X-Men Unlimited
#10
Writing: Mark Waid
Art: Frank Toscano
and Nick Gnazzo
This takes place
after X-Men #50, but before Uncanny #331
What Went Down: Our
story begins with a flashback to a young Hank McCoy fixing a school bus and
annoying the heck out of Groundskeeper Willy.
The flashback is being retold by the former school principal, who is
retelling the story with pride in the present at a hospital. Unfortunately the principal’s visitor is the
evil Hank McCoy from the Age of Apocalypse, who promptly suffocates the principal
after learning everything he can about the Hank of this world. As Dark Beast leaves the hospital, it is
apparent that he’s killed everyone there, not just the principal, as he
recounts his history up until now.
Meanwhile, the real Beast is using the Danger Room as a
giant microscope to manipulate the molecules of the Legacy Virus for
study. Professor X and the other X-Men
interrupt him to implore that he spend more time outside the lab. In a secret lab, Dark Beast has hacked into
regular Hank’s computer and is keeping track of his work.
Dark Beast meets with another person from Hank’s
life—this time a former girlfriend named Mindy who recounts teenage Hank’s
fixation with the robotics of a haunted tunnel ride. As she tells the story, Mindy becomes ill,
and Dark Beast reveals he infected her and the rest of the restaurant with a
deadly virus.
At the institute, Iceman is helping Beast with yet
another experiment. Bobby has to use his
powers to keep a microscope from overheating, even though this eventually
causes him pain. The computer eventually
overheats and blows up. Afterwards,
Bobby gets Hank to agree to leave the lab, but it’s a trick to get rid of
him.
Dark Beast then visits a priest who retells the origin of
Hank’s fur to the villain. The priest is
repaid by having his church blown up.
After acquiring some files from the Brand Corporation, Dark Beast is
able to turn his fur blue. He heads to
the home of Hank’s parents to learn more about the genuine article. Evil Hank gets more of his origin filled in,
pertaining to the radiation accident that may have given him the x-gene. Both parents notice something wrong with
their son, and just when it seems like Dark Beast might kill them both, he
falters and leaves abruptly. On his way out of town, he kills a random
passerby.
As real Beast works on his computer, Dark Beast hacks his
computer and leads him to the abandoned Brand Corporation. Dark Beast traps regular Beast in a box and
gloats about all the people in Hank’s life that he has killed. Enraged Beast bursts free and a fight
ensues. Just when Beast has the upper
hand, he realizes he is about to kill Dark Beast and lets up, allowing Dark
Beast to knock him out. When Hank wakes
up, he is being bricked into a dungeon.
Beast begs him to let him go and help him cure the Legacy Virus, but the
villain seals him in.
How It Was: Well when you have a dark version of a
character hanging around a super hero universe, it is inevitable that he will
end up facing his better self at some point.
While it’s not the most original set up for a comic story, Mark Waid
wrote it, so there is actually a little substance to this tale. Dark Beast is a problematic character because
theoretically he shares the same temperament and personality with regular Beast,
only without all the patience and ethical concerns; his vague fear of Mr.
Sinister, who probably doesn’t know he exists at this point, seems
unfounded. Waid quickly defines the evil
McCoy by making him a remorseless killer the likes of which we haven’t seen in
the X-books up to this point. Even when
Sabretooth escaped and had a dozen chances to kill someone, he was never
allowed to; compare that to Dark Beast who wipes out entire hospitals and
restaurants full of people on a whim.
It’s off-putting, but the violence does serve a purpose. Having racked up an enormous body count by
the middle of the issue, I was almost certain Dark Beast was going to kill
Hank’s parents, who are probably as crucial to the X-books as all the made-up
characters from Hank’s life in this issue.
There is a marvelous sense of tension as Dark Beast reaches for the
axe. In fact, it might’ve ended up a
more memorable story and cemented Dark Beast as a more palpable threat long
term if he had gone through with it.
Some of the flashbacks are a little hokey (why is Groundskeeper
Willy at Hank’s school), but they establish that downhome mid-western
Smallville charm that makes for an excellent contrast with the over-the-top
violence of the Dark Beast. Regular
Beast’s experiments are shown for a little too long, and I don’t really get how
an electron microscope can overheat and explode, but once he’s lead to the
Brand Corporation, it’s worth it to see his reaction to Dark Beast’s
remorseless crimes. It’s unfortunate
that most of this is forgotten after Onslaught because although he’s sort of
derivative in terms of comics stories, Dark Beast would’ve made a more
interesting obsession for Beast to focus on as opposed to the Legacy Virus plot
that just kept going and going and going.
Waid injects personality and a hint of humor into the
characters (I love the line about Bobby getting a 200 point lead in
Scrabble). And although the two Beasts
couldn’t seem more different, Waid wisely uses the corny flashbacks to
establish the commonality that both of them need to satisfy their own
curiosities when it comes to how things work; Dark Beast just uses living
people as opposed to machines and lab equipment. Both are obsessed with figuring out how
things work, and it’s a shame we aren’t given more of Dark Beast’s history to
really drive home the similarities and differences.
This is probably one of the best issues of X-Men Unlimited I’ve ever read. It feels like a narrower focused story,
unburdened by the myriad of subplots that would undoubtedly be included in the
main titles; however, for the first time most of the book doesn’t feel like
padded filler. Dark Beast seems like a
genuine threat, even if he never does anything threatening or interesting while
undercover at the X-Mansion. This
could’ve been the foundation for rehabilitating a contrived villain—it’s too
bad it never was followed up on, so Dark Beast actually comes across in later
appearances as C-level Mr. Sinister.
Still, this is quite a good one.
Everyone Should
Read
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