Showing posts with label X-men 1. Show all posts
Showing posts with label X-men 1. Show all posts
Wednesday, May 29, 2013
X-men #1 - Girl Powered Awesome
Between Marvel NOW and DC’s New 52, I think I speak for most fans when I say I’m getting burned out by all these relaunches and not in a good way. I don’t mind being burned out on tequila or weed. At least when you’re blacked out on that shit you either have a chance at getting laid or becoming famous on the internet. Just ask David Hasselhoff. Marvel has overhauled so many of their books, relaunching nearly every major title to the point where there’s only one book numbering in the triple digits (X-Factor) and that book is ending as well. So what could possibly make yet another relaunched title appealing?
Four words: all female X-men team. That’s right, Marvel. When in doubt, throw a bunch of tits into a series. Yes, it’s shallow. Yes, it will piss off the feminists out there. But if you’re honest about your love of tits or the fact that women in comics have them, you’ll see the appeal. Because that’s what Brian Wood is giving us in a relaunched adjectiveless X-men title. He already showed some potential when he wrote towards the latter end of the previous adjectiveless series. But at that point there were too few fucks left to give on the part of fanboys and the series ended.
Now some of you may be sober enough to remember that we already had a reluanched ajectiveless X-men a few years ago when Victor Gischler tried to cash in on the vampire craze with Curse of the Mutants. I’m not sure if I have enough brain cells to recall, but it did have its moments. The most lasting impression this series did in my drunken opinion was turn Jubilee into a vampire and do it in a way so that she didn’t become Bella fucking Swan.
But along the way, Jubilee faded into the background once more and hasn’t been active in recent X-men events. Well now Brian Wood is promising to bring her back into the fold with a team of X-women that include Rogue, Rachel Grey, Kitty Pryde, Storm, and Psylocke. It’s a premise that is the basis for no fewer than thirty percent of the masturbation fantasies among male X-men fans and gay female X-men fans. There are enough books involving characters with dicks. So why not give the ladies a shot at captivating readers in ways beyond mere boners?
This new series promises to give Brain Wood a fresh start with the X-men and his “no dicks allowed” policy already gives it a unique backdrop to work with. It's a little vague at first in that it gives a brief lesson in the history of life that would make a creationist's head explode. We don't know who is narrating yet (but it is revealed later on), but he basically explains how there were two siblings of primordial goop in the early days of the planet. And one of those siblings was an asshole in that it cast the other one out so that it could be the Darwinian life seed of the planet. It proves once again that fighting with your siblings isn't just natural. It's a biological imperative.
Skip the rest of the biology lesson and give creationists a moment to clean their brains off the floor and we meet up with our old gal pal, Jubilee. Last we saw her, she joined a team of vampires to learn how to be Twilight style hippies that don't kill other humans, minus the fucking sparkling. Well someone must have had some kick ass blow since then because now Jubilee is on her own, on the run, and caring for an infant. Where did this infant come from and why is it so adorable? That's not clear, but what is clear is that someone is after her and it isn't MTV looking to make another reality show. Or maybe it is and if that's the case, both the X-men and the Avengers need to beat the shit out of whoever is running MTV these days.
I've often noted the parallels between the Jean Grey Institute and my old high school. And at times I admit those comparisons may be a little extreme, but one thing I do credit Marvel with doing since they introduced the Jean Grey Institute is including some bits of realism. It is a school and as such, it has all the crazy shit you would expect to find in a school. That includes teenagers beating each other up for no reason aside from looking at each other cross-eyed. That's what happens with Mercury and Bling, which Rachel Grey has to come in and break up. Two teenagers beating each other up in the pages of an X-men comic may seem trivial, but for anyone who has survived high school, it's as real as last Thursday.
In addition to evoking painful memories of high school, this scene introduces us to the core cast of X-women that will be making up this estrogen-laden team. They're not giddy school girls talking about how hot Robert Pattinson looked in the last Twilight movie. They're teachers and administrators trying to run a school. Teenage mutants make that difficult in the same way quantum mechanics makes physics a pain in the ass. Then they get a call from Jubilee and they have an entirely new pain in the ass to deal with.
After arriving via plane from Europe, Jubilee hops a train. And some creepy R. Kelly motherfucker is following her every step of the way. So rather than just wait at the train station like reasonable adults, the X-women say "fuck it!" and hop the train themselves. Why? Because they fucking can, that's why. Rogue, Kitty Pryde, and Storm use their powers in simple yet effective ways to board the train, all while ensuring none of the passengers so much as spills their coffee. Kitty is the first one to meet Jubilee and reacts as most would expect to react when they see a teenage girl with a baby.
Once Rogue and Storm catch up, Jubilee offers an explanation that's only slightly more believable than a teenage girl that says the condom broke and the abortion clinic was closed for nine months. Apparently, this baby is an orphan like her. She rescued her from an orphanage that was the site of some terror bombing and/or a meteorite and/or Dr. Doom being too bored with internet porn. Now she's on the run because that creepy R. Kelly motherfucker earlier is after her and she believes the only way to protect the baby is at the Jean Grey Institute.
It's a welcome touch of novelty because usually when a story involves a teenage girl and a baby, it's either a reality show or some anti-sex bullshit from the religious right that is trying to control women's vaginas. But what makes it more compelling is that Jubilee is an orphan as well. She has a connection with this baby and it shows in how she treats it. Wood and Oliver Coipel's art conveys that sense of drama nicely and that sort of shit is rare in an X-book not written by Brian Michael Bendis. But as is often the case with babies and teenage girls, there is often more to the story than it seems. And it shows in the way the baby seems to fuck with the train's electronics.
As adorable as the baby may be, she managed to fuck up the whole train just by touching the speaker system. It finally forces a little action into this issue in the form of a train going out of control like a drunk Jeff Gordon on the New Jersey Turnpike. It allows Rogue to finally do more than just bitch at the Scarlet Witch like she has been doing in Uncanny Avengers and stop the train in a nicely drawn out action sequence. Yes, it's somewhat basic. Stopping a renegade train in the Marvel universe is akin to a cop citing a drunk for public urination. But given that this time the train was derailed by a fucking baby, I think that adds a little more intrigue. As if we didn't need enough reasons to not want to sit near a baby on a train.
While some of the all-female cast is busy meeting up Jubilee, the R. Kelly motherfucker that has been stalking her does something completely unexpected. He flies to the Jean Grey Institute and surrenders. They don't even try to tear his balls off or threaten to throw his brain in a blender. He just up and surrenders. In the process, we find out that said motherfucker is John Sublime. For those of you who missed the pop quiz last week, John Sublime isn't exactly a man or a mutant. He's a glorified pack of primordial goo that occasionally takes the form of a guy who looks like he should be a registered sex offender. But beyond his creep factor, he does offer an explanation that ties in nicely with that creationist-killing prologue from earlier.
Once Rachel and Psylocke contain him in a completely non-pornographic way, he explains that his sister has returned. And his sister happens to be that other blob of protoplasmic goo that he kicked out a billion years ago. And anyone who has ever had a sibling knows that no amount of time heals the vindictive wounds of an angry sibling. Now she's back and he's probably shitting whatever primordial goo shits. He also mentions that she can possess machines the way he possesses people. So that little trick with the train is now even more distressing.
But as Rachel and Psylocke are interrogating Sublime, Jubilee arrives at the institute with the baby in hand and doesn't seem to know that this baby just derailed a train. She gets a warm welcome from her fellow X-men and a nice clean room. The baby, however, wasn't content with just derailing a train. Sublime also makes clear that his sister is dangerous and he's not equipped to handle her, which I'm guessing is code for him being too lazy as well. And the baby shows that by using Jubilee's cell phone to pull off more mischief. Because kids just can't be satisfied with a little destruction. They have to go all out to satisfy their ADHD mentality.
Sublime makes clear that the X-men are making a big fucking mistake by not locking that baby in a cell next to Loki. And the baby ends up proving him right by using Jubilee's cell phone to access Hank's lab. And from there, Sublime's sister with a billion-year grudge emerges in the body of Omega Sentinel. That body also takes a female form, which is entirely appropriate given the context of this story. It's a form that might or might not give you boner, but it makes clear that Sublime isn't entirely bullshitting the X-men when he says that this is a dangerous new threat and they're royally fucked if they don't do something about it. And isn't that key in any new comic series? Setting up a situation that threatens that one or many will be utterly fucked?
Usually when women are at main characters of a story, the plot either revolves around men they want to bone/marry, clothes, looks, or the Spice Girls. Feminazis have been pointing it out for years and there is some kernel of truth to it. A lot of these stories basically portray women as a walking ball of hormones obsessively seeking their own version of Ryan Gosling to make babies with when they're not shopping for a new dress that they may or may not wear more than once. Even as someone with a working penis, I find that pretty fucking bland. So reading X-men #1 with its all-female X-men cast was refreshing in that it gave the X-men's most prominent female characters an awesome story that gave the finger to typical stereotypes while also giving me a raging boner.
Brian Wood's work on the X-books always showed potential, but being able to start fresh with a new team on a book with a very different premise has finally realized that potential. He didn't just bring Jubilee back into the fold. He added some genuine emotion into the story along with a touch of dry humor about the frustrations that come along with running a school of teenage mutants and time displaced X-men. I may come off as an unfeeling drunk at times, but get a few beers in me or a few good joints and I'm capable of genuine feeling. Other than All New X-men and Uncanny X-men, not many X-books give me that feeling that Donald Trump probably gets when someone writes him a check for eight figures. I found myself actually caring about this mystery baby and Jubilee's struggles to take care of a child. And she didn't even need a fucking reality show on MTV to make it compelling. That along makes X-men #1 a win.
This issue was a solid first issue in that it didn't just establish a new cast. It established a new threat with John Sublime and his sister that the X-women are now caught up in. It's the kind of threat that is different from what they face in the other X-books, yet you don't get the sense that it's trying to capitalize on a fad like the last X-men #1 kept trying to capitalize on the vampire craze. Well Twilight is over, Kristen Stewart's career is in the shitter, and fans are hungry for something different. And this book delivers that something that provides a new avenue for awesome.
It would be too easy for a book featuring only X-women to become nothing more than a poor man's Playboy or jerk off material for teenage boys with no internet connection and no underwear magazines. But Wood made the story compelling and that has elevated this book in ways that make it a worthy relaunch for a series with a concept that should keep the National Organization for Woman from bitching at Marvel for more than once a month. The only thing keeping this issue from being perfect is the lack of explanations on what Jubilee has been up to since she joined her vampire crew. It's not even clear in this issue that she is still a vampire. I'm not sure if Brain Wood is going to explore that in future issues, but for now he's set up a foundation as hard as my dick. And for that, I give X-men #1 a 4.5 out of 5. Ladies and effeminate men, this is the book you've been waiting for. It's an all-female crew dealing with more than just all-female problems. More than anything else, this comic proves that unless you're Cyclops, you don't need a penis to get the job done. Nuff said!
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Saturday, July 10, 2010
X-men #1 - Mutants vs. Vampires Equals Awesome

It's a rare and beautiful thing when you see any comic with a #1 label for an issue. It's an especially beautiful thing for an X-men comic because it conjures up images of the classic Chris Claremont and Jim Lee #1. You know...the X-men #1 that sold over 8 million fucking copies. It was a rare collection of circumstances, but damn it if it wasn't awesome. That X-men #1 set the tone for an entire era of X-men comics and kicked so much ass most fans still can't sit down. So obviously any other X-men #1 that comes out has a lot to live up to. This past week even with Second Coming not over yet, the first X-men #1 in two decades came out. It's been hyped since C2E2 and it's being penned by a the legendary Victor Gischler.
Wait what? Victor Gischler? The Deadpool Corps guy? How the hell did he land this gig? If you're not confused you damn well should be. We're talking about X-men #1 here! The last one was penned by a comic book legend, Chris Claremont. That guy wrote X-men for over a decade and penned some of the most memorable stories in X-men history! This guy's only notable X-men work includes Deadpool Corps. Not to knock the guy, but with other big names like Brian Bendis, Ed Brubaker, Matt Fraction, Chris Yost, and Jeph Loeb you would think Marvel would try to tap some other names. After all, wasn't that part of what made the last X-men #1 a success? It does indeed baffle the average reader. But let's forget about who is writing this thing at the moment and focus on the story. That is what's important, right? It shouldn't matter who writes it.
The story does indeed take place after Second Coming. It doesn't spoil any big revelations other than Bastion is defeated, the X-men are still on Utopia, and the mutants that lost their powers on M-Day did not get them back. In that sense it really can't carry over any of the emotion or overall awesome that such a huge event brings. If anything, it seems as though this story could probably take place before Second Coming and still work. That's a big problem, but again let's try to give Vic the benefit of the doubt here.
The first scene brings back an old and familiar face who hasn't been involved with the X-men in a while: Jubilee. She still doesn't have her powers, but she's still the same lovable young girl fans know and love. She's just out having lunch with Pixie on a beautiful day. It seems so peaceful. Then a guy wearing what looks like bondage attire. Hey, this is still San Francisco so that kind of thing doesn't turn as many heads as it would if you were in Bumfuck, Texas or Wassila, Alaska. Yeah, it's going to be that kind of day.

Nobody takes notice of the guy. I think everyone is just assuming he's on his way to a kick-ass party on Castro street where he's about to become bitch of the decade. But the guy seems less interested in being the bitch and more interested in doing the fucking. So he just walks up to everybody who are just enjoying their lunch and blows himself up. Yeah, he's a suicide bomber and not looking for 72 virgins either. It's so remarkably contemporary that Glen Beck himself is probably off somewhere crying.

Cut to Fox News for some fair and balanced coverage...nah, just kidding! Go right to Utopia where Cyclops, Wolverine, and the X-men are taking this shit in. Now it's not clear at this point if this is just another religious wacko looking to terrorize a city that Nancy Polosi calls home or if it's something more exotic. Since it's X-men we're talking about here, it's something more exotic.
But the immediate concern isn't the bombing. The big concern is Jubilee, who was unlucky enough to get stuck at ground zero when the guy blew up. Only instead of being burnt to a crisp, she was splattered with blood and given a few mild injuries. That would only be gross if she didn't describe the guy as having exploded as soon as he was exposed to the sun. Thankfully, nobody asks the stupid question as to who or what this could be. Because if it takes more than three seconds to make a vampire link, you're either the victim of an impromptu lobotomy or you've been in a cave for the past five years with your eyes closed and your fingers in your ears. Between True Blood and Twilight, you have no excuse.

There's no subtlety here. The vampires make their big entrance into the X-men's world. While they're figuring this shit out, a very non-Twilight creature emerges from the bay. Again, the people are remarkably calm when they see this thing. I guess the folks in San Francisco are hardened to this shit, but that doesn't stop a few people from being stupid enough to confront this beast because it's clearly no Edward Cullen.

While this bloodsucking asshole is making himself at home, the X-men get a nasty revelation from their science team. Jubilee has been infected by some exotic virus. That suicide bomber wasn't just trying to spread terror. He was trying to spread a virus the same way Tommy Lee tries to spread Hepatitis. Now she hasn't gone full vampire yet, but the prognosis isn't good. The virus is progressing rapidly and nobody knows what hell it's going to do to her. Whatever it does, it seems pretty clear that Jubilee is up to her neck in shit.

While Jubilee is becoming her own little Outbreak monkey, the vampires are gathering and already they look tougher than anything Twilight or True Blood can churn out (with the possible exception of Godric and Eric Northstram from True Blood). There aren't many of them and they're all being lead by that Doomsday look-a-like that emerged from the bay earlier. They seem to have been targeting Jubilee. They know what that virus is going to do to her and they're licking their chops, eager to see her join them. You know a group is creepy when they're eager to get a teenage girl to come to them.

Since Wolverine and the rest of the X-men don't take kindly to people who fuck with their friend, they go out to investigate. It doesn't take long for them to find out that vampires have established a presence in the city. They encounter a rough pack of familiars (who if you haven't seen the Blade movies are non-vampires who for whatever reason help them out) and break into an innocuous building. There, they encounter their first bloodsucker. It turns into a decent fight scene, but not quite as epic as you would expect for a book titled X-men #1.

It's some nice vampire action and it looks like more is brewing. Back on Utopia, Jubilee seems to know what she's in for and not liking it in the slightest. Being the stubborn teenager that she is, she tries to fight it. She actually goes outside and tries to sit in the sun when she knows she's about to become something that dies when exposed to sunlight. Even without her powers, Jubilee is still pretty fucking tough. But she's clearly changing. She snaps at Dr. Rao and is getting more fucked up by the second.

While she's trying to tough it out, Cyclops is learning more disturbing news about the virus. For one, it's not contagious. So that means they won't have to lock Jubilee up in a sealed chamber, which is kind of disappointing because you know she wouldn't go without a fight for that. He also learns that the virus is affecting her brain. It's going to start giving her cravings in the same way a pregnant woman craves bizarre shit every so often. She seems well on her way to joining the Twilight and True Blood crowds and not in a good way. But hey, at least she won't fucking sparkle.
Before more can be revealed, Wolverine calls in and reveals that they've found something pretty fucked up. Apparently, that suicide bomber wasn't the only one. There's a whole fucking place that seems to be manufacturing these assholes on an industrial scale. So that means that this blast wasn't just a one-time thing and Jubilee wasn't the only target. It sets things up nicely for a much bigger conflict.

So before I give the final score let me get this out of the way. This issue is good. It's a solid beginning to what could potentially be a great arc. The whole premise of mutants vs. vampires just breathes awesome. Me being a True Blood fan, I love the idea and I would love to see how it unfolds. That being said, this issue seems a wee bit out of place.
Like I said earlier, this is an X-men #1. That's what's on the cover. But seriously, this thing doesn't even come close to measuring up. It involves only a small part of the X-men, the plot is very narrow and focused, and it doesn't seem to be affecting any of the other more established X-titles. With a title like X-men #1 you would think this shit would be a bit bigger in scale. But it isn't. You could probably put this issue as the beginning of a new arc in Uncanny or X-men Legacy or even New Mutants and it would work just as well. Hell, you could just call the title Mutants vs. Vampires and that would work perfectly! It feels like an utter waste of an X-men #1 and a major downgrade compared to the Claremont/Lee #1. I get that the circumstances are different here in 2010, but an X-men #1 is so rare that a story like this just seems like an insult to the label. It's like saying your dick is huge before you fuck only to reveal you're no Ron Jeremy when you step up to the plate.
Were it not for the label on the cover, I would give this a much higher score. But given the context this title takes place in and the fact it is utterly irrelevant to the rest of the established titles, I can only give X-men #1 a 3.5 out of 5. It's a decent comic and a nice way to get vampires back into the Marvel Universe, but it simply wasn't right to call this X-men #1. It's a slap in the face to Chris Claremont and Jim Lee and fans who still have fond memories of 1991 will be painfully underwhelmed.
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