Dominic wrote:Iron Man #007:
The "God Killer" arc continues. Stark gets advice from a Living Recorder for how to handle being on trial for killing the Phoenix(!?!) during AvX. Stark manages to hold his own during a trial by combat sequence, (with each individual charge being sorted out by a different fight). But, the plan falls apart when his accusers hire Death's Head to be the prosecutorial champion. This expands on what I thought was a silly cameo in the last issue. Death's Head is ~30 feet tall, which strongly implies that this is set between his appearances in the TF UK comics (20+ years ago) and his subsequent appearances in Doctor Who and older Marvel 616 comics. (Ironically, the "future" shown in those old UK TF comics is now the past to us.)
Grade: B
Interesting, Death's Head popped up in last week's Avenging Spider-Man as well. I wonder if Marvel is actively pushing him all of a sudden, for some reason. Maybe he'll end up having a role in Age of Ultron or something?
Age of Ultron #1:
Some stuff happens. The first issue is set in the ruins New York City. Apparently, the "big changes" have all happened before the first issue. If the previews are anything to go by, fixing the problem is likely to involved time travel or something. Marvel is promising "big changes", but that is nothing new. There have been rumours that Marvel is planning a "Flashpoint" style reset. And, in theory, "Age of Ultron" could be that sort of event. But, in practical terms, I am doubtful. Marvel promises "big changes" every year or two. But, aside from a slightly better track record of keeping dead characters dead than DC has, Marvel is generally averse to change. And, the cover is all shiny and foil covered. It is very 90s! This is something to flip through, and maybe read as filler. But, it is nothing worth getting too excited over, especially given how many tie-ins it will have.
Grade: C
I'm surprised at your lukewarm reception of this, given your boy Bendis is writing it. Is he just not in top form on this one? Maybe he's held back by the event format?
Anyway:
The Superior Spider-Man #5-
Oh man, remember how I said the novelty seemed to be wearing off of Superior Spider-Man? I was wrong, the series is back in top form this issue, in fact, it might be even better. Here are things that happen in issue #5: Massacre goes into advertising, Otto meets up with an adorable midget science tutor to eat Italian food and talk technobabble, the comic makes the point of “How come Spider-Man never thought to call the cops to provide backup when he was heading over to take out supervillains?” which is still another thing Peter is amazed he didn’t think of, and
Otto shoots Massacre dead at the urging of the victims he just saved from him. And then the media praises him for it.
Definitely a major plot development, given that Ghost-Peter has been keeping on Otto this whole time to make sure something like that DIDN’T happen. And now Otto looks to be getting ready to use his now-equipped-with-facial-recognition-software spider-bots as a Spider-Gestapo, and we’ll see if he turns into a one-man corrupt police force (they’d been hinting at this last issue, with Otto ‘preventing’ crime by using himself as a fear-inducing presence), and with this issue establishing for all those criminals out there
that the Superior Spider-Man is willing to kill
this might even work for him. The story is likely going to come down to a juxtaposition of whether the methods Otto’s heading towards really make him a ‘Superior’ Spider-Man or not, and how for better or for worse, this is the new current identity of the character. That’s what this issue was mainly about, moving away from showing how Otto’s lifestyle clashes with his attempts to be Peter Parker from before and moving into setting up his own identity and status quo (hence the introduction of elements of a college setting, the Spider-Bots, and the aforementioned adorable midget science tutor who already has shades of a love interest for our brain-switched-bad-guy main character). This issue has all the over-the-top conceptual excess I expect and want from the series, and actually manages to weave some damn cleverly implemented ideas in at the same time. I’m genuinely wanting to read the next issue now to see where Slott is going with this, not just which direction the train will crash next, there’s some killer potential with what they’ve set up here. Bravo, gentlemen.