X-Men #4 annotations
As always, this post contains spoilers, and page numbers go by the digital edition.
X-MEN vol 6 #4
“Fearless, Chapter 4: Nightmare on 86th Street”
by Gerry Duggan, Javier Pina & Erick Arciniega
COVER / PAGE 1. Nightmare rears up on his horse, holding the severed head of Cyclops.
PAGE 2. Data page. Opening quotes about Nightmare from Dr Voodoo (currently in the cast of Strange Academy) and Magik.
Nightmare is a Doctor Strange villain, and the fairly self-explanatory ruler of a magical Nightmare Realm.
“He’s conquered a splinter realm…” This is just referring to the Nightmare Realm. The term “splinter realms” comes from the 2000 Magik miniseries.
“…once succeeded in trapping Eternity.” Doctor Strange vol 2 #13, published in 1976.
PAGE 3. Night at the Treehouse.
The pumpkin with a single eye is a cute touch.
X-Men Unlimited Infinity Comic #1-4
X-MEN UNLIMITED INFINITY COMIC #1-4
by Jonathan Hickman & Declan Shalvey
So here’s a thing that exists!
A few people have asked me about this book. Mainly, “will you be annotating it”. The answer, obviously, is no, for reasons which will be very very obvious to anyone who’s actually read it.
The Infinity Comics line is a series of digital-only exclusives for Marvel Unlimited subscribers. You can’t buy them separately, and it wouldn’t even be possible to print them as conventional comics. What they are is vertically scrolling comics in the model of Webtoons, optimised for viewing on a phone.
When I say “optimised for viewing on a phone”, I’m not kidding. You can read them on a tablet if you really want, but I wouldn’t. The lettering is enormous, and the app fills the whole screen – which is unlikely to have precisely the same dimensions as a phone screen and means that you often find it’s impossible to view in one go everything that the artist plainly intended you to see. (Artists might want to be a bit more cautious about what they assume to be the dimensions of the screen, to be honest. It’s not like all phones are the same shape either.)
New Mutants #22 annotations
As always, this post contains spoilers, and page numbers go by the digital edition.
NEW MUTANTS vol 4 #22
“Shadows & Mirrors”
by Vita Ayala & Rod Reis
COVER / PAGE 1: The Shadow King in profile, with the New Mutants fighting inside his mind.
PAGES 2-4. Inside the Shadow King’s illusion, the New Mutants make a last stand to defend Krakoa.
The horde of attackers include:
- Some good old fashioned Sentinels
- Former X-Man Omega Sentinel, currently allied with Orchis as seen in House of X and X-Men. I’ll come back to her.
- Nimrod
- Belasco
- S’ym, Magik’s former sidekick demon turned insurgent, and one of the main villains from the original Inferno.
- The Brood
- The First Horsemen, who aren’t actually enemies of Krakoa any more.
- AIM
- Some people from Orchis, including the helicopter in the top right and the evolved apes in the middle of the page.
Hellions #16 annotations
As always, this post contains spoilers, and page numbers go by the digital edition.
HELLIONS #16
“Come Hurt With Us”
by Zeb Wells, Stephen Segovia & Rain Beredo
COVER / PAGE 1. Greycrow, with the other Hellions in his sights – though in the story itself, he’s certainly not after all of them. It’s got an “After Liefeld” credit on it, which I can only assume is because of a very vague resemblance to the cover of New Mutants vol 1 #87 (the one with Cable and the heads of the New Mutants shown in gunsights). Calling it a homage is very generous
PAGES 2-6. The aftermath of the explosion.
Last issue ended with Sinister revealing his creation of a Sinister/Tarn hybrid chimera, and Empath responding by prompting Havok to destroy the whole place – thus also eliminating the backup of Psylocke’s AI daughter (from Fallen Angels) that Sinister has been using to keep her in line throughout this series. The Hellions also effectively learned that they’d been manipulated by Sinister and had their memories altered at his behest.
Excalibur #24 annotations
As always, this post contains spoilers, and page numbers go by the digital edition.
EXCALIBUR vol 4 #24
“By the Pleasure of the Court”
by Tini Howard, Marcus To & Erick Arciniega
COVER / PAGE 1. The regents of Sevalith with Betsy as a guest, and a spilled goblet of wine / blood. One of those cases where having a different cover artist is very noticeable, since Betsy’s costume is entirely different, and so is the entire style of room – Mahmud Asrar opts for something traditionally gothic, while Marcus To’s Sevalith is minimalist and modern.
PAGE 2. Data page. Our opening quote is from Le Morte D’Arthur by Sir Thomas Malory (c 1415-1471). It’s missing a few words – it forms part of a passage about how Mordred has become a popular ruler in Arthur’s absence, and it continues: “For then was the common voice among them that with Arthur was none other life but war and strife, and with sir Mordred was great joy and bliss.” The general tone of the original is “bunch of ingrates”.
PAGES 3-5. Betsy has dinner with the regents of Sevalith.
I think this is the first time we’ve seen Oublia and Oscura as anything other than generics, but they were named back in Marauders #13.
“The assassin who attacked you in the Avalon woods.” A Sevalith assassin attacked Excalibur last issue.
“What followed within the market.” Presumably the skirmish with the Furies in the Crooked Market at the end of last issue.
The Incomplete Wolverine – 1993
Part 1: Origin to Origin II | Part 2: 1907 to 1914
Part 3: 1914 to 1939 | Part 4: World War II
Part 5: The postwar era | Part 6: Team X
Part 7: Post Team X | Part 8: Weapon X
Part 9: Department H | Part 10: The Silver Age
1974-1975 | 1976 | 1977 | 1978 | 1979
1980 | 1981 | 1982 | 1983 | 1984 | 1985
1986 | 1987 | 1988 | 1989 | 1990 | 1991 | 1992
Last time we covered a really long story that ran up to Wolverine #65 (January 1993). But then we doubled back to cover a lot of other stories… and there are a lot of them. So before we get back to Larry Hama’s storylines in Wolverine #66…
DARK ANGEL #9-12
“Assassination”
by Bernie Jaye, Dell Barras, Helen Stone & Helen Nally
April to July 1993
The X-Men help Dark Angel against assassination attempts from Mys-Tech’s D.O.G.s and Psycho-Warriors, and get to hold off the bad guys while Dark Angel and the Wyrd Sisters (Braxus, Sapphire and Xena) head off to the astral plane. Eventually the Guide directs the heroes to a hidden computer which was responsible for the assassination attempts , and she channels the spirit of her late father Ranulph Haldane so that he can deliver the voice command to stop the machine.
Rudimentary even by the standards of Marvel UK at its worst, this is best forgotten.
This overlaps with…
Wolverine #16 annotations
As always, this post contains spoilers, and page numbers go by the digital edition.
WOLVERINE vol 7 #16
“Ill-Gotten Gains”
by Benjamin Percy, Adam Kubert & Espen Grundetjern
COVER / PAGE 1: Wolverine and Solem fight, with Solem using the Muramasa Blade.
PAGES 2-3. Solem approaches Wolverine in the Green Lagoon.
When we left off last issue, Wolverine had just discovered that his version of the Murasama Blade had been stolen from his room by Solem. Evidently he’s been investigating further since then (i.e., a whole bunch of other stories could have taken place since last issue, which is handy).
Logan’s reflections about Solem’s confusing nature are broadly in line with what we’ve seen so far in this book. The bit about him potentially being a victim largely stems from his origin story as related by Sevyr Blackmore last issue; even on Sevyr’s version of events, Solem was the sole survivor of an attack on his village, who then got taken in and raised by the people who had slaughtered everyone he knew. Solem then bides his time before taking revenge… none of which makes him seem that bad. But he goes on to be an all purpose pirate and rogue himself.
S.W.O.R.D. #8 annotations
As always, this post contains spoilers, and page numbers go by the digital edition.
S.W.O.R.D. vol 2 #8
“Unbroken”
by Al Ewing, Guiu Vilanova & Fernando Sifuentes
COVER / PAGE 1. Storm fights some Arakkans.
PAGES 2-3. Storm descends to Arakko.
Storm is making a point of using her powers to return through space, rather than doing the sensible thing and taking a gate, in order to assert her authority over the bunch of lunatics who live on Aarakko. As she descends, we get to see some of the landmarks of Arakko that were established in Planet-Size X-Men #1: the statue of Apocalypse in the sacred valley (there’s one of Genesis next to it), the Lake Hellas Diplomatic Ring, and the town of Port Prometheus.
Although Mars is terraformed, the art in this issue still largely depicts it as something of a desert wasteland.
PAGE 4. Recap and credits. Storm isn’t technically a member of S.W.O.R.D., but she’s joined the cast by virtue of her role on Arakko, and she’s our star character for this issue.
Inferno #1 annotations
As always, this post contains spoilers, and page numbers go by the digital edition.
INFERNO vol 2 #1
by Jonathan Hickman, Valerio Schiti & David Curiel
INFERNO. “Inferno” was the name of the big X-books crossover of 1989, in which demons invaded Manhattan. On the face of it, this series has nothing to do with it. But we’ll see. Inferno vol 1, if you’re wondering, was one of the miniseries from the Secret Wars event of a few years back.
COVER / PAGE 1. Moira stands over the fallen members of the Quiet Council.
PAGE 2. Opening quote from Omega Sentinel. It’s from page 12 panels 4-5.
PAGES 3-4. Emma resurrects Charles.
Obviously a flash forward. This scene is a direct callback to the opening two pages of House of X #1, in which Professor X resurrected the X-Men after their first suicide mission against Orchis. The layouts are basically the same. This time it’s Emma resurrecting Professor X and another guy who isn’t easy to recognise – presumably Magneto?
The line “To me, my X-Men” was used by Xavier in the original (and was the only line of dialogue in the scene). Emma’s line here is new. Xavier is cast in the role that Cyclops had originally. Xavier has been killed and resurrected before in the Krakoa era, but this is very clearly presenting a role reversal.
X-Men: The Onslaught Revelation #1 annotations
As always, this post contains spoilers, and page numbers go by the digital edition.
X-MEN: THE ONSLAUGHT REVELATION #1
“Altar/Piece Alter/Peace”
by Si Spurrier, Bob Quinn & Java Tartaglia
Despite the title, this is effectively Way of X #6.
COVER / PAGE 1. Nightcrawler and Legion face an Onslaught-possessed Professor X.
PAGE 2. The mutants gather for the Cruciball.
“There was once a sacred land where death had been dethroned…” Obviously, the narration is partly a plot recap for anyone gamely taking that #1 on the cover at face value. But it raises directly the question of whether the resurrected mutants are actually the same people as the original, or just copies who believe themselves to be the same person because they share memories. This is a very awkward question which the X-books have genuinely tiptoed around.
