Regarded as the second major X-Men crossover, "Fall of the Mutants" takes a much better approach for its titles at the time than what had been done in its predecessor "Mutant Massacre." In essence, it's not a crossover at all - each series was slated to go through a significant change at exactly the same time under the same banner headline. This allowed the creators to do whatever they wanted and fail or succeed on their own merits.
Showing posts with label Marc Silvestri. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marc Silvestri. Show all posts
Wednesday, October 8, 2014
Review # 135: "X-Men: Fall of the Mutants"
Labels:
Angel,
Apocalypse,
Chris Claremont,
Cypher,
Dazzler,
Havok,
Hulk,
Louise Simonson,
Magneto,
Marc Silvestri,
Marvel,
Mystique,
New Mutants,
Polaris,
Rogue,
Walt Simonson,
Wolverine,
X-Factor,
X-Men
Monday, September 15, 2014
Giant Size Review # 1: "Avengers" by Roger Stern ("Under Siege," "Assault on Olympus" and more)
Trying something new here. I have a lot of Roger Stern "Avengers" work to go through and thought it would be simpler to bunch everything together instead of spreading it out over time.
Friday, November 15, 2013
Review # 76: "X-Men by Chris Claremont and Jim Lee Omnibus Vol. 1"
Even though I've gone through all the issues included here before, there's a bit of culture shock as the last Chris Claremont X-Men work I'd read was the omnibus collecting the start of his run up until the beginning of "The Dark Phoenix Saga." We're talking about a ten year gap and a definite shift in style as the X-Men storylines are darker and a lot more cruel to the characters. This is coming in at a key moment, as - after "Inferno" wrapped up years worth of stories in a single swoop - Claremont is spinning a trademark, complex web of narratives for the last time before his exit from the franchise he defined.
Labels:
Banshee,
Chris Claremont,
Colossus,
Forge,
Gambit,
Jim Lee,
Lady Deathstrike,
Legion,
Mandarin,
Marc Silvestri,
Marvel,
Mystique,
Polaris,
Psylocke,
Rogue,
Shadow King,
Storm,
Wolverine,
X-Men
Wednesday, October 9, 2013
Review # 58: "X-Men - Messiah Complex"
After what seemed like an endless wave in the 90s, massive crossovers had fallen out of favour at Marvel. They'd become bloated, overly contrived and generally a pain in the ass for collectors. They just plain needed to go away for a while. So they did. The X-Men franchise, which had been the centrepoint for most company crossovers, abandoned the concept for close to a decade. Series like Grant Morrison's "New X-Men," "X-Force/X-Statix," Joss Whedon's "Astonishing X-Men" and Peter David's "X-Factor" stuck to their own stories, and the line enjoyed a creative renaissance.
Labels:
Bishop,
Cable,
Chris Bachalo,
Christopher Yost,
Craig Kyle,
Cyclops,
Ed Brubaker,
Hope,
Jamie Madrox,
Layla Miller,
Marauders,
Marc Silvestri,
Marvel,
Mike Carey,
Peter David,
Sinister,
X-Factor,
X-Force,
X-Men
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