Preview: Adventure Time #52
Adventure Time #52
Imprint: KaBOOM!
Writer: Christopher Hastings
Artists: Ian McGinty
In the ghost realm, Jake is met with some pretty familiar challenges to overcome.
Adventure Time #52
Imprint: KaBOOM!
Writer: Christopher Hastings
Artists: Ian McGinty
In the ghost realm, Jake is met with some pretty familiar challenges to overcome.
After so many years of sarcastic self-awareness, how can Marvel out-meta itself? First, create the visual joke of Gwen Stacy in a pink Deadpool costume. Then, start treating her as an actual character, with a lead role in a holiday special issue and a supporting arc in Howard the Duck. In the course of that character development, give her the worst traits of both of the figures she’s based on: Deadpool’s crass sense of humor and conscience-free recklessness, and Gwen’s lack of superpowers. Establish that she’s neither a clone of Wade Wilson nor an alternate-universe Gwen Stacy, but a girl who happens to be named Gwen Poole. Throw it all in a blender, glue a heavy rock to the puree button, and let the gory, sparkly mess splash all over Gwenpool #1.
As it turns out, Gwenpool is a delicious experiment.The title character is a terrible superhero by design, but she’s a great vehicle for the kinds of narrative reflection that both Deadpool and Gwen do best. Deadpool’s brand of fourth-wall busting is now so far from innovative that it’s looped back into retro charm, so Gwenpool goes a step further. Our antiheroine is a comics fan who’s been swept into the world of Marvel Comics – method and backstory unknown – and who retells her adventures in the hopes of communicating with the folks back home. Since she comes from our mundane world, her only special abilities are her bottomless genre savviness and her even more inexhaustible self-confidence.
The catch, of course, is that Gwenpool might be crazy, after all. The fourth wall might be just another wall, and she might be one of the “extras” in the superhero pageant that she derides. Maybe everyone she encounters is right, and no matter how many times she reasserts that she’s a hero, she’s nothing more than a normal girl who’s going to get herself killed.
Throughout the issue, we encounter normal people who, unlike Gwenpool, acknowledge that they’re normal – the many Gwen Stacys of the Marvel universe. We meet a cop haunted by memories of invaders from another dimension, a teen hacker who can only hack into things that a regular person could actually hack into, and the beleaguered assistant to the guy who hands out jobs to heroes. We, as readers, are continually faced with the conflict between other people’s resigned realism and Gwenpool’s insistence that all she needs to save the world are a cool outfit and a bag of guns. Realism should win out, shouldn’t it?
Except that, despite constant warnings, Gwenpool persists in not dying. And that, in the end, is why Gwenpool #1 works, and why I suspect that this entire series – for however long Marvel lets it continue – will continue to eloquently answer questions way above its pay grade. That’s a testament to Christopher Hastings‘ script, which does a masterful job of building fully realized personalities in a few short panels. It also stems from the brilliant editorial decision to split this issue between two artists: Danilo Beyruth‘s conventional comics style in the prologue, and Gurihiru’s manga-influenced art for what I assume will be the majority of the series.
This is a comic that really knows what it’s doing, so much that it wants you to feel bad about yourself if you take it at face value. If you’re laughing at Gwenpool’s tired and mean-spirited jokes, you’re as self-deluded as she is. (For the truly funny lines, look to the shopkeeper at Big Ronnie’s Custom Battle Spandex, whom I hope we’ll get to see more of in future issues.) Whether you’re fetishizing her in her pink-and-white leotard or self-righteously criticizing its impracticality, there’s a scene to take you to task for that – and it takes place while Gwenpool lies in the bathtub, implicitly referencing the violent sexualization of certain DC characters whom she might or might not resemble. And if you think you know where all this is headed, the last two pages of the issue will tear your heart out of your chest, then send you running to put this title on your pull list.
Gwenpool isn’t perfect, and it’s not for everybody. I’m still not sure whether it’s a step forward for female-led comics, or if it’s wryly undermining its own feminism. Gwenpool herself is a grating character, a little too anti-heroic for readers who prefer to relate or aspire to their heroes. But it’s cool and clever, and it manages to take self-referentiality in a different direction than Marvel titles usually do. Even if you doubt Gwenpool is your cup of tea, you owe it to yourself to get your hands on this first issue.
Story: Christopher Hastings Art: Gurihiru (main story), Danilo Beyruth (prologue), Tamra Bonvillain (prologue colorist)
Story: 10 Art: 10 Overall: 10 Recommendation: Buy
Marvel provided Graphic Policy with a FREE copy for review
Adventure Time #51
Imprint: KaBOOM!
Writer: Christopher Hastings
Artist: Ian McGinty
After too many back-to-back quests, Jake and Finn disagree on how important doing this hero stuff really is.
Wait, really? Yes, really! 2015’s overnight sensation is slicing and dicing her way into hearts and minds as well as her very own ongoing series! Hold on and hang tight world, because she’s The Unbelievable Gwenpool – and her first issue is coming at you this April from writer Christopher Hastings and artist Gurihiru!
Gwen Poole used to be a comic book reader just like you…until one day she woke up INSIDE the Marvel Universe. Now all the characters she read about are real! But they can’t be really real, can they? This has got to be some kind of dream or something, right? Well you know what that means – NO CONSEQUENCES! First order of business, get a costume and start fighting crime. Why? Because that’s what everyone who has a solo series does!
No power. No responsibility. No rules. No limits. The Marvel Universe has a new player, and she’ll shoot and stab her way through anyone and everyone. Could she truly be Marvel’s least role-modely and least responsible character to date? She can if she tries! Find out this April as this marvelous mercenary makes her explosive entrance!
THE UNBELIEVABLE GWENPOOL #1 (FEB160762)
Written by CHRISTOPHER HASTINGS
Art & Cover by GURIHIRU
Variant Covers by FRANCISO HERRERA (FEB160763), STACEY LEE (FEB160764), CAMERON STEWART (FEB160768) and SKOTTIE YOUNG (FEB160766)
Hip-Hop Variant by WOO DAE SHIM (FEB160765)
Action Figure Variant by JOHN TYLER CHRISTOPHER (FEB160767)
FOC – 3/21/16, On-Sale – 4/13/16
Adventure Time Vol. 8 TP
Imprint: KaBOOM!
Writers: Ryan North, Christopher Hastings
Artists: Shelli Paroline & Braden Lamb, Zachary Sterling
It’s the end of one era and the beginning of another in this collection that includes the very the last issue by Ryan North and artists Shelli & Braden as they take the AT gang on one last one-shot adventure, and introduces indie all-stars Christopher Hastings and Zachary Sterling as they start Finn and Jake on an adventure that is as tasty dangerous! Collects issues #35-39.
Adventure Time #50
Imprint: KaBOOM!
Writer: Christopher Hastings
Artist: Ian McGinty
Anniversary issue! This special oversized one-shot issue introduces new series artist Ian McGinty (Welcome to Showside, Bravest Warriors)! Finn takes a tour of his past lives when he astral projects through an old photo album. Features special incentive covers by the original Adventure Time art team, Shelli Paroline & Braden Lamb, and Jeffrey Brown (Darth Vader and Son)!
Adventure Time #49
Imprint: KaBOOM!
Writer: Christopher Hastings
Artist: Phil Murphy
Finn and Jake’s old friend has to make a sacrifice to defeat a monstrous threat.

Adventure Time #48
Imprint: KaBOOM!
Writer: Christopher Hastings
Artist: Zachary Sterling
Finn and Jake learn the truth about their mysterious old friend and her connection to Joshua’s spell.

2015’s overnight sensation is taking center stage next year and slicing and dicing her way into her very own ongoing series! That’s right world, get ready for The Unbelievable Gwenpool #1 – coming at you in April from Gwenpool Holiday Special creators Christopher Hastings and Gurihiru!
Gwen Poole used to be a comic book reader just like you…until one day she woke up INSIDE the Marvel Universe! Now the characters she read about are all real! But they can’t be really real, right? This must all be fake, or a dream or something right? You know what that means – NO CONSEQUENCES! First order of business, get a costume and start fighting crime. Why? Because that’s what everyone who has a solo series does!
No power. No responsibility. No rules. No limits. The Marvel Universe has a new player, and she’ll shoot and slice her way through friend and foe alike. Could she truly be Marvel’s least role-modely and least responsible character to date? She can if she tries! Be there this April as this marvelous mercenary makes her explosive entrance!
THE UNBELIEVABLE GWENPOOL #1
Written by CHRISTOPHER HASTINGS
Art & Cover by GURIHIRU
On Sale in April!

She-Hulk throws a holiday party and invites the entire Marvel U! Deadpool teams up with both Hawkeyes – Kate and Clint – to…stop a pickpocket?! Ms. Marvel takes on her most dangerous threat yet: the holiday blues! And then there’s the reason for the season(al special): GWENPOOL!
Gwenpool Special #1? Really, this is She-Hulk Special if anything in this rather odd one-shot that spins out of Howard the Duck #1 which featured the popular Gwenpool. Well, if you’re here for Gwenpool, you might be disappointed, especially since she doesn’t show up until about page 40.
These types of one-shots are interesting in that they can be good, but they tend to be really bad, and this absolutely falls in the latter. The fact that it has Gwenpool in the title, but lacks her within, screams to me cash-in and while the comic is about 60 pages (with ads), it’s $5.99 you don’t need to spend.
Featuring a group of writers and artists, the quality bounces all around as one would expect as the comic is made up of a bunch of short stories that are supposed to connect, but that never quite works out in what feels like a natural way. Some is entertaining, but most of it’s not.
The art too is all over the place with different styles and different qualities. Some works, some doesn’t, a lot of it is really bad.
As a whole, the comic feels a lot like a cash grab, especially with the fact that Gwenpool whose name is in the title is within so few of the pages. This is a comic that as a kid, I’d totally have bought only to walk away disappointed. I struggled to read it all. Don’t fall for the title, this is a comic to absolutely skip this week.
Story: Gerry Duggan, Charles Soule, Christopher Hastings, Margaret Stohl
Art: Danilo Beyruth, Langdon Foss, Gurihiru, Juan Gedeon
Story: 4 Art: 4 Overall: 4 Recommendation: Pass
Marvel provided Graphic Policy with a FREE copy for review