Showing posts with label Age of Ultron. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Age of Ultron. Show all posts

Monday, August 29, 2016

Ranking Marvel's Modern Events

Since the Avengers disassembled in 2004, Marvel has published over 20 major crossover events including line-wide events, franchise events (cosmic, Avengers, etc.), and family mini-events (X-Men, most usually). That said, there are 12 major line-wide events that define the overall tone of the Marvel universe beginning with House of M through the current Civil War II. I've ranked each event from worst to best, (SO SPOILERS!) starting with the practice in self-loathing called...


---

12. Avengers & X-Men: AXIS
In One Word: Unreadable.

Simply put, AXIS is a train wreck from beginning to end, a story originally meant for the pages of Uncanny Avengers that Marvel more-or-less forced Rick Remender to expand into a crossover event that was neither wanted, necessary, or well-liked. AXIS is a prime example of event fatigue, not only for the consumer, but also for the publisher who only wrapped up Original Sin one month before the March to AXIS branded-titles began. The entire premise was ridiculous – the Red Skull becomes Onslaught and a plan to defeat him backfires which inverts all the heroes and villains – and the expounding plotlines about the X-Men and Apocalypse, Sabertooth’s redemption, and an alliance of villains all very much fell flat. It’s not fun.


11. Fear Itself
In One Word: Frustrating
Writer Matt Fraction relies far too much on contemporary motivations to inform Fear Itself, a narrative about the civil unrest in America post-economic collapse that turned into Occupy Wall Street and other similar movements. While it’s admirable of Fraction to want to incorporate real life situations in a comic book universe, connecting a nihilistic America to the rise of a Nordic god of fear is a flimsy premise at best, and the whole bit about evil hammers possessing Marvel heroes is just stupid. We get it: Thor has a hammer and this is about Asgard, so there are more hammers! Fear Itself begins with a bang and no context, then expects readers to know far more than they would unless they've followed Thor for quite some time. The entire event feels convoluted and disjointed, like there’s so much story yet no cohesive way to tie it all together.


10. Original Sin
In One Word: Boring
Honestly, Jason Aaron’s Original Sin isn’t all that bad – I just happen to think it’s rather boring. The main, eight-issue series is a murder mystery featuring various weird team-ups between Marvel heroes as they investigate the murder of the Watcher. Early in the series, Z-list villain the Orb ‘detonates’ (I guess?) one of the Watchers’ eyes removed post-mortem, which results in various secrets of the Marvel U being revealed to the affected parties. The corresponding mini-series and tie-in issues are WAY more enjoyable than the main series because those tie-ins delve into the animosity between various heroes and how they deal with these new revelations. Unfortunately, AXIS came about soon after, so much of the status quo set by Original Sin was either ignored or replaced rather quickly.



9. Civil War II
In One Word: Disjointed

Alright, I know it’s not the greatest and there’s a lot more talking than there is war-ing in the pages of the main series, but given all its flaws, Civil War II has actually been more enjoyable than I imagined it would be. The premise is still shaky because Iron Man is obviously in the right while Captain Marvel sounds more and more like a fascist every issue, the dynamics of future crime prevention are being presented in different ways by different writers which has allowed the concept to breathe outside Brian Michael Bendis’ rather rudimentary explanation in the main series. Could it be better? Of course. Is it necessary? Probably not in the long run. Am I having fun with it while it’s happening? Definitely.


8. Age of Ultron
In One Word: Misunderstood
The misunderstood little event that didn’t have a home. This crossover was seeded in 2011 with a Free Comic Book Day issue, yet the event itself didn’t appear until 2013. Originally, writer Brian Michael Bendis had it planned to come out much sooner, but the development of AvX and the succeeding ‘Marvel NOW!’ initiative meant too many different plans were in play, and Age of Ultron was pushed to the side until it just felt awkward. That said, this crazy time-travel story that starts with Ultron having already won comes with a fun House of M style alternate timeline and finishes with a major shake-up that ties into Jonathan Hickman’s Avengers saga that eventually led to Secret Wars.


7. Avengers vs. X-Men
In One Word: Chaotic

Yes, it feels disjointed sometimes because five different writer scripted issues round robin-style, and yes, twelve issues was way too long for what could have been done in eight, but Avengers vs. X-Men is still an explosive, engaging crossover that comes close to lampooning itself with the tie-in mini-series AvX: VS. As a natural conclusion to a number of plotlines as well as an organic evolution of the tensions between the Avengers and the endangered mutant species, Avenger vs. X-Men succeeded in bringing about real and lasting change to the Marvel universe (Charles Xavier is still dead, Cyclops is/was? still a radical revolutionary, the Unity Squad is still a thing) and doing so with an air of fun and whimsy that doesn’t detract from the nature of the story.


6. Civil War
In One Word: Dramatic

I like Mark Millar and Steve McNiven’s Civil War. I know it’s not a complete story in seven issues, but I also recognize that almost no event tells the entire story in just the main series. Secret Wars and Age of Ultron aside, every event on this list either benefits from tie-ins and mini-series, or requires them for a full understanding of the event. Civil War pits Captain America against Iron Man over their political ideologies concerning the Superhero Registration Act meant to unmask superheroes and make them accountable by becoming agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. Iron Man represents the US government in supporting the bill, while Captain America believes it infringes on personal liberties. Each Avenger rallies other heroes to his respective cause, then they all fight a lot. It’s not perfect, but it’s a damn fun story.


5. Siege
In One Word: Shocking
This reads a lot better if you’ve read J. Michael Straczynski’s Thor run because it sets up the entire “Asgard floating over Oklahoma” angle that makes Siege such an emotionally-impactful tale. The Asgardian gods have taken refuge in the floating city of Asgardia over Broxton, Oklahoma, and current head of international security and peacekeeping, Norman “Green Goblin” Osborn needs a major win to make his job and his various machinations more legitimate. He stages an attack that mirrors the catastrophe from Civil War that catalyzes the SRA and pits the death of hundreds on the Asgardians. Osborn lays siege upon Asgard and uses the full might of his army of villains masked as heroes to rain destruction upon the benevolent gods. It’s a short read at four issues, but the effects are many and the “Dark Reign” of the Marvel universe comes to an end.


4. Infinity
In One Word: Epic
Infinity doesn’t get nearly as much love as it deserves. Granted, no one much sh!ts on Jonathan Hickman’s cosmic event, but no one much talks about it either, which I think is a shame. Infinity presents a war on two fronts: The Avengers take to space to assist a coalition of galactic empires to stave off the threat of the Universal Builders, while the remaining heroes on Earth must contend with an invasion force led by the Mad Titan Thanos. This is a crossover that lives up to that name, as Hickman’s corresponding Avengers and New Avengers tie-in issues are essential to getting the full story. And what a story it is: what Infinity lacks in character development, it more than makes up for in all-out epic space battles, an insane Thanos/Inhumans story, and a huge conclusion that sets the stage for…


3. Secret Wars
In One Word: Everything

Jonathan Hickman’s insane, over-the-top, game-changing mega-series is a testament not only to his, Esad Ribic, and Ive Svorcina’s skill as storytellers, but also to Marvel’s overall gambit with a year-long event that ended the Marvel universe that had stayed in-tact since 1961. Secret Wars was an endgame literally years in the making (and for real; not like, say, Siege, which was really only in the making for two years) and paid off quite handsomely with a series that received critical and commercial success even under duress of heavy delays and a pre-empted ‘All-New, All-Different’ Marvel universe. This is how a crossover event is done – a phenomenal story, incredible art by a consistent team, and real consequences.


2. Secret Invasion
In One Word: Explosive
For some reason, I just love Secret Invasion. I wasn’t actively reading comics in 2008 when this event was being published, so I didn’t get the experience of reading it as it came out. That said, I read all the pertinent tie-in issues in the order they were published because a friend explained that was the best way. Boy was he right – getting the secret history behind the Skrull invasion while I read a story about the Skrulls making their final gambit and taking the world hostage before the planet’s heroes have time to react. Secret Invasion is non-stop action and one of the few crossover events not directly tied to any one Marvel hero or team, a rarity in this day and age. The distrust and paranoia already deeply ingrained after Civil War was exacerbated by Skrulls revealing they had been acting as some of the most recognizable heroes in the Marvel universe for years.


1. House of M
In One Word: Fun


There’s something about House of M that stands the test of time. Yes, it’s a plot-heavy book, but it also takes place over the course of just a single day in the House of M reality, so most of the heroes are reacting and not “growing” in the traditional sense. Logistics aside, House of M was amazing because it worked as both a stand-alone main series and as a gateway into this new world the Scarlet Witch conjured into existence – while Bendis didn’t spend much time exploring the world controlled by Magneto, the bannered mini-series and tie-in issues brought a resonance to House of M that still makes the main series by itself feel much bigger than it is even though none of it was required reading. Marvel took this concept to its natural conclusion with Secret Wars in 2015 where the dozens of mini-series set on Battleworld had literally no influence on the main series (outside a few off-hand remarks and one conversation in the Siege mini). But House of M did it first and is still my favorite modern Marvel crossover event.

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Age of Ultron #10AI Review

(w) Mark Waid
(a) Andre Araujo

Age of Ultron #10AI is less about being an epilogue to Age of Ultron as it is about being a requiem of Hank Pym's life. That's not necessarily a bad thing, but it just feels out of place as a bookend of a series about time travel, warlord robots, and the breaking of the multiverse. Yes, the documented time is technically after all of that happens, thus it sits at the end, but nothing about this issue screams cohesive. Not even Mark Waid's stellar writing can make it feel right.

Now, Waid's writing is spot-on here. I've nothing to complain about on that front. If this was a one-shot called Pym or even Avengers A.I. #0.1, I'd be satisfied, but none of what happens fits into the themes of Age of Ultron. Brian Michael Bendis' opus to the dangers of time travel was about taking responsibility for damaging the fabric of space and time and, eventually, suffering the consequences. Age of Ultron #10AI is about Hank Pym freeing himself from responsibility to do whatever he wanted, which led to Ultron in the first place. In many ways, this issue feels regressive, like Pym didn't learn anything from this horrific event.

I want to stress that Waid writes a good issue here, it's just the context in which Marvel decided it should go just doesn't make sense. Most of the Avengers have seen an alternate timeline or two, including Hank Pym who has always been at the forefront of science. Why now, after all these years, are the visions of a destitute future haunting him? The easy answer is that the "Age of Ultron" was his fault. But the better answer is that there isn't a sensible answer because it's not logical. (Again) Pym is man of science who understands the nature of the multiverse and that, in the end, he prevented the nightmares of Ultron from ever actualizing in the first place. Certainly a man dedicated to science could understand and reconcile the non-happening of something bad?

Apparently not.

Mark Waid's look into Hank Pym's history is intriguing and gives a lot of context for the character's decisions and actions over the years. Pym feels like a more fleshed out hero now, and that's always a good thing. If Marvel had published this in a better fashion, it would have been a home run. As a final send-off for Age of Ultron, if feels cheap and overbearing, preachy and depressing. In the end, it's worth reading for Waid's writing alone.

GRADE
7/10

Tuesday, June 25, 2013

The Week in Revue (June 26 - July 2, 2013)

------- Spotlight
Batman/Superman #1
(w) Greg Pak
(a) Jae Lee

------- DC Reviews
The Flash #21
(w) Francis Manapul and Brian Buccellato
(a) Francis Manapul

Justice League #21 
(w) Geoff Johns
(a) Gary Frank
CHECK OUT THIS REVIEW ON DC COMICS NEWS!

Justice League of America #21
(w) Geoff Johns
(a) David Finch
CHECK OUT THIS REVIEW ON DC COMICS NEWS!

------- Marvel Reviews
Age of Ultron #10A.I.
(w) Mark Waid
(a) Andre Araujo

X-Men #2
(w) Brian Wood
(a) Olivier Coipel

Young Avengers #6
(w) Kieron Gillen
(a) Kate Brown

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

Spotlight: Age of Ultron #10

(w) Brian Michael Bendis
(a) Alex Maleev; Bryan Hitch & Paul Neary; Butch Guice; Brandon Peterson, Carlos Pacheco & Roger Bonet with Tom Palmer; David Marquez, Joe Quesada

This is what disappointment truly feels like.

I defended Age of Ultron in nearly every review I wrote about the series. And while it has indeed been a fun and generally enjoyable ride, Age of Ultron #10 simply fizzles out where it should have been explosive. And one vague, surreal explosion doesn't count after nine issues of build-up.


** SPOILERS AHEAD. THOUGH, YOU PROBABLY READ A LOT OF THIS ONLINE ALREADY. **


Why do I not like Age of Ultron #10? Let me count the ways. One: there are far too many artists on this issue. Two: introducing Angela in the final pages is such an obvious grab for money that I nearly slammed by laptop's screen shut in frustration. Three: this issue is the epitome of anticlimactic.

There are ten different artists credited to Age of Ultron #10 with no guide as to who has drawn what. Sure, I've got some idea based on what I've seen in other books, but overall, it's extremely jarring to see one issue go through so many different styles. Now, Bryan Hitch, Brandon Peterson, and Carlos Pacheco were featured throughout issues one through nine, but that was for a reason. Hitch drew the original timeline, Peterson drew the 'Age of Iron Man' segments, and Carlos Pacheco tackled the sequences set in the past of the Marvel universe. There were three distinct styles for three distinct parts of the story, and generally, it worked well. The only reason that I can imagine Marvel had for employing so many artists was the nature of the story's conclusion. And even if they did -- which is highly unlikely -- the experiment was not worth it because it looks bad.

Angela, Angela, Angela. Everyone is so excited about Angela, and it turns out her presence in the issue amounts to little more than a cameo. Now it makes sense how Bendis was able to "write" a special new part for the character. I phrased it like that not because I believe Bendis can't write, but because it's not a real sequence. Angela's appearance is just her inner monologue with a two-page spread by Joe Quesada as the backdrop. That's not enough. That's just pandering. And I'm sure there are those out there who loved seeing Angela on those final pages. But if you're unfamiliar with the character, this 'epic conclusion' is just confusing.

Which brings us to the fact that Age of Ultron #10 is the most anticlimactic ending to an event Marvel has produced since...well at least before House of M. The biggest revelation we get is that the multiverse is now bleeding into itself, meaning various universes will cross over with relative ease. While this is a big change in status quo, there's only one single splash page that's interesting. The rest is panning images of space and bright lights. It might be menacing and mysterious, yes, but these are the final pages of Age of Ultron

The big battle we get is basically a reprint of Avengers #12.1 from two years ago, and though it ends differently here than it did before, it's just a big letdown. Alright, sure; the Avengers defeated Ultron before he ever started his apocalyptic invasion of Earth. But we knew that was going to happen. What we needed here was something bigger to keep the momentum going now that the event is over. Unfortunately, Marvel thought giving us one glimpse of Galactus and a spread of Angela would do the trick. And even though the crossover nerd in me did summersaults when I saw Miles Morales facing down Galactus 616, it was a fleeting emotion because the only real reason it was included was for that specific reaction, not because it had anything to do with Age of Ultron.

Age of Ultron wasn't a huge failure. Bryan Hitch's artwork for the first five issues was fantastic, Carlos Pacheco's style fit the 1960s sequences perfectly, and the goal of the entire narrative was achieved by the end of Age of Ultron #10. Brian Michael Bendis set out to create an grand story about the dangers of abusing technology we don't understand. Unfortunately, this sentiment becomes hollow when the lesson isn't learned. Wolverine isn't punished for basically unraveling all of time and space, while Hank Pym believes he can correct the errors in Ultron's programming instead of understanding that creating and manipulating consciousness -- biological or artificial -- isn't right. So what was the point? 

Bendis threw the biggest players in the Marvel universe through the ringer for no reason. The characters don't truly grow because they haven't learned from their mistakes, which makes it all the more obvious that the true endgame of Age of Ultron was to allow Marvel to dig into it's plethora of fan-favorite characters with far more ease. This might sound harmless at first, but it means the characters were simply props throughout this event. All the tie-ins, all the deaths; none of it technically matters. And that's a problem. As an event, Age of Ultron was mediocre. As the final issue Age of Ultron #10 was completely lackluster.

GRADE
5/10

Tuesday, June 18, 2013

The Week in Revue (June 19-25, 2013)

------- Spotlight
Age of Ultron #10 of 10
(w) Brian Michael Bendis
(a) Bryan Hitch, Brandon Peterson, Carlos Pacheco, et al.

------- DC Reviews
Green Lantern: New Guardians #21
(w) Justin Jordan
(a) Bradley Walker and Andrew Hennessy

Wonder Woman #21
(w) Brian Azzarello
(a) Cliff Chiang

------- Marvel Reviews
Captain Marvel #13
(w) Kelly Sue DeConnick
(a) Amanda Conner

Uncanny Avengers #9
(w) Rick Remender
(a) Daniel Acuna

Wednesday, June 5, 2013

The Week in Revue (June 5-11, 2013)

------- Spotlight
Green Lantern #21
(w) Robert Vendetti
(a) Billy Tan

------- DC Reviews
Earth 2 #13
(w) James Robinson
(a) Yildiray Cinar

The Movement #2
(w) Gail Simone
(a) Freddy Williams II

------- Marvel Reviews
Age of Ultron #9 of 10
(w) Brian Michael Bendis
(a) Brandon Peterson and Carlos Pacheco

Hawkeye #11
(w) Matt Fraction
(a) David Aja

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

The Week in Revue (May 22-28, 2013)

------- Spotlight
The Green Team #1
(w) Art Baltazar and Franco     (a) Ig Guara
THE FOIL TO GAIL SIMONE'S THE MOVEMENT, THIS SERIES FEATURES THE SUPER-RICH TEENAGERS WHO INHABIT THE DCnU!

------- DC Reviews
Justice League Dark #20
(w) Jeff Lemire     (a) Mikel Janin
HOW DO THE JUSTICE LEAGUE DARK, THE FLASH, AND SWAMP THING ALL CONNECT? ONLY JEFF LEMIRE KNOWS!

Teen Titans #20
(w) Scott Lobdell     (a) Eddy Barrows)
WILL SCOTT LOBDELL ACTUALLY DELIVER A SEMI-COGENT ISSUES THIS MONTH? I'M NOT HOLDING MY BREATH!

------- Marvel Reviews
Uncanny Avengers #8AU
(w) Rick Remender     (a) Andy Kubert
THE "AGE OF ULTRON" TIE-IN FEATURING KANG AND THE APOCALYPSE TWINS!

Young Avengers #5
(w) Kieron Gillen     (a) Jaime McKelvie
THE FINAL ISSUE OF KIERON GILLEN'S FIRST AMAZING ARC!

Wednesday, May 15, 2013

Spotlight: Age of Ultron #8

(w) Brian Michael Bendis     (a) Brandon Peterson


** SPOILERS ABOUND. DO NOT READ UNLESS YOU ALREADY KNOW OR DON'T CARE **


As of this issue, we should really change the name of this series from Age of Ultron to the more fitting Brian Michael Bendis' Tale of Time Travelling TrepidationLast issue, we got a good look at the world as it is now that Wolverine murdered Hank Pym in the 1960s. Ultron never came to be, the Defenders are Earth's primary defense force, and Tony Stark apparently runs the damn world. But at least everyone's alive, right?

Wrong.

The true tragedy of Age of Ultron is how the end of all things can push us to places we never believed possible. If faced with the hypothetical question, "Would you eat another human if you were about to starve to death?", most people will explain that there's no way they could ever be persuaded to eat a person, no matter the circumstances. While not necessarily a lie, per se, this is a misconception we tell ourselves is true because the fact is that we have no idea what we would do in the most dire of situations. Wolverine and Sue Storm knew what they were doing when they travelled back in time against the wishes of the rest of the Ultron survivors. Unfortunately, it was a most dire situation, and they felt pressured to do something most dire in response.

Age of Ultron #8 gives a ton of insight into how much the Marvel universe was screwed up by Wolverine and Sue Storm's actions. Recently, Bendis posted a long explanation of exactly how things would be different as a result of Pym's death. The list is astoundingly long, and all from just one character. Everyone is alive, but their lives are significantly worse. Tony Stark runs the planet, but it's not a prestigious job. In fact it's a curse because this new timeline is still in a state of constant paranoia after the Skrull 'Secret Invasion', and before that, a loosing war against the supreme magic of Morgan Le Fey. The Avengers broke up in their infancy. Captain America is only a violent shadow of his former self. Thor is dead. The world is in a police state. 

Wolverine believed anything would be better than the apocalypse he left and only succeeded in betraying the legacy of everyone he ever loved. By killing Pym and changing the course of history, Wolverine and Sue Storm nullified everything they and their friends and families have ever worked to achieve. Any victory, any success, any happiness was eliminated and replaced with a new lifetime of struggle, fear, and hopelessness. In their attempt to save the lives of everyone they knew, Logan and Sue cheapened all of their existences.

On the surface, Age of Ultron feels like Brian Michael Bendis just going through the time travel motions and jacking up the action level to compensate for the level of timey whimey talk. But under the initial layer of fun time-space disruption, there's a message about the cost of rewriting history when the going gets rough.

GRADE
8/10

Monday, April 29, 2013

The Week in Revue (May 1-7, 2013)

Tempering down the workload this week (and going forward) in an effort to bring better quality reviews instead of a high quantity. 

This week, I'll be Spotlight-ing Gail Simone's The Movement, a 'New 52' series that introduces a whole slew of new characters into the DC universe. Along with The Movement from DC, I'll cover James Robinson's Earth 2 #12, which continues the "Tower of Fate" arc, as well as Swamp Thing #20, the second issue from rising star Charles Soule.

On the Marvel front, I'll take a look at Age of Ultron #7, the issue with the alternate heroes gracing the cover! AoU is shaping up to have huge ramifications for the entire Marvel universe. Also, I'll be covering Iron Man #9, the first issue of Kieron Gillen's fantastic series illustrated by Dale Eaglesham. Really, Greg Land's artwork has been the only truly bad thing about the 'Marvel NOW!' Iron Man, so I'm excited to see how Eaglesham interprets "The Secret Origin of Tony Stark".

------- Spotlight
The Movement #1
(w) Gail Simone     (a) Freddy Williams II

------- DC Reviews
Earth 2 #12
(w) James Robinson     (a) Nicola and Trevor Scott

Swamp Thing #20
(w) Charles Soule     (a) Kano

------- Marvel Reviews
Age of Ultron #7 of 10
(w) Brian Michael Bendis     (a) Carlos Pacheco and Brandon Peterson

Iron Man #9
(w) Kieron Gillen     (a) Dale Eaglesham

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Spotlight: Age of Ultron #6

(w) Brian Michael Bendis     (a) Brandon Peterson and Carlos Pacheco

At ten issues, Age of Ultron has a lot of wiggle room. Brian Michael Bendis' decompressed style shines through here, as each chapter moves the story forward, but at a deliberately steady pace (unlike, say, the 'jump in head first' attitude of events such as Siege and Fear Itself). Which is interesting, because Ultron had already won before the first issue began. It's a testament to Bendis' talent, that he's able to tell a story backwards and still make it feel familiar and organic. Age of Ultron #6 marks the beginning of the second half of this event, and this is where everything changes.


**SPOILERS AHEAD, YO**


Carlos Pacheco and Brandon Peterson begin their art duties this issue, and for once, it actually makes sense. I had a theory -- a few months back when it was announced that the artistic team would change midway through the series -- that the change would have to do with time travel and/or dimensional travel. Lo and behold, that's exactly the reason. It's not a fill-in job or because Bryan Hitch couldn't produce more pages. It's because that's what the story calls for, and that's the best reason.

Last issue, Nick Fury led a team into the future on a mission to destroy Ultron and retroactively fix the past. Wolverine is skeptical, to say the least, and decides to go rogue and jump back in time to kill Hank Pym, thereby eliminating Ultron before it's even created. Because nothing bad has ever come from messing with the past. Wolverine does posit, on several occasions, that without Ultron, the future has "got to be better than what we left."

That's a silly sentiment.

And Logan, of all people, should understand this basic principle. Is he not the one going ape-shit in All-New X-Men over Beast bringing the original X-Men into the present? I could look past this if Brian Michael Bendis wasn't writing both titles. ANYTHING that changes in the past can (and usually does) have major ramifications to the future. It's not a difficult concept to understand, and Wolverine is letting his emotions get the better of him. Again, I could look past this if it hadn't happened to the X-Men numerous times throughout the franchise's publication history, but it has.

Honestly, Ultron's devastation merits extreme action. I understand that Bendis has written these characters into a situation that they've never encountered before, one that they do not have a solution for, one that can't be fixed by punching and shields. This ordeal has broken these heroes, and they don't know what else to do. The problem is that Bendis' insistence that story trumps character backfires on him here. Wolverine has never been about "what if"s and "could have"s. In any other story, he would have joined Nick Fury in the fight for the future. It's hard to get past this unconvincing character flaw because Wolverine's journey into the past is pivotal to this issue's narrative.

It's going to be hard for Bendis to dig his way out of this one -- even if Wolverine recognizes his mistake, the fact still remains that he did it. In the years he's been featured in Marvel comic books, Wolverine has never crossed the line unless he needed to, unless there was no other option. It's a shame that such a popular and revered character is being used so flippantly.

GRADE
7/10

Tuesday, April 16, 2013

The Week in Revue (Apr 17-23, 2013)

------- Spotlight
Age of Ultron #6 of 10
(w) Brian Michael Bendis     (a) Brandon Peterson and Carlos Pacheco
THE TIDES TURN AS THE SURVIVING HEROES BEGIN THE MARCH TO TAKE DOWN ULTRON!

------- DC Reviews
DC Universe Presents #19
(w) Tony Bedard     (a) Javier Pina
FINAL ISSUE! WHO HAS BROUGHT DEATH AND DESTRUCTION TO THE JUSTICE LEAGUE? IF YOU READ PREVIEWS, YOU ALREADY KNOW.

Justice League #19
(w) Geoff Johns     (a) Ivan Reis and Joe Prado
NOT A FINAL ISSUE! WHO HAS BROUGHT KRYPTONITE TO A FIGHT AGAINST THE JUSTICE LEAGUE? IF YOU READ PREVIEWS, YOU ALREADY KNOW.

---------- mini reviews
Green Lantern: New Guardians #19
(w) Tony Bedard     (a) Andres Guinaldo and Raul Fernandez
NOW THERE'S TWO WHITE LANTERNS? WASSUP WITH THIS CRAZY?

Wonder Woman #19
(w) Brian Azzarello     (a) Tony Akins and Dan Green
WONDER WOMAN vs. ORION! PLUS SOMETHING ELSE ON THE SECRET GATEFOLD!

------- Marvel Reviews
Captain America #6
(w) Rick Remender     (a) John Romita Jr.
I JUST LOVE THIS SERIES. IT'S CRAZY GOOD.

Nova #3
(w) Jeph Loeb     (a) Ed McGuinness
NOVA'S ORIGIN CONTINUES!