Thursday, September 30, 2010

Avengers #369

Avengers #369
Writing: Bob Harras
Art: Steve Epting and Jan Duursema

What Went Down: Bloodties Part 5: This double-sized, shiny cardboard covered issue opens with the SHIELD helicarrier flying towards Genosha. Nick Fury and all of the Avengers from the UN want to join the fight in Genosha, but there is a forcefield around the island. So they all contribute nothing to the rest of the story, except for later discovering that the energy dome field is shrinking.

In the sewers, Exodus rants for a while, takes over Cortez’s body, forces him to hand over Luna Maximoff, and then kills Cortez (don’t worry, he’ll be back later, but then he will die again). Exodus then defeats Quicksilver, Crystal, Scarlet Witch, and Jean Grey in one panel.

On the surface, Trish Tilby is still reporting on how the X-Men are rescuing civilians when the other four Avengers show up. They offer their help, and both teams agree to team up to save Luna. Gambit also flirts with Sersi. The first part of the plan is for War Machine and Storm to fly up and recon the energy dome. Since War Machine’s sensors don’t detect any barrier, he decides that the best course of action is to fly right into it, which turns off his armor. Both teams assume that Exodus is responsible for the dome. Xavier contacts the X-Men and tells them that they are needed immediately.

On the other side of the city, U.S. Agent, Xavier, Beast, and a wealth of other minor characters have been cornered by the Genoshan soldiers. Everyone assumes that this is their final stand, and Renee Majcomb gets clipped by a laser. Luckily, the X-Men and the Avengers show up just in time and defeat the soldiers. Cue a big fight scene. After the fight is over, the heroes are helping the wounded, when suddenly Xavier yells a warning to Rogue, and Rogue falls out of the sky. It turns out that Exodus was using his psi-powers to kill Rogue because she has a loose connection to Magneto and betrayed him. But it’s okay, because Exodus does a bad job, so Rogue is just fine.

Exodus finally confronts the Avengers; he is using his powers to restrain Luna’s family and Jean as well as fight the X-Men. Exodus rants some more, and another battle starts, this time involving the mutant armies that Cortez was leading. Exodus has all of the heroes on the ropes as the field starts to destroy the highest buildings in the city.

As Exodus is about to sacrifice the child Luna for being a human, Xavier attacks Exodus with his powers, leaving him open for the Black Knight to use his sword on him, frying his nerves or something. Xavier then proceeds to chastise all the mutate soldiers for following a villain who would slaughter a child. Exodus recovers and flies off, but not before shooting Quicksilver with an energy blast. Black Knight performs CPR on Pietro, which is a big deal because they are both rivals for Crystal’s affection, and Quicksilver wakes up. Everyone is happy. In the epilogue, Captain America, Jen Ransome, and Professor X sit on a beach and talk about whether the country can be helped.

How It Was: Marvel gives us a forty-eight page finale to a tired, strung out five issue event. And great news, it’s written by an editor and has two different artists. Suffice to say, this issue suffers from a lot of problems. First the art: it’s perfectly good and both artists fit fairly well with the standard Marvel House style. The problem is the consistency of the subjects being portrayed. Because each artist is assigned different sections of the issue, characters appear and disappear at random. Archangel, Revanche, and Sersi’s jacket are non-existent for the first thirty-or-so pages, and then suddenly pop in like they’ve been there the whole time. And why is Revanche in this story and not Psylocke? You can also tell by the art that the artists had no idea what Revanche’s powers were since she is only depicted fighting hand to hand. Each artist also draws a completely different design for Nick Fury in two separate parts of the book.

But the writing is where this issue, and really the entire crossover, is let down. It’s not that the writers are untalented; it’s just that this whole story was poorly planned to begin with. It’s plainly obvious from the story that there is just not enough narrative here for four squads of super heroes. This leads to lame attempts on the part of Harras to widdle down the cast so that the ending makes sense, and the artists don’t have to draw a bazillion characters. So we get half the Avengers standing on the sidelines and contributing nothing. We get War Machine acting like he forgot his brain in his other suit and taking himself out. Rogue gets knocked out in a scene that is more of an afterthought, when Harras remembers that Rogue is also connected to Magneto, but it’s too late to have her join Quicksilver and the others. Why not have Rogue tag along with Quicksilver instead of Jean in the first place? It is really a shame to see such great characters go to waste because of poor planning.

The most head slapping moment is when Xavier finally contacts the X-Men to come and save his group. It begs the question, why didn’t he just contact the X-Men at the end of part three instead of waiting until the middle of part five? The answer of course is that then the Avengers and the X-Men wouldn’t be able to crossover. The same question holds true of Exodus, who could have just flown off three issues ago to kill Cortez instead of waiting until now. It is frustrating to realize how unnecessarily long this bad story is. Oh, and Exodus is kind of a boring villain in this issue. He has pages and pages of dialogue this issue, as well as the power to defeat a dozen heroes by just standing still.

There are a few bright spots. The fights with the soldiers are pretty well done and exciting, even if most of them look generic. And the scene where Exodus is finally defeated works really well as a big, epic conclusion, at least until he stands up again two pages later and just flies away. Character inconsistencies aside, the art is still pretty good from both pencilers.

The problem with Bloodties is that it didn’t start out as a story idea, it started as a gimmick. Celebrating the thirtieth anniversary of two comic properties is not enough to base six books worth of story on (five issues with one of them being double-sized). With a smaller, trimmed down cast and a three-issue length as opposed to five, this story could have been something better than it turned out to be.

D+

Uncanny X-Men #307

Uncanny X-Men #307
Writing: Scott Lobdell
Art: John Romita Jr.

What Went Down: Bloodties Part 4: We enter on a splash page of Professor X using his body as a shield to protect a wounded Genoshan refugee. Turning the page, we see a two page splash of Beast and U.S. Agent engaging the human soldiers to protect the mutant prisoners. We learn that most of the mutants are infected with the Legacy Virus, and Xavier uses his powers to help the heroes against the soldiers. This reveals that he is a mutant to some of the prisoners, but Charles just brushes them off.

Meanwhile, Exodus is getting knocked across town by Sersi, the Eternal Avenger. Exodus uses his bright energy powers on Sersi, and she identifies his powers as being psionic based. On the ground, War Machine—who is feeling a lot better after being beaten up by Exodus last issue—Captain America, and the Black Knight note that the city might not survive the battle. Black Knight also recognizes Exodus, which doesn’t get resolved for many years; his predecessor, the original Black Knight, fought Exodus during the time of the Crusades.

Back at the UN, the Black Widow tells off the UN and apologizes to the world for letting the UN place politics before the Avengers true mandate. Then they leave to go to Genosha. Back in Genosha, the X-Men break into a government building to liberate the employees there. Cyclops discovers some dead bodies and questions the point of their struggle. Iceman tries to remind him that they still saved a lot of people.

Black Knight and War Machine are now trying to break up Sersi and Exodus before they destroy the entire city. A huge explosion occurs, and War Machine protects himself and the Knight behind a forcefield. Exodus flies off, and Sersi emerges from the rubble very angry. Dane stops her from pursuing the villain.

Down in the city’s sewer, Jean Grey and Quicksilver are searching for Cortez and Luna. Jean detects a presence, but it turns out to be Crystal and the Scarlet Witch. The heroes fill each other in, until Cortez appears and threatens to use his powers on Luna. Cortez explains that he wants protection from Exodus, who suddenly appears for the last page cliffhanger. Cortez tells the heroes to protect him from Exodus or Luna will die.

How It Was: A hard issue to comment on since most of the same arguments for this issue being subpar apply to the previous two issues. Let’s start with the first thing to stand out: that cover is horrible. Exodus looks nothing like he is supposed to, and all of the heroes have the exact same face. As for the story, after a plot stalling fight with War Machine, Exodus engages in a plot stalling battle with Sersi. Yes, beating Sersi shows off that Exodus is very powerful, but the majority of the fight is panels of both combatants standing around bathed in yellow energy. So it’s not much of a fight, and it gets even worse when Exodus realizes how pointless the fight is and flies off to finally move the plot along. And then there is the fact that War Machine and Black Knight’s whole storyline this issue is trying to stop the pointless fight that just ends on its own, wasting the participation of two more characters.

The scene at the UN is also fairly boring, and I can’t understand why so many heroes are needed to stand around while Hawkeye and Black Widow make a speech. It is kind of nice to see the story acknowledging that politics can often complicate situations such as a war or civil conflict, and often get in the way of helping the people that they are meant to. Still, it isn’t very interesting. The X-Men discovering dead bodies does carry a sense of tragedy to it, but Cyclops’ melodramatic internal monologue isn’t exactly deep or hard hitting. It feels like a wasted opportunity to finally depict the conflict from the perspective of the civilians and flesh out the dispute a little better.

The scenes that do work somewhat are the conclusion, if for no other reason than it finally furthers the plot a little, and the opening scenes with Xavier and the Beast. Yes, I still dislike the concentration camp angle because it vilifies one side over the other, and it’s kind of inappropriate, but at the same time something is actually happening. There are prisoners in danger, overwhelming odds, and an actual attempt to squeeze some tension out of the plot. This whole issue is just kind of a mess and it doesn’t really know what it wants to say about the characters or the setting. Basically this whole story so far has been a tedious attempt to find something for the characters to do until the story finally ends.

D