Daredevil
#119
Isn't
it strange that Thor,
Captain America,
Amazing
Spider-Man
and this book are all reaching monumental issues this year? Those
books are hitting #600 and this book goes to #500 next month. Sadly,
this is the end of writer Ed Brubaker's stint. His final flurry
featuring The Hand, Lady Bullseye, and the Kingpin is legendary
stuff. This issue is literally pitch-perfect. The climax has The Owl
knocking out Dakota, Dardevil's psuedo-girlfriend. And we learn that
the Kingpin is really setting things up to crush Murdock and take
over the city. Great art. Awesome story telling. Just a terrific
issue. ****
Thor #602
This
book was probably easy to write back in the 60's. Superheroes were
corny back then. These days you have to have attitude and be cool.
That's hard for book like Thor.
Marvel got their “serious” writer, J. Michael Staczynski, to
re-boot the book. He's done some interesting things. He turned Loki
into a smokin' hot chick (he's back to being a guy these days).
Asgard, the city where all these Norse folk live, ended up above the
U.S.A. Now the Asgardians are living in Latveria, Dr. Doom's country.
In this issue a Kansas farmboy ends up traveling to Latveria because
he's in love. Thor gets his hammer fixed with a catch (if it breaks
he dies). Some chick named Sif shows up and dies. I loved the last
issue. This issue is just mediocre. The major problem is awesome
artist Olivier Copiel is M.I.A. Straczynski is leaving the book soon.
He put a decent stamp on it so far. It's kind of a shame he isn't
sticking around. **
X-Factor #45
Old
man Peter David has been writing this book since it's first issue (he
also wrote it for awhile during it's first go-around). David is
famous for his stint on Hulk,
although I only know him from his infamous debate with Todd McFarlane
and his Dark
Tower
series. This book always gets rave reviews. I figured I'd check it
out, although I'm totally lost. This issue takes place in both the
present and future. In the present, Shatterstar's mind has been taken
over and he tries to kill two X-Factor members. In the future, Dr.
Doom meets with the other members. The big reveal at the end is that
Shatterstar is...gay. Um...okay. The writing is good but the art is a
little on the sloppy side. Does anyone even read this book? **
Uncanny X-Men
#512
Wow.
38 pages. This book is big. It's also very, very awesome. After Ed
Brubaker left the book I left along with him. Writer Matt Fraction
comes up with a terrific story here, one that certainly could have
filled a six-parter easily. The X-Men travel back to San Francisco
1906 to get blood samples from two people. The X-Men want to find out
more about the mutant gene. What they end up with is battling the
first Sentinel, a contraption not unlike the metallic spider in the
movie Wild Wild
West.
The art by Yaneck Paquette is so-so, but the story is thrilling and
fun and very well thought out. A great issue. ***1/2
Dark
Avengers/Uncanny X-Men Utopia
Mark
Silvestri did the pencils here. He is utterly awesome. I don't know
what he's been up to these days, but his work is some of the best
ever. Matt Fraction is writing this, which is a six parter that will
eventually end up in both Uncanny
X-Men
and Dark
Avengers
this summer. The story has protests gone awry in San Francisco.
People hate mutants. The X-Men get their fight on. Norman Osbourne
and his Dark Avengers show up. It's a war. The story is a good one.
The art, though, is strange. Silvestri drew it...but he got “assists”
by four other artists and nine inkers. You can tell that Silvestri
started it but got behind. His art is phenomenal. There are some
pages that are not. This definitely sets up an interesting plot.
There should be some good battles. Dr. Xavier comes back and Emma
Frost might be evil again? So far so good. ***
Detective
Comics #854
This
book got some rave reviews online. Writer Greg Rucka and artist J.H.
Williams the 3rd
are doing it. It features Batgirl. She's a lesbian punk by day,
crusading Batgirl by night. Her villain? A white-skinned,
white-dressed Alice in Wonderland-esque Queen. The art is
breathtaking stuff. One minute it's sketchy and dark, the other is
bright and cartoonish. The story is thin so far, but it's an
entertaining book. I'm not sure why it's gotten a lot of raves. I've
never heard of this writer or artist. And it's good but not
shockingly awesome. And really, do we need five monthly Gotham City
books? ***
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