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Mar 3

Inferno

Posted on Thursday, March 3, 2022 by Paul in x-axis

INFERNO vol 2 #1-4
Writer: Jonathan Hickman
Artist: Valerio Schiti & Stefano Caselli
Colourist: David Curiel
Letterer: Joe Sabino
Editor: Jordan White

Inferno is a strange book with a strange role. With Jonathan Hickman departing the X-books, it completes his run, but without resolving what he set up. The X-office has decided to stick with the Krakoan set-up for a little while yet, instead of moving on to the next phase of the originally planned storyline. That doesn’t mean it won’t happen at some point, of course – the nature of comics is that everything tends to revert to its traditional status quo in the end. But for now, we’re sticking with Krakoa.

So, if that’s direction, how do you go for finality? Well, by paying off a few prominent storylines and moving those characters on to their next phases, which seems fair enough. Quite why any of this is called Inferno, mind you, is less than obvious. Yes, it’s a trademark, but they already did a series under that name in 2015. This has nothing to do with any previous Inferno story, and nothing to do with Madelyne Pryor, who was being set up for something over in Hellions. (Her story continues in New Mutants, to be fair.) It’s hard to avoid the suspicion that it’s called Inferno mainly because they’d already started foreshadowing something called Inferno.

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Mar 2

X-Men #9 annotations

Posted on Wednesday, March 2, 2022 by Paul in Annotations

As always, this post contains spoilers, and page numbers go by the digital edition.

X-MEN vol 6 #9
“The Rule of Three”
Writer: Gerry Duggan
Artist: C F Villa
Colourist: Marte Gracia
Letterer: Clayton Cowles
Editor: Jordan D White

COVER / PAGE 1. Orchis members sitting behind a bloodstained desk, after a bunch of shootings. That’s Killian Devo and Alia Gregor setting at the desk, with Dr Stasis, Nimrod and Omega Sentinel behind them, alongside a bunch of Orchis footsoldiers. The desk has obvious parallels to the Quiet Council desks, and this whole issue picks up the theme from Jonathan Hickman’s stories about clear parallels between the Krakoans and Orchis. I’m not sure who the guy lying on the floor is – it might be Feilong, but that doesn’t really make sense, and if it’s him his costume is miscoloured. On the other hand, Alia doesn’t actually appear in the story. Also lying on the floor in the foregrounds are a mixture of bullets and Orchis’s signature petals.

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Feb 26

Charts – 25 February 2022

Posted on Saturday, February 26, 2022 by Paul in Music

We talk about him incessantly, I think you’ll find.

1. Carolina Gaitan, Mauro Castillo, Adassa, Rhenzy Feliz, Diane Guerrero & Stephanie Beatriz – “We Don’t Talk About Bruno”

That’s six weeks. As for the other Encanto songs, “Surface Pressure” returns to 3 this week – it’s spent six weeks now hovering between 3 and 5 – while “The Family Madrigal” is still at 8.

6. Mimi Webb – “House On Fire”

Presumably the first single from her next album. This becomes her highest placing single, beating last year’s “Good Without” (which got to number 8). The singles from the last album were mostly mid paced ballads, so this is a bit of a shift, positioning her more as an 80s pop act. It’s not subtle, but I like the hook.

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Feb 24

X-Men #1-5

Posted on Thursday, February 24, 2022 by Paul in x-axis

X-MEN vol 6 #1-5
“Fearless”
Writer: Gerry Duggan
Artists: Pepe Larraz (#1-3), Javier Pina (#4-5)
Colourists: Marte Gracia (#1-3), Erick Arciniega (#4-5)
Letterer: Clayton Cowles
Editor: Jordan White

That’s kind of a guess, actually. The solicitations for the first trade paperback have it covering issues #1-6. But issue #6 isn’t labelled part of “Fearless” and seems to be the start of a new arc. So, I’m going to figure that the first TPB is actually meant to be issues #1-5, whatever the solicitations say. Because that would make some kind of sense.

Ish.

When I think about the first few issues of Gerry Duggan’s X-Men, two main things spring to mind. One is the art. I love the art. I enjoyed Pepe Larraz’s work on House of X, and he’s great here too. That low-angle establishing shot of the Treehouse in issue #1 is fabulous, but so is the body language in the exchange between Cyclops and Ben Urich that follows. It really gets the sense of both characters dancing around the topic. His action scenes are dynamic, but the parade of aliens in Gameworld is full of invention. Dr Stasis’s weird suburban home is suitably creepy (the pallid colouring helps there too). Issue #3 is mainly a big pointless fight, but at least he brings the crazy animal soldiers.

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Feb 23

X Deaths of Wolverine #3 annotations

Posted on Wednesday, February 23, 2022 by Paul in Annotations

As always, this post contains spoilers, and page numbers go by the digital edition.

X DEATHS OF WOLVERINE #3
Writer: Benjamin Percy
Artist Federico Vicentini
Colourist: Dijjo Lima
Letterer: Cory Petit

COVER / PAGE 1: Daken, Scout and Wolverine (Laura) pose for action in front of Omega Wolverine.

PAGES 2-4. Professor X asks Wolverine (Laura) to go after Omega Wolverine.

Wolverine and Scout. Laura, the other Wolverine, is a regular character in X-Men. She’s effectively Logan’s genetic daughter. Scout is basically a younger clone of Laura, who Laura treats as a kid sister.

“[T]his whole Children of the Vault thing.” This is an X-Men storyline from both the Hickman and Duggan runs. Laura was locked in the time-distorted vault belonging to the Children of the Vault, centuries passed from her perspective, but she died immediately after escaping and before she could be backed up, so she doesn’t remember any of it.

“[S]houldn’t you be … hanging out at the Wild Hunt?” The training area for younger mutants from New Mutants, where Scout is a regular character.

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Feb 20

Charts – 18 February 2022

Posted on Sunday, February 20, 2022 by Paul in Music

This really does seem to be unshiftable.

1. Carolina Gaitan, Mauro Castillo, Adassa, Rhenzy Feliz, Diane Guerrero & Stephanie Beatriz – “We Don’t Talk About Bruno”

Five weeks. It has peaked, but it’s still comfortably in the lead. As for the other two Encanto songs, “Surface Pressure” drops to 4, and “The Family Madrigal” rebounds 9-8 (which is still below its peak of 7).

2. Ed Sheeran – “The Joker and the Queen”

Not an obvious choice of single, this is the track from last year’s “=” album that Ed Sheeran performed at the Brit Awards, and then followed up with a new version featuring Taylor Swift. Even though that’s the version with the video, and it accounts for the vast majority of streams, for some reason the label hasn’t nominated it as the lead version – and so the song appears on the chart credited simply to Ed Sheeran as per the original album version.

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Feb 19

House to Astonish Episode 197

Posted on Saturday, February 19, 2022 by Al in Podcast

We’re back once again with a full slate of comics news, remembering Ian Kennedy and Tom Veitch, and discussing the Hero Initiative’s JLA/Avengers reprint, DC’s upcoming Black Label titles, Marvel’s Wild Cards and Thunderbolts revivals, IDW’s Last Bot Standing and the Amazon/ComiXology disaster. We’ve also got reviews of Iron Fist and Nightwing, and the Official Handbook of the Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe has a burnin’ love. All this plus an underground car park, trading cards with staples and Carnage, the most well-adjusted man in comics.

The podcast is here, or here on Mixcloud, or available via the embedded player below. Let us know what you think, in the comments, on Twitter, via email or through our Facebook fan page. And if you wanted to buy a t-shirt from our Redbubble store, then well, we wouldn’t say no.

Feb 17

X-Men #8 annotations

Posted on Thursday, February 17, 2022 by Paul in Annotations

As always, this post contains spoilers, and page numbers go by the digital edition.

X-MEN vol 6 #8
“The Buffet is Undefeated”
Writer: Gerry Duggan
Artist: Javier Pina
Colourist: Marte Gracia
Letterer: Clayton Cowles

COVER / PAGE 1: M.O.D.O.K. holding Jean Grey’s mask.

PAGE 2. Data page. A quote from Nick Fury, telling us that we should take M.O.D.O.K. seriously despite his appearance.

M.O.D.O.K. – the Mental Organism Designed Only for Killing – debuted in the Captain America story in Tales of Suspense #94, back in 1967. Basically, George Tarleton is an A.I.M. technician who was turned into a human supercomputer to help with their investigations into the Cosmic Cube, only for him to overthrow them and seize control of A.I.M. The original M.O.D.O.K. was turned back to human form in Incredible Hulk #610 – the M.O.D.O.K. in this issue (and most stories in the last decade or so) is a clone who debuted in Hulk vol 2 #29.

Originally presented as a grotesque but basically serious villain, over the years he’s become mostly a comedy figure. Even though he isn’t played entirely straight in this issue, it’s actually a pretty credible outing for him by modern standards.

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Feb 16

X Lives of Wolverine #3 annotations

Posted on Wednesday, February 16, 2022 by Paul in Annotations

As always, this post contains spoilers, and page numbers go by the digital edition.

X LIVES OF WOLVERINE #3
Writer: Benjamin Percy
Artist: Joshua Cassara
Colourist: Frank Martin
Letterer: Cory Petit
Editor: Mark Basso

COVER / PAGE 1. In the foreground, western hero Wolverine stands over the defeated bone coils of an Omega Red that he’s evidently defeated. In the background, Department H-era Wolverine (recognisable by his mask) faces off against the real Omega Red.

PAGE 2. Professor X and Marvel Girl continue to monitor Wolverine.

Wolverine’s opening narration continues the theme of time. He casts his long lifespan as more of a curse. Bear in mind that one of the signature achievements of Krakoa is supposedly to enable all mutants to live forever; Wolverine apparently sees that as a bad thing that makes life less meaningful.

PAGE 3. Wolverine experiences flashbacks to various parts of his life.

Apparently, just like us, present-day Wolverine is in some sense experiencing all these events together. From left to right, the four recognisable flashbacks show:

  • Top left, Logan in World War I, probably as a member of the Devil’s Brigade, fighting a German soldier possessed by Omega Red. We haven’t seen this segment in the main story yet.
  • In the main panel (X shaped to mirror the Cerebro helmet), old west Logan fights an Omega Red gunslinger. We haven’t seen this in the main story yet either, and with only two issues to go, you have to wonder if we’re actually going to.
  • At the top, Logan as a member of Team X, in a plot thread we’ve already been following.
  • Department H Wolverine fighting what seems to be some sort of north African merchant possessed by Omega Red (bearing no resemblance to the fight seen on the cover).

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Feb 13

X-Men: The Trial of Magneto

Posted on Sunday, February 13, 2022 by Paul in x-axis

X-MEN: THE TRIAL OF MAGNETO #1-5
Writer: Leah Williams
Artist: Lucas Werneck with David Messina (#3-4)
Colourist: Edgar Delgado
Letterer: Clayton Cowles
Design: Tom Muller
Editor: Jake Thomas (#1-3) & Jordan White (#2-5)

I know, I know. The backlog is building up. This series finished ages ago. We’ll get through them.

So: Trial of Magneto came out at an odd time for the X-books, not quite in the post-Hickman era, but certainly transitioning there. In one sense, it’s an extra arc for X-Factor… but that book ended with a rushed cancellation, and in the end, X-Factor’s role in Trial of Magneto is mostly procedural. Perhaps that’s inherent in the concept. This isn’t really an X-Factor story. Maybe as originally conceived it had more to do with them – there’s a germ in the published version of a focus on Polaris as the Other Daughter. But at its core, it’s the Scarlet Witch’s story.

But then… why is it called Trial of Magneto? In fact, why is it called X-Men: Trial of Magneto, since it’s not really an X-Men story either? You can ask that too. But mainly: Magneto?

One obvious answer is that they didn’t want to spoil the plot – and the end of “Hellfire Gala” – by promoting it as a Scarlet Witch story. That’s doubtless part of it. The first issue was solicited with a modified version of the cover, to avoid showing her as the body. Still, though – the trial of Magneto? Is there a trial? He’s a suspect, sure, but she comes back from the dead halfway through the plot, so there’s never a trial. The final issue casts around to try to justify the title, but the whole thing reeks a bit of changed plans.

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