Since the movie is (deservedly) a huge hit, it's no surprise that Marvel has gone back to the well with Civil War II.
There's one thing missing this time around - Captain America.
This time around, it looks like the conflict is going to be between Iron Man and a different Captain - this one is named Marvel.
This issue #0 (I hate issues numbered zero on general principle, I should admit) doesn't give us much to chew on.
There's some nice artwork by the always-excellent Olivier Coipel, but the script by Brian Michael Bendis is disturbing - and not in the ways he intended.
We're just given a handful of scenes without much in the way of context. For example: She-Hulk argues in a case defending a retired super-villain threatened with prison for having a discussion of his past crimes; War Machine (James Rhodes) meets with the President (carefully covered so you can't identify him) who promises to make Rhodey the next president (can he do that?); Captain Marvel meets with Doc Sampson (I thought he was dead?), who does some not-so-subtle analyzing of her state of mind; and the Terrigen Mist sweeps across a campus in Ohio, leaving behind a few cocoons, and three new Inhumans.
How does all that tie together? I have no idea - and the closing pages depict a scene that makes no sense at all. Is it a scene of destruction, an illusion, a vision of the future, or something else? No clue.
Heroes fighting each other is a Marvel staple, and the movie Captain America: Civil War shows how to do it right. The original mini-series, Civil War, shows how to do it badly.
We'll see which category this series ultimately falls into.
Grade: B-
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Friday, May 20, 2016
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2 comments:
All in good fun? Isn't that the point of being morally dubious?
Kevin, no argument here!
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