Showing posts with label New Mutants. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New Mutants. Show all posts

Thursday, 2 December 2021

New Mutants 73 - Inferno

Illyana goes back to where it all started.

New Mutants #73

Writer: Louise Simonson
Penciler: Bret Blevins
Inker: Al Williamson & Mike Manley
Letterer: Joe Rosen
Colorist: Glynis Oliver
Editor: Bob Harras
Editor in Chief: Tom DeFalco

Illyana battles S'ym knowing that she could destroy him but at a terrible cost. Meanwhile others search for her. Sam (Cannonball), Rahne (Wolfsbane), Bobby (Sunspot), Warlock, Boom Boom and Rictor are delayed by a street that comes to life and won't let them pass. Colossus strides through New York alone and forces demons to take him to S'ym. Magneto and the rest of the Inner Circle of the Hellfire Club are confronted by N'astirh who tries to make a deal with them; Wolfsbane hears part of the conversation and she and the others are soured on their headmaster further. First Colossus and then the New Mutants reach S'ym and discover that Illyana is now entirely encased within a suit of armour. Ashamed she flees into Limbo with the New Mutants following whilst Colossus battles S'ym. Within Limbo Illyana declares she must stay there to rule it as the Darkchilde, rejecting her human side, and that her whole life has led to this moment. Things get worse on Earth with demons attacking the church where Dani (Mirage), Rusty and Skids put up a spirited defence despite their wounds. Rahne realises that because time doesn't exist in Limbo they can save Illyana's younger self from going down this path. Searching through multiple portals they find the six year old girl who first came to the realm but are then confronted by her older self who wants to kill her. Rahne tells Illyana that contrary to what N'astirh claimed there is a choice and she can save her younger self. Returning everyone to New York the older Illyana sucks most of the demons, including S'ym, back through the portal then throws away her Soul Sword. Colossus and the New Mutants find the armour with a voice crying out - inside is the younger Illyana freed from her dark path with the older self having sacrificed herself to save the day. But N'astirh is still on Earth with plans.

This is the final New Mutants issue of Inferno, a special double-sized issue that brings the title's contribution to the crossover to a conclusion. In doing so we also get a very definitive conclusion to the story of Illyana. In addition the regulars get their first encounter with any of the X-Men since the latter's apparent deaths as Colossus shows up to help his sister. Though Illyana herself gets a scene of coming to terms with the realisation that this is indeed her brother, the reaction of the others is limited to Bobby commenting that they though Colossus was dead and Magneto glimpsing from afar the X-Man being carried by two demons and deciding that it can't be him. But it's an appropriate guest appearance for a highly personal tale.

The themes of child abuse and corruption have long been central to Illyana's story as her childhood was stolen and she was brought up around men who used and abused her. One of her abusers was S'ym and now she is stronger and more powerful to fight back - but he is also more powerful than before. She cannot bring redemption through confronting her abusers and instead seems fated to forever be the corrupted being who was once an innocent little girl. Convinced she has no choice in the matter any more there seems nothing her friends can do to help her. The metaphor is strong and effective. The solution less so.

Limbo has been established as a realm where the rules of time work differently from Earth. This is reinforced early in the issue as demons remind Colossus that, "Time different in Limbo. ... One time is all time in Limbo... is part of Limbo's special magic." It's sufficient to prepare for the moment whereby the older Illyana is effectively negated when her younger self is rescued from the realm just after her arrival with the realm's magic able to overcome the logical rules of time travel and altering a character's history making it work in the narrative. But it also feels unsatisfactory given the metaphors. Real life abuse victims cannot just make their torment have not happened. At most they can suppress the memory but it is not easy to simply lock away a bad memory and never think it again. They can help save others from being abused but not turn the clock back. Thus Illyana's end is not so much overcoming the effect of the abuse to live as committing suicide. For the rest of the New Mutants may have saved her from the whole experience and triumphed but for her it's not the best outcome to a story that's been running ever since she first entered Limbo many issues earlier.

The art on this issue manages to capture the themes of darkness and salvation well. One of the main problems throughout the crossover has been the rather silly look of S'ym. Here we get him drawn in demonic poses and coloured especially darkly which makes the character look credible but he really needs to lose the cigar. Otherwise the key moments are well drawn especially Illyana's final transformation and action.

Overall this is an ending that both does and doesn't work. As a story of the New Mutants ending the threat of the demons and saving Illyana it's a viable ending. But as a conclusion to a very personal saga that has long served as a metaphor for child abuse it's utterly unsatisfactory.

Wednesday, 24 November 2021

New Mutants 72 - Inferno

Illyana's transformation is completed.

New Mutants #72

Writer: Louise Simonson
Penciler: Bret Blevins
Inker: Al Williamson
Letterer: Joe Rosen
Colorist: Glynis Oliver
Editor: Bob Harras
Editor-in-Chief: Tom DeFalco

The demons descend upon New York as N'astirh encourages Illyana to embrace her dark side completely. S'ym shows up and the two leading demons battle whilst Illyana flees. The rest of the New Mutants see the X-Terminators in the sky fighting to destroy the pentagram and take off to help them. They succeed but with several wounded. The surviving members of both teams join together. Illyana finds herself teleporting into surreal distorted versions of life in New York with the twisted demonic forms overwhelming her and taunting her to use the Soul Sword. Eventually she does so as the demonic magics increase due to N'astirh having absorbed the transmode techno organic virus and now having magic in all his circuits. He survives an explosion and confronts Illyana, telling her there is no path of redemption. She uses the Soul Sword again on him and her armour now fully forms, encasing her completely.

This issue demonstrates a major problem with the crossover structure of Inferno. Rather than having separate issues of different series tell distinct chapters that flow smoothly from one to the next it instead has a lot of overlapping issues with characters jumping from one set of pages to another and back. This is why there are so many different orders in circulation for the event though they tend to at least line up around key moments such as the opening of the portal bringing the demons into New York. Sometimes the overlap is especially great the whole narrative jumping between titles. This happens here.

With the exception of Illyana's part of the issue it is very hard to follow in isolation. It overlaps heavily with the final issue of X-Terminators to the point that the battle between N'astirh and S'ym is only fully understandable when the two issues are read in close proximity. The team-up between the two teams is mostly covered in the limited series but here we get more of the rescue of the babies and an extension to the scene of the two teams resting at the end. The two teams are effectively fused in this issue with a redivision based on wounds rather than existing affiliations and this looks like it could lead to a future expansion.

However Illyana's story is mercifully told in a single series. Here we see her descent continue as she becomes ever more a pawn of the demons. Some proclaim to worship her but others are more overt in simply using her. The scene at the end as she sees what she has become and N'astirh tells her that there was never a right path for her once she entered Limbo and everything ultimately led her to this moment is truly chilling. Her continued destruction has driven so much and left her vulnerable to abuse and manipulation, making for a very dark cliffhanger as her only source of help seems to be S'ym (who is drawn and coloured to look more menacing here than usual).

This issue is very much in two pieces. One side is a mess because it overlaps upon another part of the crossover so heavily that it doesn't work well in isolation and even read together it feels jumpy and slightly repetitive. The other side is self-contained and shows a terrifying final descent for Illyana as she truly becomes the Darkchilde with seemingly no escape. The stakes are rising but this issue could have been better structured to get there.

Sunday, 14 November 2021

New Mutants 71 - Inferno

Illyana confronts her past as it collides with her present.

New Mutants #71

Writer: Louise Simonson
Penciler: Bret Blevins
Inker: Al Williamson
Letterer: Joe Rosen
Colorist: Glynis Oliver
Editor: Bob Harras
Editor in Chief: Tom DeFalco

The New Mutants are trapped in Limbo but find they can escape from S'ym and his demons within it and he snatches the Soul Sword. As they flee through the realm Illyana tells them how she grew up here and the horrors she endured. Due to the different nature of time in Limbo they witness a young Illyana being assaulted by S'ym but N'astirh intervenes. This incarnation of N'astirh professes his love for Illyana and tells her how to regain her power and the ability to teleport to Earth by recovering the Soul Sword and embracing her dark side, which Illyana accepts. New York continues to suffer from objects coming to life and Magneto leads the Hellfire Club in investigating the continued growth of the Empire State Building. In Limbo Illyana overcomes S'ym, transforms into the Darkchilde and opens a portal to Earth... only to arrive in Times Square and discover N'astirh holding it open to bring all the demons through to Earth.

After a lot of build up and small scale incidents in New York we come to one of the key moments in the entire crossover. This issue also shows how some of the antagonists have been planning for a very long time. Much of this part of the crossover builds on events from the Magik (or "Storm and Illyana") limited series from five years earlier and so an issue that recounts the events and how they shaped the protagonist into what she now is very welcome. It's also a strong reminder of the themes of child abuse that ran throughout that limited series as Illyana was taken from her family, had her childhood stolen as she spent seven years in the realm and grew up around men who professed to love her but instead sought to use her for their own ends. The addition of N'astirh to the story helps to reinforce the sense in which Illyana has been a pawn all this time.

What is potentially confusing is the way that time operates in Limbo combined with Illyana's teleportation powers and the appearances of N'astirh at first adds to the confusion as it's not clear if this is the one from when she entered Limbo or the present day incarnation and it's further complicated by his having travelled back in time as well. As a result it's not immediately apparent whether he's a long term schemer who betrayed S'ym or a short term opportunist. But he still comes across as the more effective of the two main demons in Limbo even though Bret Blevins and Al Williamson have managed to make S'ym look fierce and sinister with the techno organic transmode virus compensating for the more comical aspects of his design.

Also less than clear is just how far alternate timelines can be forced in Limbo. Illyana tells how there was a timeline in which the X-Men never escaped and were either transformed or destroyed until she killed the last survivors yet she declares it's not possible to intervene to save her younger self because she has to grow up to control her teleportation discs to get them home. Why she cannot do both in the warped time is not explained.

The deception and corruption of a young girl has always been at the heart of Illyana's story and here it reaches new levels as she ultimately succumbs to the dark side of her nature and allows demons to manipulate her into opening the portal linking Limbo and Earth. This may at first seem an explanatory issue but it also serves to up the stakes for the crossover as a whole in spectacular fashion.

Wednesday, 27 October 2021

New Mutants 70 - Inferno Prologue

The New Mutants try to escape Spyder and rescue Gosamyr's parents.

New Mutants #70

Writer: Louise Simonson

Penciler: Terry Shoemaker
Inker: Al Milgrom
Letterer: Joe Rosen
Colorist: Glynis Oliver
Editor: Bob Harras
Editor in Chief: Tom DeFalco

Magneto fights two battles in New York, one against a fire escape that has come to light and another as the leaders of the Hellfire Club start manoeuvring against each other. Meanwhile the New Mutants have been captured and imprisoned by Spyder, only escaping when Gosamyr sacrifices her power to influence those around her. Rushing to rescue Lila and Gosamyr's parents they find the latter have been used by Spyder as silk worms at the cost of a shortened hibernation that brings them to life as solar system destroying monsters. Only a sacrifice can save the day.

This story arc is finally over and it says a lot that the subplots about the takeover of Limbo, strange happenings in New York City and machinations in the Hellfire Club are far more interesting than the main material in this issue. There's an attempt to redeem Gosamyr by having her seemingly lose her powers when she undergoes a change known as "minor death" to flee her bonds and release the New Mutants from an electric cage but though she's explicitly acknowledged as acting in a less selfish way and developing it does little to endear the character. Nor does the horrific fate of her parents who have been forced out of their cocoons thousands of years early and so emerge as ferocious giant monsters instead of peaceful beings. However it's hard to believe that two creatures their size can eat their way through to the core of a planet and destroy it so when Lila Cheney uses her powers to teleport them and herself into the planet's sun her sacrifice doesn't seem particularly spectacular.

Instead it's just a relief to be at the end of this wretched story. It could easily have been cut to two issues or even better ignored completely. Gosamyr looks set to stick around for now which is a pain but excitement looms as the New Mutants teleport into Limbo to discover S'ym has conquered it.

Tuesday, 26 October 2021

New Mutants 69 - Inferno Prologue

The New Mutants make their way to Spyder's parlour as they discover the truth about Gosamyr.

New Mutants #69

Writer: Louise Simonson
Penciller: Bret Blevins
Inker: Al Williamson
Letterer: Ken Bruzenak
Colorist: Glynis Oliver
Editor: Bob Harras
Editor in Chief: Tom DeFalco

Spyder arranges for the New Mutants to land safely on his planet but Gosamyr's powers continue to wreak havoc amongst them with Dani (Mirage) running off the ship at the first opportunity to get attack by thugs whilst Illyana (Magik) retreats into depression and the others get ever more tense with each other. Only Warlock seems immune and he eventually realises what Gosamyr is and how her powers have affected the others. Rushing to rescue Dani the New Mutants pass through Limbo where Illyana transforms into the Darkchilde and back on Spyder's world she finds she cannot change back. Back on Earth Magneto is also descending as he reflects on how he thought he had found a better way to the old days but his students refuse protection and so he must protect them in the way he knows best. The New Mutants come to Dani's rescue but Illyana's sword turns a robot into a monstrous demon and then she attacks Gosamyr revealing a monstrous true self. Gosamyr comes to realise that not every being acts the way her culture has brought her up and they head for Spyder's lair to rescue Lila.

This is a more action packed chapter than the previous ones but there's still far too much emphasis on the effect Gosamyr has on those around her. It's meant to parallel how a group of friends can be broken up by a single attraction but here it struggles as the script is trying to make Gosamyr both sympathetic and devious and it doesn't always succeed. Of more interest is Illyana's continued breakdown, being unable to change back out of her Darkchilde form and getting ever angrier and bloodthirsty. The contrast with the way Magneto is calmly drifting back into his old ways, shown most vividly by the way he dons his old helmet, out of frustration at his failures to keep his students safe is striking. Otherwise Spyder's world is not a terribly interesting environment and the alien inhabitants are completely forgettable.

Once again we have a slow chapter of a story arc with more issues than it can really sustain based around a character who's been terribly thought through. This arc is easily the worst story in the whole of X-Men: Inferno Prologue and it's a relief there's only one more issue to go.

Monday, 25 October 2021

New Mutants 68 - Inferno Prologue

The New Mutants head in to space to pursue Spyder's ship but find the influence of Gosamyr causes them to got through strange things.

New Mutants #68

Writer: Louise Simonson
Artist: Bret Blevins
Letterer: Ken Bruzenak
Colorist: Glynis Oliver
Editor: Bob Harras
Editor-in-Chief: Tom DeFalco

The issue starts out in Limbo as Illyana (Magik) seeks to recreate her Scrying Glass from the shattered fragments. She manages to identify Spyder's ship before the glass explodes again and as it will have moved the team teleports to Gosamyr's ship to pursue it. On board the power of Gosamyr soon becomes clear as she seduces Bobby (Sunspot) and encourages Rahne (Wolfsbane) to indulge her feelings then tricks Dani (Mirage) into creating a solid illusion of Rahne's desire - a gallant Sam (Cannonball) who courts her. The illusion disappears when Dani has to create another to trick officials on the planet they have pursued Spyder's ship to and this causes the team to start lashing out at each other. Worse still when Dani created what the official wanted to see it turned out to be not authorisation papers but a bribe - and a superior has discovered this.

This story arc is incredibly slow and decompressed with the issue taking an unnecessary detour into Limbo to once again show how Illyana's powers over it are breaking down and something dark is on the horizon then spending an extended period on the ship in which Gosamyr's powers and tricks are disrupting the team's dynamics. As well as seducing Bobby she plays upon Rahne's feelings for Sam, even dressing her up and giving her a wig to resemble Lila. Of the boys only Warlock seems immune whilst the manipulation turns Rahne against Dani and then Dani against Gosamyr.

It's hard to escape the feeling that this story arc has been given more issues than necessary in order to tread water before the upcoming crossover. The problem is that it results in an extremely slow pace that's compensated for by a focus upon characters - and when the key character is an unlikeable silly cliche like Gosamyr that's not a good move. Taking the team into space could have opened up many good ideas but so far it's wallowed in bad ones.

Sunday, 24 October 2021

New Mutants 67 - Inferno Prologue

Cannonball goes to a concert but finds his promise to not use his powers was rash.

New Mutants #67

Writer: Louise Simonson
Artist: Bret Blevins
Letterer: Ken Bruzenak
Colorist: Glynis Oliver
Editor: Bob Harras
Editor-in-Chief: Tom DeFalco

Sam secures permission to go to a Lila Cheney concert but promises to not use his powers. However the concert also attracts the interest of an alien slave owner called Spyder who regards Lila as his "property" through forcing her previous owner into bankruptcy. He sends his monstrous "accountants" to retrieve her at the concert with the rest of the New Mutants rushing to try to save Lila. Meanwhile Gosamyr, a slave of Spyder's, escapes and makes her way to Earth where she pleads to the New Mutants for help to save her family. She soon has Sunspot enthralled with her. Elsewhere Limbo continues to get worse and Illyana comments on how this reflects her own descent.

This is a relatively slow paced issue to kick off the last storyline before Inferno. And it introduces one of the worst conceived characters in the whole run of the series. Gosamyr is an alien with empathic powers and combined with the way she is drawn as a sexy young alien the result is an intergalactic seductress which is a highly dodgy approach that would almost certainly not be followed today. Spyder is a little better, an intergalactic businessman whose holdings include living beings and whose business methods including forcing bankruptcies to acquire assets. It's easy to see him as a parody of real life businessmen whose methods could leave chaos in their wake (something Marvel itself would experience in the next decade).

Otherwise we have a continuation in the seemingly endless pattern of the New Mutants being placed under restrictions by Magneto and getting round them one way or another. This situation cannot endure indefinitely any more than the deterioration of Limbo. Overall this issue is relatively relaxed to build the characters for the story arc but as one of the key ones is so ill conceived it dargs the whole thing down.

Sunday, 10 October 2021

New Mutants Annual 4 - Inferno Prologue/The Evolutionary War

The High Evolutionary seeks to remove the powers of particular mutants...

New Mutants Annual #4

1st story: Mind Games
Writer: Louise Simonson
Penciler: June Brigman
Inker: Bob McLeod
Letterer: John Workman
Colorist: Glynis Oliver
Editors: Ann Nocenti & Bob Harras
Editor in Chief: Tom DeFalco

Mutants are the next stage in human evolution and so it's natural they will attract the attention of the High Evolutionary sooner rather than later. Here his plan is to remove the powers of high level mutants through the use of a machine that can strip them of their powers. In the process we get a subtle explanation for some of the inconsistencies in the event.

The Evolutionary himself is shown as sympathetic to mutants and not wishing to kill them but the same cannot be said for some of his subordinates including Dr Stack and Major Purge. Given the scale of the Evolutionary's overall plans it's unsurprising that many individual tasks are handled by underlings but he doesn't seem to have realised just how dangerous some of them are. This disparity in goals can help to explain some of the variation in the overall story as well as showing potential problems for further down the line.

After having captured and depowered the mutants Glow Worm and Bulk from an early X-Factor adventure the Evolutionary's Purifiers turn their attention to Magma (Amara), now living in Nova Roma and hating the prospect of an arranged marriage. The Hellion Empath is with her and there's a clear confirmation from Purifiers' scans that Empath is subconsciously using his power on Amara without perhaps realising it. Elsewhere at least some of the New Mutants suspect the power is being used but seem very relaxed about it. This can't be dismissed as an "of its time" blunder since this came out not longer after the West Coast Avengers storyline where Mockingbird was drugged and seduced by the Phantom Rider against her free will. At this point they are completely grounded by Magneto who also bans them from using their powers without supervision, still angry about how Doug Ramsey died. But this has never stopped them and news of Amara's kidnapping results in the New Mutants sneaking off to rescue her whilst Emma Frost recruits allies in the Hellfire Club including Magneto.

The battle in the Purifiers' base is straightforward bar a moment when Mirage (Danielle) gets caught in the depowering machine. Before she can even realise she's lost her powers a dying Bulk and Glow Worm give their last breaths to reverse the effect. When Mirage comes round the images she creates are now solid and the New Mutants are able to rescue Amara and escape just before Magneto and the Hellfire Club arrive.

This is the best chapter of The Evolutionary War so far as it manages to use the overall event well in order to generate a small but significant change for the regular series. Mirage has long suffered from fairly weak powers and a limited opportunity to build up her leadership skills so it's understandable that multiple writers have sought to beef her up whether through making her a Valkyrie or now making her illusions solid. That she cannot get rid of them without making another also adds a constraint to their use. Otherwise this is a good showcase for all the characters in the series at this stage, showing how Magneto is trying to do his best to protect his students but alienating them in the process, how the New Mutants themselves are easily getting round the restrictions placed on them, how Illyana is becoming ever more ruthless in sending foes to Limbo and also how Amara is adapting to life back home. This is just the sort of showcase a crossover chapter should be.


2nd story: If Wishes Were Horses
Writer: Louise Simonson
Penciler: June Brigman
Inker: Roy Richardson
Letterer: John E. Workman Jr
Colorist: Glynis Oliver
Editor: Bob Harras
Editor in Chief: Tom DeFalco

This is a surprisingly long tale at 15 pages considering the brevity of the story material. It could easily have become an issue of the regular series with plenty of space for subplots but instead it appears here as character and art showcase as we get a Mirage solo tale in which she discovers more about her newly changed powers and how best to handle them. There's plenty of comedy as her powers go wrong such as when they create a mate for Brightwind whilst she's flying on him and so gets thrown off or an encounter with a police officer who tries to make sense of all the weird things going on, first wondering if he's on a prankster television show and then assuming he's encountering aliens. This leads to an especially good moment when Brightwind reappears and firmly confronts the officer until he releases Mirage.

Otherwise this is primarily about Mirage steadily working out how to make use of her new powers that pull images out of people's heads and bring them to life as now solid objects and also how they won't disappear until she creates another. It's a good idea but it feels like it just takes up too many pages even though the story ends with Magneto returning home in a good mood and admitting to his students that he can be harsh at times. Overall this is okay but I wonder what else could have appeared had this been cut down to a more natural length.


3rd story: The High Evolutionary: Blood Drawn, Blood Spilt
Story: Mark Gruenwald
Pencils: Ron Lim
Inks: Jim Sinclair
Letters: Ken Lopez
Colors: Gregory Wright
Editor: Ralph Macchio
Editor in Chief: Tom DeFalco

The saga continues as we start ploughing through the various characters whose backstories have been tied to Mount Wundagore. So in the space of one day we see how the Drew family fell apart when the future Spider-Woman (Jessica Drew) collapsed whilst playing with clay with the future Puppet Master (Phillip Masters) and was subjected to an experimental spider-serum in the hope of saving her from radiation poisoning before arguments about further treatments caused her mother Merriem to go for a walk where she was killed with the prime suspect appearing to be the father of the Werewolf. It's a sudden rush but in just six pages it's a reminder of just how many different characters had been given ties to the mountain and/or Mount Wundagore. But it also establishes a devious side to Herbert Edgar Wyndham as he repeatedly places keeping the Moloids above other concerns, refusing to investigate them despite being a scientist and hiding the true cause of Merriem Drew's death from her husband out of fear that Jonathan will blame the Moloids and attack them. Wyndham swears to make the true murderer pay and in doing so his driven ruthless nature is further established. However the saga could really benefit from some footnotes as some of the character names are obscure and others reference relatives of heroes so the connections aren't always obvious.


There are no pin-ups or other features in the annual which is a pity as a further introduction could have helped to sell the series to readers passing through due to The Evolutionary War. But overall this is a solid book with excellent artwork and a clear solid plot that makes it important to the ongoing series narrative and not a mere side event.

Thursday, 30 September 2021

New Mutants 66 - Inferno Prologue

Illyana's descent into the Darkchilde continues as she has a showdown with Forge in Limbo.

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

Illyana begins her descent into the darkness as she seeks revenge for the death of the X-Men.

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

The New Mutants face their grief over recent deaths in their own way.

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

Yet another flashback fill-in issue as we discover how Illyana obtained a space suit and a gun several years ago...

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

New Mutants 62 - Inferno Prologue

Magma travels home to Nova Roma the long way round.

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.

Monday, 7 January 2019

New Mutants 86 - Acts of Vengeance

Given the protracted build-up for this issue it's fair to see expectations are higher than usual. And not only is this the series finally devoting a full issue to "Acts of Vengeance", but this is also a landmark for the creative team. It's the start of the run by Rob Liefeld.

New Mutants #86

Writer: Louise Simonson
Penciler: Rob Liefeld
Inker: Bob Wiacek
Letterer: Joe Rosen
Colourist: Glynis Oliver
Editor: Bob Harras
Editor-in-Chief: Tom DeFalco

Ah Rob Liefeld. It's astonishing to see that at the end of last issue he was actually billed strongly as about to start on the book. This is incredible for someone whose first published story had only appeared twenty months earlier and who had worked on a grand total of just a dozen issues before getting the gig. It's one thing to try a relatively new artist on a long-running book, it's another altogether to be heavily billing their arrival. Looking at this it seems clear that Liefeld peaked way too early and his style got stuck before it developed. Liefeld has his fans, as his sales over the years certainly demonstrate, but also his detractors, particularly given the way large charge of the comics industry started pursuing the style. I'm invariably biased as in the early 1990s I was largely reading titles that had avoided the trend and only first encountered Liefeld's work on a permanent(ish) basis with "Heroes Reborn", which wasn't the best circumstances.

Here the art shows a dynamism but also the odd awkward poses, extra-long legs and titillating shots that Liefeld would go on to be known for, though given the characters involved and Skids's established costume, the most overt are some of the angles of the Vulture's rear. It may be a theme of his story that he's showing there's life in the old man yet but there are some places better not gone. The multiple lines on faces actually works quite well for both the Vulture and Tinkerer, really emphasising that these are wrinkled old men. However the fight scenes are rather confused, with a limited sense of how the five characters are all positioned in relation to each other, and the explosive climax has captions describing what's happening over a two-panel spread that really fails to show the key moments of the sequence.

The plot is straightforward though we get a further dismissal of the wider crossover from Simonson with the Vulture receiving orders from an unseen stranger (but no doubt that particular mysterious stranger) to attack Speedball but decides this is beneath him, later bemoaning "Where's the villainy in that? Where's the prestige? Where's the vengeance?" and instead sets out to free Nitro, another old man being help sedated in a cannister to prevent him using his exploding powers. The Vulture aims to use those powers to show he's a force to be reckoned with. Meanwhile Rusty and Skids escape jail in the hope of capturing the Vulture and proving the value of mutants. However at the end Freedom Force show up, seemingly working for the government once more (another sign of the series's reluctance to integrate well with the wider crossover) to take them away. Later there's an attack on an energy research facility by a new terrorist group, the Mutant Liberation Front, and we also get our first glimpse of the mysterious Cable.

Given all the build-up to this issue and the high billing given to the series's new artist, expectations are flying higher than the Vulture. Unfortunately they're not met with a somewhat simplistic tale let down at key moments by the artwork. However it's good to see some villains rejecting the stock structure and heroes the overall scheme has assigned them as well as to show a villain at times written off as a feeble joke (and subject to more attempts at replacement than just about any without "goblin" in the name) striving to restore his reputation.

New Mutants #86 has been reprinted in:

Friday, 4 January 2019

New Mutants 85 - Acts of Vengeance

"Acts of Vengeance" continues to be an unwanted nuisance in this issue, which otherwise concludes the Asgard war storyline, but there is at least some awareness that there will be more less familiar than usual readers with captions on the first three pages quickly summarising what's going on and introducing all the key players in a two-page battle spread.

New Mutants #85

Writer: Louise Simonson
Penciler: Geoff Isherwood
Inker: Bret Blevins
Letterer: Joe Rosen
Colourist: Glynis Oliver
Editor: Bob Harras
Editor-in-Chief: Tom DeFalco

Back on Earth the plot continues at snail's pace as the Vulture throws off Rusty Collins and flies away to release Nitro the exploding man. Rusty in turn frees Skids. It's a quick scene but spreading it over multiple issues just makes it stand out how much this has been forced upon the wider story and Louise Simonson is doing the bare minimum. It's also unfortunate that there's another fill-in artist this time, Geoff Isherwood, and he draws the Vulture in his conventional flight suit rather than the prison uniform and modified wings seen last issue. This is building up for the next issue, but being such an afterthought in the series is continuing to be annoying given the way it's drawn people in.

The conclusion to the story in Asgard is mostly an action piece as just about everyone battles against Hela's army of giants, trolls, dwarves, dark elves and dark Valkyries, including Moonstar possessed by a cursed sword. Whilst everyone else is fighting Moonstar seeks to assassinate Odin and the New Mutants have to stop her, trying both words and physical force. There's a poignancy as Wolfsbane confronts her, trying to appeal to her true self but getting nowhere and it takes Eitri, a dwarf-lord, to expose the vulnerability of the sword, leaving Cannonball facing how to put an end to it all.

This issue is a step up from the previous one as it actually makes some attempt to explain the situation in Asgard and as the concluding part of a storyline there's a real sense of closure to it. But it's still first and foremost an issue of its own series resenting the imposition of a crossover and only giving away a few pages to slowly advance a subplot. It would probably have been better all-round if neither this nor the last issue had carried the "Acts of Vengeance" banner and so not exposed them as one of the weakest contributions to the whole arc.

New Mutants #85 has been reprinted in:

Wednesday, 2 January 2019

New Mutants 84 - Acts of Vengeance

In one way or another, every single one of the four mutant titles has a somewhat awkward relationship with the "Acts of Vengeance" crossover. None has a conventional style story in which the heroes are targeted by foes they haven't fought before. Sometimes the story could just as easily have been told without the wider event. And in most cases the titles were telling multi-part stories that had moved the heroes away from their normal spheres, with the event becoming an irritating intrusion.

New Mutants #84

Writer: Louise Simonson
Penciler: Terry Shoemaker
Inker: Al Milgrom
Letterer: Ken Bruzenak
Colourist: Glynis Oliver
Editor: Bob Harras
Editor-in-Chief: Tom DeFalco

Thus this is really the penultimate chapter of one of the series's own storylines, with "Acts of Vengeance" now announced via a banner on the cover but confined to two pages set on Earth; the intention presumably being that the two stories can be separated for reprints if necessary. The "Acts of Vengeance" sequence is extremely straightforward, continuing events in the prison that Rusty Collins has been sent to for reasons not given here. Another inmate is the Vulture, taunted for being past it and having been ignored by the organisers of all the attacks on the superheroes. But then he discovers a new set of wings with modifications made to his designs and determines to prove everyone wrong by breaking out with a supplied explosive then reasserting his name. Rusty tries to stop him but gets carried out as the Vulture flies off. It's a straightforward sequence setting things up for a later issue but feels like it was shovelled in to meet an editorial dictat to maximise the additional sales that would come from the crossover. It also implies that the organised nature of the attacks is either rather more obvious than other series imply, or recruiters have visited the jail (which seems more likely, given the presence of the wings).

As for the rest of the issue... Oh dear. To cut to the chase this is the penultimate part of a storyline set in Asgard which Hela, the Norse goddess of death, is about to attack. This issue is focused on getting the New Mutants, the Warriors Three and various other characters plus allies altogether to help the defence. As a result it's a fast-paced piece that moves a lot of people around. In the process it completely fails to explain just what the New Mutants are doing in Asgard or who the various groups are. It seems the story was written before it was realised that the crossover was coming and nobody tried to modify it.

This is a strong contender to be the single worst issue of all the books with "Acts of Vengeance" on the cover as it makes next to no concession for readers brought in by the crossover and doesn't even try to at least wield the theme of fighting other heroes' foes into the existing narrative. As we'll see elsewhere, Louise Simonson was one of several writers who openly expressed their dislike of the crossover, but most still did what they could to accommodate it and the new audience. This issue would have been better off not putting the banner on the corner of the cover and not bringing in extra readers just to confuse them.

New Mutants #84 has been reprinted in:

Saturday, 1 September 2018

New Mutants 83 - Acts of Vengeance

Here's an additional issue that isn't billed as part of the crossover or collected with it, but does a little preparation. This issue was published on the same day as Avengers Spotlight #26 and Amazing Spider-Man #326 so could have just as easily carried an "Acts of Vengeance" banner. As we'll see, this is as involved in the crossover as the next two issues which do. It even references the breakout at the Vault. However it's not offering itself to the world as part of the crossover and nor does it seem to have been collected as such.

New Mutants #83

Writer: Louise Simonson
Artist: Bret Blevins
Letterer: Joe Rosen
Colourist: Glynis Oliver
Editor: Bob Harras
Editor-in-Chief: Tom DeFalco

This issue, the last of Bret Blevins's run, contains just a couple of pages towards the big event, starting to set things up for a future issue. Rusty Collins is in a regular prison and learns of the Vault breakout from a paper when another prisoner is brought in, the Vulture. Widely taunted by the guards and other prisoners, the old man declares he will show them all and is inspired to seek help from Nitro whom he sees a report about. This is quite a quick little scene that serves to establish the characters for a later story.

The rest of the issue continues the New Mutants' long-running adventures in Asgard. Since the next issue is the first with a banner it's more appropriate to discuss this storyline there as this, presumably, was not intended to be read by readers coming in just for the crossover.

Overall the prison scene here is a straightforward piece that can help understanding the events in the next two issues, but this isn't something to search high and low for.

New Mutants #83 has been reprinted in:

Friday, 1 January 2016

What If... Essential Deadpool volume 1?

For a final look at a hypothetical Essential volume I turn to one of Marvel's biggest latter-day stars, the Merc with a Mouth in the days when he first became the Merc with a Monthly, the one and only Deadpool!

Woo hoo it's me!

Oh no! No! NO!

Hey I finally made it onto your blog!

Oh no you don't! Didn't you pay attention? You didn't know you were a comic character until the Writer of Death showed up and those issues aren't until later.

Yeah but you're inserting me into older material. And it wasn't quite Priest who...

Look let's stop this now. I'm the one with the keyboard, I'm the one who can type blanks into all your weapons - and I don't just mean your guns - and I'm not having another of these conversations. You have two choices - either p*** off and star in another film or I make like Fox and sew your f***ing mouth shut. GOT IT?!

Your funeral pal. See you in the funnier pages. Toodle-oo!

Now that that's over, back to normal service...

Essential Deadpool volume 1 would contain his first appearance in New Mutants #98, the two four-part limited series Deadpool: The Circle Chase and Deadpool: All New X-Men Limited Series (well that's what it says on the cover; it's also been called "Sins of the Past" in places) plus issues #1 to #11 & #-1 from his first ongoing series and the crossover annual Daredevil/Deadpool '97 as well as a guest appearance in the back-up story from Avengers #366 which ties in with the first limited series. That would make for a larger than usual volume but Deadpool's done this sort of thing before.

The bulk of the material can be found in Deadpool Classic volumes 1, 2 & 3 but the Avengers appearance is in Deadpool Classic Companion, an extra volume devoted to all those appearances sequential reprints often ignore. This doesn't include every early Deadpool appearance ever - in particular there are some X-Force storylines absent that would otherwise overwhelm any collected edition - but it catches his early years quite well. Otherwise, most of the earliest Deadpool limited and ongoing issues looked at here have been collected in a variety of editions, released in multiple countries and languages. The most complete source for the ongoing title is the Deadpool by Joe Kelly Omnibus.

(And for those wondering where the cover image has come from, it's a piece that did the rounds when the ongoing series was launched and is now probably best known as the cover for the trade paperback Deadpool: Mission Improbable which reprinted the first five ongoing issues back in 1998. Yes the standard practice for Essentials in the 21st century has been to use art from the original comics but since when did Deadpool ever conform to standard? And the obvious alternative image from New Mutants #98, as used on Deadpool Classic volume 1, is just hideous. It's unsurprising both the Italian edition and the British edition with just the two limited series went for the cover of the first issue of the second series, but this is a better option.)

Deadpool's first appearance in New Mutants is plotted & drawn by Rob Liefeld and scripted by Fabian Nicieza. The Circle Chase is written by Nicieza and drawn by Joe Madureira whilst the second limited series is written by Mark Waid and drawn by Ian Churchill, Lee Weeks and Ken Lashley. The ongoing series, including the "Flashback" and annual, is written by Joe Kelly with help from Pete Woods on one issue and contributions of a different kind from Stan Lee on another. The art on the series is mostly by Ed McGuinness with some issues by Kevin Lau, Shannon Denton and John Fang whilst John Romita contributes in a way on one issue whilst the "Flashback" issue #-1 is drawn by Aaron Lopresti and the annual by Bernard Chang. The Avengers story is written by Glenn Herdling and drawn by Mike Gustovich. Invariably this means there's a separate labels post. And I see someone has already done the dialogue for it. Grr...

This volume would cover an interesting and turbulent period in the comics market with Marvel and its travails often at the centre of the storm. During the early 1990s there was a massive rise in overall sales accompanied by a huge increase in the volume of titles and many characters received their own limited or ongoing series, with Deadpool amongst them. But it was notable that very few of Marvel's new titles lasted any length of time outside of the X-Men and Spider-Man families. (Exactly how few is subject to a few myths so worth checking in detail.) After a flurry of lasting successes launched in 1990 such as Namor the Sub-Mariner, Ghost Rider, Guardians of the Galaxy, New Warriors and even Barbie and Barbie Fashion, Marvel entered a long run of misses. Over the next six years many titles were launched but outside the Spider-Man and X-Men families only six series lasted more than three years - Darkhawk, Warlock and the Infinity Watch, Punisher War Zone, Spider-Man 2099 (counting that as a 2099 family title rather than a Spider-Man one), The Ren & Stimpy Show and Doom 2099. The last of these launched in early 1993 and all of these had gone by late 1996.

Meanwhile the various Marvel companies and divisions got involved in some complicated chaotic financial dealings that led to actions that exacerbated problems in the North American comics market, contributing to a massive crash, roughly around the time of Deadpool's second limited series and over the next few years Marvel lurched through a series of crisis decisions that saw many titles axed and several long running superhero titles farmed out to Image creators. The bleakest moment came in late 1996 with the announcement that Marvel had filed for bankruptcy protection. It seemed as though the creative edge had gone out of Marvel and few expected any new series to last.

Yet out of that winter came two series that did manage to last for a good number of years and show that Marvel had now got its mojo back. The second of these titles was Thunderbolts. The first was Deadpool.

But reading Deadpool's first appearance from some six years earlier there's nothing that hints at this. He may be the most prominent character on the cover of New Mutants #98 (with the element later lifted for the first of his Classic series) but within the story he's a one note character whose primary purpose is to establish the skill of another new character, Domino. Deadpool fights Cable and the other New Mutants before being overcome upon Domino's arrival and is then mailed to his employer with the implication that will be the end of him. As first appearances go it's extremely underwhelming though it establishes Deadpool as a rather chatty mercenary who just won't shut up. He would pop up again and again in the replacement title X-Force before benefiting from the massive explosion in the number of titles in the early 1990s in which even the most obscure character could get a limited series.

With the great explosion of came some titles came some not so great product and that's apparent here. The Circle Chase is primarily a quest series with Deadpool and a whole range of other characters hunting for an ultimate weapon mentioned in the will of the unseen Mr Tolliver. The quest spills over into a back-up story in the 30th anniversary Avengers issue which otherwise focuses on the Black Knight's battle with his squire turned evil, the Blood Wraith. The appearance here of Deadpool, and indeed the one-off Plug-Uglies - Flame and Foam - also searching for the weapon, provides a wider conflict to ensnare the Blood Wraith but otherwise is mainly incidental to the story, though there's a scene where Victoria Bentley is confused for Deadpool, something that can't happen that often. Even Deadpool's dialogue is tame, showing how difficult a character he is to write for.

Back in the regular series we're reintroduced to other elements of Deadpool's life such as his technician "Weasel", his artificial healing factor, his personal history with the mutant Copycat aka Vanessa and so forth. But the storyline itself is lame, consisting of a series of fights around the globe with the likes of Weapon X, Slayback, the Juggernaut, Black Tom Cassidy and various lesser foes, before a climax in which the weapon is revealed to be the least offensive tool imaginable and Deadpool saves himself through logic and selflessness in acting to heal Copycat. Overall this limited series just isn't anything to set the world on fire and is an unfortunate start to Deadpool's solo tales.

The US comics market was starting to go into freefall by the time the second limited series came along, but that may have been to the title's effect by increasing the talent available. This limited series is far more personal to Deadpool, focusing upon his history with the Weapon X project and as a mercenary plus his friendship with the X-Force member Siryn under the disapproving watch of her father Banshee. The story deals head on with one of the character's biggest problems, namely that his healing factor is so powerful that it removes any real sense of danger for the character. Here he has to come to terms with the factor failing and find a way to restore it, as well as a repeated encounter with the Juggernaut and Black Tom Cassidy, the latter now needing some healing of his own. It's a good little personally focused story, of the kind that the limited series format is best for. The only new character of any significance is Dr Killebrew, the geneticist responsible for Deadpool's healing factor in the first place and thus has good potential for recurring appearances over the years. Otherwise we get a movement of the lead character towards the more wacky side that would come into full force with the ongoing series.

Deadpool's ongoing title began in late 1996 and it's easy to forget now just how revolutionary or niche it often was. This series began before the regular South Park series launched, before the first Austin Powers movie had come out and indeed before much of the explosion of cartoony style adult humour series. Indeed at times it seems to be setting the trends. Marvel had done humorous titles before but never a mainstream universe superhero title with such a bizarre wackiness to it. This is a very experimental title that does its own thing, with a character highly different from the norm.

It's also easy to forget, especially now with such a major movie about to come out, that this was a title that was constantly fighting to survive and at times only holding on by the skin of its teeth. From memory Marvel announced its cancellation more than once and there was a big "Save Deadpool" campaign, trying to increase the number of subscribers to secure extra sales in advance. Marvel's then-recent track record on cancelling titles was not encouraging. Few honestly expected the series to last at all and expected Deadpool to then drop into obscurity. To predict the character's present day popularity and sales would have marked one as mad as the character. And yet somehow the book managed to last so long.

It's probable that Deadpool primarily survived because the series was so different from everything else the company was putting out and thus probably bringing in readers that Marvel otherwise couldn't reach. And the cancellation threat itself was oddly beneficial to the series, allowing the creators to experiment as much as they did because they had nothing to lose. The result was something truly amazing.

Now sure the issues contained here, covering the first year of the title, include some typical Marvel superhero comic clichés. There are the guest appearances, both by characters Deadpool has a history with and those with no previous connection. There's an encounter with a superhero team, allowing the Avengers logo to appear on the cover. There's a whole issue devoted to a Spider-Man encounter. There's some exploration of the character's past and origins. There's a supporting cast established, including an over helpful sidekick role, a recurring antagonist in day to day business and an elderly lady. And the storylines vary in length from done in one tales to multi-part sagas that try to go into more detail.

But it's the whole approach that is so different. It's best to think of the series as like an adult cartoon, with a foulmouthed anti-hero as the protagonist and some quite wacky and offbeat situations encountered along the way. The conventions are rarely conformed to but instead often sent up in their own wild and wacky way. Deadpool is slowly drifting towards herodom but it's a long journey for Wade Wilson, in spite of the hopes of Landau, Luckman and Lake in a long running subplot. Early on the healing factor is toned down, allowing for more tension. There's also a very unusual guest cast.

Weasel continues to help Deadpool from time to time, playing a pivotal role in the last issue as we learn more about his past and just how long an influence Wade has had on him. He makes for a likeable supporter who sticks by Deadpool in spite of everything and it works. More curious is Blind Al, an elderly woman who lives with Deadpool and we slowly discover she is his prisoner who has become accustomed to her situation despite all the crap she has to deal with. The exchanges between the two makes for a tricky relationship with each unable to admit how much they are dependent on the other. It can also set Deadpool back in the field, especially when Al sabotages his weapons.

As well as Deadpool's own home he also spends a lot of time at the "Hellhouse", a sort of community centre for mercenaries to hang out, collect assignments from the runner Patch and maintain tense relations with one another. Deadpool's main recurring rival in the series is the mercenary T-Ray, though the antagonism is not fully explored at this stage. There aren't too many new foes introduced at this stage with the main new one being Deathtrap who captures Deadpool and subjects him to a highly surreal situation. Otherwise the foes are drawn from a variety of other Marvel titles with appearances by the likes of Taskmaster, Vamp (one of the more obscure Captain America foes), Typhoid Mary and Kraven the Hunter.

The potential list of guest stars was not great if the title was consciously trying to avoid encounters with the X-Men family at this stage. A good chunk of big name heroes were absent because of the transfer to the Heroes Reborn pocket universe, but that proves advantageous in forcing a more experimental approach with those that are left. The first issue features Sasquatch, between stretches in Alpha Flight, with the traditional misunderstanding, fight and then team-up. Later on we get an appearance by Siryn which sets out just what Deadpool actually means to her. The handling of his rather creepy stalking her and hovering outside her bedroom window is a bit tame though. There's a tense encounter with the Hulk, at this point in his most inhospitable with Bruce Banner having been torn out of him. But the most memorable tales come with three other guest stars.

An extended story with Typhoid Mary leads to a crossover with Daredevil in the annual but this is different from what has come before. Although many a prior annual has contained a guest star joining the regular hero (and some have forgotten which is which), this one is the first to give joint billing to both stars. It was a successful experiment that led to nearly every annual the following year being such a team-up book. The story itself provides a strong contrast between Deadpool's wackiness and the traditional darkness of Daredevil, adding in a twist from the latter's past as he discovers just how responsible for Typhoid Mary's life he really is. Meanwhile Weasel and Foggy Nelson go out on the town, with the consequence that Deuce the Devil Dog changes owner and titles. A dog companion is part of old comics silliness that feels totally at home in Deadpool's title.

But two other guest appearances at the end of the selection are even more amazing. First come, wait for it, the Great Lakes Avengers. Sorry, a correction. At this point they had brought out of the Avengers franchise (the actual team being disbanded and presumed dead can't have helped) and were now "the west coast adjunct to the Thunderbolts... the Lightning Rods! Attracting malignancy away from those it would see electrocuted in its negatively charged grip of evil!" This was the first time the team changed their name, although the cover of issue #10 retains the original. On their few prior appearances the GLA Lightning Rods have been treated as a joke aspiring to Avengers membership and here they encounter Deadpool at an aquarium resulting in total chaos as they fight. By this stage the series has settled into a fantastic alternate cartoon approach and this works incredibly well.

Before we get to the final issue though, a quick word about the "Flashback Month" issue. And frankly #-1 is an example of where the gimmick completely failed. It was published in the middle of the Typhoid Mary storyline (and thus has had to be relocated to before it for collected editions), apologies for the interruption but doesn't really tie into anything in the ongoing series beyond the interest in Deadpool by Zoe Culloden of Landau, Luckman and Lake. And here her investigations only bring her into indirect contact with Wade, instead focusing upon Vanessa when she worked the streets. A character called Montgomery is created for the story seemingly only to allow a cover image of a terribly burned face. Overall we have the mess of trying to create a Silver Age retro feel for the most Modern Age of characters, made worse by the issue not actually focusing upon him at all. To top it off we now have to accept that the Landau, Luckman and Lake interest in Deadpool has been going for at least a decade, which may be a commentary on how long some subplots last but feels more like a product of trying to come up with anything that could tie in with the current title. Going by the issues in this selection alone, one could easily skip #-1 and miss nothing at all.

A much more successful attempt to create a Silver Age feel yet apply it to Deadpool comes in issue #11, a triple sized issue that is the inevitable Spider-Man issue but comes in a very different form. Rather than a fight or a team-up we get a wonderful time travel story in which Deadpool and Blind Al find themselves thrown through time and arrive in 1967 just in time to take part in the events of Amazing Spider-Man #47. The original issue is reprinted at the end and is a somewhat typical example of the middle period of Stan Lee's run on the title with John Romita's art really coming to the fore in a tale focused on Flash Thompson's leaving party with a gatecrashing by Kraven. But it's also an example of the innocence of the Silver Age comics and the weird slang that can sound utterly incomprehensible at times. And that becomes the beauty of it.

Deadpool and Blind Al find themselves impersonating Peter Parker and Aunt May respectively as they wander through the events of the issue, often drawn into the original comic pages in a Forrest Gump manner. Pete Woods's new art is highly sympathetic to the original, helped by veteran inkers Al Milgrom and Joe Sinnott recreating a classic feel. However the script is mocking in all its glory as Deadpool and Al brings their own sensibilities to it, commenting on the mad slang, the Osborn hair, the sexual undertones to what was originally written as fairly innocent material and so forth. Against all this the fight with Kraven is even more of an afterthought than in the original issue. Overall this is a wonderful contrast of the classic and modern approach with wonderfully biting satire to boot, making for what is easily the best issue in the whole selection.

As a whole this is a series that knows it's allowed to be different and revels in it. There had been anti-hero leads in comic series before but never any quite like Deadpool. His earlier appearances had shown some potential but also a lot of extraneous moments that have to be waded through. But the ongoing series finds a strong niche and runs with it as a comic form of adult sitcom cartoon, sending up the situations and presenting a wacky lead with incredible dialogue and few inhibitions. Based on this selection alone, Joe Kelly is the best Deadpool writer so far, really nailing the character. There are some individual poor issues but there are also some incredible ones, with #11 a contender for one of the absolute best Marvel issues of the 1990s.

So should Deadpool have had an Essential volume? Absolutely! Deadpool is a character who has transcended all other rules so recentism is no problem. There's a lot of material out there - the Classic reprints are already up to volume 14! - and a good cheap bulky volume would be a good primer. The Classics suffer from the first volume having to contain the two limited series so an Essential volume would get deep into the main run.

Yay! Now to time travel once more and sort it out.

Sigh... Oh well, he's someone else's problem now.