Thursday, 30 September 2021
New Mutants 66 - Inferno Prologue
New Mutants #66
Writer: Louise Simonson
Penciler: Bret Blevins
Inker: Terry Austin
Letterer: Ken Bruzenak
Colorist: Glynis Oliver
Editors: Ann Nocenti & Bob Harras
Editor-in-Chief: Tom DeFalco
Continuing the confrontation from last time this issue is heavily focused on the battle between Illyana and Forge and the consequence around them. An early worrying sign comes when the Soul Sword slices through a rock despite only being able to affect magical subjects - and the rock has a leering face. The other New Mutants try to end the fight but instead they all get pulled into Limbo and held captive as Illyana transforms ever more into the Darkchilde until she stabs Forge and disrupts his magic. Then before she can kill him Dani (Moonstar) pulls out an image of Illyana's worst fear - the fully transformed Darkchilde. Oddly it proves to be the demons in Limbo who bring her to her senses when she refuses to give into temptation despite them egging her on and declines to kill Forge. But Illyana struggles to transform back and recognises in herself the monster from Destiny's prophecy.
There's not a great deal of meat to this issue with the battle taking up most of the action. Forge does fight back with both words and magic - and draws out just how much of Illyana's anger is really against herself for having transported her brother to Dallas but then not been there for the final battle. Ultimately he offers her the chance to kill him, seeing in her what he saw in himself when he was young and using his magic in Vietnam.
Otherwise the issue starts a couple of other subplots with the revelation that Magneto has taken to wearing a version of his traditional costume from his villainous days (albeit with no helmet and a big M symbol on the front) and out in space an alien called Spyder offers his slave Gosamyr freedom if she can capture Lila Cheney.
Overall this issue feels too brief. The battle of words and actions doesn't add a great deal to events and feels like it could have been wrapped up sooner especially given how long it's taken to reach this point. Nor is there much further exploration of how Limbo is reacting to these changes. Instead we have a less than satisfying issue just as the key threads start to get seeded.
Wednesday, 29 September 2021
New Mutants 65 - Inferno Prologue
New Mutants #65
Writer: Louise Simonson
Penciler: Bret Blevins
Inker: Terry Austin
Letterer: Tom Orzechowski
Colorist: Glynis Oliver
Editor: Ann Nocenti
Editor-in-Chief: Tom DeFalco
After the X-Men seemingly gave their lives to save the world it's inevitable there would be a fallout amongst the New Mutants especially given the presence of Colossus's sister on the team. The last few issues have shown Illyana (Magik) dwelling on the events and concluding that Forge is responsible; now she sets out to get revenge upon him and lashes out at anyone who doesn't share her desire - which turns out to be just about everyone she turns to from her fellow New Mutants to Magneto to Kitty Pryde.
As this issue reminds us Illyana did not have a normal upbringing even by the standards of her fellow New Mutants. Instead she spent many years growing up in a dark dimension and eventually coming to command to magic and rule the realm despite being only in her early teens. So it's not so surprising that her reaction is one of fury and she refuses to listen to the others who point out that the X-Men gave their lives voluntarily or that Forge doesn't appear to be as evil as she assumes. But this has far reaching consequences when she enters Limbo and it reflects her angry state as her "Darkchilde" persona increasingly takes over. Worse still she takes the Soul Sword out of Limbo with her, leaving it vulnerable to mutinous demons such as S'ym who prepares to open a portal to extend Limbo's power and thus set the seeds for Inferno.
There's further foreshadowing as Illyana arrives in Dallas and finds Forge protected by Freedom Force. Destiny immediately foresees catastrophe for the world that hinges on these events. As battle commences she further sees demons invading our world and Illyana at the centre of destruction. But despite her warnings Illyana refuses to listen, believing this to merely be an attempt to protect Forge with words after a battle with Freedom Force has not ended overwhelmingly.
The rest of the New Mutants reluctantly decide to help Illyana if only to protect her from both Freedom Force and herself but it has little impact. however the battle itself brings some strong action and a great moment of humour as Destiny calmly explains how she foresaw Sunspot bringing a wall down on Avalanche, the Blob and Spiral and did nothing to warn her teammates as the first two are invulnerable whilst she finds Spiral insufferable and deserving a humiliation. Mystique impersonates Forge and nearly gets killed for her troubles but then the real Forge appears and an even darker Illyana turns to confront him.
This is quite a strong issue showing how rage and anger are consuming Illyana with devastating effects not merely for her but for all around as we get one of the earliest hints of the destruction to come. There is far more at stake than one girl's desire to avenge her brother and the apocalypse that is coming out of this is clear for all to see.
Tuesday, 28 September 2021
New Mutants 64 - Inferno Prologue
New Mutants #64
Writer: Louise Simonson
Penciler: Bret Blevins
Inker: Terry Austin
Letterer: Tom Orzechowski
Colorist: Glynis Oliver
Editor: Ann Nocenti
Editor-in-Chief: Tom DeFalco
The deaths of Doug Ramsay (Cypher) and of the whole X-Men recently have cast a shadow over the New Mutants but unfortunately the reaction has been delayed by not one but two awkward fill-in issues. Now we get a strong issue looking at how people react to grief when they have both powers and technology to hand that cannot bring their close ones back. All they can do is try and hope.
How many people go over a tragedy in their mind again and again, thinking over what they could have done differently and wishing they could have prevented the events? Rahne's reaction follows this pattern but it's made worse by the existence of the Danger Room and thus she is not merely thinking the situation through but running endless simulations in which she took a different action and Doug survived. She goes on to spend much of the rest of the issue not quite accepting that Doug has died even when she first sees his body lying in his coffin. Such a reaction feels all too human and understandable but magnified by everything around here.
Illyana's reaction to the apparent death of her brother and the other X-Men also has obvious parallels to how many react to tragedies in the news. She sits for ages watching the footage of their final moments, having taped a lot of the coverage to capture the whole sequence. All she can do is express her anger that she wasn't able to get to Dallas and can only watch until she comes to her conclusion about who is responsible for the deaths, setting up a strong cliffhanger as she declares she is going to seek vengeance.
Magneto finds himself in the difficult position of having to preserve the true nature of both the school and Doug whilst also telling his parents how their son died. His decision to lie and pretend that it was an accident when on a camping trip Doug stumbled across hunters clearly weighs heavily on him but all he can do is hold in his anger and grief whilst wondering about the eventual fate of mutantkind.
But it's Warlock's reaction that is remembered the most and which takes the cover scene. The child-like alien just does not understand human death and his confusion is enhanced first after seeing a zombie movie on television and then as he learns of the Christian belief in the afterlife and the eventual resurrection of the dead. So he becomes convinced that all Doug needs to come back from Heaven is to have life energy restored to him. When Doug does not do this Warlock decides to show him those who miss him in the hope this will bring him back to life. At first it seems macabre to have a corpse carried around and paraded in front of first his mother and then the one who might have become his girlfriend. But as an unusually sensitive Bobby (Sunspot) explains this is just Warlock wanting what all of them want and trying to bring Doug back to life just as Rahne was trying in the Danger Room. It's quite a moving scene as Rahne and Warlock come to accept that Doug is truly gone.
It's incredible how such a weird situation and such a comic looking character as Warlock can generate such a moving issue. But this one works surprisingly well as all the reactions are entirely in character and understandable given the extraordinary situation everyone is in. This issue is the best so far in this look and its only fault is coming two months later when it should have been issue #62 giving a strong immediate aftermath to the Fall of the Mutants rather than coming later.
Monday, 27 September 2021
New Mutants 63 - Inferno Prologue
New Mutants #63
Plot: Chris Claremont
Script: Louise Simonson
Artists: Bo Hampton & Josef Rubinstein
Letterer: Tom Orzechowski
Colorist: Nel Yomtov
Editor: Ann Nocenti
Editor-in-Chief: Tom DeFalco
It's curious just how many of these early issues are so blatantly fill-ins, often pressed into awkward service by coming at a difficult point in the ongoing narrative and having to be twisted into service. This one stands out even more than most because it has a framing narrative that doesn't fit the current continuity and takes a bizarre step to fix that. It also sets out to answer a question that didn't need answering many years later.
Back in New Mutants #21 Illyana (Magik) was briefly infected with the Transmode virus when Warlock first arrived on Earth. She grabbed Lockheed the dragon and teleported away into Limbo and later returned cured wearing a strange spacesuit and carrying a gun. Where these came from was not explained at the time and so could just have been left as one of the little mysteries that life is full of. But now we get an explanation - or do we? This issue starts off with Illyana and Kitty Pryde fooling around in their bedroom before accidentally phasing through the floor into Colossus's room. That gives away that the story had been prepared some time back and its use has to get around the fact that Kitty is no longer at the mansion and Colossus is now believed dead. And so Illyana's thought captions on the first page establish this as a dream sequence even before Illyana starts to recount what happened to her. Then the last panel reaffirms the whole thing as a dream rather than genuinely being the untold tale of what happened to her between pages of that issue.
As a result the whole thing feels even more inconsequential than a usual fill-in issue. It tells how Illyana first faced off a demon in Limbo and cured herself of the techno virus then found herself in what appeared to be an alternate reality some time earlier before she arrived at the mansion. Curiously Colossus, her own brother, barely reacts to her claims. It turns out this isn't the past or an alternate reality but instead a spaceship where the Brood have cloned the X-Men and are using them to breed Brood eggs. Illyana finds the dead original crew of the ship and takes both a gun and a spacesuit for protection then faces down the Brood Queen with the help of the rebellious clones before leaving on the ship to protect its cargo.
This flashback sequence is a bit odd and in part feels like an excuse to allow an artist to draw the X-Men in their earlier costumes but otherwise there's little to it that suggests it couldn't have happened in continuity and just never been mentioned again. But the framing narrative is the confused mess with a second frame added at the end that just pushes the whole thing back into the realms of fiction-within-fiction. So ultimately it contributes little. And as the second fill-in issue in a row when the New Mutants are suffering the double fallout of both the death of one of their own and the death of the whole X-Men (including Illyana's brother), this feels a very odd time to be flashing back to explain obscure points from three and a half years earlier. Only the final panel hints at things to come as Illyana reflects on current events but overall this issue should have been left in inventory and only deployed into service at a less intense time and with a more current framing narrative.
Sunday, 26 September 2021
"Marvel to lose Spider-Man!" What's going on?
An attempt to untangle the legal web as Spider-Man goes to court...
There's a lot of poorly informed commentary flying around the internet with wild claims that comics and movies are to be cancelled and anger about the various parties involved. Much of the confusion is rooted in a misunderstanding about US copyright laws and just what is actually happening. So here is an attempt to explain it all.
US copyright law has changed over time and one of the consequences is that the length of copyright terms has been extended. So when Spider-Man was created in 1962 the US copyright term was a total of 56 years from publication. This was set down in the 1909 Copyright Act (PDF). The 1976 Copyright Act (PDF) was a massive overhaul of US copyright law with many changes to the law. And there are many provisions where the situation is different for works created before the Act took effect (at the start of 1978) and afterwards.
For pre 1978 works the copyright term was extended from 56 years to 75 years. Legal creators (a term I'll come back to as these cases often hinge on how that's defined) or their heirs (tightly defined at the time) were given the right to reclaim their copyrights for the additional period of copyright by terminating the assignment (or "transfer") to another party. This termination right can only be exercised in a strict window of time around the 56th anniversary.
Later on the 1998 Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act (PDF) extended the term for pre 1978 works again, this time to 95 years. It provided the opportunity to terminate the transfer around the 75 year anniversary and also widened the definition of heirs who could terminate transfers (previously only the creator, their widow/er, children and grandchildren could do so).
The principle of creators being able to reclaim their copyrights years later has a long history going back to at least the 1710 Statute of Anne in Great Britain and was present in the first US copyright law, the 1790 Copyright Act. However it previously worked on the basis of there being two copyright terms with the creator having the power to renew for a second term otherwise it would go into public domain at the end of the first term. (This is why some US works from the 1920s to the 1960s are public domain and others are not.) The renewal right was also heavily undermined by initial contracts that included the renewal rights and thus gave publishers both terms, with the US Supreme Court upholding this in a 1943 ruling. The 1976 Act is trying to undo some of this by giving the creator an inalienable termination right that can't be signed away by an earlier contract no matter what it says. Heirs also have rights now as the longer copyright terms mean that often the creator will have died by the time the relevant anniversaries are reached.
However one key problem is the definition of who is the legal creator.
The concept of a "work made for hire" is mentioned in the 1909 Act but not defined in all circumstances. A staff writer on a company salary is clearly doing work for hire. A person who writes a story and then offers the complete manuscript for sale is clearly the creator transferring a copyright. But when a freelancer is commissioned fell into a void of uncertainty with courts having to decide.
It should also be noted that prior to the 1976 Act there was very little practical difference between someone doing work for hire and someone assigning all their rights to another. In both cases the payer wound up with a copyright that they would have for 56 years and the person who did the work would get whatever payment was agreed at the time. So a lot of contracts, agreements and paperwork did not always bother to go into specifics on what seemed like hair splitting. And Marvel was not very well organised in the early 1960s, often not having written contracts and what paperwork exists did not foresee the significance of later changers in the law.
US courts developed what became known as the "instance and expense test" whereby the circumstances under which it was decided to create something became critical. The 1976 Act did include a clear definition of work for hire and required written contracts specifying something was a work for hire to be signed in advance of creation for freelancers. But this did not apply retroactively.
Marvel's early 1960s situation was litigated some years ago when Jack Kirby's heirs sought to terminate the copyright transfer on the works he created for Marvel between 1958 and 1963. However Marvel sued to stop this and every court that heard the case ruled in Marvel's favour and that Kirby had been doing work for hire. The case was submitted to the US Supreme Court but got settled privately before the Court could decide whether to hear it or not. Opinion amongst commentators is divided as to whether Kirby's heirs stood much chance of getting the "instance and expense test" overturned and Marvel/Disney settled to avoid the legal ruling or whether the decision to settle was a political/commercial one to avoid bad headlines and a battle with the Hollywood talent unions who had shown a formal interest in the case.
The precedent of the Kirby case suggests that the Ditko estate and others are not going to get their portions of the copyrights and are most likely to settle for a monetary sum. It should also be noted that even if the copyright transfers were terminated then Marvel would still hold the portion of the copyright for Stan Lee's contributions (and likely also Jack Kirby's). So Marvel/Disney would be very unlikely to lose the characters at all.
I've seen some people bringing up the cases brought by Jerry Siegel, Joe Shuster and their heirs over the Superman copyright. That situation is quite different as Superman was created in a comic strip that Siegel & Shuster had been offering around for some years before DC Comics (to use the modern name) purchased it. As long ago as 1974, an appeal court ruled that this was not a work for hire but rather a copyright transfer (although it also ruled that Siegel & Shuster had assigned their renewal rights in a previous settlement) and so their estates have been able to seek termination. The situation there was complicated by other agreements signed by the estates over the years so it doesn't offer any precedent on what may happen.
So in summary this is not a case of Ditko's heirs suddenly waking up and deciding they want a bigger slice of Spider-Man's success. Nor is it an attempt to retroactively change an agreement made in 1962. Rather this a case based on the copyright term having been extended and determining who has the right to claim it. And it is not going to stop Marvel producing Spider-Man comics and movies anytime soon.
(Oh and also watch out for all the wild claims that US copyright terms have been extended just because Disney lobbied the US Congress to keep Mickey Mouse in copyright. Disney has certainly benefited from the extensions and was one of many bodies lobbying for the 1998 Act but was hardly the only factor. A lot of the changes in US copyright law in the last 60 plus years have been driven by international developments and a recognition that as the US is now a net copyright exporter it benefits from stronger protections and reciprocal international agreements. Probably the single most important factor in the 1990s was the European Union harmonising copyright lengths to a minimum of life of (last surviving) creator plus 70 years, an increase in length of 20 years over the minimum specified in the Berne Convention. This was a length already reached by Germany back in the 1960s.)
New Mutants 62 - Inferno Prologue
New Mutants #62
Writer: Louise Simonson
Artist: Jon J Muth
Letterer: Tom Orzechowski
Colorist: Glynis Oliver
Editor: Ann Nocenti
Editor-in-Chief: Tom DeFalco
We come to another issue that is all too obviously a fill-in and again told in flashback with a letter starting off the issue though this time the letter merely sets the scene and doesn't describe the details. Instead we merely learn of a character's current location before seeing the path that brought them there.
It seems clear that Amara (Magma) was a character inherited from Chris Claremont that Louise Simonson was not very keen on. Very early in her run on the series she wrote Magma off the team by having her transfer to the Massachusetts Academy where the Hellions are based. This issue moves her a step further as though she's being set up for something further down the line. Unfortunately the signs are that this will be a well-trodden cliched storyline of a clash between a traditionalist father and a westernised daughter over a prospective arranged marriage with Amara at one point not wanting to be rescued from the jungle because of this. It is a pity that so many writers so often resort to this plot device for a culture clash storyline and there's little of interest in it. Even Amara's brief environmental speech about how the jungle they're in produces a quarter of the world's oxygen and so she needs to be careful about using her magma powers seems more interesting though it turns out this is just an excuse for not deploying them.
Slightly more interesting is the handling of the Hellion Empath. His powers to manipulate emotions are on extremely dodgy grounds especially when used for seduction and it's indicated here that despite his claims to the contrary he has been using his powers on Amara which makes their eventual kiss late in this issue rather dodgy. He is sent to accompany Amara on her journey home in order to strengthen the Hellfire Club's relations with Nova Roma and ensure Amara returns. But in the course of their journey their plane is struck by lightning and the pilot killed, forcing the pair to spend many days wandering through the jungle trying to survive and discovering each other's character better. There's the revelation that Empath doesn't just manipulate emotions but can also read them and in part his use of his powers is a defence mechanism to cope by blocking out the emotions he's reading. The intention may be to develop his character in a more sympathetic direction but even in this issue he's also shown taking control of others for pleasure which hints at the limits to what can be achieved.
Otherwise the issue is taken up with the extended and rather dull trek through the jungle as Amara and Empath try to find their way out. But there's little hiding the fill-in nature of this issue and once again we have one that comes right at the moment when a title needs to be dealing with the dramatic consequences of a recent big storyline and not digging through the inventory files to flashback to what another character's been up to.
Saturday, 25 September 2021
Uncanny X-Men 230 - Inferno Prologue
Uncanny X-Men #230
Writer: Chris Claremont
Penciler: Marc Silvestri
Inker: Joe Rubinstein
Colorist: Glynis Oliver
Letterer: Tom Orzechowski
Editor: Ann Nocenti
Editor-in-Chief: Tom DeFalco
It's a Christmas issue - but at a very odd time of year. This issue is cover dated June but for historic reasons Marvel's cover dates were now four months ahead of when they went on sale and so a Christmas issue should have an April cover date (as X-Factor #27 does). Nor is there any sign of it being "Christmas in July" as celebrated in some southern hemisphere countries to have additional celebrations in winter. Rather this seems to be a victim of scheduling problems with issue #228's fill-in partially to blame but also it's a consequence of having a crossover using a season pun in the title (a pun that doesn't work in countries where autumn is not known as "fall") and then only one month to get at least two issues' worth through.
The issue is taken up with the X-Men exploring their new home and coming to terms with their new status quo. Some adapt rather better than others. The opening splash page shows Storm flying once more, her powers restored and in a new costume. Meanwhile Dazzler is hating the lack of facilities and the loneliness, a reminder of how of all the X-Men she is the one who has had the greatest life. Elsewhere Longshot finds his psychometric powers overwhelmed when he discovers the vault containing the Reavers' loot. Madelyne is adapting to the base's surveillance systems and hoping to find her missing son whatever it takes. And Gateway continues to sit on top of a great rock a mystery to us all.
This is a mostly character driven issue that packs in a lot such as the X-Men training or Storm using her powers to literally wash out all the dirt in their home. The discovery of the loot re-establishes one of Longshot's more neglected powers as well as leading to debate about what to do with it, highlighting the continued ethical divide within the team. The solution is to return everything they can locate the owners for, combining the powers and skills of Longshot, Psylocke, Madelyne and Gateway. This results in a Christmas sequence as they travel the world to return everything they can to the rightful owners. The issue concludes with a Christmas celebration including Rogue gifting a recorder to Gateway who proves responsive even though he continues to not say a word.
The timing of the issue is unfortunate but it serves to give the team the chance to settle in to their new home and establish further the relationship with the outside world. There are lots of nice little moments that help to fill out the whole cast and show their differing reactions to everything around them with Dazzler especially benefitting from the focus. And the ongoing plot threads are not forgotten either as we are reminded of Madelyne's determination to find her son no matter the cost.
Friday, 24 September 2021
Uncanny X-Men 229 - Inferno Prologue
Uncanny X-Men #229
Writer: Chris Claremont
Penciler: Marc Silvestri
Inker: Dan Green
Colorist: Glynis Oliver
Letterer: Tom Orzechowski
Editor: Ann Nocenti
Editor-in-Chief: Tom DeFalco
After last issue's interruption we now come to one of the most significant issues of Uncanny X-Men as it establishes the "Outback Era". One of the features of Chris Claremont's writing of the series has been the way things have rarely stood still with a constant sense of flux and turmoil providing a strong backdrop to character development. Now we have things turned on their head as the apparent death of the X-Men at the end of Fall of the Mutants becomes the basis for a fixed line-up in a highly unusual setting.
The issue is taken up with conflict with the Reavers, a group of cyborg criminals who launch raids around the world teleporting from an abandoned town in the Australian outback. We see first one such raid on a bank in Singapore as they capture both the contents of a bank vault and one of the bankers and then conflict in Australia as the X-Men attack and take over the town. It's surprising how all of this takes place in a single issue but it works to quickly get the new status quo set-up. Less convincing is the way the mysterious entity Roma arrives to introduce the "Siege Perilous", a jewel that can grow to become a magical gateway that individuals pass through to be judged and reborn. At this stage it primarily serves as a way for most of the Reavers to be dispatched instead of being killed by Wolverine. More intriguingly Roma explains how the X-Men are now invisible to all scanning devices save their own.
With the help of the mysterious aboriginal mutant Gateway, who can teleport them to and from wherever they wish to go, the X-Men are now set up for the next year and a half. Under the cover of being believed dead and invisible to sensors they are able to operate in secret and continue to carry out Xavier's dream seemingly safe from the menaces that have threatened them. The setting also locks in a pretty consistent cast of Storm, Wolverine, Colossus, Rogue, Psylocke, Dazzler, Longshot and Havok with only Madelyne Pryor and Gateway as their regular supporting cast. As a result there's the opportunity to do some unusual things with the characters without the turmoil of new arrivals and departures or overspill effects from adventures of other occupants of the mansion. We'll see in later issues just how effective this is and there's also the problem of three of the Reavers who escape but for now this is a quick strong start for what is one of the most unusual periods of the team's history.
If there's a problem with the issue it's the way Roma just turns up at the end of the issue to provide an alternative resolution to what to do with the captured Reavers when Wolverine suggests killing them is the only way to preserve the X-Men's secrecy. It feels all too convenient a solution rather than having the X-Men figure out something themselves even though Roma's presence allows the completion of the set-up. But all in all this is a strong real start for the X-Men in this overall look.
Thursday, 23 September 2021
Uncanny X-Men 228 - Inferno Prologue
And so the X-Men enter an all new era starting with... a flashback fill-in issue.
Uncanny X-Men #228
Scripter: Chris Claremont
Guest Penciler: Rick Leonardi
Guest Inker: Terry Austin
Colorist: Bill Wray
Letterer: Tom Orzechowski
Editor: Ann Nocenti
Guest Plotter, Editor-in-Chief: Tom DeFalco
This is the first issue in a very long time that is not solely written by Chris Claremont (collaboration with artists aside). Instead we get a plot by Tom DeFalco revisiting a character from Dazzler's own series albeit one introduced years after he stopped writing it. It's a classic fill-in structure with the main story told in flashback (and even containing flashbacks within the flashback) whilst the first and last pages anchor it to a character in current continuity, in this case O.Z. Chase a bounty hunter friend of Dazzler's as he reads a letter from her detailing an adventure she and Wolverine had with him.
This is the first problem with the issue - why on earth is Dazzler telling Chase about events he was involved with? And also Dazzler has not been with the X-Men that long which limits the period in which this adventure could take place to at most a few weeks before she could have sent the letter. It's likely this issue was intended to be used much later on but the big change in the X-Men's status quo is such that the narrative device won't work for a good while yet and so it's been pressed into service at this point. The result is that of all the former team members and supporting cast characters to be seen reacting to the news of the X-Men's death in the Fall of the Mutants we get an obscure bounty hunter and his cigar eating hound from the tail end of Dazzler's solo title.
The story also resorts to what was already becoming a tired cliche - a character Wolverine has interacted with in the past but never mentioned it before or since. In fact this time we get two. Wolverine's past has evolved from a well of story ideas to an incredibly convoluted list of characters and situations as "mystery" gets treated as a casual dumping ground. It stands out even more when he's not the regular character first drawn into the events but instead is following Dazzler as she rushes to Florida to help her friend who has been arrested on suspicion of being a werewolf killer. The real killer turns out to be Vladimir Zaitsev, a mutant ex Soviet agent Wolverine has tangled with before and is now on the run having first defected to the US and then fled to Columbia but has been deposed as a drug lord. As a result the Soviets are trying to eliminate him whilst the US government is trying to catch him. The latter is represented in the form of Henry Peter Gyrich, another character whose past and present are regularly adapted to suit the needs of the story at hand. Here we discover that he was Wolverine's CIA contact when the latter worked for the Canadian Special Intelligence Service. The story climaxes in a showdown in the Florida swamp where Zaitsev proves rather demanding in insisting on his life for his three hunters' and Cerberus decides to take the deal on offer. Back in the present Chase finishes reading the letter and hears the news of his friends' deaths then confronts a bigot in the bar about them.
It's easy to beat up on fill-in issues. They are invariably structured to be dropped in whenever they're needed and so can't do anything significant with the characters. The ongoing narrative structure also often requires them to be told in a flashback format to make them easier to adapt when called into service. And events in them invariably get forgotten completely. Chase hasn't been seen since this issue and I don't think any other issues have done anything with Gyrich and Wolverine's history. But that's by the by. The real problem with this issue is its placing. Coming immediately between a dramatic storyline and the launch of a bold new status quo for the series it can't disguise itself as an intruder getting in the way of ongoing developments. Because Inferno Prologue collects all the issues of all three series since the Fall of the Mutants it's understandable why it's wound up here but this has a strong potential to be the single most ignorable issue in this entire run. And it would have to be the very first Uncanny X-Men issue we come to.
Wednesday, 22 September 2021
X-Factor 29 - Inferno Prologue
X-Factor #29
Writer: Louise Simonson
Penciler: Walter Simonson
Inker: Bob Wiacek
Letterer: Joe Rosen
Colorist: Petra Scotese
Editor: Bob Harras
Editor-in-Chief: Tom DeFalco
This issue sees the introduction of a new villain, one whom it's hard to imagine would be created today. But this era of comics often still saw new seductresses created, frequently with Walter Simonson involved. Infectia is shown picking up a succession of men in bars and taking them home to kiss - only to transform them into monstrous forms to become her slaves in her initial assault on ship.
It's hard to imagine Infectia being created today. But the 1980s was another era and for now she takes on the role of a femme fatale as she lures multiple men into becoming her slaves for her unsuccessful first attempt to seize Ship. This raises the curiosity that the established rule that only mutants can enter Ship's forcefields doesn't apply to Infectia's slaves as they attack. The resulting battle is fierce and only resolved when Marvel Girl unleashes her full power and causes them to burn out and crumble to dust. It's a pretty dark moment as Jean comes to terms with what she's done.
The main focus of the issue is on character as Jean comes to terms with the believed to be dead Madelyne Pryor and the situation Scott is in. Meanwhile the Beast tries to discuss his situation with Trishy Tilby but is interrupted by Death/Angel searching for information about where Candy Southern has gone. And Iceman is coming into his own role as the team's spokesperson when he finds himself taking command of a press conference about the team's plans to move Ship out into the Atlantic Ocean so it will no longer disrupt New York's shipping lanes. There's a lot of threads continuing to build in this issue but a curse of starting where we have is that no big moments have come just yet.
Tuesday, 21 September 2021
X-Factor 28 - Inferno Prologue
X-Factor #28
Plot/Scripter: Louise Simonson
Plot/Penciler: Walter Simonson
Inker: Bob Wiacek
Letterer: Joe Rosen
Colorist: Petra Scotese
Editor: Bob Harras
Editor-in-Chief: Tom DeFalco
This issue is a further step in establishing the new status quo for the series as the team comes into full control of Apocalypse's ship, discovering its artificial intelligence in the process. There's something almost goofy and retro about "Ship" being a fully sentient character but then the core concept of the series is a throwback to the Silver Age. However the execution of the idea isn't so great as it merely results in the team and the younger mutants battling against a series of mechanical traps as they seek to overpower the system's defences then getting a bomb away before it explodes.
The issue continues the Beast's problems as he struggles with his intellect disintegrating every time he uses his strength ever since Pestilence touched him some issues back. Hank's determination to save his friends and their determination to save him often clash and here we have the spectacle of Iceman freezing the Beast to the floor to prevent him from getting involved in the action; however ice is not shatterproof. Meanwhile both Cyclops and Death/Angel are seeking to reconnect with their closest ones. The latter discovers that his girlfriend Candy Southern has been kidnapped setting things up for later issues. Scott is heading to Dallas to see if he find any clues about the whereabouts of his son but only gets as far as the airport before seeing the news about the ship attacking X-Factor and hurries back. Although he's chosen the hot action over the cold trail, once again we see how readily Scott will drop everything to be by the others' sides, especially Jean's. By contrast Death/Angel's reaction is to leave X-Factor to it, still feeling abandoned by them.
There are some good ideas in this issue but the execution of the core concept is poor resulting in a rather stilted battle that marks the final triumph over Apocalypse. However the long term searches are building up as the key themes going forwards.
Monday, 20 September 2021
X-Factor 27 - Inferno Prologue
X-Factor #27
Writer: Louise Simonson
Penciler: Walter Simonson
Inker: Bob Wiacek
Letterer: Joe Rosen
Colorist: Petra Scotese
Editor: Bob Harras
Editor-in-Chief: Tom DeFalco
X-Factor was a title that by rights should have been a disaster. An editorial mandate to launch a new team reuniting the original X-Men resulted in a lot of heavy lifting to get all five back together. In the process retcons were deployed to resurrect Marvel Girl (Jean Grey) and exonerate her from Phoenix's guilt of committing genocide whilst Cyclops (Scott Summers) had to be hurriedly yanked away from his marriage and newly born child. Along with the apocalyptic end of the New Defenders the result was a mess made worse by the very poor state the series was in at the start. That the title turned around so well was down to Louise Simonson taking over the writing early on and slowly setting about clearing through the various messes of set-up and character actions. To her credit she didn't bring in sweeping changes quickly but instead developed them over lengthy storylines. By the time of this issue the premise of the team has been transformed, ditching the "rescuers posing as Mutantbusters" and instead our heroes have just won popular acclaim and backing. But there's still a lot of work to be done relating to Cyclops and the women in his life, his original girlfriend Jean and his wife Madelyne who astonishingly looks just like Jean.
Looking back on the early years of X-Factor it's easy to see some similarities to the later Spider-Man Clone Saga and indeed the Spider-writers may well have had the fate of Scott, Jean and Madelyne in mind as they struggled to find ways to get Peter Parker back into the webs with his child and possibly also his marriage removed in such a way that didn't denigrate the character. (Indeed some of the office ideas that floated around during the Clone Saga that have made it to public do have a whiff of repeating things done on X-Factor.) Because unfortunately Scott was severely damaged as a character by the way he walked out on his marriage to go and play with his school girlfriend and other mates. Early on Madelyne and their son (who wasn't actually named on page for a good while) vanished with no records existing of them and there was a possibility that Madelyne had indeed been Jean all along. Or there was a corpse found. But Madelyne turned up alive over in the pages of Uncanny X-Men and eventually this would have to be resolved. This issue sees Scott watching the footage of Madelyne and the X-Men seemingly dying but as we'll see that only kicked the can further down the road whilst Scott has renewed reason to find his son.
Otherwise the issue itself is full of character moments as X-Factor and the young mutants they've rescued enjoy public adulation at Christmas and bring joy to others particularly children in hospital. Jean opts to reveal herself to her parents and discovers her sister is missing following a firebombing. Meanwhile the Beast continues to struggle with his intellect failing as he uses his strength. And Apocalypse has repaired Ship and gifted it to X-Factor.
A slow paced character piece is actually a very good place to start all this, bringing readers up to scratch with the current characters and events whilst also seeding of the threads for the issues to come. There are some nice moments such as the kids arguing about Leech's idea to donate the gifts they've received to a children's hospital or Apocalypse giving a rather sinister Christmas toast. The Simonsons have a strong grasp of the characters and the series is now free of the chaotic set-up it began with. This is a title definitely moving forwards.
Sunday, 19 September 2021
Inferno
It's been very hot lately, much hotter than normal. So it's time to have a look at another of Marvel's epic crossovers.
(Although by the time I get these posts ready it'll probably have cooled down significantly.)
Inferno was the third big crossover originating from the mutant titles but this was the first one that really spread out beyond that family of books to take in some fourteen different Marvel titles throughout 1988 and beyond. It's another crossover that's been released in a way that doesn't give an official order. In fact it's had three sets of releases. In quick summary:
- X-Men: Inferno Prologue is only available in an oversized hardcover and contains X-Factor #27-32 & Annual #3, Uncanny X-Men #228-238 & Annual #4 and New Mutants #62-70. Although many of these issues have been reprinted elsewhere, this is their only collection under the "Inferno" banner.
(We'll see as we go how much this collection can legitimately be called "X-Men: Inferno Prologue" as opposed to "X-Men: Collected issues from a period between big storylines that we've slapped the title of a popular crossover onto".)
Now the rest of this is going to be a source of confusion. There have been some trade paperbacks reproducing only the core issues but not agreeing on which those are. Confining this to the various complete collections, forty-five issues have been published in both two oversized hardcovers and three paperbacks, with the combination of issues slightly varying between them. Avoid mixing and matching these if possible.
- X-Men: Inferno Hardcover contains X-Factor #33-40 & a story from Annual #4, X-Terminators #1-4, Uncanny X-Men #239-243 and New Mutants #71-73.
- X-Men: Inferno Crossovers Hardcover contains Power Pack #40 & #42-44, Avengers #298-300, Fantastic Four #322-324, Amazing Spider-Man #311-313, Spectacular Spider-Man #146-148, Web of Spider-Man #47-48, Daredevil #262-263 & #265, Excalibur #6-7, and Cloak & Dagger #4.
Alternatively:
- X-Men: Inferno volume 1 paperback contains X-Factor #33-36, X-Terminators #1-4, Uncanny X-Men #239-240, New Mutants #71-72 and Power Pack #40 & #42-43.
- X-Men: Inferno volume 2 paperback contains X-Factor #37-40 & a story from Annual #4, Uncanny X-Men #241-243, New Mutants #73, Excalibur #6-7, Power Pack #44 and Cloak & Dagger #4.
- X-Men: Inferno Crossovers paperback contains Avengers #298-300, Fantastic Four #322-324, Amazing Spider-Man #311-313, Spectacular Spider-Man #146-148, Web of Spider-Man #47-48, and Daredevil #262-263 & #265.
Alternatively alternatively:
- X-Men: Inferno Omnibus contains all the issues in the above two sets in a single volume.
And there are a handful of follow-on issues or loose tie-ins that aren't contained in any of these collections but which are worth looking at as well including:
- Power Pack #39
- Fantastic Four #325
- Power Pack #45
- Damage Control #4
- What If...? #6
- What If...? #37
But Inferno didn't crossover in this period on its own. The three annuals in "Inferno Prologue" were part of The Evolutionary War, another big crossover told across twelve annuals in 1988. And one of the What If...? issues is part of its own ongoing storyline entitled Timequake. I'll be looking at both of these in the course of things.
As for the order I'll be following the order in the Inferno Prologue book for those issues (except where additional issues have to be slotted in) but the Inferno Omnibus doesn't order the whole set of issues chronologically. Instead all the core issues in the Inferno Hardcover appear first followed by the Inferno Crossovers Hardcover issues - and the crossover issues are grouped by series (apart from putting the eight Spider-Man issues in their own chronological order). There are multiple orders online and they don't always agree with even the ordering of the core titles. So once again I'll be following the order given by The (Almost) Complete Marvel Crossover Guide (albeit with a small change to handle the Avengers annual). This also handily helps with the placement of The Evolutionary War.
So get the fire extinguishers ready and stand be as we get started...
Saturday, 18 September 2021
It's coming
Yes this blog is coming back to life to look at another big Marvel crossover from the past. Stay tuned and enjoy some contemporary adverts for it: