Showing posts with label Christopher Yost. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christopher Yost. Show all posts

Thursday, 26 January 2017

X-Men Origins: Beast (2008) # 1, Colossus (2008) # 1, Jean Grey (2008) # 1, Gambit (2009) # 1, Sabretooth (2009) # 1, Wolverine (2009) # 1, Cyclops (2010) # 1, Deadpool (2010) # 1, Emma Frost (2010) # 1, Iceman (2010) # 1, Nightcrawler (2010) # 1


(I originally read these comics in early January 2017)

You should cherish this post if you're an X-Men fan, because I won't be making many of them. The X-Men and their sundry spin-offs are the Marvel franchise for which I have the least affection. However, that's not to say I don't enjoy some X-Men comics. Given that their convoluted continuity is my main barrier to enjoying them, self-contained, short stories like those in the 'Origins' one-shots should be much more palatable. At least, that's the theory.


  
  
  

Released between 2008 and 2010, each of the comics purports to tell the origin story of a long-standing X-character. In reality, they're really just recaps. Even as a casual (at best) X-fan, there wasn't much here I didn't already know or hadn't read elsewhere. Mike Carey's script for the Beast comic is hampered by having to retell what was already a crappy story with a silly villain. However, the frankly weird art style that looks like painted-over photographs really skewers it. His Gambit book is marginally better (an' I say dis as an avowed Gambit-'ater) and showcases an interesting art style by the combined talents of David Yardin and Ibraim Roberson. The Colossus book is better and has the benefit of moody art by Trevor Hairsine, but content is slim. It's Mike Mayhew's art in the Jean Grey comic that's the standout amongst the first half dozen titles. While I'm no great fan of painted comics, Mayhew's work is simply beautiful, presumably heavy on photo reference but without the stiffness that often results. Jean's journey from traumatised tween to powerful teen telepath is sensitively handled.

There's not much room for sensitivity in the Wolverine or Sabretooth comics, but then that's not what their fans are after. Kieron Gillen's Sabretooth 'origin' doesn't offer much beyond violence, but Dan Panosian's art is great. With more history to recap than most, Chris Yost's Wolverine one-shot is superficial and you'd expect him to have remembered who out of Logan and Colossus he'd had join the X-Men first, instead of having both his efforts blatantly contradict each other.



  
 


Of the latter five titles, the ones featuring Cyclops, Nightcrawler and Iceman are the best, though that's not saying much. Jesse Delperdang shines on the art for the Cyclops one-shot, which recaps Scott Summers' background from parents' deaths to assumption of the role of X-Men leader, taking in their first clash with Magneto in the process. The Nightcrawler one at least has a Universal horror film vibe that I appreciated, but the rest are hit or miss. 

Deadpool still sucks. 

One thing that becomes apparent in these stories, to the point of it being a running joke, is just how willing these kids were to ditch their families, maybe forever, to follow a creepy, bald dude. Whether engaging in an endless battle to "protect a world that hates and fears them" or ending up faces frozen in time and staring out from the sides of of milk cartons is the worse fate, I'll leave up to you to decide.


X-Men Origins: Beast (2008) # 1, X-Men Origins: Colossus (2008) # 1, X-Men Origins: Gambit (2009) # 1, X-Men Origins: Jean Grey (2008) # 1, X-Men Origins: Sabretooth (2009) # 1 and X-Men Origins: Wolverine (2009) # 1 are collected in:

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X-Men Origins: Colossus (2008) # 1 and X-Men Origins: Wolverine (2009) # 1 are collected in:

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X-Men Origins: Colossus (2008) # 1 is collected in:

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X-Men Origins: Cyclops (2010) # 1, X-Men Origins: Deadpool (2010) # 1, X-Men Origins: Emma Frost (2010) # 1, X-Men Origins: Iceman (2010) # 1 and X-Men Origins: Nightcrawler (2010) # 1 are collected in:

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X-Men Origins: Deadpool (2010) # 1 is collected in:

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Sunday, 4 December 2016

Scarlet Spider (2012) # 1-9/12-25, Point One # 1, Superior Spider-Man Team-Up (2013) # 2


(I originally read these comics in mid July 2016)

Post 'Spider-Island', which I haven't read yet, the surviving Peter Parker clone, Kaine, is cured of the degenerative condition that previously ravaged his body and is heading towards Mexico to escape the attentions of the FBI, Avengers, etc. However, he only gets as far as Houston before reluctantly getting involved in thwarting a people-trafficking operation. He becomes guardian of the one survivor, a teen girl who may be psychic, and establishes his base in a luxury hotel with money looted from the traffickers. He's repeatedly drawn into situations where he has to choose whether or not to act for the good and eventually decides this may be his opportunity to atone for the killer's life he's led so far.

The figures behind the human trafficking operation are revealed as the Lobo cartel, a Mexican crime family who are also werewolves. This is their first appearance since Gerry Conway's awesome late '80s Spider-Man runs, so that was cool.

Kaine is not Peter Parker; while not killing his enemies he displays no hesitation in seriously maiming them, and he's forever fighting the 'monster' within. Writer Chris Yost seems to think Kaine stopping short of killing criminals who want to kill him is 'heroic'; I beg to differ. He incurs the wrath of the Assassin's Guild (best known from their association with Gambit) and this plot comes back to haunt him when he's pressed into killing Wolverine. He also has a run-in with the Superior Spider-Man (Doctor Octopus, inhabiting Peter Parker's body) that follows up his killing of Ock during the Clone Saga, fifteen years previously. Unfortunately, this could have been better. 

A long foreshadowed plot featuring the revived Kraven the Hunter (yuck) comes to fruition towards the end of the run and takes the series to its bittersweet conclusion. 

This is a good series and I'm sorry it didn't last longer. Kaine is a bad guy trying to make good but knowing that in the end it's fruitless. He is what he is. Maybe it'd have played out differently had the comic not been cancelled but I'm glad in a way it didn't go that far. It's a refreshingly honest conclusion in a genre in which characters are permitted to hop between being hero and villain with amoral regularity. The supporting cast, including a gay doctor/cop married couple (rolleyes) are engaging. Artists vary but Ryan Stegman is the first and best.

I missed out issues 10 and 11 this time because I read those as part of the 'Minimum Carnage' crossover (reviewed here) and it's far too soon for a re-read.


   
   
   
   
   
  
  


Point One (2011) # 1 and Scarlet Spider (2012) # 1-6 are collected in:

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Scarlet Spider (2012) # 7-9/12.1-15 are collected in:

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Scarlet Spider (2012) # 10-12 are collected in:

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Scarlet Spider (2012) # 16-20 and Superior Spider-Man Team-Up are collected in:

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Scarlet Spider (2012) # 20 and Superior Spider-Man Team-Up (2013) # 2 are collected in:

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Scarlet Spider (2012) # 21-25 are collected in:

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Wednesday, 9 November 2016

Carnage (2010) # 1-5, Carnage, U.S.A. (2012) # 1-5, 'Minimum Carnage' (2012), Superior Carnage (2013) # 1-5, Deadpool vs Carnage (2014) # 1-4


(I originally read these comics in mid April 2016)

Amused myself over the last few days reading recent adventures of Marvel's favourite serial killer 'symbiote.' If you don't have much interest in Carnage, I wouldn't blame you - he has always been a desperately one-dimensional character and his stories nothing more than an excuse for bloody violence. Certainly the first two series by Zeb Wells and with dark 'n' slimy art by the inexplicably popular Clayton Crain are nothing to get excited about. 


  
 

  
 


However, the 'Minimum Carnage' crossover sees Carnage being transported to the Microverse and pressed into use by nefarious forces, with the new, heroic Venom (Spidey jock 'Flash' Thompson) and Scarlet Spider (the surviving Peter Parker clone from the '90s 'Clone Saga') in pursuit. I wasn't sure how I'd like FlashVenom, but he's obviously gone through a lot of recent character development and is put to good use. I'm certainly eager to check out more. The few Marvel-owned characters from their '80s 'Micronauts' series - namely Arcturus Rann, Marionette and Bug - also appear. 


      


The 'Superior Carnage' series entails the Wizard abducting Carnage, left catatonic after his previous adventure, to make up the final element in his latest incarnation of the Frightful Four with himself, Klaw and a paraplegic scientist. The purple-helmeted one bonds the Carnage symbiote to the scientist and is even possessed by it himself to battle the 'Superior Spider-Man' (actually Doctor Octopus' consciousness controlling Peter Parker's body - don't ask.)


  
  


I'm not sure how a five-issue limited series warrants an annual, but it at least reunites the Carnage symbiote with his original host, Cletus Kasady. It then leads straight into the 'Deadpool vs Carnage' series, which, despite my disdain for Deadpool, proved to be pretty amusing despite it being just a four-issue fight.


   


Carnage (2010) # 1-5 are collected in:

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Carnage, U.S.A. (2012) # 1-5 are collected in:

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Minimum Carnage: Alpha (2012) # 1, Scarlet Spider (2012) # 10-12, Venom (2011) # 26/27 and Minimum Carnage: Omega (2013) # 1 are collected in:

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Superior Carnage (2013) # 1-5 are collected in:

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Superior Carnage Annual # 1 and Deadpool vs Carnage (2014) # 1-4 are collected in:

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