My descent down the Marvel hole continues.
I've read so much the past month I feel like I could do a Bachelor's thesis on Marvel history by now.
Got a hold of some missing issues of the Secret Invasion and Siege which cleared a lot of stuff up. I feel like they under played the godlike nature of the Asgardians during the siege. Thor alone is capable of starting a Norse doomsday for mankind if he wanted, wiping out a bunch of up start villains shouldn't be that much of a hassle.
The Sentry though. Man is he a crazy character. I kind of dislike his power set, too powerful, but that also makes him fascinating as a wild card in every situation. If you want to go by the story told/proposed he's
Which certainly explains his abilities but I don't like the idea that this origin trumps Thor or Ares power.
Anyway I don't get how
What ever.
I like Parker Robbins/The Hood as a new mid level power player with aspirations. He's got a good power set and a practical super powered gangster mentality. I feel like he's a character that should always be in the background like a super natural kingpin.
After Siege I am jumping around a bit. I've read a couple of issues of the newest Avengers and I've started the Kamala Khan Ms Marvel series.
How does Tony Stark continue to make enemies of all the heroes only for then in the next generation of comics they're back to square one? Is he secretly mind wiping them with nanites?
New Ms Marvel is great. Much like the Champions volume I read earlier, I think they do a fantastic job of writing a new teenage hero for the kids of the 2010s. The writing is clever and up beat. They manage to implement internet age topics and identity politics with out it getting nauseating.
I was one of the people who roled their eyes when I heard they were "ethnizising" another old marvel super hero but they proved me completely wrong with Kamala Khan. Her Muslim, Pakistani(?), New Jersey heritage makes her novel instead of pandering. It's interesting to read a whole different take on the teenage hero stories I adored to read about Spiderman when I was a kid.
I also read through House of M and various M side stories. This seemed pretty throw away, no where the depth or creativity of Age of Apocalypse. I did greatly enjoy the Spider-man portion of this though. He got the perfect life he always dreamed of and then even that fell apart and then he snaps out of the delusion and Gwen is dead and they never had kids together. 30 something years of happiness taken away and replaced with all his hardships.
I loved how when they woke in the tower he was just screaming and smashing things in a comically sad way. You've got to feel for the guy.
Also reading Punisher Max right now. That's some violent comics right there. Punisher when written right is fascinating. It's easy to enjoy him punishing fictional cartoon gangsters but it gets really good when they turn it around on the reader and show the Punisher as a monster rather than a hero. It's best when you're on that edge between wondering whether the world needs castle or he should be dead.
Still my earlier complaint/objection remains. How the fuck does he survive that much physical trauma? He lost a fucking rib in the first issue of Punisher Max! I swear he's secretly a mutant or he's blessed by a deity or something.
Somebody should keep a tally of all the physical damage he takes over the course of the publication history and have a trauma doctor tally how long it would take him to recover or how debilitating the damage would be permanently.
Still reading Rick Remenders X-force. About 300 pages in. That's some good black ops mutant heroics. Favourite bit so far was watching Deadpool slicing off pieces of himself and feeding them to a recovering archangel. That's fucked up.
This post has been edited by Alternative Goose: 18 August 2018 - 06:28 PM