Spider-Man takes on Morlun, Pt. 2

We’ll pick up right where we left off.  Y’know, where old man Ezekiel tells Spider-Man he has no chance and is going to die.  What a bummer.  Unfortunately, as I said yesterday, the minute Spider-Man loses Morlun, the supervillain will just kill civilians and wreck the city until Spider-Man shows up again.  Sure, Spider-Man just got caught in an explosion a few minutes before, but he has to jump right back into the action.  Mainly because Morlun’s a jerk:

Maybe Peter Parker should invest in a spider-coat, because I don’t think any tailor is good enough to sew that outfit back together.  Witness Spider-Man’s nerd rage against Morlun’s supervillainy.  And by the way, Morlun’s the perfect supervillain.  Every action he takes is for the completion of his own selfish goals.  He spews apathy and disregard for anyone or anything who gets in his way, no matter how many lives are ruined or how much destruction is caused.  Well, that and a significant satisfaction when the hero fights back.  And oh, does he fight back.

Game over?  Well, no, because this is the just the start of the article.  But as painful as the fight was, the getaway isn’t any less joyous.

Now Spider-Man has like five or six minutes before Morlun catches up to him.  Probably less.  Spider-Man’s hit that well-dressed hippie with every ounce of strength and move in his arsenal.  He knows he’s going to lose.  And if you only have a few moments left before you’re pounded into mush and drained of your life force, what would you do?  I know you as the reader aren’t blasting Enya while you read these, but please understand the emotional intensity in the next scene.  He makes the last phone call of his life.

Luckily, in the first good news since this arc began, Spider-Man finally has some help.  Not Hulk or X-Men help, but still help.  And oh, how it’s sweet.

You have to buy the comic book to see the process through which Ezekiel changes his mind.  But he does.  Y’see, Ezekiel, having the same powers as Spider-Man, also qualifies as a “totem” that Morlun wants to absorb.  So with the extra muscle comes far higher stakes.

Look, Parker’s not Reed Richards smart.  Or Bruce Banner smart or Tony Stark smart or Hank Pym smart or T’Challa smart or you get the idea, but he does have all the makings of a science genius. And with his high science IQ, he examines, studies, and realizes a neat little truth about his seemingly invincible opponent.

Well, with Morlun fast approaching and Spider-Man’s final act of desperation underway, everything we’ve seen and every attack that’s been thrown has led up to this moment.  Has Morlun drank his last cappucino?

Morlun didn’t know today would also be educational.  Let Spider-Man explain.  Using science.

After four issues of Morlun smacking around Spider-Man while Spider-Man futilely defends himself, the tide has finally turned.  What follows is a good half an issue of Parker just pounding on Morlun.  I’ll show you one or two of the highlights.

Eventually because fights have winners and losers, the radiation takes a toll on our antagonist.  Struck against the wall of the laboratory (symbolically), we see his true form, his final plea, and the thrilling conclusion.

Victory!  With that, Spider-Man’s broken bones, charred back, massive radiation poisoning, and bruised everything can finally heal.  He does heal at an accelerated rate, but I’m talking a few days instead of a year and a half of surgery and rehabilitation.  Oh, and he should probably take care of the final loose end:

Besides the crazy beating Spider-Man endures, what makes this story so important?  Ezekiel does return for an awesome story a few arcs later (that you should find and read), but it’s nothing long-lasting.  Y’see, the fight against Morlun changes the series for a good decade.  Because of this:

Yeah, that’s a big deal.

Morlun week continues tomorrow with his resurrection and return.  Oh, and I hope you like punching, because by comparison, it makes these first two parts look like a birthday party.


Spider-Man takes on Morlun, Pt. 1

It’s Morlun week!  Nope, not a drunken misspelling of King Arthur’s wizard.  The next four days will chronicle Morlun’s entire appearance in the Marvel universe: about 14 issues and 3 arcs.  He’s minor for sure, but this supervillain may be the most dangerous foe Spider-Man has ever fought.  I’m not just saying that to get you to read my article, I promise.

Now, because I’m not exactly sure how Fair Use applies to comic books (and the fights are practically every page of the issues), I’m only going to show you like a third to half the pages of their fights.  The goal of this blog is to get you to go out and buy comics anyway, so you have to plop down some money to see the whole thing (also the whole I don’t want to have to take down my website).  Before we start though, let’s talk about Peter Parker!

Spider-Man’s my favorite superhero.  I’ll freely and proudly admit it to friends, family, dates, etc.  But let’s be fair, he’s not exactly one of the heavy hitters of the Marvel universe.  He couldn’t take Thor or Hulk, for instance.  Heck, remember this scene from Amazing Spider-Man #534?

And keep in mind, Spider-Man’s far stronger, faster, and more agile than Captain America.  But regardless of his shortcomings, he’s relentless, smart, and has immense moral integrity.  I’m saying Spider-Man would beat the crap out of Hawkeye.

Anyway, we go back to Amazing Spider-Man #30-35, volume 2, written by J. Michael Straczynski and drawn by John Romita Jr.  This arc actually won the 2002 Eisner award for best serialized story, which are the Oscars for comics.  Parker just took a job as a science teacher at his old high school and life’s not too bad (a sharp contrast from around the previous 40 years of Spider-Man comics).  Then, he suddenly an old man named Ezekiel finds him, who just so happens to have the exact same powers as dear Parker.  More importantly, turns out Ezekiel has some inside information about an upcoming threat.  Y’know, Morlun.

Let me explain about Morlun.  Turns out certain superheroes and villains throughout history have been animal “totems,” essentially a combo between men and animals.  This Morlun has traveled the world hunting down these totems, because he needs occasionally to drain  “life force” from these totems in order to live.  I mean, a really good totem could subsist him for a hundred years or so, and unfortunately, Spider-Man fits the profile.  This story is actually the start of the idea that last from the first half of the 2000s that maybe Spider-Man’s powers are more magical than scientific, which is a super cool idea.

Anyway, Morlun found out what city Spider-Man lives in, waited until the Fantastic Four/Avengers were out of town, and attempts to draw him out.

I wasn’t lying when I said Morlun may possibly be the most dangerous enemy Spider-Man’s ever fought.  Y’see, besides hitting crazy hard, he has some extra scary perks.  Not a good day for Spider-Man.  Oh, but Morlun will tell you.

Spider-Man totally has this.  Check out this montage:

But I don’t think I’ve been clear enough.  What’s so hardcore about a well-dressed long-haired strongman?  I mean, he doesn’t have electric powers or a flying glider or anything.

I guess he can also absorb life force from normal people too.  Even nice people who just want to know if the man who fell fifteen stories isn’t dead.  Spider-Man doesn’t have a rage problem, but he’ll get plenty angry.  Remember this incident?  And sucking energy out of innocent civilians certainly helps rile our hero up.

If you like punching, this arc is about 90% punching.  Just saying.

So what’s the problem with running away for a little bit to recover?  Well, two main setbacks.  First, Morlun can track him.  And second, the minute Spider-Man gets too far away, Morlun’ll kill civilians and wreck the city until Spider-Man fights him again.  And sadly, for all his spider-powers, spider-healing is not one of them.

Yes, let’s cheer together!  Spider-Man’s fought hundreds of bad guys thousands of times and he’s come out on top every single time.  One vampire-ish dude in a trench coat ain’t going to be the one who does him in.  Though as you know, Morlun fights dirty.

Sure, Morlun only has one henchman, but to be fair, that’s one more than you or I have.  Unless you are a supervillain, in which case I apologize and please don’t hurt me.

Can you guess who Spider-Man’s mysterious benefactor might be?  I’m going to spoil it: Ezekiel. That dude runs a major corporation, has extensive knowledge about our antagonist, and has had spider-powers for decades.  He’ll definitely have some good advice.

Well, that sucks.  To be continued indeed!


Magneto’s clone problem, Pt. 2

We’ll pick up right where we left off on Friday.  Magneto’s clone has decided he’s going to do that whole replace the original guy fantasy all clones dream about in their little clone beds.

Round two, buddy.

Not Magneto.

That’s Magneto.

Pay attention to Magneto’s face during this battle.  That’s not the face of a hero.  This miniseries isn’t going to lie to you.  Like what Magneto does next:

Do you know why Magneto’s constantly rated as one of the top supervillains of all time?  Part of it’s definitely because he can control giant planes and crash them into his opponents.  But the commanding large vehicles idea builds a following.  Time for Joseph to counter with some wheels of his own.

Trust me, this is the best train chucking fight you’ve ever seen.  I even cut a page or two.  The main difficulty in writing Magneto remains getting him into locations that happen to be Magneto-friendly. And by that I mean lots of big stuff to throw around.  Oh, I guess also the politics and philosophical situations revolving around Magneto’s personal beliefs and aspirations.  But mostly places to barrage dudes with transportation.

Why he saves those people is up for debate.  Certainly he’s at least attempting to do some good, as that’s kind of the whole point of the X-Men.  And Magneto isn’t about to let innocent civilians perish in this grudge match.  Maybe.  I don’t know, but he does end this fight with a single blow.  As the master of magnetism should.

And now the final ramblings of a beaten supervillain.  It’s an important tradition.

Breathe in this moment.  Magneto has spent his entire adult life fighting humanity, spewing the exact hate-fueled rhetoric about humans as the man spills bile about mutants.  They’re angry and aggressive, but they’re still just civilians.  Professor X would turn the other cheek.  Cyclops would attempt to pacify the situation.  The Avengers would flee the scene.  And Magneto?

He slaughters them.  After all, that’s how Magneto’s dealt with humans for over a half century and old habits die hard.  Emphasis on the dying and hard.  A tragic moment certainly, but he’s never truly claimed the title of superhero.  The path to redemption and rehabilitation is long and arduous.  And for Magneto?  Baby steps:


Magneto’s clone problem, Pt. 1

You don’t have to look far and deep to find proof of Magneto’s villainy.  The master of magnetism commands absolute power of metal, magnetic fields, and probably stuff like blood pressure and mercury poisoning.  He’s not a good man, broken by the atrocities he experienced in the Holocaust and from his misguided attempts at mutant superiority through blood and war.  Magneto certainly claims the title of the most influential and dangerous enemy the X-Men have ever fought.

But not anymore.  Nope, now Magneto’s an actual X-Man, dating Rogue (half his age), and saving mutantkind from evildoers.  Except as much as he fights alongside Cyclops, Wolverine, and the gang, 70 years of bad behavior isn’t going to disappear overnight.  And unfortunately, something to reinforce that happened recently in the Magneto: Not a Hero miniseries, written by Skottie Young and drawn by Clay Mann.

I get it.  Mutants are really easy to hate.  They have scary powers.  Some have scales and feathers. But think about it: how many of the mutants, if they really put forth effort, can take down, say, a tank? Like half, right?  If every time someone makes a mutant hate speech, there’s an actual substantial risk that a bird man can fly in and drop off an egg that shoots lasers or whatever, how often would these little get-togethers happen?  And unfortunately, these bigoted jerks have to learn that lesson the hard way.

You’re a perceptive audience.  You’ve noticed the title of the article and can safely assume that’s not the Magneto we know and love.  Definitely not the Magneto who’s dating the fiery crawfish and shoved it in Gambit’s smug handsome face.  Looks like the X-Men have to do a little PR.

So Magneto, not quite as intimidating in a purple button-down, has to go find and deal with this impostor before the Avengers are forced to take action against the X-Men.  I mean, the Avengers do take action against the X-Men, but that’s a totally different Marvel event.  And that event has way less metal chucking.

Enjoy monologues by crazy supervillains?  I hope so.  Evil plans don’t explain themselves.

Good advice for later: clones don’t like to be reminded they’re inferior.  Probably the same way with twins.  Unfortunately, Joseph is every bit as strong as Magneto.  And just as important, you only get to sucker punch Magneto once.

Have you ever read a superhero comic where the protagonist faces even odds?  Of course not. Superhero stories are fun because the good guys are always outmatched.  But what’s so terrifying about a clone?  Well, what about plural?

An entire (deformed) Brotherhood of Mutants!  Magneto gets to fight his old gang while wearing slacks and a t-shirt.  Though, let’s make one thing clear.  There’s a reason Magneto led the team.

Despite his fancy X-Men membership card, killing dangerous and evil bad guys isn’t really a deal breaker.  I mean, he probably shouldn’t brag to Cyclops or anything, but even Wolverine hacks up a dozen or so people an issue.

As you can tell, Joseph has something more mysterious and sinister going on.  Unfortunately for you, I’m not going to get into it.  As a quick note, it involves conspiracies, corporate espionage, and arrogant backstabbing.  Y’see, that last little rumble was the warm up.  Magneto’s pissed, and nothing excites me more than the most powerful of characters “letting go.”  Sure, it’s fun to watch the Hulk uppercut a giant lizard or something, but when he hits the giant lizard so hard that its torso changes from solid to liquid, my friends are going to hear about it.  In a loud passionate recap.  Whether that want to or not.  Usually not.

Round 2’s on Monday, kiddos.  Who’ll win?  Will it be Magneto?  Or Magneto?


Batgirl and the assassin prep school

If you ever question how Batman patrols all of Gotham City every night, I reassure you that the Bat family is huge.  Criminals might not get sucker punched by the Batman himself, but don’t forget Robin, Nightwing, Batgirl, Batwoman, Huntress, Red Robin, Catwoman, Manhunter, Man-Bat, Azrael, Etrigan, and more.  That’s a lot of kung fu in Gotham.  Today though, we’re taking a little look at Stephanie Brown, my favorite Batgirl.

I know it’s fairly blasphemous to like Stephanie over Barbara Gordon (the original Batgirl and Nightwing’s redheaded paramour), but Stephanie’s 2009 series was an absolute delight, written by Brian Q. Miller and drawn by a whole bunch of talented artists.  Unfortunately, in 2011, DC rebooted their entire lineup, and all of a sudden Barbara was back in the Batgirl role.  Stephanie had just disappeared with no explanation given.  Well, until the Batman Incorporated: Leviathan Strikes one-shot came out, written by Grant Morrison and drawn by Cameron Stewart.

Though before we jump into the story, we should very quickly cover this Batgirl’s history.  Y’see, she’s the daughter of Cluemaster, a C-list supervillain.  Disgusted by his criminal actions, Stephanie put on a costume, called herself Spoiler, and set out to ruin her father’s plans.

Along the way, she sparked up a friendship and eventual relationship with the Robin of the time, Tim Drake.  And when Tim’s dad found out about his little crime fighting hobby, daddy Drake obligated Tim to quit.  And to be fair to Tim’s dad, I wouldn’t want my son jumping off rooftops wearing a bright red and green costume either.  Stephanie, anxious to prove herself, snuck into the Bat cave, and forced Batman to make her the next Robin.

This lasts about five issues.  Stephanie broke Batman’s rules.  Wayne’s refusal of Stephanie actually led to the major event War Games, which is a crazy complicated and tragic story that I’m not going to go into.  But cut to 2009.  Wayne’s currently dead and Nightwing becomes the new Batman.  The current Batgirl, Cassandra Cain, has given up the role, and Stephanie used the opportunity to claim the job opening.

So with DC rebooted and Stephanie gone AWOL, where did she go?  I’m here to answer that question.  Lean back, sip your beverage, and fall in love with the only blonde Batgirl once more.

Stephanie’s sent deep undercover to break up an all-girl assassin prep school.  Yes, I’m excited too.

Just like your science classes, right?  No doodling in explosives class, students.

Who hasn’t had a firearm pulled on them in the gym locker room?  But c’mon, she’s secretly Batgirl, and guns are what wussies use.

Now as you may wonder, what’s the purpose of this school?  Sure, a sexy military boot camp sounds great on paper, but shouldn’t these girls learn algebra and not mixed martial arts?  Well, trust me when I say this boarding school is definitely “for profit.”

And their tests?  Not exactly standardized.  Luckily, a good decade or so of training alongside the finest superheroes in the DC universe allows Stephanie to practically cheat.  She’s taken out Clayface and Scarecrow, so a gaggle of teenage girls isn’t really a terribly stressful situation.

Yup, now we get to see the dirt behind the official induction ritual.  What makes this school so evil that Batman plans to break it up?  Here’s a hint: it’s not the chess club.

Professor Pyg(‘s son)!  Just another wacky supervillain Gotham scientist, who carves up people and spreads mind-controlling gas.  He’s only been around for five years or so, but Professor Pyg’s one of the craziest villains Batman’s ever gone up against.  Oh, and I guess he has a kid.

With her cover blown, our lovely hero’s going to have to take down the school the only way the Bat family does: kicking the crap out of all of them.

What a beautiful, fist-pumping moment we just experienced!  You know why Batman and his group always win?  Because they’re better than everyone else.  Superpowers are for losers.

Also, keep in mind Stephanie has spent her entire comic book existence trying to prove herself to Bruce Wayne.  He rejected her as both Spoiler and Robin.  He refused to let her participate in patrols or training.  She accidentally unleashed the largest gang war Gotham City has ever seen.  So when Batman gives his indirect approval, that’s winning the superhero lottery.

Oh, and as our story comes to an end, I won’t send you off without learning a partial truth behind the evil killer academy.  You deserve it.

The identity of the headmistresses?  You’re going to have to read the rest of the issue to find that out. But anyway, mission accomplished!  Though for her sake, I hope Stephanie’s school credits will transfer.


A non-love story with Namor and Sue

No beating around the bush here: Namor, the shirtless king of Atlantis, has a major crush on Sue Richards, the Invisible Woman and mother of two.  I’ve actually covered it briefly in my previous Fantastic Four article.  Oh, we’re definitely going to see lots of panels of Namor shameless hitting on the Invisible Woman.  And it’s delightful.  But before that, it’s important to cover a little bit of history. Because regardless of the X-Men or whatever team the Atlantean king’s currently a part of, he’s forever linked to the Fantastic Four.

Y’see, Namor’s success in today’s comic market sparked in Fantastic Four #4, written by Stan Lee and drawn by Jack Kirby.  The Sub-Mariner had fallen off the radar after the 1940s.  Luckily, in 1961, the Human Torch stumbles upon a certain familiar hobo.

Unfortunately, Namor finds out that during his years as an amnesiac bum, his home in the ocean hasn’t been treated very kindly by mankind.  So he tries to kill everyone.  Oops.  Luckily, the Fantastic Four are there to stop him.  Kind of.

And that my friends, is my gift to you: the very first ever meeting between the two.  To put this in perspective, Dr. Doom, the clear arch-nemesis of the Fantastic Four, makes his debut in the next issue.  This comic gem is pre-Doom.

Let’s skip ahead 40 years.  In the current series, Sue has two wonderful kids (one genius and one reality-altering mutant) and her marriage to Reed Richards still holds tight.  The team has their own building, is super rich, and has gained both the respect of the Marvel universe and a massive rogue gallery.  But Namor’s pining for dear Sue hasn’t sunk (sorry) in the least.  We’re going to start with Fantastic Four #6, volume 3, written by Chris Claremont and drawn by Salvador Larocca.

She loves the water.  Reminds her of the ocean.  Though, wouldn’t be a bad idea to return to shore since a certain Atlantean is perving at the bottom of the pool.

After the initial bad first impression, Namor and the Fantastic Four have a sort of weird friendship going on.  And while Namor still isn’t too fond of humanity, he’s not summoning sea monsters to destroy the cities.  Now, Sue rejects his advances.  Every time.  But why does she put up with it for as long as she does? My theory: her husband, the smartest man in the world, is never not busy and almost always emotionally unavailable.  She uses Namor for positive attention.  Don’t feel bad for the king of Atlantis.  He doesn’t really care.

Rejection number one of hundreds.  Though why Sue Richards?  Certainly a man of his status and abs could have practically any woman he so desires.  And he does.  Frequently.  But Namor can only truly respect and love his equals.  Part of having an unwieldy ego.  As proven in Fantastic Four #587, written by Jonathan Hickman and drawn by Steve Epting, that despite the soccer mom persona, the Invisible Woman absolutely stands as his equal.  Oh, and somewhere a few issues back, she became a sea queen.  It happens.

Embarrassed in front of mutant-Triceratops and aqua-Voldemort?  Namor’s not going to stand for that. No matter their past, she better get ready for the beating of her lifetime.

Or not.  The flirting will continue.  She is, after all, magnificent.

Look, Mr. Fantastic’s reputation as a husband isn’t exactly stellar.  Yes, the two love each other deeply and always will – they’re definitely superhero soulmates.  And truthfully, he does the best he can.  Probably.  But keep in mind, Sue ain’t a science genius.  She has very little knowledge or interest in the wacky devices her husband invents.  So he has to take time from exploring microuniverses and making teleporting motorcycles to spend quality time with the missus.  And because he’s a dude, in the secretive company of his friends, he’ll let off some steam and complain. After all, the most influential men in the Marvel universe whining about their significant others takes up the first third of New Avengers: Illuminati #4, written by Brian Michael Bendis and Brian Reed and drawn by Jim Cheung.  Peer pressure and whatnot.

Get ready, because sometimes words can hurt far more than repulsor rays.

It’s not drawn, but I promise if we zoomed in on Reed’s face, you’d see a single rubbery tear run down his face.

Everything I’ve shown you today leads into the Fantastic Four: 1234 miniseries, written by Grant Morrison and drawn by Jae Lee.  This story isn’t canon, which means it never actually took place in the “real” Marvel universe.  And you’ll understand why in a few pictures.  Dr. Doom decides to take out the Fantastic Four by targeting them individually.  He finds their biggest weakness and exploits it. Guess what Sue’s is?  Here’s a hint: his costume consists entirely of a speedo.

Though first, Sue and Alicia Masters (Thing’s girlfriend) have some lovely little girl talk.

Now I’m not a girl, and I don’t really know how girl talk works, but I imagine it’s just as poetic and full of metaphors as the above.  Luckily, all this Namor talks comes in handy, because guess who knocks on the front door?

Yes, that’s usually the greeting when a friend stops by.

Unfortunately for him and thank goodness for her, she receives an emergency alert from her brother needing help underground.  Namor tags along, helping the Invisible Woman and disobeying his promise and support to Dr. Doom.  The Atlantean king takes out the mole people and refuses to succumb to his primal dirty urges.  And as Sue thanks the Sub-Mariner, witness the sweetest and most mind-boggling scene in the entire mini-series.

That’s why it’s not canon.  They don’t even hide it.  She smooches sea royalty in front of the Human Torch and the Thing.  And no one mentions this again.  Reed and Sue have a strong marriage. Hopefully.

And on a final note, despite the long history and emotional connection between Namor and Sue, it’s just his nature to pursue unavailable, self-assured women.  He can’t help himself.

Cyclops, Emma Frost’s boyfriend, isn’t even three feet away and he attempts to seduce her. Seriously, it must be comic book magic because I’ll never figure out how his swimsuit could ever possibly hold the size of his balls.


Superman vs. Earth-Man

Stop me if you’ve heard this before.  In the 31st century, alien xenophobia runs rampant.  Y’see, the future Justice League believes that Superman was actually born and raised on Earth, protecting the planet from all the harm of the evil aliens.  We know this isn’t true.  The Legion of Superheroes knows this isn’t true.  The people of Earth though, believe it wholeheartedly.  So Earth law decrees all aliens and alien supporters need to be killed or kicked off planet.  Because Superman is a symbol or something.  Look, what’s important is that the Justice League are the bad guys and the Legion of Superheroes are the good guys.  And when Superman gets transported into the future to help out, he fights with the Legion.

One little problem.  In the 31st century, Earth’s sun shines red.  For the uninitiated, why is this bad? Well, remember there used to be a whole planet of Kryptonians like Superman.  Yet they had the all the superpowers of you or me.  The reason, we find out, is because red solar rays nullify any superpowers.  Yellow solar rays make Superman what we know and love.  If that sounds kind of dumb to you, also understand that Superman just used a time machine to go a thousand years into the future.  Suspend your disbelief and buckle in for the ride.  How has Batman dodged hundreds of thousands of bullets in his crime fighting career?  Because he has, that’s why.

Anyway, Earth-Man, a supervillain whose power lets him permanently absorb the powers of other superheroes, leads the evil Justice League.  At the climax of the story, which is our focus today, he possesses every superpower in his time.  Superman, of course, currently has no powers.  That’s not going to stop him as they sneak into the evil space station.  Enjoy the final issue of Superman and the Legion of Superheroes, written by Geoff Johns and drawn by Gary Frank.

That dazed alien lady’s one of the lost Legion(naires?).  Also, as Superman’s suspicious look suggest, she’s not one the Legion(naires?).

Turns out Earth-Man absorbed some shapeshifting.  And why does Earth-Man want to kill the symbol and inspiration for all the future Earth’s superheroes?  Insecurities, greed, and other personality blunders I’m not going to show you.  More importantly, this is like Batman going up against Superman, if Batman didn’t have any kryptonite, a utility belt, or anywhere to hide.

Not going well for our hero, huh?  But despite his name, you know something Earth-Man doesn’t have?  Yes, the unrelenting spirit of humankind.  Y’know, the stuff that the alien from Krypton spills out of every pore.  Allow me to present the next few panels clearly exhibiting both the bravest and stupidest action Superman has ever taken.

Now before you anxiously await the next panel where Superman’s head pops, that ring he wears lets him fly on Earth and in space.  Unfortunately, Earth-Man also knows this.

As we cut back to the space station, the tension builds.  Superman has about a minute before he becomes superpaste.  Y’see, the superhero Sunboy had been used to keep the sun a nice shade of crimson.  Can the Legion wake him up in time using their secret weapon of attractive alien tongue?

Of course they can.  But will Superman get his powers back in time?

Of course he will.  Who leads the Justice League back in the 21st century?  Who commands respect and admiration through his unwavering moral attitude?  Darn tootin’ it’s Superman.

You have to understand, Superman most likely has the ability and power to single-handedly destroy planets.  No one’s stronger, faster, or tougher than the Man of Steel.  His crazy amount of power makes his devotion to the law of his country and protecting the innocent citizens impossible to stray from. Because the second he punches a hole through a criminal’s chest or doesn’t pay his taxes, the people of Earth will cry themselves in fear.  If he didn’t hold back, no one could stop him.  You know why Batman can beat Superman?  Because Superman has too much moral integrity to simply smush Bruce Wayne into a wall smear within milliseconds of their fight.

And now Earth-Man is going to know who he’s really up against.  He’s going to understand why of all the superheroes in existence, Superman’s legacy rings the loudest a thousand years later.

Though to be fair, Earth-Man does happen to have all of Superman’s powers.  And some extra ones.

What does he have?  A ray gun?

Oh, way better than a ray gun.  I’m skipping a page or two, but the Legion of Superheroes, freshly revived from their space pods, attacks Earth-Man all at once.  They actually do fairly well, until our antagonist unleashes his rainbow powers.  Still, our villain lost the fight the moment Superman gained back his strength.

Delightful knockout.  Don’t feel bad, Earth-Man’s a sociopath and deserved every bit of humiliation. Plus, now all the superheroes get to celebrate the only way comic books end.  That’s right.  Flyovers and smiles.

Happy endings are the best.  You’re wrong if you disagree.


First date with Spider-Man & Ms. Marvel

We all know about Spider-Man (have you seen the movie yet?).  He’s silly, poor, a genius, and full of great responsibility/power.  Also, he just so happens to be single.  And looking at his past relationships, Spider-Man tends to prefer a certain kind of woman.  Attractive, yes, but in comic books, you’d be searching for a long time to find an ugly one.  I don’t know why only models get superpowers.

But most importantly, his women are sassy and tough.  Black Cat was so sassy and tough that their relationship became practically emotionally abusive for Peter Parker.  Though, and this is strictly my personal opinion, of all the superheroes running around, Spider-Man takes more beatings than really any of the others and maybe deep down, a small part of him likes it.  I, of course, have zero proof, no psychology training and my college degree is in English.  But y’know.

Anyway, cut to Ms. Marvel #34, written by Brian Reed and drawn by Paulo Siqueira and Adriana da Silva Melo.  Ms. Marvel, now just plain ol’ Carol Danvers, has been stripped of her powers.  Still, she ain’t going to let stuff like being vulnerable to bullets stop her, so she tries to get some package or something from a warehouse pier full of government goons.  Or something.  I skimmed the issue.

Luckily for her, our friendly neighborhood Spider-Man shows up.

Despite her unfriendly welcome, the two team up and save the day.  The issue concludes with this adorable moment:

She agrees, and thirteen issues later in Ms. Marvel #47, we get to see The Amazing Spider-Date (actual title).  First though, they have to end their shift at work.

With Ms. Marvel’s powers back, I should probably tell you a little bit about her if you’re unfamiliar.

Danvers premiered in 1968 as an Air Force fighter pilot and spy.  She became friends with the alien Kree superhero Captain Marvel and during one of their missions, she got caught in a Kree device explosion – fusing her DNA into half-human, half-Kree.  Luckily for her, that also came with a bunch of cool new superpowers.  Though her years in comics have been fairly tragic.  She’s had lovers murdered, watched her mentor die of cancer, experienced an alien sexual assault/kidnapping, the X-Man Rogue stole all of her powers and memories, fought alcoholism, had her career ruined, and that’s just the tip of it.  But as I’ve said before, what kind of superhero would she be if not for tragedy?  All those powers come with a steep price.

And the extent of her powers?  They’re a doozy.  She’s crazy strong – about equal to The Thing, and unlike him, she still gets to retain her good looks.  Ms. Marvel can fly, possesses super-speed, has near invincibility, is able to shoot energy blasts, and she can absorb all types of energy.  A beastly powerhouse.  In comparison, Spider-Man is one-tenth as strong, cannot fly, and his projectiles are all gooey. Though their personalities are both fantastic.

Oh yeah, the date.

And since Parker gets to be the girl, Danvers has to impress him.  The best society way society has told us how: showing off.

Did I forget to mention that Ms. Marvel’s rich?  She wrote a tell-all book about her time at NASA. Wasn’t a terribly complimentary book.

This story takes place during the Marvel event Dark Reign, where Norman Osborn (Green Goblin) became the head of national security and spent the better part of a year or so hunting down superheroes.  Thank goodness for secret identities.

You know Mystique, Magneto’s former buddy and troublemaker.  While the master of magnetism has reformed in the past decade or so, Mystique still causes a bunch of trouble.  She’s more in Wolverine’s rogue gallery nowadays anyway.

Keep in mind, this is an actual date.  Not a friends getting cotton candy together date, but a real date. The two banter together better than any other Avengers (maybe Hawkeye, but Ms. Marvel’s way prettier) and they get along magnificently.  But I don’t think I’d be wrong in saying that this is the first time the two of them have had any opportunity to talk to each other alone and not about strictly superhero stuff.  Let’s see how it goes.

Despite how bad the date’s going, we’re missing one vital part of every single superhero date in existence.  Did you say random attack by armed bad guys?  Because you’re right.

Write down that one-liner.  You’ll need it next time you’re ambushed at a restaurant.  Since they’re fugitives and their cover’s blown, the two have to cut their dinner short.  But now we finally get to see a real moment between Parker and Danvers.  One that’s genuinely sweet and not totally awkward.

While this is more than enough for me to be satisfied with an article, I’d be a terrible person not to bring up the Siege: Spider-Man one-short that occurred six months later, also written by Brian Reed and drawn by Marco Santucci.  Siege was the finale of Dark Reign, where Norman Osborn and his group of bad guys attacked Thor’s home of Asgard (that floated next to a small town in Oklahoma). This issue was one of the many side issues that went along with the event.

In the fight, Ms. Marvel gets sucked up by the Venom symbiote.  Happens a lot, actually.

But the most important reason for me showing you this issue is in the next few panels:

And Spider-Man’s little mention in the aftermath:

Truthfully, the chances of the two of them having a relationship are slim.  Spider-Man’s destined to get back together with Mary Jane, though that’ll probably take another five to ten years.  And Ms. Marvel just got a promotion to the new Captain Marvel, which should cost her most of her time.  But I promise you that if in the next few weeks or months Spider-Man and Captain Marvel make out, you’ll know.   And I’ll apologize.  A very small apology.


Batman & Bane: blood brothers

With the Dark Knight Rises coming out today, I’d be a real jerk not to do a Batman/Bane article.  And fortunately, everyone already knows about Batman, plus I’ve already covered Bane’s back story and history in a previous article.  So let’s fast forward to Batman: Gotham Knights #33-36, written by Scott Beatty and drawn by Mike Collins.  Y’see, Bane has been running around trying to destroy all the Lazarus Pits, used by Ra’s al Ghul to keep him immortal.  Oh, let Robin explain:

But I’m getting ahead of myself.  We start a few pages back as Bane makes a surprise visit to Wayne Manor.  Remember, Bane figured out Batman’s secret identity back in his comic premiere.

While Bane ain’t exactly trustworthy, Ra’s al Ghul is a common enemy. Plus, even though Batman spends most of his time breaking criminals’ limbs, he’s a softy at heart.  Also as you can tell from his hundreds of repeated drop offs to Arkham Asylum every year, he’s a huge fan of rehabilitation and second chances.

Luckily for us, Nightwing guesses correctly because his word boxes exactly match the action.

I must not be the only one who thinks bat-jetpacks would have been a way cooler idea than a whirly-bat.  Though to be fair, I don’t have the decades of ninja training and detective skills to make the correct choices regarding infiltration missions.  Either way, this little escapade has nothing to do with the rest of the story except to set up the rest of the magnificent arc.  Y’see, because Batman helped Bane out, Wayne gets a reward.  And it’s a doozy.

Being that Bane was born and raised in prison, he doesn’t have much of a clue to the identity of his father.  Well, turns out he received a lovely little photograph on a cruise (which I’m not showing you) displaying Thomas Wayne’s arm (Bruce’s dad) around Bane’s mother.  Normally, this shouldn’t be cause for concern as the odds for the two super dudes being related are astronomical at best.  But this is the crazy world of fiction, where one man wears a batsuit and the other’s a killer luchador. Trust me, panic should set in.

Until the blood testing comes back, why not the siblings enjoy their new relationship?  After all, they have quite a few years of catching up to do.

Y’see, the real problem with Bane and Batman being related occurs with Thomas Wayne.  As you imagine, if the blood test comes back positive, that meant the Wayne patriarch cheated on his wife Martha and his good character besmirched.  His values and morality instilled in Bruce may very well be the main reason Batman fights crime.  Though as Alfred will explain, he doesn’t believe Thomas’ infidelity for a second:

Don’t worry, I won’t leave you in the dark (knight).  Blood tests don’t take that long.  Probably, I’m not sure.  Either way, while Batman is out on patrol, Bane scurries to find out the results.  His future depends on it.

Now, Wayne’s a major figure in the city.  Playboy philanthropist billionaire and whatnot.  The doctor’s not above selling the results to a third party.  I think that breaks the Hippocratic Oath.  But no matter the results, Bane would like a word with the reporter.  Supervillain style.

Oh, can you guess why Bane’s depressed?  Yup, blood test.

Look, the Bat family hasn’t been terribly supportive of Bane joining their little group.  I’ve skipped a dozen pages of Nightwing, Oracle, Robin, Batgirl, Huntress, etc. screaming and arguing about Bane’s inclusion.  He is a supervillain.  On the plus side, Thomas Wayne’s reputation as a devoted husband remains intact.  Though the same can’t be said for Bane’s heart.

Unfortunately, the big guy doesn’t have time to grieve.  His almost-brother is in trouble.  I’m sorry for neglecting Batman’s side story.  A tattoo artist has been killing dudes by making their tattoos turn real.  Yeah, I’m serious.  His detective work leads him to the killer’s apartment.  We’ll join in halfway through the fight.

So Bane hasn’t really reformed.  Sort of.  Let’s be fair, Bane will never be a good guy.  His awful childhood and warped ideals made sure of that.  But he did save Batman, and that has to count for something, right?  Though any chance of them being friends flew out the window the second the blood test came back negative.

By the way, Bane actually does find his father ten issues later.  Read it yourself, it’s a fun one.  Bane has a lumberjack beard.

And I don’t think this is a sad ending.  Because despite all the almost-tears Bane shed not being the almost-brother of Batman, it opened the character up to a tiny shining sliver of redemption.  Will he accept the challenge?  Kind of, though the status quo always eventually gets restored.  The Riddler became a very successful private eye for a while before going back to crime.  I’m just saying.  As we wrap up this arc, let’s let Alfred have the last word.  After all, he’s the only character whose job includes scrubbing up bat guano.


Death of the Green Lanterns

Emphasis on plural Green Lanterns.  Because for those who aren’t terribly familiar with comics, Green Lantern comics have an insane amount of blood, gore, and death.  Surprisingly so.  And I’m going to prove it to you in today’s article.

Some quick background info.  Green Lanterns are the intergalactic police force, run by the tiny blue Guardians.  At any point in time, there are 7,200 flying around, two for each designated sector of the galaxy.  Despite massive casualties, Green Lanterns are super tough.  The power ring given to each one runs off of willpower and allows the wearer to make “constructs,” which is literally anything they have their mind set on.  It’s a cool concept.  When one dies (happens a lot), the green power ring soars to the closest qualified alien.

Now a few years back, Sinestro, the former Green Lantern who became leader of the Sinestro Corps (yellow rings that run on fear), started a war with the Green Lanterns.  The phenomenal event took place throughout Green Lantern #21-25, written by Geoff Johns and drawn by Ivan Reis, and Green Lantern Corps #14-19, written by Dave Gibbons and Peter Tomasi and drawn by Patrick Gleason and Angel Unzueta.

Let’s skip the exposition and jump straight into the first ambush.

See?  That’s what constructs can do.  A flamboyant rings creates a military grade sniper rifle out of sheer willpower.  That shoots willpower bullets.

Not just because I think it’s funny, but we should talk about the idea of “willpower” as a weapon.  The best I can describe the strength of the rings is this: the less fear you have and the stronger your convictions, the more powerful the ring becomes.  Like the ugliest group of the most elite soldiers in the galaxy.  Unfortunately, you see that squirrel shoot a green acorn in the above panel?  Y’see, Green Lanterns’ primary objective is to keep the peace, which means the ring won’t let them use deadly force.  The Sinestro Corps are allowed far more freedom.

Which as you can tell, means Green Lanterns are being slaughtered.  As powerful as a willpower-filled acorn can be, it just simply can’t compare to yellow blasts that make eyeballs explode.  Victory for the Sinestro Corps.  But since this is a war and not a rumble, we’re going to jump ahead to battle number two.

Didn’t expect to see floating space body parts in a Green Lantern comic, did you?  These two series quietly slid under all the mom groups’ violence radar, because in the pop culture society, Green Lantern is one joke above Aquaman.  And both of those superheroes do crazy awesome, horribly bloody acts.  Acts that would make Batman blush.  Also, do you know how many times Aquaman has had his arm chopped off?

Oh, what’s that?  Just a Green Lantern torn in half and being eaten.  If you notice a theme, the Green Lanterns don’t stand a chance. Sinestro made a habit of picking the best (worst?) murderers, sociopaths, and criminals for his little army.  And not to compare or anything, but the very first Green Lantern was a glorified librarian.

So what happens now?  A hundred pages of Green Lanterns blowing up?  No way, that would be an awesome awful story.  How about the Guardians up the ante and make the war an even playing field?

With the tide of the battle finally changing, how can we make this war more exciting?  A change of scenery?  How about we make the final battlefield somewhere comforting, familiar, and with far more at stake?

Oh, remember the last time you saw a Green Lantern who wasn’t soaked in blood?  Me neither.  But now we get the best benefit of being on Earth.  All our favorites get to punch bad dudes.

Because the majority of the Green Lantern stories take place in space, the writers get to include supervillains who may have been sealed up or shot off in a rocket somewhere.  Like Superboy-Prime, an alternative dimension Superman.  Not a scary name, but one of the most powerful villains in the DC universe.  He’s the guy who famously punched reality so hard that he resurrected the second Robin. Yeah, I’m serious.  Anyway, since he’s happily smacking around Green Lanterns as one of the Sinestro Corps’ allies, why don’t we take a break and watch him fight for a bit?

Please don’t let pre-teens read these, that’s way too much blood for someone who hasn’t hit puberty yet.  Let your child ride his bike or try to get around your parental filter blocking porn.

Fortunately for us, all that destruction gives us some of the most impressive and prettiest art I’ve ever seen in a comic book.  Lucky us, unlucky them.  You can click the pictures for larger versions.

Now, we’ve seen a lot of fighting, but are you wondering where’s the big boss Sinestro?  He’s shown up a bunch, I just didn’t show those pages.  Though I did mention this is the final battle of the war, so it’s only fair to you that he makes an appearance.

And what’s the most effective way to settle philosophical and political differences?  Rooftop fistfight? Absolutely.

Finally, after hundreds, possibly thousands of deaths, the Sinestro Corps and Green Lantern Corps war ends the only way it can.  A giant green explosion.

Feels good, right?  The good guys always win, because that’s why we read comics.  With all the blood and gore out of the way, how does the intergalactic police force celebrate their victory?  Patriotic symbolism, that’s how.

I love the Green Lanterns.