Showing posts with label Death of Wolverine 1 spoilers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Death of Wolverine 1 spoilers. Show all posts

Monday, September 8, 2014

Making Death Matter: Death of Wolverine #1

The following is my review of Death of Wolverine #1, which was posted on PopMatters.com.


Over the years, death in comic books has become about as relevant as Lex Luthor's barber. It has gotten to a point where funerals in comics might as well double as goth club meeting. People show up, act all sad and depressed, and just pretend they'll never be happy again until the inevitable retcon/resurrection. People can joke and complain all they want about these kinds of stories. Yes, they are gimmicks. Yes, they are overdone. However, they have one quality that makes them viable. They trigger enough of an emotional reaction to get fans to buy it. So long as people enjoy making money from comics, these sorts of stories will continue.

That's not to say that stories surrounding death can't be good. What sets stories like Death of Superman apart from stories like Final Crisis is extent to which it creates an emotional impact. That is what has allowed deaths like Gwen Stacy and Ben Parker to have such a compelling influence on the overall narrative. Conversely, it is also what has led to the cheapening of death with the likes of Jean Grey and Bucky Barnes, but the emotional impact still matters. And Death of Wolverine #1 attempts to lay the foundation for that impact. The results are not conclusive, but they are promising.

Wolverine has been functioning without his healing factor for nearly a year now. It has gotten to a point where he seems to have gotten a handle on things. He's shown that he can continue to be the best there is at what he does without relying on his healing factor. However, this issue establishes that the sheer rigor that comes along with killing armies of ninjas, fighting Sabretooth to the death every other month, and drowning enough whiskey to kill half the Scottish army is taking its toll. He's not given a death sentence just yet. But Reed Richards does warn him that if were as young as he looked, then he probably wouldn't live long enough to collect Social Security.

The extent of this toll is the main highlight of this issue. Wolverine isn't his normal brutish self, treating the advice of his doctor the same way Homer Simpson treats advice from his nutritionist. There are powerful moments that show just how much just being Wolverine is wearing on him. He can no longer be the tenacious fighter that helped him survive two World Wars and two separate runs on X-men by Chris Claremont. For the first time in his long history, Wolverine is nearing his physical and mental limits. It's a strange yet compelling spectacle. It's not unlike Brett Favre's final season where his physical limitations finally caught up to his passions.

While this sets a clear tone for the overall narrative, it does feel somewhat muted at times. Wolverine might be ailing without his healing factor, but there isn't much depth given to the extent of that ailment. He still snarls, spits, and swears like anyone would expect him to. He also still fights, even when it's not in his best interests to do so. But when he has to confront multiple threats that now know he's vulnerable, there isn't a genuine sense of struggle.

Now normally, it wouldn't be reasonable to expect such a struggle from Wolverine. This is a man who treats a sudden attack from AIM or the Hand the same way most people treat a hangnail. But when someone like Nuke comes along hoping to collect a fat bounty on his head, the struggle feels a bit too much like it would if he still had his healing. It might be a typical Tuesday for Wolverine prior to losing his healing, but that's exactly why a greater sense of struggle is so important to the narrative.

That's not to say Wolverine's struggles in this issue don't have an impact. The battles he fights here are just preludes to a much larger battle that's being funded by the same person who put the bounty on Wolverine's head. It nicely establishes what is set to be Wolverine's final battle, at least until his inevitable resurrection and return. At the moment, it's nothing too novel or radical. But it does hit the right emotional chords, albeit not all of them.


But that's where the whole Death of Wolverine concept is fatally flawed. It might not even be possible to hit all those emotional chords because the revolving door that is death in comics ensures that Wolverine is not going to stay dead indefinitely. No matter what Marvel claims, it a bad business practice to throw away such a valuable asset. DC did it with Superman and cashed in. And if Marvel can't even keep Bucky Barnes dead, then there's little chance they'll be able to keep Wolverine dead.

Even if Wolverine's death is destined to be temporary, the story in Death of Wolverine #1 offers a compelling foundation for an emotionally charged story. This firmly established to be Wolverine's final battle, at least for a while. Like the movie Snakes on a Plane, there is little ambiguity with respect to the content of the story. The success or failure of the story hinges on its ability to generate the right emotional impact. It might not be possible to evoke all right emotions due to the nature of death in comics, but this issue does succeed in laying the foundation. It might be a foundation built on unstable shores, but it's one that could still support a strong story.

Final Score: 7 out of 10

Thursday, September 4, 2014

Scanned Thoughts: Death of Wolverine #1


Comic book fans love to bitch and moan every time somebody tries one of these bullshit death gimmicks. I certainly don't blame them. I've done more than my fair of bitching every time Marvel or DC decide to kill off some big name character for shock value, sales, and a note in Section F of the New York Times. But as I've gotten older and had more time to reflect in my least sober moments, I realized something. Marvel and DC are not the problem. We, the comic book fans, are the problem. We're the reason they keep churning shit like this out. We're the reason it keeps getting more and more infuriating. And it's not because the editors and writers jerk off to cries of enraged fans. It's because we buy this shit. We still fork over our hard earned money that could be far better spent on beer and weed to buy these stories that piss us off. I'm sure they're as confused about it we are, but it's giving them money so like any competent business they keep feeding us these gimmicks and we keep choking them down like Homer Simpson chokes down donuts.

I feel that needs to be said because I know there will be plenty of standard bitching surrounding the of Death of Wolverine. Like the movie Snakes on a Plane, there's no need to explain what it's about. There are no spoilers involved whatsoever. Marvel isn't even trying to be coy with this one. They're going to kill Wolverine. They're going kill one of their most popular characters of all time and by far the most popular X-man of all time. They've been building towards it since he lost his healing factor. Now they're finally getting around to finishing the job. They've even made a mini-series of it so that fans have four entire issues to build up their rage boner. I would ask these same fans that before they start sending Marvel hate mail, look in a mirror and bitch at the reflection first because that's the reason they're doing this. That's who I'll keep in mind with Death of Wolverine #1. Like getting maimed by the IRS every April, we know what's coming. So let's just brace ourselves and try to maintain some perspective before our rage boners kill us.

Perspective is something Wolverine has been avoiding like I avoid going to traffic court. Since he lost his healing factor, he's been trying to keep being the Wolverine he's always been. He hasn't always been successful and he has had to cheat a few times, relying on special suits and time-displaced allies to help him. That and I'm sure sleeping with Storm helped give him as much strength and more as his healing factor did. But now even the power of Storm's sweet naked flesh can't keep Wolverine's overly Wolverine-like activities from catching up with him like an overdue hangover. And after years of being able to shake off the kind of shit that would put most people in a coma, all those hangovers are starting to hit Wolverine all at once.


But before the hangover started kicking his ass and sending his insides up the wrong way, we flash back to what led Wolverine to this painful point in his blood and alcohol soaked life. Since he can no longer rely on rest and whiskey to heal him, he starts consulting doctors. And these aren't the WebMD style doctors either. These doctors include the likes of Reed Richards, a guy who has more medical expertise in his pinkie toe than a dozen Doogie Howsers. He's not the kind of guy people get a second opinion from. But as qualified as he is, that doesn't mean Wolverine can expect to go back to drinking booze and making out with Storm.

Reed gives Wolverine some overly sobering news. While he lost his healing factor, he didn't lose his adamantium skeleton or any of the other physical endowments that make him Wolverine. I'm assuming that means his penis didn't shrink so I guess there's some good news to come out of this. But because he's now walking around with metal in his body, he's prone to a host of diseases that he used to be able to shake off like an overgrown toenail. Reed even mentions that the metal may be slightly radioactive because he got too close to one too many nuclear blasts in his life. In terms of a prognosis, it's not exactly dire. But it's not the kind that makes him able to go rock climbing naked.


End the flashback and Wolverine finds himself at a bar, the only place he can still heal. He enters looking the way most people look when they get thrown out of a bar. While a little whiskey won't mend his wounds, it'll help him in its own unique way. There's no way this can be the last major Wolverine story for a while without him visiting a bar so it's good that we got that off the checklist. It also gives him time make a phone call and get a little extra liquor for the road. In doing so we get some hints that people are aware of his vulnerability at this point. Hell, I'm surprised it didn't start trending on Twitter the very next day. But I guess it takes a while for Wolverine's enemies get their shit together.

This is somewhat of a shortcoming though. Wolverine has been killable for a while now. Yet it's only now that he starts worrying about his enemies coming after him? Hell, Sabretooth already came after his ass and that amounted to an inconvenience on the scale of a pothole on the highway. While there is a clear sense that Wolverine's lack of a healing factor is finally catching up to him, it's also somewhat fucked that it's taking his enemies this long to take advantage of it. And no, I'm not counting Sabretooth's bullshit plot because he got laid out with a single punch. That couldn't have been more poorly planned without George W. Bush coming out of retirement.


A while after Wolverine leaves, one of his enemies finally decides to show up, albeit ridiculously late. This time it's Wolverine's old pal Nuke, who is basically what Captain America could have been if he had been raised by Rush Limbaugh and Ann Coulter. He comes to the bar looking for Wolverine because he knows that every search for Wolverine either begins at a bar or within a 50 foot radius of Storm or Jean Grey. The poor bartender tries to defend his best customer, but Nuke takes the Donald Rumsfeld approach and demands answers. He doesn't end up having to crack any skulls to get them because Wolverine actually left the bartender a note on where he could be found. He also probably left a note telling him to spare the bartender and his innocent whiskey. I have to believe that even Nuke isn't that sadistic.


The note leads them to an isolated part of British Columbia that can only be reached by boat. They send one of their guys to check out the dock. Naturally, the dock explodes. Without his healing, Wolverine has to work smarter and not harder. It's crude, but it works and it pisses Nuke off to the point where he decides that working smart is overrated. He basically tips over his own boat and decides to swim to shore, assuming Wolverine didn't rig it with mines or explosives. Sure, most of his men end up drowning. But he just wouldn't be an all-American anti-hero if he weren't okay with letting expendable soldiers die for no reason. It's like the third bullet of the Bush Doctrine.


But when Nuke arrives on the shore, he finds out that Wolverine didn't just leave that note for him. He made sure everyone looking to exploit his newfound weakness knew where the find him. They beat Nuke to the punch and their reward was a brutal, bloody death. It's exactly as badass and satisfying as it sounds. Sadly, we don't get to see the epic battle that led to the shores being littered with the bodies of AIM operatives and Hand ninjas. We're just left to assume that Wolverine did to them exactly what he did to Sabretooth, albeit with more than one punch. If nothing else, it's a bittersweet reminder that Wolverine is capable of some pretty badass shit and that this kind of shit will be badly missed when he's gone.


This still doesn't dissuade Nuke. He's American, damn it. He doesn't give up, change his plan, or try to find a more efficient means of accomplishing his goal. He keeps doing what he intends to do, no matter how dumb or inefficient it is. And he doesn't even need subsidies from the oil companies to do it. He just attacks Wolverine exactly as he planned, ignoring completely that he just eviscerated an army of AIM and Hand agents. He even reveals that somebody put a huge fucking price on his head the likes of which would make Bin Laden himself jealous. And like any red-blooded American, he wants that money and he doesn't want to pay a lick of taxes on it.

Like the beginning of the second Iraq war, it starts off pretty well. He roughs Wolverine up, taking full advantage of how AIM and the Hand softened him up. Then Wolverine starts to get pissed and the fight plays out just like his fight with Sabretooth. But unlike that fight, this one wasn't built up or needlessly elaborate so it's only slightly disappointing. It could've been a lot more brutal and bloody, but I suspect Marvel wanted to keep this whole death issue PG-13. It sounds like making a clean version of Deadwood, but I understand the logic behind it.


After the fight plays out with fairly predictable brutality, Wolverine gains the upper hand and ruins Nuke's chance at being a male model. He then starts demanding some answers and since he's not American, he doesn't resort to waterboarding. I'm sure Nuke and everyone at the CIA is calling him a pussy at this point. Eventually, Nuke channels his inner Frenchman and reveals who placed the bounty on Wolverine's head. For once, it isn't Sabretooth. I'm pretty sure Wolverine got his point across with that asshole now. He says it's someone called the Green Queen. It sounds like a stripper name or whatever Gordon Gecko calls his blow-up doll, but Wolverine still takes it seriously.


Anyone expecting this to be some sort of elaborate Scooby Doo style mystery can put away the Scooby Snacks because there's no ambiguity here. The Green Queen is Viper, a woman who treats Madripoor the same way Donald Trump's ex-wives treat him. She's the one that wants Wolverine beaten to a pulp and brought to her alive, probably so she could masturbate while she has Sabretooth peel his skin off like a banana. It's almost fitting in some ways. Wolverine has screwed and been screwed by so many women in his long illustrious life. Now it a woman might end up being the one that kills him. It's the kind of irony that would put a smile on any feminazis face.


This first issue of this already-spoiled story should only give most people a semi-rage boner. This issue didn't have a whole lot going on in the sense that it only established that everybody knows Wolverine lost his healing and someone is willing to pay a metric fuckton of money to bring him to Madripoor alive, even if he's not in one piece. But it's done in a way that helps convey what Wolverine is going through. He's not making light of how fucked he is. He understands that he's dying. It looks like he's even starting to accept it. It makes for a far more engaging plot that involves more than him just kicking the ass of some wannabe Captain America meth head. We already know Wolverine is going to die. The challenge of this series is to make us give a damn and this issue is off to a good start. That's why I give Death of Wolverine #1 a 7 out of 10. It's not going to make anyone shit their pants in anger or disappointment, but it will humanize Wolverine in a way not usually seen without a pretty redhead being in close proximity. That in and of itself is an accomplishment and one that'll make his death slightly less the bullshit marketing gimmick it inherently is. Nuff said!