Sunday, October 28, 2012

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

A Whole Nother New World

Much like I did with DC last year, I'm going to give a weekly review of the Marvel Now relaunch.

I first want to mention that I have no problem with the renumbering. People complain about all the tradition being lost, but the only reason that comics used to have such high issue numbers was because in the old days, new comics didn't sell well.  To keep sales, publishers would just change titles instead of starting a new series.

For example: Incredible Hulk did not originally sell well. Instead of cancelling after six issues, Marvel started Tales to Astonish at issue seven. When the Hulk became more popular, instead of starting a new series, Marvel changed Tales to Astonish back to Incredible Hulk at issue 102. It had nothing to do with tradition or artistic integrity. It was because at the time readers felt more secure with a book that had lasted. Issue 102 would sell more than a number one.

I haven't bought a Marvel comic since April, so I'm not distraught about any cancellations. A lot of these new ideas seem interesting. And unlike DC which hit a magic reset button that kept some continuity but not others but didn't really state which was which (muddled continuity and some other minor complaints aside, I think DC made the right choice), these books continue where the previous volumes left off.

The first of these new books Uncanny Avengers. This is meant to be the new Marvel's flagship title and amalgamates their two biggest franchises. To say I was disappointed may be putting it lightly. Coming from two creators I have enjoyed very much in the past, writer Rick Remender and artist John Cassaday, this story came across as bland and although the art is solid, not up to par with Planetary or Astonishing X-Men.

The rest of the review will contain spoilers:

The prologue is pretty cool and teases the antagonists for what will be at least the first arc. After that, most of the book is more of an epilogue for Avengers Vs X-Men dealing with Professor X's funeral and Cyclop's incarceration. I realize that the book is not a restart and will deal with these topics. But Marvel says the object of  Marvel Now is a new start to gain new readers, and this seems completely bogged down with previous continuity. There's even a House of M (an event that happened eight years ago)discussion. With the continuous massive events that occurred throughout the past decade, there has been no room for character growth and their only character background seems to stem from these ridiculous events where everyone is constantly acting out of character in order to reinvent Marvel's status quo for the year (until the next event).

The last page reveal would have been exciting if Marvel hadn't already released the cover. to issue two, and the seeds planted were kind of cool but overall in serialized storytelling I feel the first installment needs to stand as a microcosm to the series. While decompressed storytelling may work in a trade, as a first issue there wasn't enough to get me excited about the next which is important when deciding what to spend money on from month to month.


Tuesday, October 9, 2012