Hey, you all remember how Marvel retconned Nick Fury into a genocidal maniac who wiped out entire alien races, right? How they had him murder the Watcher for no reason that made a lick of sense? How, after wallowing in the desecration of a hero, they had the Watchers turn Nick into "The Unseen" and chain him to the moon, forcing him to fulfill Uatu's old duties?
Yeah, four years later, that still sucks worse than anything Marvel has ever done.
So, ummm...how has Nick been doing?
Er, yeah. That sounds precisely like Nick Fury.
Look, if you wanted someone who would act exactly like the Watcher and talk exactly like the Watcher and be punished by the Watcher Council for breaking Watcher rules...then why the hell did you kill the Watcher?
By the same token, if you had to make Nick Fury become The Unseen, maybe have him talk or think like Nick Fury, and not like, say Uatu?!?
What was the freakin' point, if you're going to make Fury/Unseen a straight palette swap for Uatu? Here was a chance to maybe do something new and original with the omniscient observer idea, to see what another character would do...and they just give us Watcher Lite, washing away any identifiable characteristics of Nick Fury.
Heavy sigh...
From Exiles #2 (2018)
Showing posts with label Original Sin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Original Sin. Show all posts
Saturday, May 12, 2018
Unseen, But Not Unheard
Friday, January 26, 2018
Try To Picture This Scene With Tom Cruise And Jack Nicholson!
Nick Fury is being court-martialed for punching out a superior officer.
The guy is on the stand, being cross-examined by Fury's attorney:
Even his accusers love him!!
That was then, of course, when Nick Fury was a hero.
This is to remind you that 3 1/2 years ago, Jason Aaron and Marvel had Nick Fury murder the Watcher, commit several alien genocides, and end up presumed dead but actually chained to the moon, observing in Uatu's place.
So I kinda wish that Marvel would make Nick Fury half the man he was...
From Sgt. Fury #7 (1964)
The guy is on the stand, being cross-examined by Fury's attorney:
Even his accusers love him!!
That was then, of course, when Nick Fury was a hero.
This is to remind you that 3 1/2 years ago, Jason Aaron and Marvel had Nick Fury murder the Watcher, commit several alien genocides, and end up presumed dead but actually chained to the moon, observing in Uatu's place.
So I kinda wish that Marvel would make Nick Fury half the man he was...
From Sgt. Fury #7 (1964)
Sunday, August 30, 2015
SPOILER Sunday--Noman, Agent Of S.H.I.E.L.D?!?
All right, I'm going to SPOIL a thing or three about the 2nd story in this week's S.H.I.E.L.D. #9--the 50th anniversary issue!!--and it's a prett good story, so if you don't wanna know, came back later.
SPOILERS commence after the four S.H.I.E.L.D. pictures...
Still here? Good.
So, as you recall, the stupidest, most upsetting thing Marvel has done in recent years was in the abominable Original Sin event, wherein we learned that...
Yup...we learned that Dum Dum Dugan was killed by Hydra about 10 minutes after he joined S.H.I.E.L.D., and Nick Fury used super-alien tech to Make his own Dum Dum LMD that thought he was still human.
Yes, every single appearance of Dum Dum Dugan post-1966 was not really Dugan.
Sigh....
Me, I had hoped that the Secret Wars reset was going to undo that, or bring over a Dum Dum from Earth-56123 or something.
Nope:
Only now, he knows that he's an LMD...
He's a bit of a super-powered LMD...
...and whenever he dies, his consciousness is transferred to one of "hundreds" of replacement bodies...
That's right...Dum Dum Dugan of S.H.I.E.L.D. is now essentially...
...Noman of T.H.UN.D.E.R. Agents (without the invisibility cloak).
Look, I won't lie. I despise with the passion of a thousand exploding sons what Original Sin did to Dugan (and to Nick Fury). But if you're not going to retcon that idiocy away, I guess this is a pretty good way to go.
And I have to confess, this is a really good story by Al Ewing and Stefano Caselli. It serves as a "pilot" for the forthcoming Howling Commandos Of S.H.I.E.L.D. series, which Maria Hill describes as "send scary monsters to fight scary monsters."
But here's the odd part...
This isn't the creative team that's doing the actual series! Why did Marvel have one set of hands make the "pilot," when someone completely different will be doing the regular series? This is no critique of Barbiere and Schoonover--I'm just saying that a story by Ewing and Caselli might not be a fair indication of what the series will actually be like.
So in summation--I still loathe what they did to Dugan; this is probably the best way to salvage it without retconning; Dugan is now Noman; this is a really good story and a promising pilot for the series; but the actual series is being made by different hands, so who knows?
Meanwhile, Nick Fury is still chained to the moon...
SPOILERS commence after the four S.H.I.E.L.D. pictures...
Still here? Good.
So, as you recall, the stupidest, most upsetting thing Marvel has done in recent years was in the abominable Original Sin event, wherein we learned that...
Yup...we learned that Dum Dum Dugan was killed by Hydra about 10 minutes after he joined S.H.I.E.L.D., and Nick Fury used super-alien tech to Make his own Dum Dum LMD that thought he was still human.
Yes, every single appearance of Dum Dum Dugan post-1966 was not really Dugan.
Sigh....
Me, I had hoped that the Secret Wars reset was going to undo that, or bring over a Dum Dum from Earth-56123 or something.
Nope:
Only now, he knows that he's an LMD...
He's a bit of a super-powered LMD...
...and whenever he dies, his consciousness is transferred to one of "hundreds" of replacement bodies...
That's right...Dum Dum Dugan of S.H.I.E.L.D. is now essentially...
...Noman of T.H.UN.D.E.R. Agents (without the invisibility cloak).
Look, I won't lie. I despise with the passion of a thousand exploding sons what Original Sin did to Dugan (and to Nick Fury). But if you're not going to retcon that idiocy away, I guess this is a pretty good way to go.
And I have to confess, this is a really good story by Al Ewing and Stefano Caselli. It serves as a "pilot" for the forthcoming Howling Commandos Of S.H.I.E.L.D. series, which Maria Hill describes as "send scary monsters to fight scary monsters."
But here's the odd part...
This isn't the creative team that's doing the actual series! Why did Marvel have one set of hands make the "pilot," when someone completely different will be doing the regular series? This is no critique of Barbiere and Schoonover--I'm just saying that a story by Ewing and Caselli might not be a fair indication of what the series will actually be like.
So in summation--I still loathe what they did to Dugan; this is probably the best way to salvage it without retconning; Dugan is now Noman; this is a really good story and a promising pilot for the series; but the actual series is being made by different hands, so who knows?
Meanwhile, Nick Fury is still chained to the moon...
Sunday, July 19, 2015
Seriously, He Didn't Even Bring Any Wine!!
Do you know what I really miss, post-Original Sin?
I miss the fact that you can be having a swanky dinner party with your co-workers...
...and this guy could crash the party!!
Dude, we're trying to eat!!
Oh, yeah, that swanky dinner party--that was The Avengers!
You know, Bob Harras takes a lot of crap--probably some of it deservedly--but you have to credit him for, in 1992, putting together an Avengers team that was 1/2 female.
From Avengers #357 (1992)
I miss the fact that you can be having a swanky dinner party with your co-workers...
...and this guy could crash the party!!
Dude, we're trying to eat!!
Oh, yeah, that swanky dinner party--that was The Avengers!
You know, Bob Harras takes a lot of crap--probably some of it deservedly--but you have to credit him for, in 1992, putting together an Avengers team that was 1/2 female.
From Avengers #357 (1992)
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Thursday, September 18, 2014
Top Ten Better Ways That Marvel Could Have Done Away With Older Nick Fury!
OK, OK, I know that you're tired of my ranting about Original Sin and the transformation of Nick Fury into a genocidal douchebag who killed the Watcher for no particular reason and ended up chained to the moon's surface by unexplained parties/means in order to become "The Unseen," doomed to watch Earth forever in Uatu's place.
Yes, it really was that stupid.
As we've discussed previously, the probable motive for this bit of putrid stupidity was to remove older Nick Fury from the scene, so newer-looks-sorta-like-Samuel-L-Jackson Nick Fury can shine on his own (even though Marvel hasn't done a single interesting thing with the character since introducing him, and there seems to be no prospect for that changing in the near future).
Now, I'm no comic book writer--indeed, I'm specifically baneed from writing comics by various international treaties--but even if I agreed with the need to eliminate old Fury, I can come up with a whole lotta better solutions off the top of my head. Lots and lots.
Therefore, in my vary last comment about Original Sin [author's note: kvetching about Dum Dum Dugan is still allowed] allow me to present the following list:
From the home office in Kalamazoo, Michigan:
The Top 10 Ways Marvel Could Have "Gotten Rid" Of The Elder Nick Fury Without Making Him A Genocidal Bastard And Chaining Him To The Moon To Be The "New Watcher":
10. Give him a heroic death. Duh.
9. Nick Fury and The X-Men. Who better to replace Wolverine? Double duh.
8. Loan the character to Lionsgate for Expendables 4. C'mon, you know you'd pay to see it...
7. Instead of killing him, put him in a brand new book with his son--a buddy action/comedy, as old white Nick Fury tries to teach young black Nick Fury how to be a proper super spy in a bunch of rollicking adventures!
6. Have Fury transported to the past, to train George Washington's troop how to fight the British
5. Have Fury transported to the future to help the Guardians Of The Galaxy 3000 fight the Badoon.
4. Have Fury (and all the Howling Commandos) transported to Limbo in order to hold back Ragnarok (yeah, yeah, I know, it's been done)
3. Have Fury become Marvel's version of Astro City's The Old Solider. To quote Wikipedia: "A symbolic, legendary figure clad in martial attire of many eras who manifests in wartime, including 1863, 1898, 1918, 1944, 1959, when he assisted Honor Guard against Shirak, October 1972, when he intervened against U.S. soldiers in Vietnam, and 1975, at the fall of Saigon." Man, that would be too cool...
2. Have him wake up on The Prisoner's island of "retired" spies. ("I'm not a number, I'm Nick freakin' Fury!!") Seriously, this might be the best idea ever...
1. OK, this one is kind of crazy--how about trusting your readers to understand and handle the concept that you can have a father and son alive at the same time, who have the same name? It's not like Marvel is 21st century DC, who is afraid to death of legacy characters, is it? If we can handle Ms. Marvel and Captain Marvel at the same time, than maybe--just maybe--we can wrap our tiny brains around Nick Fury and Nick Fury Jr? I'm just sayin'...
Yes, it really was that stupid.
As we've discussed previously, the probable motive for this bit of putrid stupidity was to remove older Nick Fury from the scene, so newer-looks-sorta-like-Samuel-L-Jackson Nick Fury can shine on his own (even though Marvel hasn't done a single interesting thing with the character since introducing him, and there seems to be no prospect for that changing in the near future).
Now, I'm no comic book writer--indeed, I'm specifically baneed from writing comics by various international treaties--but even if I agreed with the need to eliminate old Fury, I can come up with a whole lotta better solutions off the top of my head. Lots and lots.
Therefore, in my vary last comment about Original Sin [author's note: kvetching about Dum Dum Dugan is still allowed] allow me to present the following list:
From the home office in Kalamazoo, Michigan:
The Top 10 Ways Marvel Could Have "Gotten Rid" Of The Elder Nick Fury Without Making Him A Genocidal Bastard And Chaining Him To The Moon To Be The "New Watcher":
10. Give him a heroic death. Duh.
9. Nick Fury and The X-Men. Who better to replace Wolverine? Double duh.
8. Loan the character to Lionsgate for Expendables 4. C'mon, you know you'd pay to see it...
7. Instead of killing him, put him in a brand new book with his son--a buddy action/comedy, as old white Nick Fury tries to teach young black Nick Fury how to be a proper super spy in a bunch of rollicking adventures!
6. Have Fury transported to the past, to train George Washington's troop how to fight the British
5. Have Fury transported to the future to help the Guardians Of The Galaxy 3000 fight the Badoon.
4. Have Fury (and all the Howling Commandos) transported to Limbo in order to hold back Ragnarok (yeah, yeah, I know, it's been done)
3. Have Fury become Marvel's version of Astro City's The Old Solider. To quote Wikipedia: "A symbolic, legendary figure clad in martial attire of many eras who manifests in wartime, including 1863, 1898, 1918, 1944, 1959, when he assisted Honor Guard against Shirak, October 1972, when he intervened against U.S. soldiers in Vietnam, and 1975, at the fall of Saigon." Man, that would be too cool...
2. Have him wake up on The Prisoner's island of "retired" spies. ("I'm not a number, I'm Nick freakin' Fury!!") Seriously, this might be the best idea ever...
1. OK, this one is kind of crazy--how about trusting your readers to understand and handle the concept that you can have a father and son alive at the same time, who have the same name? It's not like Marvel is 21st century DC, who is afraid to death of legacy characters, is it? If we can handle Ms. Marvel and Captain Marvel at the same time, than maybe--just maybe--we can wrap our tiny brains around Nick Fury and Nick Fury Jr? I'm just sayin'...
Wednesday, September 3, 2014
Where's Dum Dum, Chapter 1!
Hey, it's time for a new, exciting, recurring feature here at Slay Monstrobot!!
Can you find Dum Dum Dugan on this cover?
Try again--can you find Dum Dum in this panel?
WRONG--He's in neither of those pictures!! According to the dire Original Sin event, Dum Dum Dugan has been dead since 1966!! Every appearance since has been by one of a series of LMD's that thought Dugan!!
Hahahaha, don't you feel silly now?
Join us throughout the month for more "Where's Dum Dum?"!!!
From Captain America #247 (1980)
Can you find Dum Dum Dugan on this cover?
Try again--can you find Dum Dum in this panel?
WRONG--He's in neither of those pictures!! According to the dire Original Sin event, Dum Dum Dugan has been dead since 1966!! Every appearance since has been by one of a series of LMD's that thought Dugan!!
Hahahaha, don't you feel silly now?
Join us throughout the month for more "Where's Dum Dum?"!!!
From Captain America #247 (1980)
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Sunday, August 24, 2014
Spoiler Sunday--Unoriginal Sin
Look, we really have to talk about the abominable and head-shakingly awful Original Sin.
But to do so, I've got to spoil some major revelations from Original Sin #5 from last month, as well as this week's Original Sins #5.
So if you haven't read them yet, or are waiting for the trade, you'll probably want to come back later.
Spoiler-filled rant commences after the pictures of 5 original sins that are all better than Marvel's event...
SPOILERS commencing...now!
So the whole Original Sin debacle is supposedly about the death of The Watcher, and the theft of his eyes. Those eyes keep "exploding," releasing many of the deep, dark secrets Uatu has seen over the years. Blah, blah.
But what the series is really about is figuring out what to do with Nick Fury.
Not the new, younger, let's-cash-in-on-Sam-Jackson-as-Fury-even-though-he's-always-wearing-a-spandex-thing-that-Sam-Jackson-would-never-be-caught-dead-wearing guy. No, the problem Marvel has is, now that young Fury is around, and Maria Hill is entrenched as leader of S.H.I.E.L.D., what the hell do you do with the "old" Nick Fury?
The obvious answer is, you turn him into a genocidal villain.
Original Sin has Identity Crisis-envy so badly, I'm surprised that they haven't had Batroc violate Aunt May. The entire series is about deep, dark revelations of "sins" that make us reevaluate our heroes. Because who wants nice heroes when we can have folks who have violated our trust and their own morals? Besides, it's more fun to shit on characters...
So for older Fury, they've gone and rewritten/refocused history, like this:
In 1958, Fury and his Defense Intelligence squad stumble upon an alien invasion:
His guys are wiped out, but Fury (and Earth) are saved by the appearance of a mysterious flying, gun-toting dude:
Our savior dies in the fight, but not before he sends a bomb through the portal that destroys the entire alien world on the other side. The entire world:
Well, Howard Stark shows up, and expositions us. The dead hero was Woodrow McCord, the "man on the wall." (Don't bother looking it up--you've never heard of him before, and you will never hear of him again) You see, Stark and others have been scavenging lost alien technology for years (a la Torchwood...ahem) so they can protect Earth from the alien threats that they know are out there. And there is always one man--answerable to no one, who uses all the goodies to do whatever is necessary to save us all:
And since McCord is dead, we need a new "man on the wall," and Stark recruits Fury to be that man.
Q: Well, if the job is so important, why only have one man on the wall? Why not two, or three? A whole squad?
A: Don't ask sensible questions about nonsensical retcons!
Fury takes the job, moves operations to a super-secret stealth satellite, and begins to protect Earth.
How?
By assassinating alien leaders who lust after our planet:
By wiping out threats before they become so big that super-heroes might become involved:
By going all Guantanamo on captured aliens:
And, yeah, eliminating entire planets. Yes, ELIMINATING ENTIRE PLANETS:
Now, Fury did this while still working for the CIA, and then S.H.I.E.L.D., basically pulling a Peter Parker/Clark Kent and finding an excuse to run off whenever a cosmic-level threat reared its head. Seriously, we're shown him ditching an important briefing when he "forgot it was...my Aunt Matilda's birthday."
Eventually, though, Fury got himself a corp of LMD's who could cover for him when he was extincting entire species.
Also, the Infinity Formula in his blood stopped working, so he's ridiculously old now.
So any recent interactions with a Nick Fury who looks like he always have have most likely been with aDoombot LMD. This has the benefit of conveniently (and lazily) hand-waving away any difficult continuity questions that might arise from this silliness.
Of course, there are other questions:
Q: So where was the "man on the wall" during The Invasion? Why did he let the Skrulls invade?
A: Uhhh...
Q: Where was all-powerful Nick Fury during the Kree-Skrull War?
A: Uhhh....
Q: Hey, how come Nick Fury and his Howling Weapons Of Mass Destruction didn't stop Thanos' alien fleet during Infinity?
A: Uhhh...
Q: Hey, speaking of Thanos, the bastard has attacked Earth and thereabouts any number of times. He's precisely the type of thing Nick took the position to stop. And pro-active Nick has weapons capable of killing a Watcher--why didn't he just put a bullet in the Titan's head at any time, like he did to other alien threats?
A: Look, you're not playing fair by asking logical questions that we never thought about!
So, in other words, Uber-Fury saved Earth from countless cosmic threats--except the ones he didn't.
Now look, I understand that Jason Aaron is trying to give us a "subtle" critique of the American "neo-cons," and of many of the things the Bush administration did post-9/11.
All well and good (if not exactly timely). But why the hell do you have to shit all over Nick Fury to make that happen? I've read my fair share of Nick Fury comics, and I never got the sense that he was the type who would endorse, for example, killing every man, woman and child in Germany in order to stop the Nazis. Which is essentially what he's doing here, with his "watch entire races die screaming before they can attack us" protocol.
There are other characters in the Marvel Universe who might fit better into this role, if you insist on having it. Tony Stark is a fine example of an asshole I can see rationalizing all of this as OK. There are others. But why the hell spoil Fury? Why make him into a ruthless, evil version of Captain Jack Harkness? Only because you're trying to get rid of him in favor of the new younger guy.
Oh, but wait, there's more.
In this week's Original Sins #5--a tie-in series which tells shorts stories about folks dealing with the "sins" they learn about from the Watcher's eyes--we have a story which doesn't do that at all. Instead, they decide to ruin another favorite character!
In this one, Dum Dum Dugan offers to give Fury a transfusion of his blood, in order to "kickstart" the Infinity Formula in Fury's system. Hey, it's worked before with the Super-Soldier Serum, and, as Dugan points out:
Oh, dear. Nicky has to break some bad news to Dugan:
It turns out that Dum Dum died back in 1966--yes, nearly 50 years ago--after catching a random bullet in a raid on a Hydra complex.
Wait--then how have we been seeing Dugan in so many stories since then?
Ah. So every appearance of Dugan in the modern Marvel Universe--heading up S.H.I.E.L.D. squads, chasing Godzilla for two years, everything--has just been a LMD that thinks he's Dugan.
Fuck you, Marvel.
Anyway, this information causes "Dugan" to read Fury the riot act, and call him on all of his "I'm the only man who can do this so rules and morality don't apply to me" bullshit. Finally:
Once again, fuck you, Marvel.
We've twisted continuity past any reasonably breaking point, and pooped upon the legacy of two of Marvel's oldest characters. Why? All because you want to replace one of them with a guy who more closely resembles a movie actor.
You know, Marvel, if that's what you wanted, you just could have had elder Nick die, oh, I don't know, a heroic death. You didn't have to turn him into a self-justifying/deluding genocidal maniac and symbol for a decade-old political debate, while rendering decades of stories into so much unrecognizable sewage. Except, of course, you wanted to capture some of that Identity Crisis magic.
It is possible that, in the final issue of Original Sin, that they will reveal that "bastard Fury" is himself just another LMD, and the "real" Nick Fury will be found, or revealed to be long dead, or in some way not responsible for any of this. I don't believe in a minute that will happen, but hey, it's not out yet, so who knows?
Still, the damage has been done. The reader can now never take any previous appearance of Fury at face value--was it really him? An LMD? Following his secret bastard agenda? And if he somehow survives, well, we're in Doombot territory now--no one, reader or character, will ever believe it's the real article again. Ditto for Dugan.
Marvel has effectively taken every single story of two long-term characters and coated it with a slimy, cynical coat of "ha, you thought you were reading about heroes, but we know better, because we're more 'adult' and 'edgy,' you were fooled all those years hahaha" revisionism.
As much as I love comics, there are some days when I really hate comics. I think I'd better go read some Bandette....
But to do so, I've got to spoil some major revelations from Original Sin #5 from last month, as well as this week's Original Sins #5.
So if you haven't read them yet, or are waiting for the trade, you'll probably want to come back later.
Spoiler-filled rant commences after the pictures of 5 original sins that are all better than Marvel's event...
SPOILERS commencing...now!
So the whole Original Sin debacle is supposedly about the death of The Watcher, and the theft of his eyes. Those eyes keep "exploding," releasing many of the deep, dark secrets Uatu has seen over the years. Blah, blah.
But what the series is really about is figuring out what to do with Nick Fury.
Not the new, younger, let's-cash-in-on-Sam-Jackson-as-Fury-even-though-he's-always-wearing-a-spandex-thing-that-Sam-Jackson-would-never-be-caught-dead-wearing guy. No, the problem Marvel has is, now that young Fury is around, and Maria Hill is entrenched as leader of S.H.I.E.L.D., what the hell do you do with the "old" Nick Fury?
The obvious answer is, you turn him into a genocidal villain.
Original Sin has Identity Crisis-envy so badly, I'm surprised that they haven't had Batroc violate Aunt May. The entire series is about deep, dark revelations of "sins" that make us reevaluate our heroes. Because who wants nice heroes when we can have folks who have violated our trust and their own morals? Besides, it's more fun to shit on characters...
So for older Fury, they've gone and rewritten/refocused history, like this:
In 1958, Fury and his Defense Intelligence squad stumble upon an alien invasion:
His guys are wiped out, but Fury (and Earth) are saved by the appearance of a mysterious flying, gun-toting dude:
Our savior dies in the fight, but not before he sends a bomb through the portal that destroys the entire alien world on the other side. The entire world:
Well, Howard Stark shows up, and expositions us. The dead hero was Woodrow McCord, the "man on the wall." (Don't bother looking it up--you've never heard of him before, and you will never hear of him again) You see, Stark and others have been scavenging lost alien technology for years (a la Torchwood...ahem) so they can protect Earth from the alien threats that they know are out there. And there is always one man--answerable to no one, who uses all the goodies to do whatever is necessary to save us all:
And since McCord is dead, we need a new "man on the wall," and Stark recruits Fury to be that man.
Q: Well, if the job is so important, why only have one man on the wall? Why not two, or three? A whole squad?
A: Don't ask sensible questions about nonsensical retcons!
Fury takes the job, moves operations to a super-secret stealth satellite, and begins to protect Earth.
How?
By assassinating alien leaders who lust after our planet:
By wiping out threats before they become so big that super-heroes might become involved:
By going all Guantanamo on captured aliens:
And, yeah, eliminating entire planets. Yes, ELIMINATING ENTIRE PLANETS:
Now, Fury did this while still working for the CIA, and then S.H.I.E.L.D., basically pulling a Peter Parker/Clark Kent and finding an excuse to run off whenever a cosmic-level threat reared its head. Seriously, we're shown him ditching an important briefing when he "forgot it was...my Aunt Matilda's birthday."
Eventually, though, Fury got himself a corp of LMD's who could cover for him when he was extincting entire species.
Also, the Infinity Formula in his blood stopped working, so he's ridiculously old now.
So any recent interactions with a Nick Fury who looks like he always have have most likely been with a
Of course, there are other questions:
Q: So where was the "man on the wall" during The Invasion? Why did he let the Skrulls invade?
A: Uhhh...
Q: Where was all-powerful Nick Fury during the Kree-Skrull War?
A: Uhhh....
Q: Hey, how come Nick Fury and his Howling Weapons Of Mass Destruction didn't stop Thanos' alien fleet during Infinity?
A: Uhhh...
Q: Hey, speaking of Thanos, the bastard has attacked Earth and thereabouts any number of times. He's precisely the type of thing Nick took the position to stop. And pro-active Nick has weapons capable of killing a Watcher--why didn't he just put a bullet in the Titan's head at any time, like he did to other alien threats?
A: Look, you're not playing fair by asking logical questions that we never thought about!
So, in other words, Uber-Fury saved Earth from countless cosmic threats--except the ones he didn't.
Now look, I understand that Jason Aaron is trying to give us a "subtle" critique of the American "neo-cons," and of many of the things the Bush administration did post-9/11.
All well and good (if not exactly timely). But why the hell do you have to shit all over Nick Fury to make that happen? I've read my fair share of Nick Fury comics, and I never got the sense that he was the type who would endorse, for example, killing every man, woman and child in Germany in order to stop the Nazis. Which is essentially what he's doing here, with his "watch entire races die screaming before they can attack us" protocol.
There are other characters in the Marvel Universe who might fit better into this role, if you insist on having it. Tony Stark is a fine example of an asshole I can see rationalizing all of this as OK. There are others. But why the hell spoil Fury? Why make him into a ruthless, evil version of Captain Jack Harkness? Only because you're trying to get rid of him in favor of the new younger guy.
Oh, but wait, there's more.
In this week's Original Sins #5--a tie-in series which tells shorts stories about folks dealing with the "sins" they learn about from the Watcher's eyes--we have a story which doesn't do that at all. Instead, they decide to ruin another favorite character!
In this one, Dum Dum Dugan offers to give Fury a transfusion of his blood, in order to "kickstart" the Infinity Formula in Fury's system. Hey, it's worked before with the Super-Soldier Serum, and, as Dugan points out:
Oh, dear. Nicky has to break some bad news to Dugan:
It turns out that Dum Dum died back in 1966--yes, nearly 50 years ago--after catching a random bullet in a raid on a Hydra complex.
Wait--then how have we been seeing Dugan in so many stories since then?
Ah. So every appearance of Dugan in the modern Marvel Universe--heading up S.H.I.E.L.D. squads, chasing Godzilla for two years, everything--has just been a LMD that thinks he's Dugan.
Fuck you, Marvel.
Anyway, this information causes "Dugan" to read Fury the riot act, and call him on all of his "I'm the only man who can do this so rules and morality don't apply to me" bullshit. Finally:
Once again, fuck you, Marvel.
We've twisted continuity past any reasonably breaking point, and pooped upon the legacy of two of Marvel's oldest characters. Why? All because you want to replace one of them with a guy who more closely resembles a movie actor.
You know, Marvel, if that's what you wanted, you just could have had elder Nick die, oh, I don't know, a heroic death. You didn't have to turn him into a self-justifying/deluding genocidal maniac and symbol for a decade-old political debate, while rendering decades of stories into so much unrecognizable sewage. Except, of course, you wanted to capture some of that Identity Crisis magic.
It is possible that, in the final issue of Original Sin, that they will reveal that "bastard Fury" is himself just another LMD, and the "real" Nick Fury will be found, or revealed to be long dead, or in some way not responsible for any of this. I don't believe in a minute that will happen, but hey, it's not out yet, so who knows?
Still, the damage has been done. The reader can now never take any previous appearance of Fury at face value--was it really him? An LMD? Following his secret bastard agenda? And if he somehow survives, well, we're in Doombot territory now--no one, reader or character, will ever believe it's the real article again. Ditto for Dugan.
Marvel has effectively taken every single story of two long-term characters and coated it with a slimy, cynical coat of "ha, you thought you were reading about heroes, but we know better, because we're more 'adult' and 'edgy,' you were fooled all those years hahaha" revisionism.
As much as I love comics, there are some days when I really hate comics. I think I'd better go read some Bandette....
Posted by
snell
at
8:50 AM
14
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Labels:
Dum Dum Dugan,
Nick Fury,
Original Sin,
Spoiler Sunday
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