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Review: X-Men The Wedding Special #1

Full disclaimer: for a long time, Kitty Pryde was my all time favorite Marvel superhero thanks to her awesomeness in X-Men Evolution and Joss Whedon and John Cassaday’s Astonishing X-Men run, and there is a Marvel Legends figure of her sitting on my bookshelf right now as I write this.

Even though Kelly Thompson, Marika Cresta, and Federico Blee end up almost saving the day with a fun tale of X-Women out on the town with pretty, shiny art to match, X-Men The Wedding Special #1 is a big stinker of a “special issue.” Greg Land’s stiff art style isn’t a good fit for a raucous bachelor party, Chris Claremont can’t rekindle his old magic, and this book doesn’t really have much for long time X-Men fans who might be a little lapsed (Like yours truly.) and definitely not new or casual fans. Why are Kitty and Piotr even getting married? Maybe, the X-Men Gold  hardcore readership will find something to love here.

In the first story, Kitty Pryde’s co-creator/father of the X-Men Chris Claremont returns to Marvel with his Nightcrawler collaborator Todd Nauck and skilled colorist Rachelle Rosenberg.  However, after having Nauck re-draw Kitty’s greatest hits courtesy of John Byrne, Dave Cockrum, John Romita Jr., Alan Davis, and others, he makes the story all about Kitty’s relationships with the dead men in her life, namely, her dad, Wolverine, and some guy from a 1999 time travel miniseries called X-Men True Friends. Claremont is a still verbose prose stylist, Rosenberg is game with the bright colors of the different eras, and Nauck turns in some gorgeous dualistic compositions contrasting the triumphs and trials of Kitty Pryde’s life as an X-Man.

But there isn’t really a coherent story to channel these skills and traits into as Claremont abruptly cuts from Kitty recounting her life story and feelings about being phased through a bullet (Thank you, Joss Whedon.) to randomly talking about Wolverine and the aforementioned guy from a time travel story. Plus I guess I missed the issue of X-Men Gold where she worked as a bartender at the Hellfire Club themed branch of Coyote Ugly as Claremont and Nauck cut to this, and Nightcrawler has some great lines about faith and facing challenges. There are a few good ingredients, a few bad ones, and sadly, the story doesn’t touch on the great female friendships (and possibly romances) that Claremont set up for Kitty with Magik, Storm, and Rachel Summers among others and focused on ghostly men instead. It’s like a great slice of Chicago deep dish (Shoutout to Deerfield, Illinois resident Kitty Pryde.) that’s completely burnt to a crisp too bogged down in a continuity to have any real emotion or even nostalgia.

The second story by X-Men Gold writer Marc Guggenheim, the aforementioned Land and inker Jay Leisten, and colorist Jason Keith tells the story of Colossus’ bachelor party and except for the part where Piotr throws an anti-mutant alien monster around a casino, it’s cliched, heteronormative, and just plain bad. In keeping with his introverted nature and desire to be faithful towards Kitty after decades of breakups, reunions, and the original Secret Wars crossover, Colossus wants a chill night out and not the typical strippers/booze/brawling trifecta of a normal bachelor party. But Nightcrawler, Gambit, Iceman, and the “boyo” overusing new-look Pyro have other ideas for him including Bobby lecturing Piotr on traditional masculinity and making me glad that Sina Grace had almost exclusive creative control over him for a year. The story follows a limp, through line of getting Colossus to “lighten up”, and you have to buy a whole other comic to see how the story ends. It’s pretty terrible except for the huge smile on Nightcrawler’s face as he ushers his squad into Las Vegas and beams that there is a casino run by demons so he doesn’t have to feel weird or different while having a good time for once. Kurt is such a great character that he shines even in subpar stories like the first two in X-Men Wedding Special #1.

The final story in X-Men Wedding Special #1 is a fun, cute, grownup version of the “X-Men go to the mall” plotline as Storm, Rogue, Jean Grey, Psylocke, and others take Kitty to karaoke, which is actually “stripperoke”. However, there are both male and female strippers at the club, which Kitty is cool with. And it’s also this issue’s only nod at the bisexual subtext surrounding her since the late 1980s. In a similar way to Piotr, Kitty is introverted and more than a little Type A so the cocktail of strippers and karaoke is pretty lethal for her, and she spends most of the issue hoping for a fight.

Kitty does end up doing hand to hand combat with Callisto, who I think had a crush on Colossus, in the 1980s, and her resolves shows how much she has grown in 38 years from the X-Men’s kid sister to their leader. It also shows that artist (and star in waiting) Marika Cresta has a knack for fight sequences as well as conversation, beautiful faces, and high fashion. The bright filters used by Federico Blee and soft lighting definitely give this issue a very laidback field even if Kitty is freaking out a little bit about her wedding. The Kitty/Callisto derails the story a little bit, but Thompson and Cresta easily counterbalance with great moments like Storm rocking the karaoke stage, and Rogue and Kitty having a true heart to heart that reminded me of a more mature version of their bond in X-Men Evolution.

X-Men Wedding Special definitely lessened my faith in the marriage between Kitty and Colossus as well as heterosexual, monogamous marriage as an institution in general. Okay, maybe not completely, but the Marc Guggenheim and Greg Land story is a great example of how bachelor parties are dated and played out. However, Marika Cresta is a real find as an artist in the final story and should definitely be the main artist on one of the big X or Marvel books.

Story: Chris Claremont, Marc Guggenheim, Kelly Thompson
Art: Todd Nauck, Greg Land with Jay Leisten, Marika Cresta
Colors: Rachelle Rosenberg, Jason Keith, Federico Blee Letters: Clayton Cowles

Story: 5.0 Art: 7.0 Overall: 5.0 Recommendation: Pass

Marvel Comics provided Graphic Policy with a FREE copy for review

Preview: Hunt for Wolverine #1

Hunt for Wolverine #1

Story: Charles Soule
Art: David Marquez, Paulo Siqueira
Color: Rachelle Rosenberg, Walden Wong, Ruth Redmond
Letterer: VC’s Joe Sabino
Cover Art: Steve McNiven, Jay Leisten, Laura Martin
Variant Covers: Marco Checcetto, Elizabeth Torque, Nolan Woodard, Adam Kubert, Dan Brown, Mike Deodato, Morry Hollowell
Editors: Jordan D. White, Mark Paniccia
Assistant Editors: Annalise Bissa, Christina Harringnton
Rated T+
In Shops: Apr 25, 2018
SRP: $5.99

The RETURN OF WOLVERINE begins here, providing the first piece of a mystery that will leave no corner of the Marvel Universe untouched. Just as the X-Men have finally come to terms with Logan’s death, they learn a terrible secret. Old wounds will be re-opened, truths questioned, and an epic quest begun. The earliest clues to the mystery of Wolverine’s return are laid down here… who will solve it first?

Review: X-Men: Gold Vol. 4 The Negative Zone War

It’s Wednesday which means it’s new comic book day with new releases hitting shelves, both physical and digital, all across the world. This week we’ve got the X-Men!

X-Men: Gold Vol. 4 The Negative Zone War collects issues #16-20 and material from #12 by Marc Guggenheim, Luke Ross, Lan Medina, Ken Lashley, Jay Leisten, Craig Yeung, Frank Martin, and Andrew Crossley.

Get your copy in comic shops today and in book stores April 10. To find a comic shop near you, visit http://www.comicshoplocator.com or call 1-888-comicbook or digitally and online with the links below.

Amazon/Kindle/comiXology or TFW

 

 

Marvel​ provided Graphic Policy with FREE copies for review
This post contains affiliate links, which means that if you click on one of the product links and make a purchase, we’ll receive a percentage of the sale. Graphic Policy does purchase items from this site. Making purchases through these links helps support the site

Review: New Mutants by Zeb Wells the Complete Collection

It’s Tuesday which means it’s new comic book day at book stores! This week we’ve got the New Mutants!

New Mutants by Zeb Wells the Complete Collection features #1-11, #15-21, Marvel Spotlight: New Mutants, and material from X-Necrosha #1 by Zeb Wells, Kieron Gillen, Dio Neves, Cam Smith, Ed Tadeo, Norman Lee, Craig Yeung, Ibraim Roberson, Paul Davidson, Chris Sotomayor, Niko Henrichon, Zachary Baldus, Jim Campbell, Kevin Sharpe, Jay Leisten, David Lopez, Alvaro Lopez, Paul Davidson, Sotocolor, Leonard Kirk, Andrew Currie, Guru-eFX, VC’s Joe Caramagna, Chris Eliopoulos, Cory Petit, Daniel Ketchum, Jake Thomas, Jody Leheup, Nick Lowe, and Jeanine Schaefer.

Get your copy. To find a comic shop near you, visit http://www.comicshoplocator.com or call 1-888-comicbook or digitally and online with the links below.

Amazon/Kindle/comiXology or TFAW

 

Marvel provided Graphic Policy with FREE copies for review
This post contains affiliate links, which means that if you click on one of the product links and make a purchase, we’ll receive a percentage of the sale. Graphic Policy does purchase items from this site. Making purchases through these links helps support the site.

Preview: Suicide Squad #27

Suicide Squad #27

(W) Rob Williams (A) Barnaby Bagenda, Jay Leisten (CA) Stjepan Sejic
RATED T+
In Shops: Oct 11, 2017
SRP: $2.99

“THE SECRET HISTORY OF TASK FORCE X” part one! The next major storyline of SUICIDE SQUAD begins when Amanda Waller receives a mysterious communique confirming her worst fears: someone knows all her secrets. Task Force X. Maxwell Lord. General Zod. Everything. And the message came from…outer space?! Determined to identify and neutralize this unprecedented threat, Harley Quinn and the Suicide Squad boldly go where no sociopath has gone before!

Review: Action Comics #987

Action-Comics-987-lenticular-coverAction Comics #987 begins as yet another issue of Dan Jurgens’ early 90s throwback, yet incredibly fun on Action Comics even though it hints at the final reveal of Mr. Oz’s identity. Superman saves the day, is heroic and moral, and there are scenes at the Daily Planet with his supporting cast. He and Lois even spend time glancing at each other when blowhard sports reporter Steve Lombard tries to impress their son Jon aka Superboy with tales of his football glory days. However, it all takes a turn for the darker as artists Viktor Bogdanovic, Jonathan Glapion, and Jay Leisten twist and flips their panel layouts to show Mr. Oz manipulating the entire world and feeding humanity’s worst impulses against the pall of a dark and depressing color palette from Mike Spicer.

The driving force behind Action Comics #987 is that humans don’t deserve someone like Superman to save them. This is Mr. Oz’s motivation for all his activities since he first popped up in Geoff Johns and John Romita Jr’s Superman run in 2014. He wants to show Superman that humans aren’t worth giving hope too and will always choose darkness through a tapestry of depravity featuring everything from human trafficking and racially motivated violence. Adorable seals even die in an oil spill because LexOil employees work long hours and decided to get drunk while operating their rig. Superman is too slow to save/stop everything, and Bogdanovic, Glapion, and Leisten show the pain in his eyes and his actions as he lashes out in anger against a guerillas in the country of Logamba, who killed people he delivered a vaccine to. Perhaps the world is too complex and far gone for the Big Blue Scout to save.

All these events happen rapidly and simultaneously while Clark is enjoying civilian life with his wife, son, and co-workers, and this means he can’t save everyone. The inability to save everyone with his great powers has always been one of Superman’s biggest vulnerabilities (And a big smack in the face to those who say he has none.), especially the modern Superman, who is haunted by the death of his adopted parents. Jurgens explored this in the fantastic “Revenge” arc when Superman came into contact with and was blinded by the Black Vault in Belle Reve and brings it to a crescendo of a more universal nature in Action Comics #987. He can write Superman as a person, hero, and idea, and all three elements crash together in “The Oz Effect” arc.

AwwSuperman

Towards the end of Action Comics #987, Mr. Oz tells Superman that he gave the humans connected to him a choice between light and darkness. This is also a hint of how this comic is structured. It starts out with lots of red, yellow, and blues from Mike Spicer, and full page heroic poses from Viktor Bogdanovic as Superman stops the robbery of a medical vaccine without throwing a single punch. Jurgens’ narrative captions are bright and heroic as Superman/Clark is genuinely enjoying moving back to Metropolis from upstate.

But, when Oz begins his coordinated “attacks” , the usual sunny Metropolis skyline turns grey, and Viktor Bogdanovic draws Superman as a blur to his square until he takes a barrage of bullets for immigrant workers and goes back to classic roots of protecting the marginalized for a split second before returning to the plot. Inkers Jonathan Glapion and Jay Leisten, who worked on comics like Scott Snyder and Greg Capullo’s Batman and Death of Wolverine, add a more foreboding edge and plenty of black space to Bogdanovic’s square jawed figure and open posing, especially when Mr. Oz is working his “magic”. This plus a blinding burst of white from Spicer when they arrive at the Fortress of Solitude, which is basically Mr. Oz’s Air BnB at this point, gives the second half of the comic an unsettling feel.

By digging into the  heart of Superman’s ability to bring hope and also his inability to save everyone, Dan Jurgens, Viktor Bogdanovic, Jonathan Glapion,  Jay Leisten, and Mike Spicer give Action Comics #987 a solid ideological foundation before the big reveal. The final page definitely surprised me and is a real shock to who Superman is as a character with Action Comics #988 providing some much needed context.

Story: Dan Jurgens Pencils: Viktor Bogdanovic
Inks: Jonathan Glapion, Jay Leisten, Viktor Bogdanovic Colors: Mike Spicer

Story: 8.0 Art: 8.0 Overall: 8.0 Recommendation: Buy

DC Comics provided Graphic Policy with a FREE copy for review

Preview: Green Lanterns Vol. 2 Phantom Lantern

Green Lanterns Vol. 2 Phantom Lantern

(W) Sam Humphries (A) Julio Ferreira, Ronan Cliquet, Eduardo Pansica, Ed Benes, Jay Leisten, Cam Smith (CA) Joe Prado (A/CA) Robson Rocha
In Shops: Apr 26, 2017
SRP: $19.99

In this second collection of tales starring the mismatched Green Lanterns of Earth, Jessica Cruz at last learns why her partner, Simon Baz, carries a gun in addition to his power ring! And the Guardian’s greatest secret, the Phantom Lantern, falls into the hands of an evil presence from Jessica’s past, giving him control over all aspects of the emotional spectrum! Collects GREEN LANTERNS #7-14.

Review: X-Men Gold #1

fXavier’s dream comes full circle as Kitty Pryde takes the reins and assembles a squad of the most iconic X-Men to fight at her side. Storm. Colossus. Nightcrawler. Old Man Logan. Prestige. They are X-Men Gold! And they’re on a mission to be Earth’s finest heroes, even when that means defending those who hate and fear them.

It’s a new beginning for the classic heroes as Marvel returns to the 90s  with two teams one Gold and one Blue. The Gold team is more of the classic team now lead by Kitty Pryde and after reading the first issue, this feels so much like the fun classic X-Men from decades ago. In a return to the 90s labeling, writer Marc Guggenheim captures some of that more positive time (I remember the 90s X-Men as big colorful adventure).

While X-Men Prime helped catch up new readers, X-Men Gold #1 does a solid job of reintroducing the team with comments here and there to remind readers as to what’s going on and for those who are all caught up there’s tons a small details and humor to entertain long-time readers. And it’s those small details that got me really intrigued.

The issue kicks off with the usual hate towards mutants and that again is brought up so the social consciousness of the series is front and center. The comic starts with it! The mutant population is now hated for being mutants and starting a war with the Inhumans and Guggenheim lays that out. That hate is a fundamental of the line of comics and to see it so squarely presented early on is a reminder of this and also shows a commitment for that to still be a focus of the X-Men. The other small details of the comic is references to things we’ve been missing. Kitty and Logan sitting outside watching the X-Men play baseball for instance. A simple scene that harkens back and Kitty and Logan in their discussion feels like an acknowledgment that the X-Men have strayed to the reader.

The one negative I have is though there’s some action, the first issue feels as much as a prelude as X-Men Prime dragging on a little bit too much in getting to that ending, which again is a solid wink to old-school X-Men comics. But that action is cool and feels original as the X-Men takes on Terrax, a character I don’t think I’ve ever read them fight, so bonus on the originality, especially how Kitty saves the day. There’s something “woah” about it all.

Ardian Syaf‘s art is fantastic reinforcing the brighter direction of everything. The characters look great and there’s some cool layouts and what action exists looks great. The opening fight with Terrax too looks amazing with some panels that hand me linger. Syaf nails Guggenheim’s action, it’s a fantastic combo of writer and artist. Syaf is helped by Jay Leisten on inks and Frank Martin on colors. Both help make the art pop off of the page.

This first issue feels like a return to the classic X-Men I grew up reading decades ago with a mix of action and humor but most importantly reminding us that these though these characters have extraordinary powers, they’re very much human. Welcome back my X-Men!

Story: Marc Guggenheim Art: Ardian Syaf Ink: Jay Leisten Color: Frank Martin
Story: 8.45 Art: 8.65 Overall: 8.50 Recommendation: Buy

Marvel provided Graphic Policy with a FREE copy for review

Flashback Friday Review: Old Man Logan

oldmanloganPublished in 2008 in Wolverine #66-72 and Old Man Logan Giant-Size, the story known as “Old Man Logan” would be one that would go on to impact the character known as Wolverine, and Marvel Comics, 9 years later. Written by Mark Millar with art by Steve McNiven, “Old Man Logan” fuses classic dystopian future X-Men tales like “Days of Future Past” with Mad Max, and western heroes made famous by the likes of Clint Eastwood.

“Old Man Logan” is a road trip story at its heart. A now blind Hawkeye enlists a retired Logan to help drive across the country to deliver a package. The United States is now a hellscape ruled by supervillains who have carved the country up into their own kingdoms after having banded together to defeats the world’s heroes.

It’s been 9 years since this story was first released and I remember picking it up in single issues and as a trade all these years later, it still holds up. Interestingly, the story beyond holds up, and definitely is a modern classic in many ways.

Millar doesn’t give us anything really new with the story, but how he packages it and its setting is what really makes it all stand out. We’re given a new Logan who is a pacifist, refusing to pop his claws or take part in any violence. He’ll take a beating instead of giving one. It’s a fascinating shift for the character who at one point was one of the most deadly superheroes out there. What caused him to be this way? That’s teased out through numerous issues getting to the emotional reveal that packs a punch. It’s not just a fall from grace for the character, but a reminder that deep down he’s an animal in many ways. Millar gives us humanity for a character who often is depicted as a killing machine.

Joining Logan is Hawkeye, Clint Barton, who is now blind and been up to some shady shit. Having to get a package across the country, out of the two, Barton is the badass letting arrows fly and talking up a storm.

The story is packed with winks and nods as we move across the country to see the devastation. From bones laying around to tokens of the villain victory, this is a comic that is full of Easter eggs for comic fans.

That’s delivered by Steve McNiven who’s backed up on inks and color by a team of individuals and the art is fantastic. McNiven is a talented artist who gives us both wide expanses and close up action scenes. There’s emotional moments and moments full of rage and destruction. With a sparse choice of colors that enhance the situation, the art will have you linger on every page looking at the details that tease the story within the story.

“Old Man Logan” holds up and in some ways, I appreciate it more reading it in one sitting and really taking in the details. The story falls back on tropes a bit too many times with twists that are easy to see coming, but it’s still enjoyable and entertaining. A classic in every sense of the word and something that’s been copied, but yet to be improved upon.

Story: Mark Millar Art: Steve McNiven
Inkers: Dexter Vines, Mark Morales, Jay Leisten
Colorists: Morry Hollowell, Christina Strain, Justin Ponsor, Jason Keith, Nathan Fairbairn, Paul Mounts
Letterer: VC’s Cory Petit
Story: 9.5 Art: 9.5 Overall: 9.5 Recommendation: Buy

Marvel Weekly Graphic Novel Review: Carnage USA, Death of X, and X-Factor

It’s Wednesday which means new comic book day with new releases hitting shelves, both physical and digital, all across the world. We’ve got three volumes from Marvel covering some of their newer releases.

Carnage U.S.A. collecting issues #1-5 by Zeb Wells and Clayton Crain.

Death of X collecting issues #1-4 by Jeff Lemire, Charles Soule, Aaron Kuder, Javier Garron, Jay Leisten, Cam Smith, Scott Hanna, Morry Hollowell, Jay David Ramos, Jason Keith, Wil Quintana, Matt Milla, and Andrew Crossley.

X-Factor Epic Collection: Genesis & Apocalypse collecting Avengers #263, Fantastic Four #286, X-Factor #1-9 & Annual #1, Iron Man Annual #8, Amazing Spider-Man #282, and material from Classic X-Men #8 & #43.

Find out what each trade has in store and whether you should grab yourself a copy. You can find all three in comic stores March 1 and bookstores March 14.

Get your copies now. To find a comic shop near you, visit http://www.comicshoplocator.com or call 1-888-comicbook or digitally and online with the links below.

Carnage U.S.A.
Amazon/Kindle/comiXology or TFAW

Death of X
Amazon/Kindle/comiXology or TFAW

X-Factor Epic Collection: Genesis & Apocalypse
Amazon/Kindle/comiXology or TFAW

 

 

Marvel provided Graphic Policy with FREE copies for review
This post contains affiliate links, which means that if you click on one of the product links and make a purchase, we’ll receive a percentage of the sale. Graphic Policy does purchase items from this site. Making purchases through these links helps support the site.

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