UNCANNY AVENGERS VOL. 1: THE RED SHADOW (Marvel, 2013; Hardcover)
Collects
Uncanny
Avengers
Nos.
1-5 (cover
dates December, 2012- May, 2013)
Writer:
Rick Remender
Artists:
John Cassady (1-4) and Oliver Copiel (5)
Colorist:
Laura Martin with Larry Molinar (4)
This
book is a dream come true on a number of levels. First, I am free of
the scourge of Brian Michael Bendis' writing. Rick Remender writes
Avengers who, you know, save the day and stuff. No half an
issue wasted on conversations between characters who speak in the
exact same voice and constantly interrupt one another. No double page
spreads of Avengers sitting at the breakfast table. Just issue after
issue of great story, with something going on in every panel, with
every scene advancing the story rather than running down the clock to
pad out a page count of a flimsy arc to fill out a trade paperback.
In short, this is the first real Avengers story in a decade.
John Cassady is among the upper echelon of modern day comic book artists, worlds better then he has to be. He might be slow, but greatness is worth the wait in my opinion. (It also helps when you have a collected edition in front of you and are not waiting for the next issue.)
This
starts after the fallout of The Avengers Vs. X-Men maxi-series.
I avoided A Vs. X because it sounded incredibly stupid, and
the consensus is that it was incredibly stupid. Time and money
saved! Anyways, Cyclops is now in jail and is basically a villain
and Professor X is dead. I guess that the aforementioned event had
something to do with the Phoenix force and all other kinds of
nonsensical stupid crap that I will just pretend never happened,
because the X-Men have been dead to me for years.
So Captain America is trying to ease relations between mutants and baseline humans, which are at an all-time low. He and Thor try to enlist Havok when Avalanche attacks. This leads to a scene with Rogue having words with the Scarlet Witch, who now isn't in exile or dead or whatever she was after House of M. The Red Skull, or more accurately a WWII era clone, enlists the aid of his “S”-Men, super-powered beings who give our heroes a sound thrashing. The Red Skull also makes a power play on par with any of his past grand schemes. I won't tell you what it is, but let's just say that since we're pissing on the Marvel of old, we may as well burn it to the ground first.
The
Red Skull is also using a variation of the Madbomb, this time turning
normal humans against mutants. So this adventure bonds a team of
mismatched heroes together as the Avengers Unity Division. The
roster: Team leader Havok, Captain America, Thor, the Scarlet Witch,
Wolverine, and Rogue. The Wasp and Sunfire pop in for issue 5, and
Wonder Man is hanging around and will undoubtedly join the team. I
always liked it when The Avengers were limited to 6-7 members. 8 or 9
seems too unruly. I vote for getting rid of Wolverine, as he should
have never been an Avenger to begin with.
The
next arc should be a real doozy, with the Apocalypse Twins, a
mummified corpse of Immortus, and Kang the Conqueror all converging
on...what? I am thrilled to death with this title. Finally! A new
Avengers book that I want to read.
Junk
Food For Thought rating: 4.75 out of 5.
The
OCD zone- Marvel has switched to a new dustjacket free hardback
for all of their Marvel Now! Premiere Hardcovers. While the MSRP for
five issues seems a bit high ($24.99 MSRP), all of
the variant covers are included as a gallery in the back and there is
a code included for a free digital copy of this book. I honestly
don't care about digital comics, but this is great for the folks who
do. What I do care about, however, is the annoying cardboard code
card that is glued into the binding. It sticks out like a sore thumb
towards the back of the book and makes me unhappy.
Note how the card with the digital code is glued into the casing. |
Paper
rating: 3.75 out of 5. This book has a decent weight glossy
coated stock. It's not as thick as the stock that Marvel used to use
in these books.
Binding
rating: 4.25 out of 5. These Premiere Hardcovers have glued
binding, but they are on the thin side so they lay reasonably flat
with the exception of the very front and especially the very back of
the book. That stupid digital code card throws a wrench in the
enjoyment factor for me.
Hardback
cover coating rating: 4.5 out of 5. The coating leaves a strange,
filmy feeling on your fingers but is of sufficient thickness that it
doesn't scuff easily. It's not Avatar Press awesome but is pretty
darn good. I'm happy with it. I was initially opposed to the idea of
Marvel foregoing dustjackets, but not any more...at least for these
Premiere Editions.
I picked this up while at Free Comic Book Day yesterday. Can't wait to read this in 2027 when I'm caught up!
ReplyDelete