At its heart, "Absolute Vision" is a pretty darn good - if basic - story. It has a slow burn that keeps you guessing, and paints Vision - a major character - in a way that makes him difficult to figure out. One moment he's stoic and robotic, the next he's smiling and speaking like a first-class politician. The synthezoid is clearly up to something, and while it's pretty easy to figure out on your own, reading as the Avengers clue in is entertaining.
Showing posts with label Joe Sinnott. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Joe Sinnott. Show all posts
Tuesday, June 24, 2014
Friday, January 24, 2014
Review # 94: "Avengers: Absolute Vision Book 1"
A funny thing happened to the "Avengers" series in the 80's: it became historically insignificant. While big things were happening in the pages of, say.... Captain America (the emergence of US Agent), Iron Man (the rise of Jim Rhodes), Thor (about a million things written by Walt Simonson), and even West Coast Avengers (Hawkeye becoming a leader) nothing that happened in the central line stuck. Monica Rambeau, the Black Knight, Eros, Wasp as a leader and Doctor Druid barely register a blip on the collective consciousness of the casual fan.
Labels:
Al Milgrom,
Avengers,
Captain America,
Doctor Strange,
Dracula,
Fantastic Four,
Hawkeye,
Joe Sinnott,
Marvel,
Monica Rambeau,
Roger Stern,
Scarlet Witch,
She-Hulk,
Spider-Man,
Spider-Woman,
Vision,
Wasp
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