Showing posts with label Awesome Studios. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Awesome Studios. Show all posts

Sunday, 12 February 2017

Comic Review: Heroes Reborn Part 5 - Industrial Revolution

PUBLISHER: MARVEL, 1997
WRITERS: JIM LEE, BRANDON CHOI, JEPH LOEB, SCOTT LOBDELL
ARTISTS: JIM LEE, ROB LIEFIELD, RYAN BENJAMIN

The sixth issue of each of the heroes reborn titles saw a crossover drawing all the characters together - although there had already been some overlap. So it's a bit of a damp squib anyway even before the scant content. The storyline tentatively starts in Fantastic Four #6 but really it concerns tidying up the whole Latveria Doctor Doom/Silver Surfer/Super Skrull storyline - including linking the four's powers to those of the surfer and the first glimpse of this universe's galactus. Then at the end they're alerted to a situation brewing at Avengers Island.  
 
There the gamma reactor used for whatever the avengers need power for that requires a gamma reactor being built under a superhero base is going critical in their tussle with the Hulk. The Four and Iron Man head in to help - requiring Hawkeye and the Swordsman to be invalided out of the plot. Everyone meets up, speaks platitudes to each other and then Bruce Banner sacrifices himself (or likely not) for the second time in seven issues trying to save the ever-imperiled Eastern seaboard from gamma meltdown. Avengers Island still gets wasted but without any other casualties, the reactor being saved even if the team's base in trashed. Apart from maybe Hellcat, who Lobdell loses track of, and the Scarlet Witch, who's involved in some posession subplot that doesn't seem to be going anywhere good. And there's no mention of Hank Pym or the Vision either. There is a fleeting hallucination of Onslaught in the island's reactor, however, the first real glimpse that how the Heroes got where they are might be a plot point.
 
That just about stretches to filling Avengers #6 and Iron Man #6, so there's still Captain America's contribution. Occe again the dynamic team of Loeb and Liefield manage to drop the standard because most of it is a random battle aboard the SHIELD helicarrier between AIM, Modok and Zemo on one side with Cap and Cable on the other. Yeah, Cable, Liefield's creation from the main Marvel Universe turning up somehow thanks to time travel magic to big Cap up for 18 pages of awful splash pages while Bucky inexplicably tells everyone she just had a piss. Cable's snapped away at the end, realising the Heroes are still alive and needs to find out where. Which is a nice plot avenue that doesn't really ring true as it's hard to imagine Cable giving much of a toss about Iron Man or the Human Torch. The dialogue and actual plotting meanwhile are so bad; it's just a random fight scene with Cap spouting catchphrases about stopping Nazis like he's in a first gen licensed tie-in game while Cable creams at how inspiring he is. Oh and in the last couple of pages someone reminds him it's part of the crossover and the Avengers and Iron Man materialise in Nick Fury's office to tell him Tony Stark will be taking over the team. In a splash page.
 
Not only could this huge plot point have taken up page space otherwise used establishing that Bucky needs to read a sign to remind her to wash her hands after a slash but it also reverts much of the setup to pre-Onslaught formatting, making the first arcs of three of the books totally pointless. An apt summary for a poor crossover even on charitable relative terms.

Wednesday, 8 February 2017

Comic Review - Heroes Return Part 2: The Avengers #1-5

Alongside Jim Lee's Wildstorm the other Image studio to land work on Heroes Reborn was Rob Liefield's Awesome studios, who handled The Avengers and Captain America. Before the reboot The Avengers wasn't actually in particularly rude health, due to Marvel's habit for much of the nineties of spreading the big names out among their solo books more, leaving the title with a weak roster and the big guns featuring almost as guest stars. This was partly rectified in the closing issues as much to bring the characters intended to 'die' in the Onslaught event together but the last thirty of forty issues of the first volume are basically no-one's favourite run of Avengers issues.

As such the Heroes Reborn title had the advantage of unfettered access to the mainstays of the team. Liefield and Loeb came up with an interesting set-up, with the team being a SHIELD-controlled unit based on an island off Manhattan - more than a little like the later much better regarded Ultimates, which just goes to show how easy it is to make a mess of a decent concept. Captain America is head of the team, something which ties into his solo title (the events of this book taking place later than those in that book); joining him on the field roster are the Vision, the Scarlet Witch, Hawkeye, the Swordsman and Hellcat. Hank Pym meanwhile is tech support, having built the Vision and working on Ultron on the island, with wife Jan also  non-combat personnel. Thor meanwhile is found frozen in ice in the first issue (a clear flip of Cap's Silver Age introduction) while within a couple of issues Pym experiments with being Ant-Man. Iron Man is kept separate for the time being in his own title, thankfully.

It's not a roster without promise, notably the addition of the Swordsman and Hellcat - and not just as cannon fodder, though sadly they have Peak Liefield redesigns; the Swordsman has a weird bowl-cut that stops just north of his ears, a vaguely Japanese outfit and is incapable of going anywhere without 27 swords strapped to his back because obviously if you're the world's best swordsman you're going to lose swords left, right and centre and need to carry loads of spares; Hellcat on the other hand is just Feral from X-Force, all weird vertical hair and Swimsuit Illustrated poses with the underscoring feeling that Rob actually thinks the result is pretty damn hot. Sadly under Loeb & Liefield any potential is fumbled to a few broad character strokes - Cap is deeply distrustful of SHIELD; the Vision is struggling to learn about humanity like Data off Star Trek; Hawkeye is a Rebel Who Doesn't Like Orders; the Swordsman is a preening poser who is secretly unsure of what he contributes, the Scarlet Witch is inexperienced and falls in love with basically everyone male, Thor awakens with the morals of an actual Norse God. 

Some of these character sketches have potential but they're dropped into a crazy helter-skelter of a plot as Loki, the Enchantress, the Hulk and Kang are all thrown into the first five issues (The Avengers did double-time in the Industrial Revolution crossover) along with the brewing Ultron and Agatha Harkness. Unlike Loeb & Liefield's Captain America this does mean it has a bit of pace but it's too badly done to match the Fantastic Four's amiable Silver Age energy. There are still far too many splash pages and there's a weird dissonance in that the Avengers seem to be simultaneously a new and unproven team and well-known enough to attract media coverage and a key role in SHIELD. The team's relationships between each other are the same, the title acting like they've just met sometimes and have a full rundown on each other at other times. All of this is bad enough and then you've got Liefield's art, which isn't his worse but is still comfortably dreadful nonetheless.


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