Thanks to Charlie Horse 47 and Killdumpster for their sponsorship of this post, via the magic of Patreon.
***
The beckoning fingers of The Past signal for me to step forward and see just what I find there.
As always - and possibly thanks to a magic sword - our barbarian is triumphant.
However, the ever-hapless Fafnir bites the bullet!
Not literally, of course. Bullets haven't been invented yet.
I do, of course, mean he dies.
I feel like this is the third time he's done that.
It's serious trouble for the X-Men in an issue that is, for some reason, double-sized.
In it, we see Thunderbird's brother try to avenge the death of his sibling, by abducting Banshee and forcing the gang to invade NORAD.
Needless to say, the X-Men survive that bid and Thunderbird's brother learns the error of his ways.
As does Firestar who's also involved. Apparently, this is her first-ever appearance in a Marvel comic.
Upon realising the fiend is actually good at acting - and not the irredeemable ham everyone always assumed - Hornhead decides to let him get on with it.
Can Marvel's two most patriotic captains be at each other's throats?
No. It can't be.
In fact, Modred the Mystic has stolen the UK hero's costume, in order that he can do something or other.
Whatever that something or other is, I can't help feeling the combined power of the two crime-smashers will prove too much for him.
Fortunately, for him, some old bloke pulls him out from under it all and nurses him back to health.
As they get to know each other, our hero starts to suspect that man may be Odin in disguise.
But, no, unknown to the thunder god, he's actually, Odin's dad!
I think.
If not, he's someone else.
So, Spidey sets out to find him but, along the way, accidentally bumps into Killer Shrike who thinks the hero's come looking for him and decides to get his retaliation in first.
Also notable, is that this issue sees the first appearance of Scourge when he kills a character who seemed like he was going to be the main villain of the piece.
Well, now he's decided the only reason that plan failed was because the Sub-Mariner was there and messed it all up for him. Therefore, he might as well try it again. But, this time, without Subby's help!
Then again, is it really Doom?
Or is the truth even more senses-shattering than even that?
Captain Marvel, having been sent on a wild goose chase by the Vision, lands on one of Thanos' abandoned bases, deep in the depths of deepest space.
But is it really abandoned?
And just how far can she trust the other people who've also found their way there?
22 comments:
Only the Thor and the DD here.
Can’t remember the Thor.
I remember the DD is atrocious.
Low standard of covers here. The Avengers one looks best to me.
Hey, look - it’s that Thunderbird X-man guy I was asking about the other day. He’s back!
SEAN - you no like Jodi Whitaker as Dr. Who? Me thinks she was the perfect who… but Charlie only watched three episodes with her. But, that was three more full episodes I saw of any other who.
Wow, I didn’t buy a single one of these. From checking out the month’s listings at Mike’s Amazing World, it appears I bought just one Marvel comic, and that one is from their Epic line (THE BLACK DRAGON 1 by Claremont and Bolton, of which I have only the vaguest memory).
I agree with Matthew that it’s a pretty weak batch of covers overall. Even Simonson’s THOR cover is shockingly poor, far below his usual standard. If it took him more than 15 minutes to draw, start to finish, I’d be very surprised. I think Byrne’s PETER PARKER cover is my fave here. The concept is unusual, the hi-con lighting is well executed , and even the coloring is above par.
b.t.
I think Simonson was taking a bit of a rest at this point, b.t. - Thor #355 was drawn by Sal Buscema (and the next issue will have a one-off creative team filling-in).
Matthew, its not that Thunderbird from the other day. Its his brother. Completely different!
Steve, I believe that X-Men issue was double size to mark the All-New All-Different team's hundredth anniversary (ie GS X-Men #1, Uncanny X-Men #94 - #193). It includes a dedication to Len Wein and Dave Cockrum.
Any excuse, eh?
-sean
Charlie, I didn't much care for what I saw of Jodie Who. Nothing against her, the writing just wasn't up to much. But thats been the case with the show for quite a while now, for me anyway.
The current series seems to be a bit of an improvement. Mainly because the new companion actually seems likeable (which is a different approach from usual).
Ncuti Gatwa seems like he should be good in the part, but still hasn't settled settled on a way to play it...? And I don't think the Doctor should have a 'tache! At least thats something you could say for the Jodie Whitaker.
You're a Who fan, Steve - any thoughts?
-sean
Apologies for a few typos there
-sean
Sean, Gatwa's a good actor and he's likeable enough but, to me, he always feel like he's just another member of the cast, rather than having a gravitational field that warps the show around him like the more memorable Doctors do. I feel he's needed a harder edge than he's, so far, possessed.
So far, this season's been good. The big test, as always, will be the finale. Davies' finales tend to collapse into a total mess that feels like he's just handing the director, actors and FX people a first draft and hoping they can sort it out for him.
I remember there being a bit of excitement, at the time, that Captain Britain was going to feature in a proper Marvel Comic. Illustrated by Paul Neary, no less, who was directly involved in his re-launch. While they did, at least, use the correct costume, the story didn’t feature anything from the recent Alan Moore run, which was disappointing. Very much an C minus. Imagine a US publisher today having an extended Moore plot to pillage.
Looking through Mike’s suggests it was was a lean month for me. Only 2000AD monthly #3 (the nice Eagle US format colour version, featuring Dredd, Strontium Dog and DR & Quinch), Swamp Thing #36 (Nukeface part 2) and Captain Britain Monthly #3 (which is UK and so doesn’t belong in this feature).
DW
A (not an) C minus. And to clarify I did buy Captain America #305 (not just peruse in the comic shop).
DW
SteveDoesComics Moorewatch dept:
DW, besides Swamp Thing #36, you could also have got Detective Comics #550 this month, which included the second part of a Green Arrow back-up, 'Night Olympics'. One of Moore's shall we say less memorable efforts from the mid-80s, drawn by Klaus Janson.
And Omega Men #26 - with the back-up 'Brief Lives' - which involved dealing with the question: would you buy a deluxe comic on fancy paper at direct market prices for four pages of Alan Moore & Kevin O'Neill?
The answer my case was yes. Sad, eh?
Btw, I think Jim Jaspers appears in X-Men by the end of the year doesn't he? In #200?
My understanding is that Chris Claremont planned to bring all that Captain Brexit stuff into the series, but Moore had a bit of a say - British and American copyright law being different - and vetoed it.
-sean
Steve, you put that much better than I did about Ncuti Gatwa.
Thats right about the season finales. Its also true of individual episodes too, that they tend to get wrapped up with a bit of drama that doesn't always make whole lot of sense.
-sean
The revived Dr Who is now 20 years old - only 6 years fewer than the original run!
A very bland month I think.At the time I read everything but looking back it does not inspire.Lots of Marvel titles seemed to be on autopilot though Byrne FF shines still!Could be just me getting old but I have no real desire to read this month's offerings again and at present reading
Hulk #160 -170(Englehart and Trimpe....brilliant)and Thor #170 -194...(Kirby.Buscema,Adams as good as it gets!)Great post and after being negative those years were brilliant for comics and music in general but this seemed a poor month! ps.How was Conan still selling.....the basic plot never really changed!
sean:
Alan Moore also wrote that month’s VIGILANTE. I dutifully bought it and remember reading it but have no memory at all of what it’s about.
b.t.
Nah.
‘Brief Lives’ was the ‘different time scales’ story, wasn’t it? That was genius, well worth the money.
I did actually notice that, b.t., and don't know why I forgot to mention it. Duh.
Possibly the Vigilante wasn't the best place to deal with the subject of domestic violence? Another one of Moore's lesser mid-80s stories that perhaps doesn't quite match the hype.
Also for all lovers of purple prose in comics this month - you'll be interested in this, b.t. - Eclipse published two issues of a title called Nightmare, which reprinted a pair of horror stories by Doug Moench and Don McGregor.
The USP for both was the Paul Gulacy artwork, which I recall being impressed by when I read them in Eerie a few years earlier -
https://theporporbooksblog.blogspot.com/2013/10/blood-on-black-satin-episode-one.html
I don't think they were as effective with added colour, and reduced to comic book size though.
-sean
You're right, it's a good one Matthew. I still remember absolutely nothing about the Omega Men though (;
-sean
sean:
Before the advent of Photoshop, combining “painted” color with continuous-tone grayscale artwork almost NEVER looked good. In fact, I can’t think of an instance where I thought the results were successful. The added color certainly didn’t do Gulacy’s inkwash art any favors. Story-wise, I remember thinking “Blood And Black Satin” was somewhat reminiscent of the Tigon movie THE CRIMSON CULT aka CURSE OF THE CRIMSON ALTAR. I don’t remember the storyline of “The Trespassers” at all. I know I read it (at least I think I did) — but all I recall is that it featured a photo-swipe of James Coburn as the story’s protagonist.
b.t.
That's the one, b.t. And if you want to refresh your memory...
https://theporporbooksblog.blogspot.com/2016/01/the-trespasser-part-one.html
-sean
Thanks, sean. I just read it. It’s terrible!
But thanks :D
b.t.
Your welcome, b.t. đ
-sean
I didn't have the Green Archer or Omega Men back-ups but did have the two part Vigilante story (Jim Baikie from memory). I also don’t recall much about it, and so it’s probably safe to assume it wasn’t one of Alan’s best stories.
DW
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