Uncanny X-Men Annual 2016
Technically that’s not the title. Technically this thing is Uncanny X-Men Annual #1. But Marvel’s annuals have come to embody Milk & Cheese‘s 1990s dream of a series composed entirely of issue #1s, so let’s call it something that’s actually vaguely informative instead.
The main story, “Balancing The Scales” by Cullen Bunn and Ken Lashley, is pretty much just an extra issue of the regular series – and it does at least matter to the plot.
Josh Foley, who was bumped off in an earlier issue to build up the Dark Riders, is back from the dead, because of his healing powers. He promptly heads off to Genosha to torture the Dark Riders (who were themselves killed by Magneto a few issues later) by raising them up and dropping them dead repeatedly. Precisely how he knows that any of this happened or where to find the Dark Riders is, shall we say, less than clear. Never mind. Magneto’s X-Men duly show up to try and bring the erratic omega mutant under control.
Charts – 23 December 2016
Ah, Christmas. I’m determined to clear some of my reviews backlog over the coming days, but this is the chart with the 2016 Christmas number one, so I’d better do it while it’s still vaguely topical. If you haven’t seen the link already, though, do look below for the nominations thread for the Homies!
But first…
1. Clean Bandit – “Rockabye”
And that’s your 2016 Christmas number 1. Since it’s spending its seventh week at the top, and its sales (even the notional figure including streaming) are nothing special by the standards of the Christmas chart, you could see this as a bit of an anticlimax. But really it’s the anticlimax that’s the story here. What’s happening here is basically the failure of the usual Christmas number 1 circus to occur.
The Homies 2016
It’s that time of the year again, where comics blogs and podcasts do their obligatory look-back best-ofs, and that means it’s time for the House to Astonish Homies Awards!
As always, Paul and I will individually be choosing a winner for each category, but there’s the usual proviso – we want YOU to help, so you all name your picks in the comments, and Paul and I each choose our own, and we talk a bit about each of the three on our awards show.
We’re likely to be recording on the 30th of December, so we’re giving you until 8pm UK time (3pm Eastern, noon Pacific) on December 29 to make your choice. When you list your picks, don’t just name names either, because we’ll be reading out the best comments on the show, so let us know your thinking!
BEST NEW SERIES
This one’s pretty self-explanatory – any comic whose first issue was published between 1 January 2016 and the close of nominations (29th December) is eligible. What new series got your attention the most this year?
BEST ACTUALLY NEW SERIES
This one’s a little less self-explanatory – what series, again first published between 1 January and date of broadcast, did you think was best, with the proviso that it has to be something where the property wasn’t in existence prior to the start of 2012. We’re counting re-use of titles as well as concepts, so Lost Light or Doom Patrol wouldn’t be eligible, but (for example) Animosity or Another Castle would.
BEST CONTINUING SERIES
The counterpart to the categories above, which covers books whose first issue was published in 2015 or before. They’ve been around the block, but they’ve still got what it takes.
BEST MINI, ONE-SHOT OR OGN
These are explaining themselves by this point, right? We’re looking for OGNs, one-shots and minis published in 2016 (or partially in 2016, in the case of minis).
FAVOURITE WRITER
FAVOURITE ARTIST
FAVOURITE COLOURIST
Each of these three is pretty self-explanatory – whose name on the cover or credits box of a book makes you want to pick it up? Whose work do you most look forward to seeing?
MOST WANTED
This is for the comic, series or graphic novel that saw print this year which you’d want to see more of, whether that be a book that was cancelled before its time, a one-shot or mini that just begs for a follow-up, or an OGN that you’d love to see a sequel to.
MOST PLEASANT SURPRISE
It may have seemed unappealing when you read about it online, and those preview pages may have looked unremarkable, but when you finally got the winner of this category in your hands you were ready to eat your words. What comic, series or graphic novel did you find yourself enjoying much more than you thought you would?
STIFF DRINK AWARD
This award will go to the comic or graphic novel that most made us gasp with surprise – an unexpected plot twist, a daring cliffhanger or a shocking denouement will stand a book in good stead here.
OUTSTANDING ACHIEVEMENT
This is exactly what it says – which creator, creative team, publisher or other contributor to the world of comics really knocked it out of the park this year?
Let us have your picks in the comments thread below, along with your thinking on each one – we’ll read out a range of the responses on our big end-of-year show. Happy nominating!
Chart – 16 December 2016
Well, this is interesting. This is the chart before the Christmas number one. In recent years it’s tended to be quiet – the regular record industry shut down for Christmas, the last-minute novelty singles and charity releases waiting for their one-week surge. But this year we have a more normal chart, notable if anything for having a couple of high profile new releases. Has the record industry decided that maybe, with the charity releases hobbled by the addition of streaming data to the charts, this might just be the year when a regular release gets to be Christmas number one again? If the midweek charts are to be believed – and they’ve been notably less accurate this year – then the answer is “yes”. (This is also likely to be the point where the general public twig to just what a difference streaming has made to the chart.)
But first, Clean Bandit celebrate six weeks at number one. That means it overtakes “7 Years” and “Cold Water” to have the second longest run this year. (Obviously, there isn’t time for it to beat Drake’s 15-week monopoly.) It has a perfectly realistic chance of hanging on for Christmas.
2. Louis Tomlinson & Steve Aoki – “Just Hold On”
Charts – 9 December 2016
Look at the date. What do you think is going to happen?
But first up, this gets a fifth week at number 1, to overtake “Rather Be” as Clean Bandit’s biggest hit. Not so unusual for this remarkably slow year on the singles chart. It tops a completely static top 4.
5. Neiked – “Sexual”
Old Man Logan vol 3: “The Last Ronin”
I’ve complained before that Old Man Logan didn’t seem to be heading anywhere – it was going round in circles with Logan learning in one arc that he needed to stop trying to change his past, and in the next arc learning the exact opposite. And with the series scheduled to end with issue #18, if it’s going to get to the point, it needs to get moving.
So it was somewhat encouraging that this arc showed signs of a much-needed direction. The preceding arc was a story about Logan visiting Maureen – the girl who would grow up to be his future wife – intercut with flashbacks about how they had met in his own timeline. And “The Last Ronin” continues that parallel structure, with flashbacks to what Logan and Maureen did next, intercut with a story about Logan meeting the same villains in the present day.
Charts – 2 December 2016
I’d planned to get another X-Axis review up by now, but it’s going to be another day or two. Anyway, it’ll be the previous Old Man Logan arc (since the book’s already on to the next one, so…)
Meanwhile, the top 40. Hope you like the Weeknd.
First, a fourth week for Clean Bandit, which matches the run of “Rather Be” two years ago. (When, admittedly, four-week runs were rather less common.) The midweeks have it on course for a fifth week.
3. The Weeknd featuring Daft Punk – “Starboy”
9. The Weeknd featuring Daft Punk – “I Feel It Coming”
17. The Weeknd – “Party Monster”
26. The Weeknd – “Rockin'”
30. The Weeknd featuring Kendrick Lamar – “Sidewalks”
39. The Weeknd – “Reminder”
Charts – 25 November 2016
It’s pretty much a dead week, to be honest. Traditionally, we’d be approaching the winter shutdown around this time: unless you were trying to sneak a hit, you generally didn’t try to release or promote a regular single during the Christmas and New Year period. In the streaming era, when records can take a month or so to slow-build anyway, this may not hold – people might figure it’s worth putting something out and seeing if it takes off at the start of January. But it’s all looking familiarly quiet right now.
Three weeks. It still needs a fourth to match the run of “Rather Be” in February 2014. But along the lines of what I’ve just said, it’ll soon be time for the papers to start filling space by blathering about the race for Christmas Number 1.
Death of X
Death of X is pretty wretched. But at least it has the decency to be revealingly wretched.
When the Marvel Universe picked up again after Secret Wars, we were told that during the gap, Cyclops had got himself killed doing something fairly awful involving the Inhumans. Death of X is tasked with filling in that gap, presumably to lay the groundwork for the upcoming Inhumans vs X-Men crossover (though how much it really adds is debatable).
The oddity of this crossover is that given the raft of X-Men titles already announced for launch in the new year, it rather gives the game away that the X-Men seem to be coming out ahead. That doesn’t necessarily make the promotion a bad idea: sometimes it’s no bad thing to send a clear message that the storyline is coming to a climax. If people didn’t like it until now, maybe at least they’ll show up to see it end.
Deadpool v Gambit: The “V” Is For “Vs.”
I’ve certainly been putting this one off. Deadpool v Gambit finished ages ago. The trade paperback is out by now. But time to get back into the rhythm. There’s something a bit odd about reading American comics right now. Comics have a long lead-in time. They’re slow to react to big events. And there has been a very big event indeed, one which won’t begin to feed through into actual comics until some time next spring. In the meantime, everything feels a bit like reading Archie. It’s a charming world of yesteryear, when things weren’t on fire yet.
No doubt I’ll be saying a lot more about this in the coming months, both here and on the podcast, as the achingly slow turning circle of comics finally orients itself to 2017. But Deadpool v Gambit is not really a good place to get into this: not only did it come out entirely before the election, but it’s a bouncy, shaggy-dog story caper book with no political dimensions at all.
