Superhero fistfights!

It’s a Friday and we’ve all had a rough week.  Why pretend to beat around the edges of a story just to showcase all the cool fight scenes?  So let’s jump right into the battles with zero context — just good guys kicking good guys in AvX: VS #1, written by Kathryn Immonen and drawn by Stuart Immonen, and AvX: VS #2, written and drawn by Steve McNiven.

The Avengers and X-Men started a war against each other over the Phoenix force.  It happens.  Now the two biggest Marvel teams have reasons to shoot lasers and shout moral rhetoric at each other!

Round 1: Thing vs. Namor

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Yes, the Thing can punch equal to the force of a car at 52 miles per hour and take a punch about equal strength, but the poor guy gets the short end of the stick when it comes to Fantastic Four powers.  His looks too, but that’s a different matter.  Fire, force fields, and elasticity create so many more strategies and cool ideas than giant rock punches.  But luckily, Namor doesn’t have powers beyond that either, and with the bad blood between them (Namor’s a jerk), this fight’s a long time coming.

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That’s two solid jokes in two pages.  Truthfully, I don’t know if the Thing has the ability to breathe underwater for extended periods of time.  He does it here, but to save any potential arguments — he’s also has the ability to talk yet he lacks lips.  I suspend all disbelief when it comes to Ben Grimm.

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Despite Namor flying off relatively unharmed in the background, the Thing coolly trotting out of the ocean gives him my personal victory.  I love Ben holding his own against Namor in water, which would be like fighting Iron Man in a robot factory.  Luckily, our next battlefield serves as home field only for dinosaurs and Kravinoffs.

Round 2: Captain America vs. Gambit

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I cut out all the neat moves Gambit makes, but to be fair, I’m wildly biased.  My love for Captain America seeps deep into my own blind patriotism, but honestly, I mainly dislike Gambit wearing a trench coat in a jungle climate.

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If I’m not mistaken, and this is done with zero research, I believe Gambit used to be way more powerful.  I’m not saying he’s not now, but we all know a pink explosion won’t take out the symbol of our country (or America, if you’re reading this somewhere else).  Most importantly, one can’t expect to speak French to Captain America and get away unscathed.

Truthfully, I don’t dislike Gambit.  I tried really hard to read his ongoing solo series.  The kind-hearted thief motif is always fun and exciting.  Plus, I’m a huge fan of explosions, no matter the color.  But my goodness, I adore the good captain, and the next few pages only make my heart soar.  You can almost hear the bald eagles heroically squawking above the battlefield:

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In the eleven-ish battles that take place over this miniseries and the dozens more in the main series, both teams come out on top about the same.  Though for story purposes, the X-Men take the villain role, eventually leading to poor Cyclops versus everybody.

Let’s do two more on Monday.  No better way to start the week, and maybe I’ll pick some fights where the X-Men win.  Maybe.


The motivations of Doctor Doom

For a man with a silly supervillain name, Doctor Doom has become a multi-layered, wildly complex figure in the Marvel universe.  Sure, he’s definitely a bad guy, but his motivations don’t come from desire for power, riches, or control.  Those just happen to be perks.  Nope, Doom knows a secret, and he’ll reveal it to us today in Doomwar #3, written by Jonathan Maberry and drawn by Scot Eaton.

So Wakanda, a relatively tiny country in Africa ruled by the superhero Black Panther, has technology and strength far beyond even our precious US of A.  Many years ago, a meteorite landed in Wakanda, and luckily for everyone there, it was composed of the largest supply of vibranium in the known world. Vibranium, a metal that surpasses even admantium (the stuff infused in Wolverine’s skeleton), has the ability to absorb all vibrations and kinetic energy thrown at it — essentially making it almost impossible to break.  Captain America’s shield, for instance.  And as a result, Wakanda has never been conquered in thousands of years.  Until Doctor Doom came along.

To access the vibranium vault, Doom not only has to bypass a whole bunch of scientific and magical locks, he has to bare his soul to the Panther God.  Seriously.  The same being that gives Black Panther his superpowers has to judge Doom to be absolutely pure of heart, the same Doom that has callously massacred thousands of people.  Well, that’s not going to stop Doom from trying.  Nothing will, really.

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Doom may be one of the most powerful people on the planet.  He’s a scientific genius and the second most powerful sorcerer alive.  But he’s also the man who once willingly sacrificed the love of his life to gain more magical power.  Good luck looking into Doom’s charred soul.

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Though Doom won’t admit it, he’d probably benefit from some major therapy.  If it’s a Panther God and the world’s vibranium at stake, I guess lying on that metaphorical couch makes showing that small sliver of vulnerability worth it.  Look, as Doctor Doom fights for a Doom-centric future, he’s certainly not doing it for himself.  I mean, he’d be in charge and everyone would obey him as a deity-type figure, but that’s only a small benefit.  Y’see, a Doomworld future serves only to benefit you, the unguided primitive fool you are.

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My dear readers, I present to you the only possible scenario that leads to Marvel universe utopia.  A brutal, law-abiding society that answers to their righteous and justified savior.  Let us bow our heads to the man who saved us from ourselves (and Skrulls, I guess).

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If Doctor Doom shows the slightest greed or hatred in his motivations, he’ll be killed by a giant cat. No getting around that.  But every action Doom takes, no matter how cruel or sickening, serves a single optimistic purpose.  And that surprised Panther God expression above reveals more the unfortunate wisdom in Doom’s world and less of a large Mouse God or something passing by.

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Surely with the world’s vibranium under Doctor Doom’s control, he wouldn’t use it for evil, right?

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Read the miniseries for the exciting conclusion and the Wakanda-changing plot twist at the end.  Plus Deadpool shows up in a few issues for some reason.


Black Panther, Kraven, and rooftops

So Daredevil got possessed by a demon and used a ninja army to mess up Hell’s Kitchen. Remember that?  After the exorcism and Daredevil’s disappearance (though I’ll shamelessly link you to where he went), the New York City borough remained undefended from Russian mobsters, creepy genetic scientists, and all those other unruly immoral types.  Luckily, T’Challa, former king of Wakanda and currently lacking superpowers, figures he could step up to the role.  So Black Panther bought a diner, started wearing glasses (to disguise his thick Wakandan accent, I guess?), and patrolled the streets at night as Black Panther.

But as we know from all superhero stories, when our hero pushes hard enough, the bad guys push back with some extra muscle of their own.  Especially when a young child’s life is at stake, like in Black Panther: The Man Without Fear #518-520, written by David Liss and drawn by Francesco Francavilla & Jefte Palo.

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Witness the post-Grim Hunt Kraven.  He famously died in that wildly famous arc “Kraven’s Last Hunt,” but a few years ago, his family resurrected him.  Familial love has never been Kraven’s strong point and he immediately resented them.  Turns out, he liked being dead and since they accidentally used tainted clone blood instead of pure Peter Parker blood in their black magic voodoo, Kraven’s cursed and nothing can kill him.  Immortality and whatnot.

But just because Black Panther can totally die and only has the strength and skill of a master martial artist, a celebrated tactical and scientific genius, and the support of numerous super powerful allies. Plus, a Punisher-sized weapon arsenal.

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Unfortunately, and for far more dramatic effect, Kraven starts their battle off with an ambush — enough to put Black Panther at a big disadvantage.  That’s what makes fights thrilling, after all.

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Their battle takes place almost entirely through two issues and covers pretty much all of Hell’s Kitchen.  I can’t show you all of it, and I even have to skip some of the cooler scenes, but you’ll get the gist of the neat stuff.

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That’s right, if falling through one glass ceiling worked so well, why not do it again?  Kraven can’t be killed by the fall anyway.  Oh, and that wrecking ball he threw a few panels up?  I have no idea where that came from.  I imagine Kraven carries it with him.  You never know when you need an emergency wrecking ball.

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Both are expert fighters, even in the urban streets.  But poor Black Panther has to do that whole superhero-ing thing and protect innocents while Kraven sets traps and blows up cars.  A supervillain’s job contains far less requirements and obligations.  Oh, but remember when I mentioned T’Challa’s super powerful allies?  Like this one:

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At this time, Black Panther and Storm lived in marital bliss.  Kind of.  They’re no longer married, victims of that dreaded status quo.  Storm has moved on to Wolverine while Black Panther remains dateless, so he’s definitely doing better than she is.  But here, T’Challa scolds his wife for saving his life.  Equal parts honor and nagging, I guess.

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I can’t really tell if Black Panther’s being a jerk to his wife or not.  On one hand, Storm is one of the most powerful beings in the Marvel universe and Black Panther totally couldn’t ninja star or billy club out of Kraven’s way.  But he did tell Storm to mind her own business and leave him alone, and that he also probably likes her or whatever.  Still, when you have a trump card (even one you make out with), use it.  Also, Kraven captured the boy the two of them were looking for.

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Our big finale!  Y’see, the mad scientist promised Kraven something no one else can offer him: a way to die.  Comic book science’s tricky.  On one hand, it can easily reverse an immortality curse, but Professor X has to remain in a wheelchair for fifty years.  Most importantly, mad scientists get to use comic book science for the really cool stuff, like giant walking piranhas,

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By Kraven’s “revere” of animals, he means chase them down with spears and make vests out of their fur.  Though despite all of Kraven’s faults (so many), he is a man of honor.  A man with a code.  One that does not allow him to let sweet innocent giant walking piranhas be imprisoned in secret laboratories.

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Did that put you in the mood for romance?

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Black Panther and Storm heal their relationship, Kraven sets free the captured animals, and the monkeys get pants!  A happy ending for everyone!


Spider-Man and J. Jonah Jameson go camping

With all the emotionally draining, soul-crushing Spider-Man stories of the past decade or so, sometimes it’s nice to read a story that reminds us why we read Spider-Man in the first place: he’s goofy.  So when I read a fun one-shot from 2002 titled Spider-Man: Sweet Charity, written by Ron Zimmerman and drawn by Darick Robertson, I knew I had to share it with you all.  Because Spider-Man and J. Jonah Jameson go camping.

Jameson has an idea!  To raise money for charity, he’ll have a superstar celebrity auction!

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I would like to say this as the best depiction of Jameson ever, if just because he’s definitely the only comic book character who would ever make a Rommel reference.  Anyway, as the auction goes on, Kraven the Hunter’s son sends a women out to unleash his evil plan:

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Y’see, any bad guy can punch his archenemy.  Any bad guy can jump kick or throw a car or shoot plasma rays at his archenemy.  But it takes a true genius to punish his archenemy with the emotional and mental blast of forcing Spider-Man to spend a weekend with the man he hates the most. That probably includes Green Goblin, who killed Spider-Man’s girlfriend.  And the best part?  This spear in Spider-Man’s heart serves entirely to help starving orphans or other charitable causes.

Most of the issue goes as you expect: long walks in the woods with lots of bickering.

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You know how most of Spider-Man’s rogue gallery is made of baddies in animal costumes (Vulture, Rhino, Black Cat, Chameleon, Lizard, etc.)?  Well, sometimes these dudes like to hang out in their natural habitat.

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For the depth and complexity of the plot, you should buy the actual issue.  Because I just want to show you the most important, most significant pages of this wonderful comic.  The pages that make your heart jump and your spirit soar.  Like Scorpion fighting wolves while discussing Popeye.

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I really wasn’t lying when I mentioned most of the issue involves Spider-Man and Jameson arguing. Apparently a decade and a half of bad blood mixed with an outdoor hike doesn’t lead to hugs, kisses, and apologies.  On a related note, I’m glad they changed Jameson’s mustache to a long bushy one in the past couple years.

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Writers love the whole, “Can you trust a hero who wear a mask?” discussion.  And for good reason. It’s too much philosophy for me, and considering every Avenger except Luke Cage hides his or her identity, we can just assume characters bring that argument up so we know they don’t trust the good guys.  Plus, Luke Cage’s superhero costume is a t-shirt and jeans.

We should check back in with Scorpion.

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Eventually, the supervillain meets our two protagonists because the story would be awful if he didn’t. Zimmerman writes a convincing argument about how dangerous Scorpion actually can be when he tries.  I mean, not against Thor or anything, but Spider-Man has to be careful.  Luckily, if a Spider-Man villain isn’t a super genius, he’s a moron.  Like Scorpion.  Supervillains tend to land on IQ extremes.

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I include the next page only for a single line that’ll delight me forever.  The single page that sums up Jameson’s complete lack of respect for our web-slinging hero.

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That’s right, Spider-Man makes woodland creatures do the dirty work for him.  Those bears did all the real fighting.  Instead of praising Spider-Man for leading Scorpion into a brilliant trap (instead of the 50/50 chance of victory in the fistfight beforehand), Jameson berates him with one of the greatest put-downs in Spider-Man/Jameson camping story arcs.

Still, though the trip’s a bust, it could have been worse.

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The Vision would totally be the worst golf partner.


Superior Spider-Man vs. Massacre

I love the Superior Spider-Man series.  Not just because we’re getting brand new Spider-Man stories never told before, but because though Doc Ock loses the joking and gains the ego/abrasiveness — he really is a better Spider-Man.  And it’s fascinating the way writer Dan Slott shows that.

If you aren’t caught up, Peter Parker and Doctor Octopus (real name Otto Octavius) switched bodies. Doc Ock’s body died with Peter’s mind still in it, giving the former supervillain Peter’s body, memories, and life.  If you want more, I chronicled the whole one-hundred issue lead up in a previous article. Think of if Doctor Octopus decided to devote his entire genius and massive ego to fighting crime instead of causing it.  Just with Spider-Man’s tools, friends, and resources.

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Yes, Otto’s better at being Spider-Man, but that doesn’t make him a better person.  Or team player. Or basic all-around nice guy.  Still, can’t really argue with results:

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And then Massacre shows up again in Superior Spider-Man #4-5, written by Slott and drawn by Guseppe Camuncoli.  If you read Monday’s article, he’s pretty much the same dude today.  Amoral, violent, and totally okay with murder.  Oh, and for clarification purposes, at this point in time, ghost Peter still haunts his old body.  Slott called it an easing in process to fans taking in solo-Otto stories.

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Notice the big difference between Peter and Otto?  Besides the goggles?  I know the argument between morality versus practicality rages on continually in comics.  Peter argues simply that good people must not kill, because that’s what makes someone good.  Superheroes are role models after all.  But Doc Ock, never one for sentimentality or a guilty conscience, figures that New York would be better if Massacre exploded or got caught in an industrial accident or whatever, and safety of the citizens (not personal morality) should be the main goal of superheroes.  Both make good points, they really do, and before you take sides, let’s see what Massacre’s up to:

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Yeah, bad day.  I wouldn’t go so far as to blame those innocent deaths on Spider-Man’s failure to contain Massacre.  Moral misgivings aside, supervillains can’t be killed — to reuse them in future plots mainly — and who knows which baddies’ll catch on with readers?

More importantly, time for Spider-Man to re-capture this madman.

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With that technology, sort of like the end of The Dark Knight, when Massacre’s face pops up on a spider-bot, Doc Ock swings into action.  Lives are at stake and privacy can’t outweigh the safety of the people.  I think that last sentence just qualified me for the Republican party.

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Peter’s main flaw relied on him succumbing to emotion far too often.  Massacre’s shooting people in Grand Central Station and the faster that Spider-Man swings there, the more people he can save.  We love Peter for that, and honestly, superhero fights usually rely on speed and power.  But y’know, a quick logical assessment of the situation could be quite helpful.  Massacre has no superpowers, just a dude with shrapnel in his head and a lot of rifle ammo.  While the police control the situation immediately around Massacre, Spider-Man can take care of any supervillain back up plans.  Big success!  I mean, almost.

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Not a tough fight.  Spider-Man wins, if just because his full strength could crush an SUV.  Spider-punches in the jaw would take down the toughest human fighters (except Captain America with his superpower of patriotism — no one knocks out the United States in a sucker punch).

Now, as Spider-Man stands over his beaten opponent, I present to you the most significant difference between the two Spider-Men.

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While the supervillain lies wounded and defeated, he exhibits that one trait Peter and the other Avengers appreciate more than any other: that glimmer of redemption, the idea that a bad man could become a shining example for others.  And as we end the article today, I want to believe that Peter’s bleeding heart speaks far stronger than the cold, logical gift of safety.  Just not today.

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Yes, Spider-Man: killer.  Look, we know Peter Parker’ll return within a year, because the new Spider-Man movie comes out next summer.  Until then, we should appreciate the storytelling ride.  Plus, Doc Ock’s doing some interesting stuff — giant prison fortress, huge spider-army, wrecking every friendship Peter ever gained, etc.

Friday marks the end of Spider-Man stories for a while, but they’ll always be ongoing in our hearts.


Amazing Spider-Man vs. Massacre

This is actually a two-part article, as Massacre has appeared in only two arcs.  But his presence demonstrates the absolute best comparison between Peter Parker’s Spider-Man and Doc Ock’s Peter Parker’s Spider-Man so far.  About fifty issues before Otto Octavius took over the role (and body and life and all the memories), Peter witnessed Mayor J. Jonah Jameson’s wife die in a supervillain attack. Wildly distraught as he tends to be when his supporting cast perishes (and his emotional breakdown every single time may very well be one of his most admirable character traits, y’know, the idea that even after a decade and a half of crime fighting that he still takes every death so hard).  After one of the best dream/philosophical sequences written in the past decade, Spider-Man makes a declaration:

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In Amazing Spider-Man #655-656, written by Dan Slott and drawn by Marcos Martin, Peter’s new mantra gets put to the test against a dangerous new supervillain (it’s Massacre, you’ve read the title).

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Once a successful businessman, Marcus Lyman and his wife received the unfortunate end of a car bomb that killed the missus and shoved a piece of metal into Marcus’ brain.  The shrapnel cut off the part of his brain that regulates emotions and morality.  No right or wrong, no conscience, no guilt, no fear, etc.  You get the idea.

You know who this looks like a good job for?  Spider-Man.

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Okay, so Spider-Man’s not exactly 100% lately.  Y’see, he lost his “spider-sense” a few issues back that lets him know danger’s approaching or dodge explosions or whatever the writer wants it to do. Meet the new Spider-Man, much more embarrassing than the old Spider-Man.

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And Spider-Man learns fairly quickly that while immoral supervillains at least have objectives and desires, amoral supervillains have far less needs.  Though to be fair to Massacre, by this point Wolverine would have dropped from the vents and clawed out his heart — Spider-Man’s a far better superhero to deal with than some of the alternatives.

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Martin’s art rocks.  It’s gorgeous in both the minimalist close ups and the sweeping views of the city.

Spider-Man loses the first round.  Spandex doesn’t absorb bullets very well, no matter how many backflips and cartwheels our hero attempts.  But when Massacre sets up his second hostage situation the next day or so, our hero’s ready.  We always forget that Peter’s a crazy science genius — probably a sliver or two away from Mister Fantastic, Hank Pym, and the others.  And if Tony Stark could build a bulletproof suit of armor in a desert prison, well, gosh darnit, Spider-Man can do just as well in his fancy genius lab.

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Click on the above picture for a larger version — it’s set up in a way that I can’t break it up.  Besides Spider-Man’s knack for technology, sometimes we forget about Spider-Man’s gaping emotional vulnerability.  Peter rarely deals with moderation of feelings.  When he’s sad, he’s an inconsolable mess.  When he’s angry, he’s an unstoppable force.  And when he’s determined?  You get what’s coming up next.  While Spider-Man can’t compete with Thor or Hulk level abilities, we must remember that Spider-Man far faster, stronger, and smarter than we give him credit.

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Massacre’s brain injury makes him irredeemable.  He can’t be fixed.  The man will be a murderer until his final moments, and the police figure now’s the best time to clear the streets of a man who’s guaranteed to kill innocents again.  But morality’s a tricky subject and Spider-Man’s resolve remains unbroken, even for the worst of the Marvel universe.

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Why does Spider-Man keep his supervillains locked up only to escape to kill time and time again? Plot reasons, mainly, but simply because as a superhero, he has to be better than us.  That even when he wants nothing more to strike out against the most dangerous of society, he must show restraint — justice over vengeance.

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And yes, Massacre does escape from prison to kill again.  But that’s Doc Ock’s problem.


Let’s take a break with Hercules and Psylocke

I get distracted when I find a good Hercules story, like the one I showed last time.  We’ll get back to our Spider-Man articles on Monday (especially because I haven’t actually shown a story starring Spider-Man yet), but as you end your week working diligently for The Man, relax and be delighted with this little love story from X-Men: To Serve and Protect #4, written by James Asmus and drawn by Eric Koda, Sandu Florea, & Miguel Munera.

This begins as most romantic tales do: halfway into the battle against a talking griffin.

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From what you know about Hercules, he enjoys many of the simple pleasures in life: beer, punching, and ladies.  And I guess not wearing shirts.  While the beer’ll come later and the punching ends satisfyingly, that really only leaves one more desire left.  Like seducing a psychic ninja mutant.

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Hercules almost certainly smells terrible and has prolific back hair.  But he is tall, strong, in fantastic shape, and speaks like he just left a performance of Macbeth.  While Psylocke can totally read minds, she didn’t really need to in order to recite our dear hero’s pick up lines.  By the way, those lines won’t work at your local bar.

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I imagine many people’ll get upset over young Psylocke’s reaction to Hercules.  I totally get it. “Psylocke wouldn’t respond that way!” “Psylocke wouldn’t fall for Herc’s lines!”  Maybe.  But the beauty of a being a fictional character is that if this pairing upsets you, retcon it in your brain or something.  And even as an adult man, if a god beat up a supervillain in front of me and offered to carry me to his bedroom, I’d need a few moments to consider.  Especially gods wearing huge belt buckles with their initial on it.

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Yes, they totally hook up.  Proof in a few pages, but I’d like to believe this story ends with Psylocke retaining her good role model for young independent women characterization.  Because unlike many superheroes (say, Hercules), she learns from her mistakes.  And while I wouldn’t call sleeping with the promiscuous Hercules a complete mistake (maybe if he provides a doctor’s note), she realizes in the past few years that she should devote her attention to stable relationship-orientated men instead.  Like the heir of Apocalypse’s eternally damned empire.  Or a schizophrenic self-absorbed French thief. Much better choices.

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Understand this: sure, Hercules flirts repeatedly with any girl who doesn’t wear pants to the point of both wild overconfidence and frenetic charm, but he’s always and forever a proper gentlemen.

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Well, close enough.


The Amazing Spider-Herc

I love Spider-Man.  I love Hercules.  When I found two issues combining them, I’m totally in.

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Genetically altered bed bugs created by the supervillain Jackal and his co-conspirator the Spider Queen gives everyone in New York City Spider-Man powers.  That’s an actual Marvel company event, and it succeeded far beyond what people expected.  Hilarious stories mixed with emotional tales stirred together with an awesome premise created one of the best events in a long time.  Mary Jane Watson received her first prominent role since her marriage dissolved.  Everyone from the Avengers to Shang-Chi to Black Panther to Venom combated spider goons.  Peter Parker and J. Jonah Jameson battled giant bugs side by side.  Spider-Man’s clone Kaine came back to life.  Spider-Girl, Hobgoblin, and the Kingpin, and an entire ninja army allied together for the good of New York.  I’m saying you should read Spider-Island and its crossovers if you haven’t yet.

Also, Spider-Herc, but we’ll get to that.  Today we check out Herc #7-8, written by Greg Pak & Fred Van Lente and drawn by June Brigman, where Herc brawls the X-Men in a Spider-Man costume.  By the way, Pak and Ven Lente deserve every bit of applause for changing Hercules into the powerful lovable oaf is today.  And hopefully today’ll prove that alongside me shameless plugging my some of my other Hercules articles here and here.

So how did he get to this point?

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After the whole Chaos War fiasco and Hercules’ death, he returned to life (as all gods do) only without that awesome invulnerability and super strength he possessed as a god.  Now he tends bar in Brooklyn, protects fellow mortals, and seduces the local women.  But y’know, Spider-Island happened.

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And his costume?

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Now, with the Spider Queen running around, arachnid royalty don’t really do a lot of their own dirty work.  I mean, sure, they’ll transform into a skyscraper-sized super spider intent on destroying the entire city, but that’s more of a back up plan.  Instead, they gather up a bunch of mind controlled champions to go and disrupt stuff for a while.  Like Hercules.  And how do they know he’s the right choice?  Convenience, I guess?  He received his spider powers pretty early.  And the next two pages consist of a long set up to a single panel punchline.  Totally worth it.

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With his possession, which I’ll show next, he goes to battle the X-Men who stand very much against the Spider Queen’s plan of conquering and wiping out New York City.

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You can buy the book for the entire fight, but it does consist of a moment where Hercules brushes off a fully-powered angry Storm lightning blast.  She wrecks everyone with those, like a trump card that could power small countries for years instead used on the second hairiest superhero in the Marvel universe.  Here’s Hercules impaling the first:

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Then this happens:

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I forgot to mention that little side effect.  Y’see, besides wild chaos with millions of Spider-Men running around, after a certain point, everyone infected turns into giant spider people under the evil control of the Spider Queen.  The X-Men realize that like most superhero teams, teamwork tends to work best in defeating foes far more powerful and with far more legs.  Just randomly throwing explosive cards and Wolverine tends not to work as well as a combined, planned assault.  I miss Cyclops; he’d have never let Hercules become that spider-centaur thing.

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Oh yeah, Hercules has some spider goddess buddies like Arachne.  Normal god Hercules is gross, with his human genitalia and whatnot.  But spider-centaur Hercules?  What spider god could possibly resist that?  Thus Hercules emerges victorious through the only way he knows how: passionate lovemaking, a skill just as finely tuned as his swordplay and alcoholism.

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As Spider-Island ends, the citizens and superheroes of New York City awake naked and confused.  A giant spider monster lays dead behind them and shouts ring out about the destruction and frustration spread throughout city.  The naked part too.  But as we end our story today, Hercules once again rises to the top of the warrior pyramid when he slays the most frightening and dangerous of his life-long foes: modesty.  I’m saying everyone’s seen Hercules’ privates.

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Peter Parker is Spider-Man

Get ready for a doozy today.  Thirty five images.  Fourteen hundred words.  But it’s cheap form to spit posts twice in a row, and let’s get all our tears out in one go.

A ton of people know who Spider-Man is.  Not like you or me, but other fictional characters in the Marvel universe.  And probably Batman too, if you count the company crossovers.  Look, we take a suspension of disbelief among superhero secret identities.  For instance, Superman’s glasses despite him working for the best investigative journalists in the world.  But when Peter does reveal his face to loved ones, allies, enemies, and occasionally on live TV, the consequences (while cathartic) lead to unexpected results.  Sometimes a stronger bond, a teenage kiss, or a long series of events that leads to Aunt May getting shot, Mephisto broke up Peter and Mary Jane’s marriage, and an incredible humiliation Kingpin has never experienced before in his entire published history.  Today, we’re going to read some of those emotional secret identity reveals.  It’ll be fun.

Remember when he revealed his identity to the world in Civil War #2, written by Mark Millar and Steve McNiven?  Here’s the scene if you haven’t seen it before:

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Hard to argue that ended up being a smart decision on Spider-Man’s part.  And unfortunately, it took place during Iron Man’s jerk phase of the mid-2000s.  Supervillains tend to use stuff superheroes care about, like loved ones and friends, to attack their enemy who they can’t win against in a fistfight.  For that obvious reason, Spider-Man’s identity remains a closely guarded secret.  Y’know, until he sits people down and explains that he dodges Goblin Gliders for a living.

After the controversial Spider-Man arc One More Day — where his marriage broke up and Spider-Man’s secret identity went back in the box it sprang from — we once again get to witness Spider-Man exposing himself to colleagues.  I mean, the face only.  Y’see, Doctor Strange put a magical/psychic mindblock on Spider-Man’s identity, essentially hiding anyone from figuring out Spider-Man’s Peter Parker unless Peter personally reveals himself.  Which he does.  A lot.  In Amazing Spider-Man #591, written by Dan Slott and drawn by Barry Kitson, Jesse Delpergang, & Dale Eaglesham, the Fantastic Four re-discover the secret.  After some bickering, of course.

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But even when friendship won’t convince Spider-Man to lose the mask, Mr. Fantastic knows to appeal to Spider-Man’s one true weakness: geeky science stuff.  As wonderfully close friends as the Human Torch and Spider-Man are (both banter, went through puberty in spandex, and date supermodels), Peter really has more in common with Mr. Fantastic.

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One group of close friends and teammates down, one to go.  Because during New Avengers #51, written by Brian Michael Bendis and drawn by six super talented artists, the group just defeated shape-shifting, superhero-impersonating Skrulls.  And Hawkeye (now Ronin) figures if Spider-Man wants to continue to not pay rent and eat Chinese food in the Avengers Mansion, he should probably pony up that secret identity thing.  That and the whole Skrull stuff.

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You recognize that New Avengers roster?  I figure you know most of them, but Mockingbird’s in the blue and white gymnast clothes, Jessica Jones wears the pink t-shirt, and in the corner we have Jessica and Luke Cage’s baby.  She’s not part of the team.  Oh yeah, and Jessica went to high school with Peter.

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If you check out Alias #22-23, you can see their high school experience, but Jessica has a filthy mouth and I’d have to edit most of it out.  Though Bendis wrote Alias beautifully.

Now, I know what you’re waiting for.  You want the gooey, emotional stuff.  You want Peter pouring his heart out to Aunt May and Mary Jane, while they cry and cry and talk about their feelings towards Peter’s superhero career.  I’ll get to that, but let’s jump to Carlie Cooper first.  During the past few years, she turned into Peter’s first post-One More Day girlfriend.  Forensic scientist by day, forensic scientist by night, and most importantly, she wanted Peter for more than his well-toned body, careful not to step on the remnants of his fragile and shattered heart — unlike some paramours (thatwitchblackcat).  They were such in love all the up to Spider Island, the Marvel event where everyone in New York City developed Spider-Man’s powers.  Yes, it’s as awesome as you think it is.

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Y’see, in Amazing Spider-Man #668, written by Slott and drawn by Humberto Ramos, as the city suddenly broke from the weight of several million Spider-Men running around, Peter Parker rallies the troops as Peter Parker.  Secret identity contained and whatnot.

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Unfortunately, that also sort of broke Doctor Strange’s magical/psychic mindwipe spell, allowing people to re-learn Spider-Man’s identity without a dramatic mask pull-off.  Like say, in Amazing Spider-Man #673, written by Slott and drawn by Stefano Caselli, when Peter’s girlfriend just realized their entire relationship was built on lies.

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And then Peter Parker died.  Twenty-seven issues later.  I’m not saying Carlie had anything to do with it by breaking up with him, but the world can sometimes be as cold as Doc Ock’s robotic, unfeeling tentacles.

As we get into the most important of Peter’s dear supporting cast, Aunt May seems to be the most heartbreaking.  Sure, she’ll understand, because she’s super awesome and understands the good Spider-Man does versus the constant fear of danger he gets put in dodging blasts of electricity.  But the conversation always hits hard.  In Amazing Spider-Man #37-38, volume two, written by J. Michael Straczynski and drawn by John Romita Jr., Peter and Aunt May have the “talk” after Aunt May walks in on Spider-Man after that crazy brutal Morlun fight.

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I should admit that what you’re about to witness has been retconned.  When Spider-Man’s secret identity went back in the bottle, Aunt May forgot as well.  But regardless of the long-lasting impact, it doesn’t lessen the pain.

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This conversation takes up the entire issue.  As Peter admits the truth behind him letting Uncle Ben’s eventual murderer go free after the wrestling match and Aunt May counters with a regret of her own, one may realize that life remains infinitely simpler when one doesn’t possess great power or great responsibility.  Still, the issue wraps up and both characters improve because of it.  Probably.

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Mary Jane has known Peter’s secret identity since Amazing Spider-Man #257-258 from 1984, where in a wildly dramatic speech reveals she’s known for years.  You can read that yourself, because it’s 1980s soap opera at its finest.

But speaking of fine soap opera, this’d be a terrible article if I didn’t bring up Ultimate Spider-Man, the alternative world fifteen year-old Spider-Man who starred in easily one of the top five best series of the 2000s.  And to return to Aunt May, he has a similar issue-long conversation in Ultimate Spider-Man #111, written by Bendis and drawn by Mark Bagley & Stuart Immonen.

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But I bring up the Ultimate universe for Ultimate Spider-Man #13, written by Bendis and drawn by Bagley, where Peter reveals his identity to also fifteen year-old Mary Jane in one of the best issues of the series.  It’s delightful if you’re into teenage romance (I don’t judge), or if you know kids who want more from the superheroes than just punching (crazy kids, most likely).

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She doesn’t believe him.  To be fair to Mary Jane, when I was a teenager, if I could get a girl to believe I was fighting crime as New York’s coolest superhero, I would also pour my lying heart out in a second.  But y’know, proof is proof.

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And thus, as Peter reveals his biggest intimate secret to his childhood best friend, so does Peter’s most meaningful relationship.  Teenage girls just can’t resist teenage Peter Parker.

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While they break up every twenty issues or so (constant danger, jealousy, or watching Spider-Man make out with Kitty Pryde on live TV), I still implore you to read the series if you haven’t.  And read Miles Morales’ Spider-Man too.  You deserve it.

As I end today with a scene from Ultimate Spider-Man #10, written by Bendis and drawn by Bagley, remember the importance of secret identities — yes, sometimes it leads to make out sessions with your high school crush, but sometimes not just people superheroes love and care about get hurt.

Most importantly, my goodness do I love Spider-Man.

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Flash Thompson: superhero, Pt. 2

After Flash Thompson lost his legs heroically saving a fellow soldier, it seems as if both his athletic and hero career has ended.  Well, one did at least.  You can probably infer what’s going to happen to Peter Parker’s buddy from the issues used today:

Amazing Spider-Man Extra! #3, written by Marc Guggenheim and drawn by Fabrizio Fiorentino & Patrick Olliffe
Amazing Spider-Man #591, written by Dan Slott and drawn by Kitson & Jesse Delpergang
Amazing Spider-Man #654, written by Slott & Fred Van Lente and drawn by Stefano Caselli
Amazing Spider-Man #654.1, written by Slott and drawn by Humberto Ramos
Venom #1, written by Rick Remender and drawn by Tony Moore
Venom #5, written by Remender and drawn by Moore & Tom Fowler
Venom #30, written by Cullen Bunn and drawn by Thony Silas & Roger Robinson
Venom #31, written by Bunn and drawn by Declan Shalvey

When Flash gets leaves the hospital, we get not only a clear message of Flash’s current contentment, but also proof of the good Spider-Man provides to the moral fiber of the Marvel universe.  Sure, Spider-Man’s strong and fast.  But he’s not that strong and fast.  Can you name a Spider-Man comic that doesn’t end with him standing barely triumphant while beaten, bruised, and wearing a tattered costume?  But the very next issue, he’s back in action.  Spider-Man takes the bullets so the innocents don’t have to (well, bullets and jump kicks, laser beams, electric shocks, pumpkin grenades, etc.).  Flash totally gets it.

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And because Flash strove to be number one his entire life — y’know, standard bully jock hiding inferiority complex stuff — he continues to succeed without legs.  That’s what champs do.

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Spider-Man’s in an alternate dimension with the Fantastic Four, but that’s a different story.  More importantly, when Norman Osborn’s siege of Asgard failed, that meant good news for the government. Y’see, all those cool weapons and toys Osborn played with now belong to the good ol’ USA. Including one weapon that makes tanks, bazookas, and Goblin Gliders look like Super Soakers.

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Venom basically acts as a suit of armor, just with an alien personality that eats superheroes instead of kevlar.  With the proper equipment and a correctly chosen host, it makes any soldier into Captain America with tentacles.  Like Flash Thompson, war hero and president of the Spider-Man fan club.

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At first, Venom (now referred to as Agent Venom) serves as a point-and-shoot weapon for the government.  Flash “puts on” Venom, jumps into the battleground, completes target objectives, and Venom goes back in the tank — and his legs with it.  Over time, both Flash and Venom evolve.  But we’re not there yet.  First up, all those cool missions:

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Super cool, right?  A super solider doing super soldier stuff.  Flash even earns himself a place on the Secret Avengers roster, which totally qualifies him as a real (secret) Avenger.  But you know how Venom is actually a crazy evil alien monster the government desperately hopes to control?  They certainly do their best.  Sometimes.

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Anyway, Flash gets his very own solo series, something Spider-Man supporting characters rarely enjoy.  I mean, Mary Jane will get a one-shot Valentine’s Day issue, but she only rarely transforms into a hulking supervillain who cannibalizes enemy soldiers.  Still, Flash turns out to be a fantastic character for holding his own comic.  He receives an arch-nemesis (Jack O’Lantern — far scarier, deadlier, and more complicated than the name suggests), a love interest (Betty Brant and Valkyrie), and even saves the world from literal Hell on Earth with his new best friends Red Hulk, X-23, and Ghost Rider.  Actually, you should go pick up that little Marvel event, I greatly enjoyed it.  Oh, and Flash’s former alcoholism?  It runs in the family.

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Though Flash exhibits the self-loathing present in all superheroes (which even Captain America has moments of), he essentially broke free of government control and serves as an actual patrolling superhero, with Venom just hanging out inside him at all times.  Like a gooey pudding that won’t digest.  Most importantly, he’s also the only superhero in Philadelphia.  For excitement, thrills, and combat, supervillains should totally hang out in New York City.  But if they actually wanted to make money, it’d be smart to move — really any other major city would do.

While Venom ends in two issues with #42, it’s well worth it to pick up the older issues, if just because now you’re guaranteed closure.  Some closure at least.

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