Thursday, November 4, 2021

Fantastic Four - Dan Slott

  1. Fourever [2018] - Reed, Sue, and the rest of the Future Foundation are off creating universes to restore the multiverse (with Franklin and the Molecule Man).  Ben and Johnny, back in New York, despair of them ever coming back.  But when a cosmic entity calling herself The Griever At the End of All Things starts tearing down what they've built, Reed summons everyone who's ever associated with the FF to take her down.  It's a fun read with some bits of good characterization, such as Reed's daughter flirting with one of the alien warriors, but for drama it's flat and empty.  The Griever flicks away Franklin and destroys Molecule Man with a touch, but is stymied somehow by a couple dozen street-level heroes?  I couldn't get past that part, despite the ostensible explanation.  I liked the extras in the volume, like the Fantastix and wedding planning stuff.  [3.5]

 

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Saturday, August 7, 2021

Planetary Brigade - Giffen & DeMatteis

Planetary Brigade - Giffen & DeMatteis [Boom]
Super-hero satire very much in the vein of their very well done JLA and JLI work, only with Boom Studio characters, nearly each one of which is a very thinly veiled pastiche of a classic JLA character.  The exception to this is the Mauve Visitor, who despite being a take on the Martian Manhunter is much more fully fleshed out and interesting than the cardboard Superman and Batman stand-ins.  This book contains two three-issue limited series, one involving a man who has unfortunately become a portal for demons and the other (much more akin to the JLA material) about the group's dealing with supervillain Mister Master and their acceptance of the repentant villain Purring Pussycat.  The snappy banter puts the book at just over the average rating.  [3.5]

Tuesday, August 3, 2021

Champions - Mark Waid

Champions - Mark Waid [2017]

  1. Change the World - Ms. Marvel quits the Avengers, realizing their mission doesn't align with her morals.  Teaming with the young Nova and Miles Morales, she enlists Amadeus Cho's Hulk, Viv Vision, and the young Cyclops from the past to form a new sort of supergroup that doesn't "punch down" or use "unjust force" and tries to help disenfranchised and oppressed people find long-term solutions.  Applying superheroics to real-world problems like slave trafficking and systematic racism in small-town law enforcement turns out to be trickier than at first thought, but Waid does a great job envisioning what an inspired superhuman might do to combat true injustice.  It's got humor, action, and just a tiny bit of romance.  [4]
  2. The Freelancer Lifestyle - The super-social justice warriors go up against a super group of sadists that proudly "punch down," the Freelancers, in the service of landlords and other corporate bad guys.  (The whole book is a thinly-veiled but well-meaning political allegory.)  This part of the book is well done, but then the volume suffers, and greatly, from both "ongoing team comic features lots of characters who have their own titles" syndrome and, worse, "big world-changing Marvel event" syndrome.  So in one story, Ms. Marvel is missing, but we never get any closure on where she was, and then she's back.  In another story, a tonal disconnect, they search for survivors in Las Vegas, which apparently Hydra has leveled in the totally ludicrous "Captain America, Agent of Hydra" storyline.  New characters come and go.  In one issue, Viv is kept prisoner by her father, Vision, for breaking curfew, but then no mention of that is made again.  And so on.  Waid's writing is fine; through not fault of his, there's just too much going on for this to be a coherent volume.  [3.5]
  3. Champion For a Day - Although the blurb on the back cites a big "membership drive," that's far from the focus of the story.  The lion's share of this volume is about Viv Vision's new human form and the replacement synthetic Viv that Vision has created to replace her (which all happened in, of course, another title).  However, we also get introduced to the new Falcon (genetically infused with Redwing to be a human-bird hybrid), Red Locust (later just Locust), and see Patriot and Ironheart, Iron Man's protégée.  When the Viv storyline wraps, that's the end of Waid's fun, and intelligently progressive, run. Also included in this volume is "Champions: Monsters Unleashed," by Jeremy Whitley, in which they team up with the Freelancers against some giant monsters.  [4]