retconning their marriage out of existence with a devil's deal, and send supervillain 'cape-killers' after their wife, brother-in-law and best friend over a political disagreement.

(Note to self, don't marry a super-hero! They can be jerks!)
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
No, no, no! The "wife-beater" thing wasn't from that old Roy Thomas-John Buscema-George Klein story... this was about 10 years later, when Jim Shooiter took over the book for the 2nd time (very briefly). He followed Bill Mantlo, Gene Colan & Dan Green, in fact, Gene did Shooter's 1st issue (which is horrible, considering how much non-stop HELL Shooter put poor Gene thru-- he just HATED Gene's art and did everything in his power to inspire Gene to QUIT).


The line-up had just gone thru another shake-up, and for the 2nd time in some years, Yellowjacket & Wasp re-joined the team. And about 1 issue later, there was this whole thing where Hank was under stress for some reason Shooter invented, he slapped Jan, she showed up at the mansion wearing dark glasses, and Hank created a robot to sent to attack the team so he could look brilliant when he defeated it.

If you ask me, it's not the character who was sick, it was the writer. And I use that word loosely.


Here's the character path I remember from the old days...


Steve Gerber brings Yellowjacket out of retirement in THE DEFENDERS.

Steve Englehart has Yellowjacket & Wasp rejoin THE AVENGERS.

Conway boots Englehart, then skips, leaving an opening for Shooter. About 6 months in, OUT OF NOWHERE, Shooter has Ant-Man show up in a psychotic episode in which he attacks the entire team for no apparent reason. There was an explanation, but it seemed from the start Shooter decided to start screwing over Hank Pym. (Perhaps his "excuse" was, "Roy started it!")

Chris Claremont & John Byrne-- in MARVEL TEAM-UP-- do a story which reaffirms just how much Hank & Jan love each other, and her power levels get increased at the same time. At the time, it struck me the entire 2-parter was Claremont & Byrne thumbing their nose at Shooter.

Shooter returns to AVENGERS and DESTROYS Hank & Jan's happy marriage. BASTARD. Then he skips, leaving a long string of fill-ins, in which somebody (maybe it was one of Shooter's stories), Tony Stark has an affair with Jan, then breaks her heart when she finds out for the first time he's Iron Man (I forget the rationale or details). Right after this, Denny O'Neil has Tony fall off the wagon (OVER SOME OTHER WOMAN) and he loses his entire company and fortune and winds up living on the streets-- for 3 whole years.

You can see something was deadly wrong with Marvel at this point. Worse, fans thought it was brilliant.

Roger Stern takes over for a very long, stable run on AVENGERS. In his 1st issue, Hank is put on trial for crimes involving national security, is kidnapped by Egghead (who, it's revealed, was affecting his mind and caused him to slap his wife). Egghead gets KILLED, Hank is cleared of all charges. And then, Hank & Jan decide they were "never right for each other" and go their separate ways. Eventually, she becomes team leader and has affairs with several different men. I always figured Stern was following Shooter's ORDERS when he did this.

Steve Englehart gets on WEST COAST AVENGERS. About a year and a half in, out of nowhere, hank tries to kill himself. (It was NEVER mentioned-- ever-- but may he LIED when he told Jan what he did?)
 
Posted by profh0011 on :
 
Candlelight:
"Dad slapped me.
So, he should be labeled a child beater?"


My Dad did 100 TIMES WORSE to me over a stretch of about 30 YEARS. He never got arrested over it.

Actually, he did get a record for assault & battery once. The charges were brought against him by my mother-- who was suffering from MENTAL ILLNESS at the time which caused NON-STOP CHAOS in our home for a couple of decades. So, check this. He gets a record for something he DIDN'T do, the much worse things he DID, not a hint. Irony? Poetic justice? Insanity?
 
Posted by Candlelight on :
 
I'm sorry that things were so bad for your family.
The world's a hard place to be on/in/a part of, sometimes.
[Frown]

[ July 09, 2012, 08:02 AM: Message edited by: Candlelight ]
 
Posted by Candlelight on :
 
Well, I finally finished this one - most of Mystery Lad's suggestions in motion, sort of.

The Knights seem to have quite a bit of skin showing, so the ones that I put together that didn't have any, I corrected, like Darkstar. I actually like her look better with the little tweeks.

I like that Crystal can take her armor off and she has her regular costume on (more golden than yellow, richer) after she puts her black belt on.
[Yes]
Lockheed started as on of JR's creations, but I changed the look pretty substancially with the armor, etc.

Mantis was fun to make levitating.
I really like her finished design, which is mostly Razer's. I added the cape and her hand and leg positions, is all.

I returned Polaris, because she's pretty cute.
[shrug]

I didn't have much interest originally in Madame Mask, but that changed as I put her together.
I love the mask, which is almost totally different from the base character's that JR did.
But, I did keep his gun and holster for her because they're so neat.

Magma got the steed, which took foreever but I like the results.

I hope that they're enjoyed:
 -
 
Posted by razsolo on :
 
Re: Hank's suicide attempt in WCA....that's actually pretty true to life for a lot of people. The first thing a lot of people say when someone they love kills themselves is that it came out of nowhere and that nobody had any idea the person was that low.

There were signs leading up to it...his interactions with Ultron and Whirlwind, the way he grew immediately attached to Tigra and then had to stop himself from flipping out when she said she just wanted to be friends...could it have been written better? Probably, but while I remember it being a shocking cliffhanger at the time it seemed like a reasonable progression from the past year or so worth of characterisation as well.

I think it's a shame that Hank didn't just stay Hank Pym, scientific adventurer for the rest of his career. To me, that really made the best use out of his character that he'd had since the early days of the original Avengers. Plus, his powerset at that point was something that was pretty unique in comics. The only character I can think of who had anything comparable was Shaman from Alpha Flight with his medicine pouch (and much later on, Honey Lemon from Big Hero 6). Hank may have been Marvel's original size-changing hero, but now he's just one of many and I think it diminishes them all, the same way Jan getting growth powers all of a sudden diminished her uniqueness as well (no pun intended)
 
Posted by He Who Wanders on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by razsolo:

I think it's a shame that Hank didn't just stay Hank Pym, scientific adventurer for the rest of his career.

I agree. One of the reasons I no longer read Marvel or DC is because there's never a sense of closure to anything. Hank Pym gives up being a costumed hero and is happy . . . but then, a few years later, he's back to being Giantantyellowjacketman or whatever.

I know comics aren't like real life, and I know super-heroes are fodder for whatever the company wants to do with them. I also know the illusion of change in comics is just that: an illusion.

But Marvel and DC's universes worked best for me when I actually believed these heroes could change, even if the changes weren't always what I or other fans wanted.

In real life, the Beatles never got back together . . . and they were probably happier for it.

In real life, gay people don't get "cured" of homosexuality. They find peace with themselves, even though they don't fit into the mold certain others would project upon them.

Comics, like literature, are at their best when they reflect real life within the bounds of fantastic settings. The original X-Men go their separate ways . . . Jean Grey dies . . . the Vision and the Scarlet Witch marry . . . Hank Pym retires from being a super-hero. Life happens. We deal with it, and we learn to look at things in a new way.

Closure is a way of acknowledging that we are not who we used to be and that the journey has been worth it.

When comics stopped being about a journey, I stopped believing in them.
 
Posted by Candlelight on :
 
I fixed and updated the Valkyrie grouping on page 67 to reflect how I'm going to do them from now on, like Mystery Lad's above.

It now includes Valkyrie and more of her picks for the team (suggested by ML.)

I'm reworking the Nightside/Iridia grouping to only include some of my suggestions.

Set's will be in the same format.
[Yes]

[ July 13, 2012, 02:58 AM: Message edited by: Candlelight ]
 
Posted by Candlelight on :
 
I have a long way to go, especially with Set's group, but I enjoyed the initial results for Power Woman, so since I figured out how to resize the picture on Paint, I'm going to post her, the baby and Power Man, her husband.

I altered her costume to reflect her relationship with PM and him I gave eyes, but that's it.

The baby is from a LIL Micro base and I pretty much created my own except for the boots.

Set has suggested that the baby would look cute on her mother's hip, so that's were she is.
In the finished piece, PW will be flying, or about to, since that's one of the common threads for each grouping.

 -

The baby's sleeping, by the way.
[Yes]
 
Posted by Candlelight on :
 
Okay.
I put them together, flying.
I may tweek them a bit, but this is them until the grouping, which may take awhile.
I'm trying to put together a Snowbird/polar bear combo and possibly another winged horse combo.
sigh

The Wiki info says that PW never really mastered her flying, so maybe she'll do better with her family hanging on.
Think so?

PM has his sunglasses on now, too.
[Yes]

 -
Edit:
The carrier and baby details are pretty well finished now, and so is mom.
PM was already finished.
[Yes]

[ July 24, 2012, 12:59 AM: Message edited by: Candlelight ]
 
Posted by Candlelight on :
 
Here's the true form of Meggan, although she usually looks like her golden haired/green costumed self, Brin's ideal woman, she discovered this as her unempathic shapeshifted self one day.
No small feat for someone who'd never seen herself through just her own eyes before.
[Yes]

Until my final grouping:
 -

[ July 17, 2012, 12:51 AM: Message edited by: Candlelight ]
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
http://www.bleedingcool.com/2012/08/27/peter-david-writes-avengers-season-one/
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
Anyone else still reading AVENGERS ACADEMY? Its apparent last arc has been a great one, cementing my affection for these characters- maybe even over the Young Avengers. Well, most of them, anyway.

The trajectory of Hazmat and Mettle's relationship has been a great one. For much of the run, I thought either or both of these characters were the ones most likely to 'turn' and fulfill the senior Avengers' fears for these kids. If that happened *now*, it would feel much more of a tragedy.

Veil and Stryker, my inital favorites, are left in fairly interesting places. And Finesse, the character I grew to like the most from when I first encountered her, has all kinds of potential. Reptil, though a sunny, likeable character, hasn't really developed all that much- though he's been put through definite wringers.

White Tiger and her mystical meeting with her namesake and that meeting's intriguing resolution definitely ratcheted up my interest in her.

This title had some of the best 'sideline' stories spinning out of the otherwise nonsensical A Vs X stuff. Too bad it's apparently ending due to whatever the end of the big mess will be.
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
Shady, I love your work and the results for so many great Marvel characters. If only the publisher had similar vision, since the idea that inspired us is apparently dead.
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
Jonathan Hickman appears to be turning The Avengers into The Legion. His run will feature 22 Avengers, a number which grew from the 18 announced with his naming as writer.

Mostly, it's the usual suspects... with Cannonball and Sunspot from the New Mutants inducted, along with Gateway's protege from SECRET WARRIORS. Several names still to be revealed.

I'm excited just to read Cannonball in this context. Not so sure Sunspot's so great a choice, but he and Sam make a fun pair.

I hope DC pays attention and considers this as sort of 'tryout' for LSH- as I think Hickman would make a great choice for Legion writer a couple of years from now.
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
I've always liked Cannonball, and am happy to see him join the Avengers, even though Dani would have been my first choice to be the first New Mutant to join the Avengers (what is Dani's current status anyway?) Not really a fan of Sunspot, but like ML said, there's good chemistry between him and Cannonball.

I am not a fan of the approach that Hickman took in Fantastic Four/FF; basically, I felt everything moved in fits and starts; I hope he takes a more straightforward approach to Avengers.
 
Posted by Candlelight on :
 
Oh.
Well, maybe it's 'dead' just for now?!
[shrug]

I DO have a Set grouping, though.
I've included the previously shown Power Woman and family, with a few tweeks.
I've included his Spider Woman, Jessica Jones, I hope I got the right one. Razer did a Spider Woman, only she was the blue and white version.
[Yes]
Frenzy got a steed, chocolate, like her.
Then, I did the 3 magic users, Amanda Sefton with the Golden Fleece for flying, which was fun to put together using one of Rat's characters for the basic fleece.
And Jennifer Kale with a magic cube thingy.
Then, I couldn't resist adding Razer's Dr. Strange, with pants, to the Clea figure.
I enjoyed making her, especially. I combined two of her looks, the pink and the black/silver versions.
Her eyes were the most interesting for me, since I haven't seen any others like them, half closed.

I have another of this in the works, Snowbird, but her steed is very different, so I'm going to give her a different type of background.
I hope to finish her sometime soon, but I'm not sure. They take such a lot of time because I'm so slow!
lol

 -

[ September 12, 2012, 11:56 PM: Message edited by: Candlelight ]
 
Posted by Candlelight on :
 
These are most of my choices:

We've seen Kitty, but I changed the Lockheed out for one by JR. I gave her a platform but allowed it to be mostly transparent, sort of insubstancial, like her. The larger dragon is from a drawing on wiki, in my mind, Lockheed's older brother, come for a visit.
[Yes]

Then, there's the finished Meggan, followed by Iridia and a brightened Lockjaw pup.

Bottom row starts with Jocasta on her robotic steed, with the soft butterfly wings and curled fish tail.
She's followed by Wanda. This one is new, a combination of Razer's Scarlet Witch and numerous other micros.
Wanda is followed by Nightside.

 -

Almost finished with these.
[sigh]

[ October 05, 2012, 03:42 AM: Message edited by: Candlelight ]
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
Valkyrie and Venom are a couple? Asgardian goddess Brunhilde is falling in love with Flash Thompson?

It can't last, because I can't really imagine showing up in Spidey-verse stories very often. It won't be 'real' unless she does.

He's obviously her 'transition' man, after the whole mess with Siegfried (however that's spelled...)
 
Posted by Set on :
 
The penultimate issue of Avengers Academy is out (*sob* choke!) and it's a flag football game between the AA students and the Jean Grey Academy students.

Lot's of character moments squeezed in, although, and I almost never laugh out loud while reading a comic book, Jocasta charging her tasers to eject various participants for excessive roughness or whatever, and being told 'Don't tase me, Jo!' by one of the students, definitely got me. I read it again the next day, and it was still enough to get me laughing.

I missed out on some of it, since I don't really know much about Quentin Quire or Warbird, so their character bits go right over my head, but it's a decent 'day in the life' sort of issue, and helps to resolve some characterization beats before the final issue.

I'm gonna miss this one!

(And this will drop my Marvel pull-list to one title, X-Factor.)
 
Posted by DrakeB3004 on :
 
Interesting that they're trying to make the Avengers more global. I'm actually hoping to see Sunfire join the ranks! He's always been a jerk, but that's fun in a group dynamic, he fits in with the new "mixing X-Men with Avengers" theme, he actually has a bit of history with Iron Man, he's been around long enough to be legitimate and he's the been the premiere hero of his country for years. Oh, and he was in "Spider-Man and his Amazing Friends!" and kissed Firestar, which just makes him cool [Wink]
 
Posted by Candlelight on :
 
Here's 2 versions of Hildegarde, the Asgardian demigoddess that is part of a grouping I'm doing for the final Valkyrior panel.

Does anyone have a preference for one or the other?
I'm finishing up Hela, the last of the Asgaridans that I'm hoping to include with the final 3 suggested Valkyrior candidates that I want to include.
Still lots of work, but getting there.
sigh

 -

[ October 12, 2012, 01:59 AM: Message edited by: Candlelight ]
 
Posted by DrakeB3004 on :
 
Re: Avengers #31
So, that's gotta be the Wasp right? If it's a red herring, who else could it be (for a second I thought Dazzler maybe) and why bother hiding her face since differing artstyles always makes facial features impossible to tell anyone apart anyway? (maybe she has a gnarly scar now?)
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by DrakeB3004:
Re: Avengers #31
So, that's gotta be the Wasp right?

Yep, Bendis brought the Wasp back to life and fandom let out a collective shrug, maybe because Bendis doesn't even seem to be pretending like he cares anymore.

One more issue and he's gone.
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
hey characters are safer dead nowadays!


[shrug]
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
[LOL]

How true, how true.
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
The last Bendis issue of Avengers came out this week. Next week is the last Bendis issue of New Avengers.

All the toys have been safely and carefully put back in the box for Hickman to play with. This after the lies eight years ago that there would be genuine and lasting changes.

More tedium follows in Bendis' ridiculously overlong farewell letter, a mixture of grandiosity, boasts, half-truths, and outright lies.

It's sad to see a talented, if incredibly erratic, writer sink to such depths. It almost makes me not want to follow All-New X-Men any further, even though I liked the first issue a lot.

Don't let the door hit you on the way out, Bendis.
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
I've been burned on this title too many times.

I'll keep trying Uncanny Avengers and Wolverine and the X-Men is hit or miss ... due solely to Marvel's messing with Aaron. actually I think it's more like "home run or strike out" which is getting tedious for me.
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
So I take it you have no interest in Hickman's "Legion of Avengers"? [Wink]

Funny thing is, I once read an interview with Roger Stern where he said that the original reason for creating the West Coast Avengers was so that he could have one huge team for one book, picking and mixing characters as he desired. I wonder if that's what Hickman has in mind, only spread out across two books?
 
Posted by DrakeB3004 on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by DrakeB3004:
Interesting that they're trying to make the Avengers more global. I'm actually hoping to see Sunfire join the ranks! He's always been a jerk, but that's fun in a group dynamic, he fits in with the new "mixing X-Men with Avengers" theme, he actually has a bit of history with Iron Man, he's been around long enough to be legitimate and he's the been the premiere hero of his country for years. Oh, and he was in "Spider-Man and his Amazing Friends!" and kissed Firestar, which just makes him cool [Wink]

YES!! Haha ....
 -
(oh, in case you hadn't heard, Sunfire will indeed be joining the ranks of Uncanny Avengers...)

And about the Wasp, even though her return was basically inevitable, I was actually able to get into Jan & gang's joy at seeing each other again.

Funny that over in "Minimum Carnage" there's another Microverse story going on featuring Rann, Bug and Marionette.
 
Posted by Power Boy on :
 
I actually really like Sunfire ... but does he have a body again or is he just a burning skeleton still?
 
Posted by Fanfic Lady on :
 
I like Sunfire, too. Unfortunately, he's in the Remender Avengers book, not either of the Hickman Avengers books. Pass.

quote:
Originally posted by DrakeB3004:
And about the Wasp, even though her return was basically inevitable, I was actually able to get into Jan & gang's joy at seeing each other again

I was not able to. This whole "Teh Definitive Avengers, Teh Heart and Soul of the Team" B.S. makes me sick. It's the reason I haven't wholeheartedly enjoyed Avengers since 1994.
 
Posted by Mystery Lad on :
 
SECRET AVENGERS- a certain something happens that's already shown to not be true in titles that take place after the current storyline. Right?
 


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