Marauders #12 annotations
As always, this post contains spoilers, and page numbers go by the digital edition.

MARAUDERS #12
“The New Phase”
by Gerry Duggan & Matteo Lolli
COVER / PAGE 1: The resurrected Kate Pryde shows off her new knuckle tattoos, which read “Kill Shaw”. The tattoo she got in issue #2 read “Hold Fast”.
This cover art wasn’t used in the solicitations, which instead had an image of Lockheed saying “shhhh” – presumably as a placeholder to avoid spoiling Kate’s return in the previous issue. Ironically, this concern to avoid spoilers doesn’t extend to issue #12 itself, since the unveiling of Kate’s new tattoos is the final beat of the issue.
PAGES 2-4. Kate is welcomed back to Krakoa following her resurrection.
Note that resurrected Kate has her traditional hairstyle, not the straightened hair that she’s had throughout the series to date. In keeping with Krakoan culture, she’s referred to by a “mutant name”, though the codename used is Red Queen (more of an office than a name) rather than any of her previous names.
(more…)iWolverine 2020

iWOLVERINE 2020 #1-2
Writer: Larry Hama
Artist: Roland Boschi
Colourist: Andres Mossa
Letterer: Joe Sabino
Editor: Darren Shan
There’s no point being a completist if you’re not going to be a completist. So… iWolverine 2020. Or at least, that’s what the logo says. The Comixology listing says it’s called 2020 iWolverine. And the event checklist says it’s just called iWolverine (though on every other book, it agrees that the “2020” comes at the end). Let’s go with what it says on the cover, and resign ourselves to the fact that when this thing finally appears on Marvel Unlimited, nobody will ever be able to find it.
It’s a curious commission. It’s part of the Iron Man 2020 event, which basically consists of six issues of Iron Man plus a bunch of tie-in issues. The broad plot of the event involves artificial intelligences around the world rising up in a rebellion against the humans who want to use them as simple tools. But unless I’m missing something, iWolverine 2020 has nothing to do with that storyline whatsoever. There’s a passing mention of the fact that Albert and Elsie-Dee are technically Donald Pierce’s property, but it’s really a red-skies crossover. This story would have worked just as well whether or not the rest of the crossover existed.
(more…)Charts – 6 September 2020
The singles chart is quiet; the album chart, not so much.
1 Cardi B featuring Megan Thee Stallion – “WAP”
Climbing to number 1 in its fourth week out, and the first time either Cardi B or Megan Thee Stallion has reached number one. These things are subjective, but it surely has to be the most explicit record ever to reach number one. The chart compilers, who would naturally prefer to talk about the statistics than the lyrics, are pushing it as “the first ever female rap collaboration to go to Number 1 in the UK”. I did wonder whether the word “collaboration” was doing some heavy lifting there, but no, Salt-N-Pepa never made it higher than number 2 – twice, with “Push It” in 1988 and “Let’s Talk About Sex” in 1991.
(more…)Wolverine #5 annotations
As always, this post contains spoilers, and page numbers go by the digital edition.

WOLVERINE vol 7 #5
“Bloodclocks”
by Benjamin Percy & Viktor Bogdanovic
It’s not a continuity-heavy issue, and to be honest, there’s not that much to say about it in those terms.
COVER / PAGE 1. Wolverine is beset by vampire bats.
PAGES 2-4. Dracula and co top up their bloodclocks from the captive Wolverine.
Apparently Wolverine’s healing factor is so good that you can freeze him in ice and he doesn’t suffocate. Not sure how that works. Anyway, the idea here is that Wolverine’s blood is special and carrying it lets vampires walk around in the day, at least for a time. This picks up on a data page from issue #1, which claimed that Wolverine’s blood – thanks to its healing powers – is somewhat similar to the blood of someone who has been bitten by a vampire, but has curative properties and lacks the vulnerability to light.
(more…)New Mutants #12 annotations

NEW MUTANTS vol 4 #12
“Monster Machine”
by Ed Brisson & Marco Failla
COVER / PAGE 1. Magik lashes out at the media (in general, rather than specifically Dox, but okay).
PAGES 2-3. Prologue – more monsters in Nova Roma.
This scene picks up on a plot thread from issue #8, where Magma, Armor and Boom-Boom dealt with a bunch of weird mutant-hunting creatures in the jungles around Nova Roma (Magma’s hidden anachronistic home town). “Senator Aquila” is Magma’s father. That story ended with the unnamed woman seen here showing up looking for revenge for the death of some of her creations.
(more…)Cable #4 annotations
As always, this post contains spoilers, and page numbers go by the digital edition.

CABLE vol 4 #4
“The Big Bang”
by Gerry Duggan & Phil Noto
COVER / PAGE 1. Cable and Esme fight the Spaceknights. This is bannered as a “Path to X of Swords” issue, presumably for sword-related reasons that would have applied to the whole series to date.
PAGES 2-5. Esme recounts the history of the Spaceknights.
We’ve covered this before, but the Spaceknights form part of the back story of Rom, the 1980s licensed series. In Rom, the established back story saw the Galadorians coming under attack from the Dire Wraiths about two hundred years ago, and the Spaceknights such as Rom being volunteers who gave up their normal bodies to become cyborg warriors. (The basic set-up of most issues of Rom was that Rom kept showing up to kill Dire Wraiths disguised as ordinary humans, and people kept mistaking him from a murderous killer robot.)
(more…)The Incomplete Wolverine, Part 6
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
We left off with Logan firmly established as a secret agent working for the likes of the CIA (and with Romulus in the background feeding him missions, thanks to Wolverine: Origins). Now, we finally get to one of the phases of his history that’s more familiar, as he joins Team X.
And this phase is… bitty. Nobody really does entire stories to the Team X era – instead it’s all fragmented flashbacks, some of which then turn out to be memory implants. So this is going to be a particularly haphazard one, since few of these really amount to a whole story.

X-MEN: ORIGINS – SABRETOOTH #1
by Kieron Gillen & Dan Panosian
February 2009
We’ve had scenes from this issue before, but it takes place over a very long time frame, and it has several scenes set during the Team X period. In particular, it’s got the closest thing to Logan joining Team X – we don’t actually see that happening, but we do learn that he applied successfully for the job, and is then horrified when Victor Creed shows up as another recruit. Logan attacks him on sight, and the two are quickly separated. The Team X staff aren’t that bothered, because they were planning to wipe both men’s memories anyway. Of course, Romulus is sitting in the background behind all this mind-wipe stuff (this issue is post-Origins). But we’ll see later that Team X has at least some employees who know nothing about Romulus – so either it’s a genuinely independent outfit that he’s infiltrated, or there are simply some people who aren’t in on the scam.
(more…)Charts – 28 August 2020
Well, this is certainly eclectic.
1 Joel Corry featuring MNEK – “Head & Heart”
Not this one, obviously. “Head & Heart” spends a sixth week at number one, with “WAP” at number 2. The gap is fairly close, equivalent to 1,700 sales.
3. BTS – “Dynamite”
Interesting. The K-Pop boy band BTS got their first hit single in 2018 with “Idol”, and reached number 13 last year with “Boy With Luv”. But thus far they’ve been something of a fanbase act who perform well in their first week, without crossing over to a wider audience. This, however, has more obvious crossover appeal, since (a) it’s in English, and (b) it’s a disco track that sounds not a million miles from something that Bruno Mars might make, albeit sped up a bit. It feels a bit too obviously market-tailored to me, but it’s number 3, so what do I know?
(more…)X-Men #11 annotations
As always, this post contains spoilers, and page numbers go by the digital edition.
Nice and simple, this one.

X-MEN vol 5 #11
“One War, One Mutant”
by Jonathan Hickman & Leinil Francis Yu
COVER / PAGE 1. Magneto presumably facing off against the Cotati. This issue is bannered as both an Empyre tie-in and a “Path to X of Swords” issue. It’s not exactly hard to figure out which scene is which.
PAGES 2-5. Summoner invites Rockslide to play a game.
The Arakko point is presumably part of the Arak Corral which showed up and joined with Krakoa in issue #2. It contains a closed portal to the sister island of Arakko. Summoner came through the portal in that issue; he has the power to control the monsters of Arakko, and he came looking for Apocalypse’s help. The three young mutants who come to speak to him are Rockslide (the rock guy), Anole (the lizard guy) and Loa (a minor character from the mid-2000s New Mutants series).
(more…)X-Factor #2 annotations
As always, this post contains spoilers, and page numbers go by the digital edition.

X-FACTOR vol 4 #2
“Suite No. 2: Mojoverse Sonata Xf. 3 Op. 45, Danse Macabre”
by Leah Williams & David Baldeon
PAGE 1 / COVER: Um… well, it’s a shot of the team in their new costumes, presumably with Aurora in red behind them, and a display of skulls with X marks on their foreheads. It doesn’t really seem to have very much to do with the issue.
PAGES 2-3. A mysterious person teleports onto Krakoa and leaves a parcel for X-Factor.
As we’ll see, this person is delivering evidence designed to prompt X-Factor into investigating the Mojoverse.
The Pod is the home of the Five, the mutants who are responsible for growing the new bodies used to resurrect dead mutants (Hope, Egg, Tempo, Elixir and Proteus). They’re discussing Proteus’ need for periodic new bodies; originally, he used to burn through bodies quite quickly. Proteus’ Scottish accent is frankly abysmal.
(more…)