"Operation Zero Tolerance" is the practical endpoint for the X-Men under Scott Lobdell. While he lingers for another few issues, this is the last major story of his seven years on the title, not counting a brief return at the start of the millennium. As far as swan songs go, it's not bad. But it's not great either.
Showing posts with label Iceman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Iceman. Show all posts
Saturday, June 11, 2016
Wednesday, September 30, 2015
Review # 178: "Age of Apocalypse Prelude"
I feel pretty comfortable calling "Age of Apocalypse" the best comic book crossover of the 90's, for whatever that's worth. For my money it is the only "X-Men" story arc from the Nicieza-Harras-Lobdell trinity that stacks up with anything that came before or has come since. It was a project birthed from wild ambition, sequenced perfectly and executed soundly. All to examine what the world of the X-Men would be like if Charles Xavier had not been around to form them.
Ah, but in the lead-in lies a flaw.
Labels:
Age of Apocalypse,
Andy Kubert,
Apocalypse,
Bishop,
Cable,
Charles Xavier,
Cyclops,
Fabien Nicieza,
Gambit,
Iceman,
Jean Grey,
Legion,
Magneto,
Marvel,
Psylocke,
Rogue,
Scott Lobdell,
Storm,
X-Men
Monday, August 10, 2015
Review # 168: "X-Men - Inferno Prologue"
Interesting technique being employed by Marvel with this omnibus, as "X-Men: Inferno Prologue" collects all material from "Uncanny X-Men," "New Mutants" and "X-Factor" between the crossovers "Fall of the Mutants" and "Inferno." If this is their model going forward - collecting the "big three" of the 80s in single collections - then I am all for it. Better to keep all of the setpieces in one place, even if it does create some unevenness in terms of quality.
Labels:
Beast,
Brood,
Chris Claremont,
Colossus,
Cyclops,
Iceman,
Jean Grey,
Louise Simonson,
Madelyne Pryor,
Magik,
Marvel,
New Mutants,
Reavers,
Rogue,
Walt Simonson,
Wolverine,
X-Factor,
X-Men
Tuesday, June 23, 2015
Review # 162: "All-New Doop"
When news broke last year that Peter Milligan would be returning to Marvel to pen a miniseries about Doop - the green blob he created in the pages of X-Force/X-Statix - I was thrilled. Unfortunately, I think I set my expectations too high.
Labels:
Doop,
Iceman,
Kitty Pryde,
Marvel,
Peter Milligan,
X-Men,
X-Statix
Monday, June 22, 2015
Review # 161: "X-Men Epic Collection Vol. 1 - 'Children of the Atom'"
Stan Lee is one hell of a creator. But I don't need to tell you that. His mark on popular culture grows by the day as franchises attached to his name have become multimedia phenomena, shattering records worldwide. Lee deserves all the praise he receives.
However, he is not perfect.
Friday, April 25, 2014
Review # 109: "Marvel Masterworks - The X-Men Vol. 6"
Before Len Wein, Dave Cockrum and Chris Claremont came along the X-Men sucked. Flat out sucked. Issue after issue of one-note characters taking on terrible villains in forgettable stories. Given how memorable the work of Stan Lee and Jack Kirby was in the early 60s, it's stunning to find a book so empty outside of some very rare exceptions. As a result, I was 100 percent certain for years that I would never pick up another pre-"Giant Size X-Men" collection again. I wasn't interested in seeing more pale shadows of these characters that I love - Cyclops, Jean Grey, Iceman, Beast, Angel, Charles Xavier, Magneto, etc. - ever again.
Labels:
Angel,
Beast,
Charles Xavier,
Cyclops,
Havok,
Iceman,
Jean Grey,
Magneto,
Marvel,
Neal Adams,
Polaris,
Roy Thomas,
Sauron,
Sentinels,
X-Men
Friday, April 4, 2014
Review # 107: "X-Men - Battle of the Atom"
It's nice to see a franchise heading in a direction I like. What isn't nice is when it's kinda stumbling in that direction.
Tuesday, March 18, 2014
Review # 103: "X-Men - Road to Onslaught Vol. 1"
A funny thing happened to the Lobdell/Nicieza/Harras-era X-Men franchise in the mid-90s: it got pretty darn good. While I personally find "The Age of Apocalypse" to be overrated, it's still excellent and I would argue as a counter that what immediately preceded and followed it was underrated as a whole.
Labels:
Beast,
Bishop,
Colossus,
Cyclops,
Exodus,
Fabien Nicieza,
Gambit,
Iceman,
Jean Grey,
Juggernaut,
Magneto,
Marvel,
Psylocke,
Rogue,
Sabretooth,
Scott Lobdell,
Sinister,
X-Men
Tuesday, February 25, 2014
Review # 100: "All-New X-Men Vol. 1 - Yesterday's X-Men"
It was the best of Bendis, it was the worst of Bendis. By chance I read the current commercial king of Marvel's run on Daredevil at about the same time as his expanded run on the Avengers. While I found his time with Earth's Mightiest Heroes in the Heroic Age to be tired, his earlier work with The Man Without Fear blew me away. BMB made the Avengers profitable again with his prior launch of "New Avengers" but by the end he ran out of creative steam.
Tuesday, December 10, 2013
Review # 83: "Wolverine and the X-Men by Jason Aaron Vol. 7 (The Hellfire Saga)"
"The Hellfire Saga" is so good it gives Jason Aaron a serious claim as one of the greatest X-Men writers of all time. It's one of those stories where everything comes together so well that it makes all that preceded it much better. Quite an achievement considering - despite sidetracks from the Avengers vs. X-Men event - it took about 30 issues of build to get there.
Friday, November 8, 2013
Review # 73: "Nation X"
"Nation X" has the X-Men in a pretty cool place. Outside of a few exceptions, every mutant hero is now living on one big island made out of what was once Asteroid M. Cyclops, Wolverine, Emma Frost, Storm, Rogue, Gambit, Nightcrawler, Colossus, Professor X, the original New Mutants, the New X-Men and many, many others are now directly interacting.
Labels:
Alan Davis,
Charles Xavier,
Cyclops,
Doop,
Emma Frost,
Fantomex,
Greg Land,
Iceman,
Magneto,
Marvel,
Matt Fraction,
Mike Allred,
Namor,
Norman Osborn,
Peter Milligan,
Terry Dodson,
Whilce Portacio,
Wolverine,
X-Men
Friday, August 23, 2013
Review # 35: "Wolverine and the X-Men by Jason Aaron Vol. 5"
While I appreciate Jason Aaron's ambition to make "Wolverine and the X-Men" a mixture of both whimsy and darkness (almost like Hogwarts with mutants,) there's always a line that can be crossed and things become too absurd. I think he may have done that here.
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