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Showing posts with label Spoilers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Spoilers. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

New Impressions of Avengers vs. X-Men (Spoilers)



In previous installments of this series concerning the current globe-spanning mega-crossover epic of the Marvel Universe AVENGERS VS. X-MEN, currently in its fifth installment (not including the multiple main title tie-ins), we assessed the context, explored the basic structure of the plot and predicted (accurately) the progression of the storyline.  With the fourth issue, we have a twist on top of a twist.  Wolverine promised to take the "mutant messiah" Hope to the moon, and that he did (after a brief confrontation with a Shiar death squad in "Wolverine and the X-Men"), but not before contacting Captain America and the Avengers.  The issue ends with Thor being thrown into the midst of these heroes, forming a crater (running against the current continuity of New Avengers, which will no doubt catch up shortly)... and the Phoenix, after much build-up, has arrived.



Hope's mutant powers react, of course, and as has been the way with her since her introduction, we are treated to the old "I'm not ready for this!" effect.  In the course of events she actually manages to take out all the X-Men and the Avengers.  Terrified, she calls on Wolverine to kill her, again. Considering Wolvie has been slashing Captain America and Cyclops alike in the guts over the past few issues, he's more than happy to oblige.  At this point the stubbornness of Cyclops is bludgeoned over our head for the umpteenth time.    

The main issue that one might call forth as a critical issue with this series is the overabundance of talent.  With nearly a half-dozen contributors to the story and script (Jason AaronBrian Michael BendisEd BrubakerMatt Fraction, and Jonathan Hickman seem to be trading dialogue duty with each issue), each and every panel and event feels polished to the point of being over-refined.  John Romita Jr. does a solid job, as expected from such a diehard professional, managing to balance out the art duties of an epic storyline with the repetitiveness of an overextended premise.  He's moved beyond the blocky standards of his early work and the inks/color/computer assists do a fine job of complimenting him in this series.   


At the end of the day, Hope is what the story hinges on, and despite valiant attempts at texture, she's entirely too shallow a character to pull it off.  A powerhouse of potential (a point driven home again and again, in each and every appearance she has ever made), she's hardly had time to be addressed as having human frailties (a few moments in Generation Hope notwithstanding).  A heap of ideals and expectations have been passed off onto her, and there's a degree to which she is an inherently unlikable character.  There's the overblown manner in which she addresses events in this series, in the past tense, as if telling the story after the fact (making references to the dropping of the atomic bomb on page one, referring to herself as a victim, like so many others, of the Phoenix, on the last page).  She takes few actions, and events happen to her.  This is her weakness as a character, being presented for some reason as a strength.

But despite that, you might ask yourself, at what point does this much-anticipated series jump the proverbial shark?



When Tony Stark equips himself in a giant Iron Man costume and shoots the Phoenix with a heretofore unheard-of deterrent weapon, a "Phoenix Buster Suit" if you will... he damages it, fractures it, and its power, rather than being transferred into Hope, is split among the X-Men present on the moon (notably removing the trademark Juggernaut helmet present on Colossus up until this point in the series, perhaps purging the demon Cyttorak?).

Really, who saw that one coming?

At best, Avengers vs. X-Men is breaking ground on the "next major plot point" to be bandied about in editor-notes on mutant-related titles for the next two to five years, potentially dovetailing with something catastrophic and "ultra-relevant" in the next two to four months (if the incessant and ever darkening foreshadowing narration by Hope is any indication).  At its greatest aspiration, this marks a storyline contending with The Dark Phoenix Saga or Civil War in terms of impact (until ret-conned by editors in an obscure limited series if or when fanboy outcry reaches its most strident peak and someone decides they never liked Emma Frost in the first place).  

Or, at worst, this series will play itself out like nearly all "hero vs. hero" slugfests up to and potentially including this point... an exercise in pulling punches.  You have to wonder if there is any writer in the Marvel stables considering the What-If issues that each step of the series could spawn, or the parallels of these "hyper-mutants" that a select group of X-Men become in issue five.  At its lowest point, it could be viewed as just another money-maker, with no real lasting impact on the characters involved.  The final verdict on that, of course, remains to be seen, but despite all the "major events" occurring, it's a possibility.

With the most recent issue of Avengers vs. X-Men, we have a crux, a tipping point, in which the final heft of the series will shortly be determined.  With the PhoeniX-Men "preparing" Hope the petulant brat messiah for her upcoming important/irrelevant role in mutantkind's final fate, it's in the hands of Marvel's finest writers to steer the ship of the series out of troubled waters and into more familiar channels, or venture into new unexplored islands of potential. A world-wide mutant "utopia"? A replay of the Civil War trope "heroes putting heroes in jail"?  It stands to reason that whatever comes next will prove profitable for the House of Ideas, regardless of its actual effect on the Status Quo.  Rock the boat even a little and you'll draw attention.

So, in short, the talent combining for this event is staggering.  Is it too big to fail?  Are the creator's ideas bigger than the reader's stomachs?  Fan reaction has been buzzing throughout message boards, but we'll have our final answer soon enough.

Charles Xavier's stepping out of the shadows, and clearing his throat. 

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Second Impressions of Avengers vs. X-Men

Now that the first optic blast has been fired and the first American-flag-shield-related concussion has been dealt, we can explore and critique and tweak the orientation of Marvel Comic's most recent "company-wide" crossover, Avengers vs. X-Men.

Something tells me this will end up being two pages of characters for each team.


It starts, as with any good hero vs. hero brawl, with a differing of opinions and a misunderstanding. The so-called mutant messiah Hope has manifested the Phoenix force at the same time as it seems the firebird itself is flying directly to Earth, laying waste to planet after planet along the way.  Captain America and the Avengers wish to take Hope into protective custody, and show up on the shores of mutantkind's Utopia to take her.  Cyclops does not react well to this. Cyclops sends a previously written and sternly worded email to the world via Val Cooper when everything starts to go down.

Did you know that Magneto has the ability to count millions of metal thingies in a split second? Me neither. 

The initial fight is broken up between the main event book and several other titles.  We see Magneto fighting Iron Man (not the foregone conclusion you may think, since Tony Stark's superpower is cash mixed with genius) the everlovin' Benjamin J. Grimm, the Thing, squares off against Namor (hasn't happened in years, actually).  After a magnetic fastball special with Colossus, a Red Hulk oriented fight ensues. When Wolverine and Spiderman infiltrate Utopia to nab/kill Hope, she goes all Phoenix voice on them, flash-fries Wolverine like he's a chump, and leaves, running across the water of San Francisco Bay.  Precisely 3:45 PM Eastern Standard Time.


They'll place bets on the Planet Sin until it heads their way.


Overall the series so far ranges comfortably from writer to writer. At a certain point little factoids will spring up. Some annoying, others less so, and some actually amusing. The way it plays out calls to mind a certain cross-company crossover event from my younger days reading comics.  DC vs. Marvel Comics, headed by Ron Marz and Peter David, artwork from Dan Jurgens and Claudio Castellini.


Old school like Aztecs but new in other aspects.


I'd estimate that the younger generation of writers and artists were similarly impacted by that series, which was interactive insofar as you could vote for the characters to win, similar in some respects to DC's hotline to determine whether or not the Joker kills Jason Todd, the second Robin.  As in that series, the various legends of Marvel Comics Universe, the Avengers, the X-Men, going against one another, that can be a problem, logistically.  As writers and editors on such a title, you have to play it relatively safe with the characters, they're money makers more and more, but you also don't want to treat them with kid gloves and openly pander to audiences or whatever expectations have been thrown around.  The big blockbuster movie event this summer, at this point, is going to be The Avengers. So in this concurrent series where that movie's characters are implicated in the title, who do you really think is going to win? Or is there actually going to be a winner, officially?  The answers to these questions lie in the way that the different group "money pots" are interacted with on a regular basis.  Avengers and X-related titles both hold the lion's share of titles in Marvel, especially considering how many once-solo characters are now one one or in some cases many teams.


Funny how planetary histories are often only told to narrate their fiery destruction.

The Avengers have been dominating center stage since the Civil War, the power-death knell of most mutants coming in House of M, and their overall relevance, outside of Wolverine, being downgraded.  In the movie world, the rights to the X-Men films is still being held outside of Disney, the absorbing entity, the Tron Mickey, hence the stream of movies culminating in Joss Whedon's The Avengers.  So even the movie universe, contracts and negotiations, are reflected in the focus of the comic universe.  The Avengers will win the battle.  Iron Man left Magneto in space.  Thing beat Namor down.  Colossus demanded Red Hulk smash him when he nearly lost control of his "Juggernaut persona".  The most powerful member of the Avengers, Thor, is fighting a giant bird made of fire in space. Actually, the Secret Avengers contend with not just the Phoenix but are forced to set down onto Hala, home of the Kree, and deal with a Phoenix-resurrected Captain Marvel.

Asgardian God vs. Primal Fiery Force or: "Thor, c'mon. Seriously? No way."

Unless the revelation of the Phoenix that results in the giant golden Celestial standing in San Francisco's parks district finally, after long last, doing something, we can expect that Cyclops may, shock, discover he is right and wrong, that maybe the whole world is not to be destroyed, or mutantkind saved, but perhaps the constant resurrections of characters will finally end! Remember, the Phoenix is the force of Life and Death fused.  This means someone has to die, and guess what? It's not going to be an Avenger this time. Imagine a scorched Cyclops being cradled in Wolverine's arms, replayed in flashbacks for decades to come.  Picture Hope sacrificing herself to restart the mutant gene via the Phoenix Force.  Perhaps the Celestial, guarding the Celestial egg that Earth houses, fights the Phoenix. Or maybe that's only a thing in the Earth X universe, designate 9997.

Now, all the mutants not housed in Wolverine's school (Cyclops will visit there next issue of Wolverine and the X-Men) will be facing not just the Avengers, but also SHIELD and the US Military.  Sentinels? No.  Sentinels are terrorist weapons (and the most hackneyed X-plot in existence), and the terrorists of the Marvel Universe are so often children lately it's somewhat disturbing. The all-tween Hellfire Club is but one example.

Even though the Avengers will win, the X-Men, the ultimate underdogs, must win the moral fight.  The spirit fostered in Marvel at the start was that characters should possess a certain pathos that the reader could recognize.  Now we delve deeper, but only in certain books geared towards certain readers.  Otherwise the status quo must be maintained, to a degree, and the likability of a character is informed by one's nostalgia surrounding it or one's ability to relate to it.  Pulling a strip from Spider Man's double cross back in Civil War, we can expect Wolverine to flip sides, as Storm already has. What will push him to that point?  Will Jean Grey be resurrected? Will the Phoenix Egg featured in Here Comes Tomorrow be laid on the Blue Side of the Moon?

The new weeks will pass on, and fights between these titans will reach levels of hyperbole hardly espoused since the conflicts of characters from different companies.  But this is Marvel, pitting its best teams at odds with one another. What are the long term effects, if any?  Will it end in confused cringes like Secret Invasion? Or the range of rage comic expressions that sprang up after the finish of Fear Itself?

The series seems to want to pack the most into itself as possible, which works for a reader seeking more than twenty four splash pages and some badly characterized dialogue mixed with contrivances.  The idea behind this is a bit rushed, but the actual follow-through feels like it was a fun project to work on. Each cheesy line's also an opportunity, and this series should provide some doozies.  At this point, expect one turncoat in #3, a minor twist or two in #4, and a major twist in #5.  See you next Wednesday morning.