Daredevil Villains #46: Copperhead
DAREDEVIL #124-125 (August & September 1975)
“In the Coils of the Copperhead” / “Vengeance is the Copperhead”
Writers: Len Wein (#124 part 1) & Marv Wolfman (#124 part 2 & #125)
Pencillers: Gene Colan (#124) and Bob Brown (#125)
Inker: Klaus Janson
Colourists: Michelle Wolfman (#124) and Klaus Janson (#125)
Letterers: Joe Rosen (#124) and John Costanza (#125)
Editor: Len Wein
Tony Isabella lasted only five issues on Daredevil before editor Len Wein removed him from the series. The next issue, issue #124, opens with the Black Widow departing – again, but this time it will finally stick. The narrator certainly seems to be taking the opportunity to put the boot in. “Good-bye”, he declares. “There is no sadder, more bittersweet word in all the languages of man… Good-bye: The word is truly tragic when those who say it really don’t want to say it at all.”
Issue #124 has a truly odd writing credit – instead of the usual plotter/scripter distinction, it credits editor Len Wein with writing the first half of the issue himself, with the rest being credited to Marv Wolfman. It all looks a bit shambolic and last minute. Nonetheless, this is the start of Marv Wolfman’s run, which will see us through to issue #143 before he leaves in mid-storyline.
Charts – 7 February 2025
It’s the Grammys week, and it turns out that that has a noticeable impact on the top 40 these days. Plus, the Weeknd has an album out.
1. Lola Young – “Messy”
Three weeks and a very comfortable 20% margin over the number 2 single (which is still “APT” by Rosé & Bruno Mars – the top 5 is static for a second week running.
6. Lady Gaga – “Abracadabra”
This is the second single from her upcoming album, but she also premiered the video during the Grammys. It’s a third consecutive top 10 hit for Lady Gaga, something she hasn’t managed since 2011. It’s very much a track in the vein of her imperial phase, though what on earth it’s about, I haven’t a clue.
The X-Axis w/c 3 February 2025
ASTONISHING X-MEN INFINITY COMIC #9. By Tim Seeley, Edoardo Audino, KJ Díaz & Clayton Cowles. Yes, well, it’s a “fight and team up” story with Juggernaut and Captain America. Nice art, and I sort of get the idea of doing “unstoppable force against immovable object” with the shield – except Juggernaut’s not literally unstoppable these days, surely? But it boils down to a fight-and-team-up story, and one that feels just a couple of steps removed from the way these characters are normally written, at that. Bit underwhelming.
PHOENIX #8. (Annotations here.) Look, I’m willing to accept that I might not be in the most receptive mood for entertainment this week. But even allowing for that, this isn’t good. It doesn’t have the glaring plot holes of issue #7, to be sure, but it’s choppy, disjointed stuff. Why is Jean suddenly in a cocoon floating in space, when she was on a planet last issue? What exactly are we meant to be learning from revisiting the Dark Phoenix Saga with changes? When did Adani get back together with Perrikus? Since when are either of them interested in bringing back the Dark Gods? Since when are the rest of the Dark Gods even missing? I don’t actually mind the art on this book, for the most part, but it doesn’t always flow that well, and the black and yellow Phoenix design at the end feels like a distaff Nebulon.
Wolverine #6 annotations
As always, this post contains spoilers, and page numbers go by the digital edition.
WOLVERINE vol 8 #6
“Lineage”
Writer: Saladin Ahmed
Artist: Martín Cóccolo
Colourist: Bryan Valenza
Letterer: Cory Petit
Editor: Mark Basso
WOLVERINE.
This time, he experiences the Adamantine’s call as a vision of being buried alive. Nightcrawler snaps him out of it, but it’s not clear whether he would have broken the spell on his own. For Wolverine, the call seems to be coming from the Earth itself.
When Laura shows up, he says that he didn’t realise until now “how much I needed to breathe the familiar scent of kin” – a slightly odd comment given that he’s next to Nightcrawler, whom he’s known far longer than Laura, but evidently the point is that he appreciates his family once they’re around.
SUPPORTING CAST.
Nightcrawler. He’s the only character aside from Wolverine that can get Leonard the Wendigo to calm down, and so he winds up babysitting the poor guy while Wolverine pursues the main plot.
Phoenix #8 annotations
As always, this post contains spoilers, and page numbers go by the digital edition.
PHOENIX #8
Writer: Stephanie Phillips
Artist: Alessandro Miracolo
Colour artist: David Curiel
Letterer: Cory Petit
Editor: Annalise Bissa
PHOENIX.
Despite what it says on the recap page, Jean isn’t in the Blue Area of the Moon, but in a floating fire cocoon in space, which Nova and Rocket Racoon are keeping watch on – they were on a planet last issue, but let’s assume they saw it shoot up into the sky and followed. The Blue Area stuff is all just a hallucination as Jean converses with the Phoenix itself. The recap page says that this was caused by Adani on purpose, but the actual story seems to be saying that it’s some sort of side effect of the Phoenix being “fractured” when Adani resisted giving up the Phoenix power, and managed to hold on to fraction of it.
In keeping with Rise of the Powers of X, this story takes the line that Jean and the Phoenix are, if not literally identical, at least two sides of the same coin. The Phoenix presents itself as an embodiment of the cycle of life.
Daredevil Villains #45: Blackwing
DAREDEVIL #122-123 (June & July 1975)
“HYDRA-and-Seek” / “Holocaust in the Halls of HYDRA”
Writer: Tony Isabella
Artist: Bob Brown
Inker: Vince Colletta
Letterer: Karen Mantlo
Colourists: Janice Cohen (#122) and George Roussos (#123)
Editor: Len Wein
Blackwing is a bat-themed villain. That might seem like a bold move in the world of superhero comics, where the bat motif is very much taken. Of course, you can always do “what if Batman, but a villain”. But for the Marvel Universe, that character is Nighthawk, and he exists already.
Yet Blackwing genuinely is distinct from Batman. For all that Batman loves his bat motif, you see, he draws the line at actual bats. Even in the days when Bat-Hound and Bat-Mite seemed like a good idea, DC drew the line at Bat-Bat. This is the gap in the market which Blackwing seeks to fill: a bat-themed villain with actual bats.
For our purposes, I’m treating these two issues as Blackwing’s spotlight story. But his debut was in issue #118 – a fill-in story by Gerry Conway and Don Heck entitled “Circus Spelled Sideways Is Death”. This magnificent title is all the better for its irrelevance: the story features neither death nor sideways orientation. It does, however, feature a circus.
Charts – 31 January 2025
My god, a busy week on the singles chart. It’s been so long.
Two weeks. Her other credited single – as a guest on Tyler, The Creator’s “Like Him” – is at 36.
And one thing hasn’t changed – the top five is entirely non-movers.
6. Central Cee & Dave – “Sailor Song”
13. Central Cee & Lil Durk – “Truth in the Lies”
Central Cee’s album “Can’t Rush Greatness” is officially his first studio album, but it’s his second number one, because the album chart doesn’t care if you call it a mixtape. It gets the maximum three singles, with last week’s “GBP” hanging in there at number 7.
The X-Axis – w/c 27 January 2025
ASTONISHING X-MEN INFINITY COMIC #8. By Tim Seeley, Edoardo Audino, KJ Díaz & Clayton Cowles. Hmm… I have no trouble buying the idea that Captain America thinks Black Tom Cassidy is still a villain. After all, he was a behind the scenes member of X-Force. I have a bit more trouble with the idea that Cap thinks the Juggernaut is still a villain, when he’s a full fledged public member of the X-Men. That said, I do quite like the way Seeley writes Cap with calmly reasonable conviction even when he’s totally wrong – it’s quite fun seeing his voice of reason routine deployed at the wrong target – and there’s some really nice art on this, particularly with Cap’s bike stunts.
X-MEN #10. (Annotations here.) Basically an issue of Cyclops staring down the awful Agent Lundqvist, who’s getting more plausible with every passing day as American politics catches up with him. MacKay does this scene very well, I think – the point of having Cyclops cite things like the Hague Invasion Act is not to align him with the right, but to have him frame his point in terms of Lundqvist’s worldview. Not just to make sure the dimwit actually understands it, but because his whole message is “the US government behaves exactly like me all the time, so stop your whining”. It’s also a post-Krakoan Cyclops who’s given up on trying to be friends with the authorities and is openly just trying to keep them off his back by threatening mutual destruction – rather than going back to the outright revolutionary angle that never quite worked under Bendis. I think it’s a good approach, and Netho Diaz gets Lundqvist’s increasing loss of composure rather well.
Psylocke #3 annotations
As always, this post contains spoilers, and page numbers go by the digital edition.
PSYLOCKE vol 2 #3
“Lady-Killer”
Writer: Alyssa Wong
Artist: Vincenzo Carratù
Colour artist: Fer Sifuentes-Sujo
Letterer: Ariana Maher
Editor: Darren Shan
PSYLOCKE:
Her first instinct is to call Devon to get an analysis of the weird cyborg robots, even though she’s actually in the Factory. Presumably most of the X-Men are off on a mission, but we know that the Beast’s in the building. Either she’s turning to Devon as a first port of call generally, or she wants to keep this separate from the X-Men because it involves Greycrow – but she has no apparent qualms about bringing him to the Factory for medical treatment, so it’s probably the former.
She recognises the butterflies left in the Factory from the display in Shinobi’s apartment, and naturally sees him as the next lead. In the circumstances, she’s surprisingly restrained in challenging him on it, although she doesn’t seem to attempt to read his mind once she’s in range – instead she confronts him and demands “to know what your game is”. (Maybe she figures that Shinobi has decent psychic defences and that she’s not the greatest stealth telepath in the world.)
She takes a bit of prompting to give Greycrow a hug after she finds him alive, but not much. He’s clearly much more in touch with his emotions than she is – which makes it a little odd that she takes the opportunity to lecture him and Shinobi later in the issue when they squabble over her. (This may just be a misjudged scene. Although they’re clearly rivals in some sense, the main reason they fight is that Greycrow grabbed Shinobi from behind and held a knife to his throat, which by all appearances is what Greycrow and Psylocke had planned. Did she not expect Shinobi to defend himself? For that matter, how was this ever a remotely sensible way to ambush a guy with phasing powers?)
X-Men #10 annotations
As always, this post contains spoilers, and page numbers go by the digital edition.
X-MEN vol 7 #10
“Brinkmanship”
Writer: Jed MacKay
Penciller: Netho Diaz
Inker: Sean Parsons
Colourist: Fer Sifuentes-Sujo
Letterer: Clayton Cowles
Editor: Tom Brevoort
THE X-MEN:
Cyclops. Naturally enough, he was expecting retaliation for the X-Men’s attack on Graymalkin over the last two issues. His solution to this problem is, as he says, brinksmanship: he hires the Hellions to wreck O*N*E’s resources, and openly threatens mutually assured destruction unless O*N*E back off. He literally says that if he’s killed then the X-Men will slaughter the US government, and that Phoenix will probably raze the Earth in revenge.
How far Cyclops is bluffing is open to debate – the message he wants Lundqvist to take from this is that he’s demonstrating the amount of damage that a fight between the two sides would cause, and that he’s giving Lundqvist the arguments he needs to back off. He’s certainly exaggerating the risk of his death driving Phoenix mad – when Quentin asks him about it, he simply says that “I can’t rule it out”, which is a lot less definitive than his threat to Lundqvist, and feels like a “well, I wasn’t completely making it up” justification. But does he have plans for a retaliatory strike on Washington? Possibly – he’s certainly selected a team of X-Men relatively likely to be on board with such a plan. Then again, when Quentin asks him “Is it true?”, Scott has to ask him to specify which bit, which implies that the whole speech was news to Quentin. (In contrast, Quentin clearly does know about the Hellions.)