Wednesday 30 November 2016

Marvel Team-Up (1997) # 8-11, Dracula: Lord of the Undead (1998) # 1-3


(I originally read these comics in early/mid June 2016)

So, I read (or re-read) some second rate, late-'90s Marvel stuff that I bought at the time. First up is the doomed continuation of Marvel Team-Up after Namor supplanted Spidey as the featured star with issue # 8. This short run written by Tom Peyer and Glenn Herdling is pretty execrable. Having returned from the 'Heroes Reborn' world with his mind fragmented and having lost his ability to breathe underwater, the erstwhile "Avenging Son" resorts to desperate measures to thwart a coup in Atlantis. Each issue is suffused with enough anti-business, pro-environmentalist drek that it reads more like ultra-leftist propaganda with super-heroics as an afterthought. The art's shit, too. Avoid unless you're a similarly-minded, filthy commie.


   


Glenn Greenberg's 'Dracula: Lord of the Undead' is better. Dracula returns to his castle in Transylvania after years in America only to find his ancestral home ransacked. In trying to track down his stolen treasures, he is led to England where the "last descendant" of Dr. John Seward (even though he has children, oops), a blood specialist, works to develop a vampire-destroying virus for a mystery employer. Unfortunately, it has unforeseen side effects for humans too. Greenberg's story is unremarkable but readable (and we fans of Marvel's Drac will take what we can get). 'Tomb of Dracula' alumnus Tom Palmer is around to polish up Pat Olliffe's occasionally gruesome pencils, but the result is never more than just adequate. Memorable for a very large-breasted and leather-clad depiction of Dracula's daughter Lilith, if you're into that kind of thing. And who isn't?


  



Sunday 27 November 2016

Runaways (2005) # 1-24, Young Avengers & Runaways (2006) # 1-4


(I originally read these comics in early June 2016)

Thought I'd pick up the second volume of Runaways, having read the first this time last year and before I forget everything about it. To refresh the memory, it follows a group of West Coast kids who came to discover their parents made up a shady crime cabal, and then teamed up to defeat them. There's no great, overarching plot to this series. Two new members join - a cyborg 'son' of Ultron and a noble Skrull who, while male, takes on a female guise after he shows up to announce his long since pre-arranged marriage to lesbian member Karolina. (And "Squee!" go the Tumblrettes.) There's a team-up with Cloak (of Cloak and Dagger), a meeting with Spider-Man (they eat sushi) and a clash with a support group for ex-teen super-heroes made up of Marvel third(or even fourth)-stringers. One Runaway dies.

This continues to be well-written stuff by Brian K. Vaughan, with great character interaction and dialogue. Of course, the kids are all far more likeable, responsible and intelligent than real-life counterparts would be. Vaughan left after # 24, so I'm gonna take a break as I'm not enjoying it quite as much as I did previously. 

I'm very surprised Marvel hasn't announced a film (or at least a TV series) of this already. It has broad crossover appeal and would seem destined to be a surefire mainstream hit.


   
   
   
   
  
  

   

  


Runaways (2005) # 1-18 and Free Comic Book Day: X-Men/Runaways (2006) # 1 are collected in:

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Runaways (2005) # 1-12 and Free Comic Book Day: X-Men/Runaways (2006) # 1 are collected in:

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Runaways (2005) # 1-6 are collected in:

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Runaways (2005) # 7-12 are collected in:

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Runaways (2005) # 13-24 are collected in:

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Runaways (2005) # 13-18 are collected in:

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Runaways (2005) # 19-24 and Civil War: Young Avengers & Runaways (2006) # 1-4 are collected in:

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Runaways (2005) # 19-24 are collected in:

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Civil War:Young Avengers & Runaways (2006) # 1-4 are collected in:

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Friday 25 November 2016

Amazing Spider-Man (1963) # 434-441, Spectacular Spider-Man (1976) # 257-263, Peter Parker, Spider-Man (1990) # 91-98, Sensational Spider-Man (1996) # 27-33, Spider-Man Unlimited (1993) # 20-22, Spider-Man: Made Men (1998)


(I originally read these comics in late May 2016)

Just finished reading the 125 or so Spider-Man comics published within the two-year window between January 1997 and Jan '99 (and a few slightly outside it). This little project took me four weeks. I've enjoyed 'em by and large but I will be glad to move onto something else. 


   
   


The 'Identity Crisis' crossover follows on directly from 'Spider-Hunt', with Peter assuming four new super-hero guises so he can continue to act while there's a bounty on his head. J.M. DeMatteis leaves as writer of Spectacular Spider-Man for the second time before the story's conclusion, leaving things to be wrapped up by Glenn Greenberg. That's a shame as he's always been one of the best Spidey scribes and he hasn't worked with the character for any extended period since.


 
  
  
  
  
 


The long-running Black Tarantula sub-plot comes to a head in Amazing # 436 (also the climax to Tom DeFalco's second extended run on the title). The character would only turn up again years later in Ed Brubaker's Daredevil run. The newly-revealed Hobgoblin, Roderick Kingsley, and Norman Osborn face off in Roger Stern's 'Goblins at the Gate', a good read, and the Kingpin makes his tentative return to the Big Apple seven years after being toppled from his perch in Howard Mackie's and Norman Felchle's 'Made Men' one-shot. (I guess we're supposed to overlook his recent appearance in 'Spider-Man/Kingpin: to the Death'.) Despite the Spidey logo emblazoned prominently on the front, 'Made Men' features the web-slinger cameoing in only a couple of panels. 


      


The run climaxes in the double whammy of 'The Gathering of Five' and 'The Final Chapter', which feature Norman Osborn assembling five artifacts needed to perform an arcane ritual through which he hopes to gain ultimate power. Instead he goes insane (insaner?) and in the final showdown with Peter reveals that Aunt May didn't die in the pages of Amazing Spider-Man # 400, after all. No, he'd previously employed a "genetically-engineered actress" to die in her place just to fuck with his mind. Oh, comics...

With Aunt May back and Mary Jane giving up her studies to return to modelling (great role model, there), the way is clear for the Howard Mackie/John Byrne reboot. I read that as it came out and was far from impressed but because I'm some kind of masochist I'll give it another read through soon.


   
  
  


This late 90s stretch of comics is largely a forgotten period in Spidey history, being sandwiched between the infamous Clone Saga and the nearly-as-infamous reboot. There are really no stories that have gone down as classics but that doesn't mean they aren't consistently enjoyable, or at least competent.

One thing I like is how '90s darlings Venom and Carnage are employed sparely. Aside from the two one-shots under his own name, Carnage only makes two appearances. Venom, meanwhile, was coming off the back of a succession of his own limited series and when he does rear his slobbering, fang-filled head it's in the one-shot 'Venom Agenda', and not a regular title. It's as if editorial had finally cottoned on to the fact they're pretty lame characters. Or perhaps not.

Another plus is the number of horror characters Peter gets thrown up against. Morbius gets a handful of appearances. There's also Dracula, Lilith, Frankenstein's Monster, Ghost Rider, Blade and two appearances from Simon Garth, the Zombie. I've always thought Spidey works well in horror settings. 


Sensational Spider-Man # 27, Amazing Spider-Man # 434, Peter Parker, Spider-Man # 91 and Spectacular Spider-Man # 257 were released with variant covers showcasing Peter Parker's alternate super-hero identities. As extras, here are those covers.


   


Peter Parker, Spider-Man # 98 also came with a variant, second outer cover heralding the character's new direction. 




Sensational Spider-Man (1996) # 27/28, Amazing Spider-Man (1963) # 434/435, Peter Parker, Spider-Man (1990) # 91/92 and Spectacular Spider-Man (1976) # 257/258 are collected in:

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Spectacular Spider-Man (1976) # 259-261 are collected in:

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Sensational Spider-Man (1996) # 32/33, Amazing Spider-Man (1963) # 440/441, Peter Parker, Spider-Man (1990) # 96-98 and Spectacular Spider-Man (1976) # 262/263 are collected in:

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