Showing posts with label fernando blanco. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fernando blanco. Show all posts

Friday, December 12, 2014

GIANT-SIZE X-MEN FOREVER #1 - July 2010


Can Love Find a Way?
Credits:  Chris Claremont (writer), Mike Grell (art), Moose Baumann (colors), Tom Orzechowski (letters)

Summary:  Lilandra leads the Imperial Guard to Earth in search of Professor Xavier.  Xavier is visiting Cyclops and his family in Alaska, along with Archangel, Iceman, Charlotte Jones, and Opal Tanaka.  When the Imperial Guard arrive and attack, Xavier hides in the Starjammer.  Using the Starjammer’s teleportation technology, the X-Men and Sabretooth are teleported to Alaska.  They join the fight, but Xavier eventually ends the hostilities by surrendering.  He accepts Lilandra’s terms that he must live with the Shi’ar for the rest of his life, due to his intimate knowledge of their classified defense secrets.

Continuity Notes:  
  • Nathan considers Charlotte Jones his aunt, following their adventure together on the moon.  She claims that after she saved Nathan’s life on the moon, they returned to Cyclops’ home in Alaska.  A footnote merely says that this is “a story yet to be told.”
  • Corsair and the Starjammers, along with their ship, live in Alaska with Cyclops in XMF continuity.
  • Archangel confirms that he’s been using an image inducer in his previous appearances.
  • Cyclops is now back to wearing the ‘90s Jim Lee costume.
  • Rogue and Nightcrawler are visiting Excalibur at their lighthouse.  Their dialogue suggests Psylocke is now a member.

Production Note:  This is a fifty-six page comic in standard format.  The cover price remains $3.99, even though the final eighteen pages are a reprint of John Byrne’s first issue, Uncanny X-Men #108.

Review:  For a series Marvel is only a few months away from killing, there seems to be an unusual amount of over-sized specials.  I have no clue what happened behind-the-scenes, but Marvel’s support of this book did seem to abruptly stop, leading the second volume to just end with (of course) numerous story threads left unresolved.  The goal of the Giant-Size special is to write Xavier out of the title, for what is at least the third time in a Chris Claremont story.  Claremont actually writes Xavier quite well, even when he enters the same dodgy territory subsequent X-writers have followed, so I’m not sure why he occasionally seems obsessed with kicking the guy out of the book.  I understand the theme of constant growth and change, but Claremont’s not exactly following that model by consistently finding reasons to reintroduce Cyclops into the title.  Cyclops supposedly “retired” from the X-Men just as Claremont was giving Xavier his most convincing sendoff yet in UXM #200.

While the execution is a bit shaky, there are some clever ideas in the issue.  Xavier made an honest mistake while combing through the Shi’ar’s database, one that ultimately lead to an attack by the Warskrulls.  Since Xavier was also impersonated by a Warskrull for several months, the Shi’ar are now suspicious if in fact the wrong Xavier returned to Earth following their first battle with the Warskrulls.  That’s not a bad starting place for the story, even if it does hinge on Xavier screwing up yet again and (inadvertently) betraying the people closest to him.  There’s another nice play on continuity later in the story, as Xavier is adamant that Jean stay out of the Shi’ar’s way during the fight, since they have no idea she’s still alive.  Logically, the Shi’ar would be incensed and/or terrified to see Jean alive again, even though none of the writers post-Claremont seemed to notice this.  

Claremont also seems to be catering to more of the online complaints about the series, teasing a few bits of unrevealed continuity and reviving some of the forgotten supporting cast members from this era of the titles.  Unfortunately, he doesn’t do an awful lot with the large cast he’s assembled, since the bulk of the story is dedicated to the X-Men fighting the Imperial Guard.  And since the fight is mostly represented by a double-page spread and a few giant panels, there’s no real choreography here -- the battle feels as if it lasts around twelve seconds.  I admire Mike Grell’s art, and I get the in-joke that another former Legion artist has been brought in to pencil the Imperial Guard, but the story just doesn’t give him enough to do.

One final complaint, if this issue could carry eighteen pages of extra reprint material without adding to the cover price -- why couldn’t every issue?  What would it harm to give readers extra reading material each issue?  Heck, pull out some obscure Claremont material like the first Mystique appearance in Ms. Marvel and throw that in here.  There’s no way that would’ve hurt sales.  For four bucks an issue, it’s not an outrageous suggestion.

But What about Vengeance?
Credits:  Chris Claremont (writer), Fernando Blanco (pencils), Jason Paz (inks), Wilfredo Quintana (colors), Tom Orzechowski (letters)

Summary:  A mysterious female executive within the Consortium consults with SHIELD official G. W. Bridge.  On her orders, Bridge releases a report implicating the X-Men in the death of Tony Stark.  The Avengers meet and plan an attack on the X-Men.

Continuity Notes:  
  • The Avengers consist of an amalgam of the East and West Coast teams of this era:  Captain America, Thor, Spider-Woman, Hawkeye, Vision, Scarlet Witch, and Quicksilver.
  • G. W. Bridge is apparently a villain in this continuity.
  • Consortium agents are performing surgery on what appears to be Amelia Trask, who was shot in the chest by Tony Stark, and are unsure if she will survive.

Review:  I’ll repeat that Fernando Blanco should’ve done more work for this title.  Sturdy, three-dimensional figures, moody lighting, and just an overall strength of line are what the book needs when Tom Grummett isn’t around.  Why this title ended up with so many mediocre fill-ins if Blanco was available is beyond me.  This is a brief tease for the opening arc in X-Men Forever 2, which has the Avengers targeting the X-Men.  The only purpose of the story is to get the Avengers in position to fight the team, and it accomplishes that goal competently enough.  Some might whine about the casual way Claremont’s playing around with the Avengers line-up, but I’m willing to give him the leeway and say that all kinds of things could be happening in the hypothetical Marvel Universe of this title.  A merging of the East and West Coast Avengers isn’t that much of a stretch; it’s the specific X-Men continuity that’s been manipulated with no explanation (I'll cite tween Nathan, yet again) that bothers me.  

Wednesday, December 10, 2014

X-MEN FOREVER #23 - July 2010



Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night (Part 3)
Credits:  Chris Claremont (writer), Rodney Buchemi (pencils), Greg Adams (inks), Sotocolor’s A. Street (colors), Tom Orzechowski (letters)

Summary:  Jean gives Beast a kiss goodbye and reunites with the X-Men.  They leave the space station before it explodes, but are attacked again by Ziggy Trask and her Neo-Sentinels in space.  Meanwhile, Tony Stark recovers and shoots Amelia Trask in the chest.  He telecommutes with Nick Fury and Beast, giving them information needed to stop the Neo-Sentinels and the Plague-X generator.  Cyclops blasts Ziggy into the station as it explodes.  The Neo-Sentinels are defeated, but the team receives word that both Beast and Tony died in the explosion.

Continuity Notes:  Tony Stark is revealed as Nick Fury’s mole within the Consortium.

Review:  We are now very firmly into What If…? territory.  Not only is Beast killed, less than a year after Wolverine’s death, but Tony Stark is rather casually whacked as well.  There’s absolutely no pretense that this is what would’ve happened if Claremont had continued his original X-Men run, but even judging the story on its own merits, it’s hard to deny that this is rushed and lacking the appropriate sense of drama.  Some of the blame lies in the art, which is almost lifeless, but the story also doesn’t seem to be taking these massive events very seriously either.  All of the poetry and baroque prose you might expect from a Claremont death story has been replaced with rather matter-of-fact dialogue exchanges.  There’s no deeper sentiment than Jean and Beast exchanging a blunt “I love you” shortly before his death.  Jean has a very brief monologue that has her questioning why she’s unable to save the men she loves, but other than this one panel, she seems fairly emotionless throughout the issue.  Perhaps I’m biased because I always felt the Jean/Beast romance was a bad idea, but at no point in the issue did I get the sense that I’m reading some great tragedy.

Not only does the issue fail as a goodbye to Beast, but you also have to wonder what on earth Tony Stark has been doing in this story.  No part of his involvement holds up to any scrutiny:  Why did he wait so long to act against the Consortium?  Why was Nick Fury unable to do anything against the Consortium, even with Tony acting as his mole?  Why did Fury keep Tony’s identity a secret, even when he knew the X-Men were wasting time investigating Tony’s connection to the Consortium?  Another annoyance is the casual way heroes are killing of villains this issue, with both Tony Stark and Cyclops offing the Trasks with no moral dilemma whatsoever.  There was a “heroes don’t kill” speech as recently as last issue, as I recall, and now that’s been forgotten like it’s nothing.  I’m not adamantly opposed to ever having the heroes kill (and I seem to recall both Trasks miraculously pulling through), but the story needs to build up the proper stakes to justify it.  Claremont’s obviously trying to craft a story with the ultimate stakes, but the sense of drama never properly develops.  Again, it feels as if you’re reading a random issue of What If…? and you’re stuck in one of those “And then…everyone died!” montages.

The Shape of Things to Come
Credits:  Chris Claremont (writer), Fernando Blanco (art), Sotocolor (colors), Tom Orzechowski (letters)

Summary:  The Warskrulls lead a successful attack against a Shi’ar base. The Shi’ar investigate and discover that the Warskrulls gained access to their files because Xavier did not secure the datanets he studied.  A Shi’ar admiral declares that Xavier will pay.

Review:  This back-up is a prelude to the upcoming Giant Size X-Men Forever special, which will serve as yet another vehicle for writing Xavier out of the book.  There’s not enough of a plot here to pass a real judgment, but it’s refreshing to see Claremont back away from modern decompressed storytelling and actually use five pages to his advantage.  The pacing here is much closer to what you’d expect from a traditional Claremont story.  Fernando Blanco’s art is a noticeable improvement over the pencils and inks in the main story, evoking a slightly darker Clayton Henry, making me wonder why he didn’t do more work for this series.
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