Avengers #9: Aaron certainly makes it clear Namor is playing for keeps here as Namor murders Stingray after he declines to embrace the oceans "or die." The issue's stakes started much lower: Tiger Shark tries to rob a cruise ship, and it just so happened Stingray, his brother-in-law, was a passenger on it. Stingray encourages Tiger Shark to get help, telling him his sister misses him. Then, Namor appears, and it all goes downhill from there. This entire sequence is gripping, though I'll admit I felt like I missed a few issues. We learn Namor's rage was initially stoked when the crew on a Roxxon ship murdered some Atlanteans, which I vaguely remember, possibly from the new "Thor." The Avengers begged him to release the crew after he threatened to execute them and Namor relented to Captain America who, as usual, was able to appeal to his better angels. But, the Avengers offer little more than words when they discover the devastation the Final Host wrought on Atlantis. When a group of starving Atlantean children "drown" on the surface after believing the Avengers would feed them, Namor snaps. He creates his Defenders of the Deep and swears vengeance. Despite the disorientation over how angry Namor suddenly is, I can't say I disliked the issue. After all, Aaron has Stingray joke about "Atlantis Attacks" as a way to make clear it's a different ballgame this time. If that event was inspired by Namor's arrogance, this war comes from a fight for Atlantis' very survival. Namor isn't wrong here, and I'm intrigued to see how the Avengers handle that.
Captain America #4: I'm very happy to give Coates a long glide path on this series, though I'm already pretty happy with the direction he's going. Here, Cap storms an abandoned military base in Algeria after learning Thunderbolt Ross sold out Sharon Carter to the Power Elite. As Alexander Lukin's widow prepares to experiment on Sharon, Steve makes his way through the Elite's guards. Along the way, Cap ponders how far the world has fallen when you can't even rely on a fellow patriot like Ross. It sounds like a punchline, but Coates doesn't make it so. Instead, he gives us a meditation on loss as Steve admits he's still struggling to accept a world that now doesn't trust him. Moreover, Lukin brilliantly summaries the American heartland as a proletariat eager to greet the Russians as liberators. Coates is as insightful as he's ever been, though I'd say he should probably give it a rest next issue with the long sequences of Cap's thought bubbles. It totally worked here, but at some point we're just going to need a good ol' fashioned slugfest.
Iceman #2: This issue is just...weird. It's unfortunate, because it starts from the interesting premise of Grace addressing why Emma didn't out Bobby when she occupied his body. I thought the answer was going to be her unusual sensitivity came from having a beloved gay brother. Instead, we learn she had a mentally unhinged gay brother with telepathic abilities who murdered his abusive father. It's...a lot. Emma initially enlists Bobby's help not only because he's gay but he's apparently immune to telepathy in his ice form. This part is news to me, particularly given his years of communicating with Jean. I guess he can allow someone to read his mind? He clearly developed this ability after young Jean outted young Bobby. Emma thinks it's her father who has powers, but really it was just her brother pretending to be her father. I think? To make matters worse, the way Grace is going, I half expected Bobby to have sex with the brother in the room where he kept his father's body. He thankfully doesn't do that, but he does just allow Emma to "handle" her brother despite the fact he murdered his own father. Would Bobby really be OK with that? I guess in Grace's world he is so long as his Grindr profile is there to distract him?
Spider-geddon #1: This issue is short and to the point: the Spider-People quickly make their way to Otto's hideout to warn him that his cloning technology is opening the door to the Inheritors' return. Otto doesn't believe them, insisting that the clones only have his DNA and that he's never wrong. (You know where it's going after that.) However, a heroic alternate-reality version of Otto shows him the Inheritors have put his readings on a loop. Otto realizes his error as Morlun, Verna, and Jennix arrive, killing Spider-Man Noir and Spider-UK in short order. Morlun leaves to get his revenge on Peter in "Peter Parker: The Spectacular Spider-Man" as a depleted Spider-People roster finds itself face-to-face with Verna and Jennix. It's clobbering' time!
The Weatherman #5: LeHeup does an amazing job in this issue juggling several different competing narratives.
The Pearl is auctioning off Nathan's death because he wants to use the money to track down other members of the Sword of God, as he -- like everyone else -- lost people he loved in Earth's destruction. We learn Jenner has a telepath on his team who ferrets out M.S.A. infiltrators. Cross' unwilling partner Garren successfully finds Orin Wetzel, the assistant to Dr. Nyseth, the woman who mindwiped Nathan. LeHeup leads us to believe the Marshal is working for the Pearl and is going to kill Garren as he secures Wetzel; instead, the Marshal kills the Pearl just as the auction concludes. Meanwhile, the Marshal's partner, White Light, tries to stop Cross from rescuing Nathan but only manages to force her to crash-land her ship.
At this stage, the only thing I don't totally understand is what Nathan could possibly know, in his evil incarnation, that Jenner would need. Obviously, it's something, but I don't get how it could be that essential to Jenner's plan to destroy, presumably, Mars. I guess we'll see.
(I edited the texts of my "The Weatherman" reviews in November 2024 as I occasionally called Cross "Amy" instead of Amanda and the Marshal as "Cowboy" or just "Marshal.")
The Wild Storm: Michael Cray #12: At the end of the day, I'm not really sure what we get here. Constantine allows Diana a glimpse through the portal he opens. Maybe she sees her gods, maybe she doesn't. At any rate, the portal explodes, either because Constantine prevents her from ending the world or he loses control of the portal. Cray gives into the Daemon inside him after Diana mortally wounds him, and he takes down Diana fairly quickly. He brings Constantine to Trelane and resigns before saying good-bye to his father. Hill certainly ends on a terrifying note, as I think we see his father's house in flames and Cray stares into the mirror at his Daemon chanting his own name. To be honest, it's a more exciting issue than we've had in a while and a strong way to end a dragging series. But, I still find myself confused about how it ties into the larger narrative before us in "The Wild Storm." The only connection I can figure is that Cray is the only Daemon we've seen other than the one who approached Angie, and I'm not quite sure even he can take on Halo, IO, and Skywatch on his own. Hill seemed oddly uncurious about the role this series played in the larger Wildstorm universe, and it dragged down this series throughout its run. I'm eager to see Michael appear under Ellis' watch in the main title, because I think he can polish the edges of what Hill accomplished here in terms of developing Michael into a complicated hero.
X-Men: Black - Mojo #1: Who knew an issue about Mojo could be so charming? Auckerman really brings out an unexpected side of Mojo as Blob Herman helps him ask out a girl he likes. Seriously, it sounds crazy, but I was totally charmed by the whole enterprise. I highly recommend.
Also Read: Detective Comics #990; Infinity Wars #4; Ms. Marvel #35; Oblivion Song #8
The Wild Storm: Michael Cray #12: At the end of the day, I'm not really sure what we get here. Constantine allows Diana a glimpse through the portal he opens. Maybe she sees her gods, maybe she doesn't. At any rate, the portal explodes, either because Constantine prevents her from ending the world or he loses control of the portal. Cray gives into the Daemon inside him after Diana mortally wounds him, and he takes down Diana fairly quickly. He brings Constantine to Trelane and resigns before saying good-bye to his father. Hill certainly ends on a terrifying note, as I think we see his father's house in flames and Cray stares into the mirror at his Daemon chanting his own name. To be honest, it's a more exciting issue than we've had in a while and a strong way to end a dragging series. But, I still find myself confused about how it ties into the larger narrative before us in "The Wild Storm." The only connection I can figure is that Cray is the only Daemon we've seen other than the one who approached Angie, and I'm not quite sure even he can take on Halo, IO, and Skywatch on his own. Hill seemed oddly uncurious about the role this series played in the larger Wildstorm universe, and it dragged down this series throughout its run. I'm eager to see Michael appear under Ellis' watch in the main title, because I think he can polish the edges of what Hill accomplished here in terms of developing Michael into a complicated hero.
X-Men: Black - Mojo #1: Who knew an issue about Mojo could be so charming? Auckerman really brings out an unexpected side of Mojo as Blob Herman helps him ask out a girl he likes. Seriously, it sounds crazy, but I was totally charmed by the whole enterprise. I highly recommend.
Also Read: Detective Comics #990; Infinity Wars #4; Ms. Marvel #35; Oblivion Song #8
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