Showing posts with label Marvel Comic Reviews. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marvel Comic Reviews. Show all posts

Friday, March 30, 2018

Avengers #73-74 Retro-Review




Issue: Avengers, #73-74
Date: Feb and April 1970
Writer: Roy Thomas

General Black Panther Spoilers

- Black Panther is in New York. The Sons of the Serpents are causing white supremacist mayham that eventually involves Monica Lynne.

- Black Panther saves Monica Lynne.

- Black Panther vows to take down the Sons of the Serpents himself due to being black too. The Avengers agree to give him 24 hours to do it alone.

- Black Panther attacks some of them at a dock and takes the identity of one of the goons. Unfortunately, when confronted by the Supreme One, he doesn't know the secret verse and is captured.

- A man wearing the Black Panther suit starts committing crimes. Avengers are forced to get involved. The Supreme One's plan is to unmask Black Panther and show the world he is black, and starting a race war.

- Avenger's stop the plan and it also turns out that both "TV people" were part of the Sons of the Serpents as well.


Importance to the Mythos

- First appearance of Monica Lynne

- First time in universe a civilian learned Black Panther was black. I guess.


Other Thoughts

- This is one of those times where white people tried to right "black" issues and fail miserably. T'challa has never really been a "my people" type of character unless he is talking about Wakanda. It came off as extremely forced here... an "all black people around the world" are the same type of thing. Soul Brother? good lord. This isn't Luke Cage or some other American black where this "jive" talk type stuff makes since. T'challa is a damn king of an African nation. He ain't "soul brothering" it up with anyone.

Roy is the worst.


Should You Read It?

- No. Not unless you really like Monica Lynne or something.

Saturday, July 8, 2017

Avengers #62 Retro-Review



Issue: Avengers #62
Date: March 1969
Writer: Roy Thomas

General Black Panther Spoilers

- The Avengers are stranded and T'challa calls upon his remote piloted air craft to pick them up and take them to Wakanda. They land in Wakanda and are attacked for Wakandan soldiers lead by W'kabi.

- They stop once they realize it is T'challa. T'challa is pissed at the aggression and the soldiers say it was ordered by M'baku, who T'challa left in charge.

- M'baku is told T'challa has returned. He plans something bad with N'gamo.

- M'baku drugs the wine and knocks out all the Avengers. When T'challa awakens, M'baku is in the forbidden White Gorilla garb and calls himself Man-Ape.

- They fight. You can find the fight HERE.

- After M'baku crushes himself (lol), T'challa laments that M'baku could not understand this new Wakanda and wanted to go back to the old days.


Importance to the Mythos

- First appearance of M'baku

- First appearance of W'kabi

- First appearance of N'gamo

- First time the Avengers were in Wakanda


Other Thoughts

- Who knew that this goofy ass character would end up in a movie?


Should You Read It?

- Absolutely.

Monday, July 3, 2017

Black Panther #15 Quick Thoughts and Spoilers



- Judging TNC's issues one by one is becoming an impossible chore due to how slow moving and meandering his floppies read. His run has to be read in graphic novel form to get anything out of it. But alas...

- This issue was just a redo of #13. Portals open, monsters come out, punching, sorcerers used to close them with consequences, chat with Shuri about history, and then pouting around Storm. We learned no new information other than these clouds that magically appeared towards the end so Coates can force Storm down our throats.

- And let's just go right to the biggest problem of this book: Storm. She is the worst. I was really hoping TNC put a bow on the whole relationship during the Crew guest appearance but nope... let's just have the same conversation over and over again. A completely one sided conversation where T'challa waxes poetically about all his mistakes blah blah blah and Storm just goes "ok." It is pathetic, I am sick of it. Coates continuing to force her down our throats while she goes around kissing Gambit and whatever and its pathetic. She doesn't belong in the mythos anymore. It was a good idea, maybe a great one, that simply didn't work. Let the Black Panther mythos move on and give T'challa his damn balls back.

- Shuri is magically Queen of the Dead. Many of us lamented the fact that T'challa's big King of the Dead power up amounted to commanding zombies which is completely impractical in the main universe... then fucking Shuri goes and raises zombie soldiers. What the fuckity fuck? So she has ancient knowledge that T'challa and his force ghosts don't have, can raise dead warriors... why the hell did Coates take BP's king of the dead stuff and just give it to Shuri through some mystery means (WHO THE FUCK IS MOTHER?)?

- This issue kinda just broke me a bit. I liked 13, thought 14 was ok.. and then this garbage just brought back all my hatred for what Coates is doing. Black Panther isn't even recognizable anymore.

- The new artist that finished the issue is dope though. Yay, positives.

- This is probably one of the shittiest and worst written reviews I have done on here, but it is basically getting to the point that Coates lovers just love everything (world building! humanizing! realism!) and Coates haters just hate everything. I am generally right in the middle but after seeing T'challa have his balls back in his short appearances in Secret Empire, the Black Panther movie trailer, and even the Avengers Assemble cartoon appearance... I just want someone write the book who actually likes the title character and wants to push the title character and actually write him like he has been written since Priest (aka the dude that made him popular).

Thursday, June 22, 2017

Captain America: Steve Rogers #18 Thoughts and Spoilers (BP Appearance)


Spoilers...

- HydraCap addresses the world at the UN. Basically tells them all Hydra is done being int he shadows, that HydraUSA doesn't need them, and they will do what they are told when they are told. Basically, a villain monologue.

- At the same time, we see various international super hero teams dealing with Hydra forces.

- And at the same time, we see Namor. Who holds a cosmic cube shard and is refusing to give it up to Steve.

- In the middle of the villain monologue, T'challa hacks into the UN as the representative of Wakanda. And starts going off.

- He explains three times Hydra forces have invaded Wakanda and three times Wakanda has slaughtered them.

- The last time, T'challa got especially annoyed and joined the fray, culminating in ripping Zola apart.

- He then straight up threatens Steve. He tells Steve to stop sending his lackies to kill and to bring himself to Wakanda instead.

- Steve is pissed, leaves, and runs into a defiant Namor and Atlantis.

- Flash forward to last SE issue and we see Atlantis church destroyed and Namor giving up the cube fragment.


Thoughts...

- Well, I didn't see this coming. Didn't see the T'challa I know and dedicate a blog to suddenly grow back his balls and not only act defiant but telling HydraCap to come finish this man-to-man. I mean... shiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiit. This is the first person to stand up to Cap to his face.

- And at the same time, it was a nice (and sad) comparison to see Namor, the always defiant proud king.... bend his knee. He had Steve right there in front of him... and walked away. While T'challa told Steve to catch him outside.

- I do not plan on getting my hopes up too much. Wakanda has been destroyed too often in events (Doom War, AvX, Time Runs Out) lately for me to think this will be another See Wakanda and Die situation. Let's cross our fingers and hope Wakanda and T'challa put up a good fight when the forces of Hydra eventually turn that way.

- What I would like is for T'challa to lead an international force against Hydra. There had to be a reason Spencer showed all those super heroes fighting Hydra forces, culminating in T'challa's outright defiance and threatening tone. A team of T'challa, Captain Britain, Namor, ect would be really fun and really powerful.


Scans of T'challa's appearance below (click to enlarge)...





Wednesday, June 14, 2017

Black Panther and the Crew #3 Thoughts and Spoilers



- Well, at least T'challa was actual in the book. And we finally figured out who the bad guys are... although I am not sure if Coates is using certain elements on accident (Faustus and now Hydra) or if he planned ot use these people right at the same time a big event is going on with these people but not tie in? Kind of bizarre honestly.

- There is some really baffling things in this issue. We get confirmation that T'challa DID re-write reality with the Reality Gem. Which, until some other writer says otherwise, is about as close as a confirmation we are going to get in regards to the end of Secret Wars.

At the same time though, he acts as if he could have restored the marriage and decided not to. So... that is what he is going to mope about? Not the fact he didn't revive his whole damn family, including the sister he moped for 12 issues about in the main book?



This just stinks of Coates trying anyway possible to put Storm and T'challa back together. No, annulled the marriage (in story anyway) because she chose the wrong side in AvX and HER side drowned what was supposed to be HER country. Not because he was afraid. Maybe BP/Storm lovers just eat this stuff up but I want T'challa to move on.

It is this kind of low key shade throwing that you could ignore in isolation but continues a disturbing pattern from Coates. But, this book is set in the middle of the solo book (why don't this books have editor notes?) so at least it kinda "fits" continuity wise.

- I also find it cringe worthy when writers force America race politics onto T'challa. I mean, I get it, he is the most popular black superhero in existence. But... it just really doesn't fit an African king of a xenophobic fictional nation really. The old lady giving him the identity speech... ugh. I wanted T'challa to bring out his back hand once again.

- I haven't touched much on the plot because it is literally the same as the previous issue. Hints about Ezra's mysterious pass + a character narrating the entire time + two characters hanging out the entire time + an explosion + splash page. We have gotten three pages of action total in three issues. Plot is moving at a snail pace. We don't read team books to spend a whole trade waiting for the team to get together.




Should You Read It?

- No. This book is a pure disappointment.


Monday, May 29, 2017

Black Panther #14 Thoughts and Spoilers...



- It was good to see Queen Divine Justice again! And even better she is going by something other than that god awful name. I am actually a little stunned there wasn't an editors note explaining who that was as I do not believe she has gone by Asira before. Come on editors, help the new kids out.

They kept QDJ's sass but made it more grown up which was a nice touch.

If you want to grow the mythos, you have to use already established supporting cast to force the issue home. One of the reasons I wanted Taku to come back instead of this new guy Hodari who is essentially doing Taku's job. Use what is already there instead of inventing new characters for no reason.

Plus, Asira has a much different personality than all the super serious Wakandan supporting cast and her sass and humor is much needed.

Not really sure where her Stane and company plot is going as it looks like nanites are being used again?

- And speaking of returning supporting cast, I think the last person I ever expected to be brought back in the fold would be Zawavari. And for him to survive the incursions? This story took a very interesting turn in this regard. And now he is going to be a side kick tag-along? Fun times ahead.



- Best part of the issue was the meeting with the previous Panthers. Not only was it nice just to see more of them with their own names and such (including another woman Panther) but it was also nice to see T'challa have some base in his voice while around them. Too often he felt "beneath" all of them during previous interactions. In this issue, HE felt like the King.

- I need more Mamadou in my life. I want to see T'challa and Mamadou spar.



- The mystical spear becoming part of T'challa arsenal is a potential nice touch.

- The art was extremely uneven. It looked great in some parts, like with the meeting with the previous Panthers. And then god awful in other parts. Like it was being rushed. The art needs to even out or people are going to leave in droves.



- All in all, this issue continues the much more solid Season 2. The mystical angle, throw back characters... it reads more like the Black Panther comic I want to read. It just really needs to get more even art and hopefully Coates doesn't fall into the exposition trap of season 1. Action is always appreciated!


Should You Read It?

- Yes. Especially if you liked #13. This is two issues in a row that I liked from Coates.

Wednesday, April 26, 2017

Black Panther #13 Thoughts and Spoilers



Spoilers... 

- T'challa chats with Storm about the nature of the Gods of Wakanda. Yes, Gods now, not just Bast.

- T'challa has been going around Wakanda, talking to elders and shamans about the new government. Many mention how none of the Gods answered their prayers during the times of destruction.

- One such elder mentions a portal and snake-men coming out. T'challa investigates just to put the people at ease, but finds out it is true. He then whoops their ass. But the door of light was still open.



- Eden and Shuri are in the Royal library who these creatures might be. They eventually decide they are of the deep past, even before Shuri's new found knowledge.

- T'challa calls them to help out with a second snake-men invasion. A brawl ensues between T'challa, Shuri, Eden, the HZ, and shamans. The plan is to round them up near the portal entrance and let the shamans banish them.

- The Shamans do their thing... and they all die. They called on the Wakandan Gods and something else seemingly answered.




Thoughts...

- I like it. And I can say that without any qualifying statements for the first time in a year. It just felt like a super-hero comic for once. Fights, snake-men, Gods, Shamans, ex-wives... it didn't feel like I was reading, "let's use Black Panther for social commentary!" It was a cape comic.

- This seems like a cool way to tackle the mythological side of Wakanda. We get tons of stories about the tech side of Wakanda so let's do the Gods!

- This is what a BP comic should be. T'challa driving the narrative, Shuri in support (with a dash of Eden), seeing the other parts of Wakanda such as the HZ and shamans. And with a little dose from the ex-wife.



- There was more action in this single issue than all of Season One combined outside #11. The goons were treated like goons for once. The action art was solid and a step up from Stelfreeze and Sprous in my opinion. However, it felt.. rushed? sloppy? unrefined at other times and the inking didn't seem to mesh with it well at all. For every dope panel there was another that looked rough. Give and take I suppose.

- Conversation with Storm was odd. Ok, but odd. He was in the Avengers with a Norse God... seems weird asking a pretend Goddess about God stuff lol.

- I really feel like the, "I don't have to hold back now," line was a head nod towards some fans (like me) pissed that he was getting hit by goons in Season 1. T'challa treated goons like goons this time.

- All in all, it accomplished what a #1 (for this story) should accomplish. Teased the bigger threat in an entertaining manner and got my attention. T'challa actually seemed like T'challa, the supporting cast did its job, no chumping involved... my body is ready for more.




Should You Read It?

- Yes. This is actually more new reader friendly than #1. If you skipped Season 1 because you didn't like it, this should at least have you tempted to jump back in and hope for the best.

Wednesday, April 12, 2017

Black Panther and the Crew #1 Spoilers and Thoughts...



This won't be like my typical reviews because I only review Black Panther comics here.

Yep, your powers of inference are indeed strong. There is no Black Panther in this book.

There is no Black Panther in Black Panther and the Crew #1.

Not a single word. Not a single panel. Not a single mention.


Basic spoilers go like this...

- Start with a flashback to the original crew. No, not the Priest version, but a new group we haven't seen that predates them.

- Back to the present time (which may predate the Crew's appearance in Black Panther book actually and seemingly predates Captain America: Sam Wilson) and black dude who lead old crew Ezra died in police custody.

- Insert typical riots/corrupt police/shadiness/black community leaders/ect.

- Misty is still on the side of the law but sees something is up.

- Misty and Storm are attacked by Americops. Storm takes them out.


So yeah, Misty Knight solo confirmed? If you like Misty or... "Blue" (Storm, lol) then this may be for you.

But if you are reading for T'challa or Cage... they ain't here.

Saturday, April 1, 2017

A Nation Under Our Feet (Black Panther, vol 6, #1-12) Review



Issues: Black Panther, vol 6, #1-12
Date: 06/2016-05/2017
Writer: Ta-Nehisi Coates


General Black Panther Spoilers

- There is trouble in Wakanda as The People lead by sorcerer Tetu, the Revealer Zenzi, and with help from Zeke Stane begin massing an army to take the Golden City and dethrone T'challa. All while T'challa deals with the living death Shuri is trapped in.

- At the same time, the former Doras-- Ayo and Aneka-- take the Jabari lands and lead a revolution as the Midnight Angels. The outcast Changamire also helps in rallying the Wakandan citizens against the throne to institute new type of government.

- T'challa successfully kicks Stane out of the country with the help of The Crew as the MA and The People form an alliance. Changamire becomes disenchanted with the revolution as his former student Tetu is not a righteous man.

- T'challa with the help of Eden resurrects Shuri as she returns as The Griot. Shuri confronts and threatens the MA, who abandon their alliance with Tetu. T'challa confronts Changamire and convinces him to help Wakanda and stop the People.

- The People attack the Golden City but are eventually defeated by the combined forces of T'challa, Shuri, Eden, the Wakandan army, HZ, Changamire, and T'challa using his King of the Dead powers to summon an ghost army of dead kings and warriors. Tetu is captured while Zenzi flees and escapes with help from Zeke Stane.

- T'challa agrees to a new form of government which will be decided by the tribes and cities while he remains king. T'challa talks with Shuri and admits his failures to her and the throne and is re-assured by Shuri that he is a good and righteous King. T'challa makes some sort of deal with the MA after Aneka realizes that T'challa suffered more than any of them.


Importance to the Mythos

- The debut of the villains Tetu and Zenzi.

- The debut of Changamire, Hodari, Akili, and Kwabena

- Debut of the royals new, robe wearing, men bodyguards.

- The breaking away of the Midnight Angels and the Dora Milaje lead by Aneka and Ayo

- Resurrection of Shuri, introduction of her new title Griot, and a display of her new powers

- T'challa's enhanced senses were upgraded to Soul Stalking

- T'challa demonstrated the ability to resurrect a Force Ghost army via his King of the Dead powers.

- T'challa's vibranium weave now has to ability to redirect absorbed energy.


Other Thoughts
When I was a kid, Spider-Man was a star. Spider-Man was right under Malcolm X for me in terms of heroes. I would like Black Panther to be some kid's Spider-Man.
-- Ta-Nehisi Coates
Whew boy. What is that quote about shooting for the moon and if you miss you end up in the stars? Coates shot for the moon, and due to sci-fi movie magic, that shit got caught in the moon's orbit, sling shot around, crashed right back into the Earth.

What was produced on panel (not Youtube videos and interviews) is simply not a great comic. It has some good moments, maybe even great moments, but as a cohesive, year long, 12 issues story, it just simply doesn't hold up to the lofty standards set by Coates. I am not even sure it reaches "good" overall. Mostly because it utterly fails at many simple, super hero comic pillars:

(1) The action sucks, both in quality and quantity, (2) the villains are a big let down other than the cool designs by Stelfreeze, (3) way too much telling, not enough showing, and (4) he wastes time on stuff that really doesn't matter so he can use flowery, poetic prose instead.

Stelfreeze provided some absolutely fantastic Wakanda designs. The clothes feel African. The city is vibrant and unique. The design of T'challa's head gear and how it comes off and on is awesome. Tetu and Zenzi look wonderful. The look of the planes, spears, Necropolis are literally top notch. And Stelfreeze really nails the emotional talking scenes 100%.

But for all the positives and great aspects by Stelfreeze and Sprouse's art... their negatives were just as pronounced. I cannot stress enough how mediocre the action scenes are. You don't "feel" any of the hits. No one feels fast. No one feels strong. The panel-to-panel transition in the action is disjointed and non-nonsensical at times. It is just a buzzkill  issues. You get the build-up to the Crew and you read it and go, "meh." Final battle with the people and it fizzles out instead of being climatic. The action just feels like one of those little kid sticker books where you place them on the page and pretend they are hitting each other (with a few stars thrown in).

And the villains started off kinda well. Both of their designs are unique and on point. A pseudo-empath/telepath and a sorcerer were cool additions to the mythos. Unfortunately, that is all they were: a couple labels that amounted to "meh." Tetu did like four things (teleport, make it rain, roots, sink hole) in 12 issues. An interesting type of villain was added to the mythos and T'challa never even confronted him directly. At all. One root attack and one spear throw was the extent of their interactions. T'challa had more interactions with mini-boss Stane than he did with final boss Tetu. Zenzi existed just to strike a pose, have some green energy flow, and move on. She was the villain Eden.

The art and villain issues actually combine to create another troubling issue with this run: the utter lack of scale in regards to the threat. The People are such a threat that Shuri goes to the Midnight Angels and says they cannot fight both at the same time. The same Wakanda that beat back a Skrull invasion and beat back Black Dwarf. Even in a weakened state, The People have to be either very powerful (ie Tetu has to be a beast) or they have to have a large force. We got neither. The People amounted to 25 goons. T'challa could beat back a threat that size by himself.

Comics are a visual medium. You have to show us things. If The People are a threat, show us the size and strength of the force. If Wakanda is weakened, show us that they are struggling to put out too many fires. If Tetu is "more powerful than we imagined," he has to do more than make a sink hole after some Tai Chi.

One thing Coates had no problem showing was just how much of a mopey ass idiot T'challa was for much of the story. And as it came out month-to-month, I freaking hated it. My favorite iterations of T'challa are See Wakanda and Die (uber confident), MCU (uber confident), Priest (uber confident), EMH (uber confident), Liss (uber confident). So yeah, this sucked for me.

But, damn, Coates actually nailed this part of his story. 100% nailed it. The final issue beautifully wrapped the mopey ass, "I am no King" stuff up while putting a bow on Hickman's run as well. And when read all at once in one complete story, the mopeyness isn't nearly as bad as it seemed floppy to floppy. In #12 when he told Shuri he never should have left her and how he cannot make the decisions that Kings should make (ala "The Cry" in Hickman's run), it brought clarity to all the previous depression and uncharacteristic decisions by T'challa. Coates was not only concluding his first Black Panther story, but he was also emotionally concluding Hickman's story as well.

Shuri's stuff was Coates at his best and worst. The Djalia stuff was painful. I really thought if I read the run all at once that it wouldn't feel so pointless. I was wrong. It was way too long, way too flowery, and popped up at the worst times in the book to completely remove any momentum. When Shuri said at one point, "what is the point of this babble Mother," I was just like "yeah seriously what is the point of this?" This all needed to be contained into one issue or it needed to be told in a way that wasn't so wordy and boring.

But when Shuri returned, she returned as classic Shuri with a touch of wisdom. She stole the show every instance she spoke. She finally has a mantle all her own (Griot) with powers all her own. Her capabilities and powers need to be fleshed out (and who is Mother?) but there is plenty of time to do that in season 2. The journey was arduous and mind numbing but the end product was top notch.

In the end, Coates failed at his stated goal and this run simply wasn't my cup of tea. There is some potential in future stories thanks to some of the world building Coates did with some potentially interesting supporting characters added that he can have T'challa bounce off of. But, Season 2 T'challa needs to the feature a fully capable and confident T'challa I love. There isn't anything left to deconstruct. Let the King reign.

Some other quick thoughts that I couldn't fit in the overall review because I suck at writing...

- I barely mention the MA above because there story was kind of stupid and it was nonsensical. Nothing really fit together cohesively. A fit of rage turned into a prison break for love turned into liberating rape camps turned into making a country of their own turned into a no one man/revolution because T'challa sucks which turned into all men suck which turned into "oh fuck we are kinda dumb" which turned into... TBD.

- The Tetu poem issue was such a waste of time. Tetu needed that issue to flush him out or show off his powers and instead Coates tried to get cute and while I am sure it impressed his writing buddies, it left me wanting to throw the issue in the trash due to its uselessness.

- Having an issue where T'challa meets with despots which kinda backfires and turns into part of a revolution talks, so he spends the next issue injecting himself with nanites to record Stanes confession, only for that to amount to absolutely nothing as it was never brought up again was a very odd sequence of events. It is like Coates needed a reason for Changamire to become more directly involved so this is what he thought of.

- I like Akili.

- Hodari should have been Taku.

- I hate Shuri's new hair.

- Twelve issues is too much for one single story unless it is amazing ala Thor's God Butcher arc. This was simply too long with too many plot threads with certain conclusions fizzling out in the end. Hopefully, Coates trades are the more classical 6 issues and the stories last that long as well.

- I am not sure why Eden is still hanging around Wakanda. But if he is going to, he needs to be a real character, not just a magic teleporting Uber for T'challa.

- One of my other issues with Coates so far is that T'challa is surprpisingly human in regards to his powers. He himself, not his tech, never really did anything notworthy. Part of that is the shit art, but he never seemed to have enhanced strength, speed, agility... his combat prowess is lacking, his martial arts abilities are mediocre... he just feels street level-ish with his powers. I am hoping the new art fixes that aspect going forward.

- Ugh. Storm. Ugh.

- This story may have the best collection of covers ever.


Should You Read It?

- All Black Panther fans should read all Black Panther solo runs. However, if you are expecting a MCU/Priest/Hudlin/Liss variation of the character or an MCU/EMH variation, you will be very, very disappointing. If you are expecting an action packed book, you will be pissed.

It is a slow burn more focused on Wakanda and T'challa's supporting cast than on T'challa. It is not a great book, it may not even be good. Fans of McGregor's stuff  and world building in general may love it however.

In my Black Panther comic rankings, it falls pretty low on the list:

- See Wakanda and Die
- Priest
- Liss
- Gillis
- Hudlin
- Hickman
- McDuffie
- Coates
- Mayberry
- McGregor
- Kirby

Monday, March 27, 2017

Cable #54 Retro-Review



Issue: Cable #54
Date: 05/1998
Writer: Joe Casey


General Black Panther Spoilers

- Cable crash lands in Wakanda. He is found unconscious by W'kabi and some Wakandans and is taken back to the city for medical aid and to inform the king.

- Cable wakes up. T'challa is there. He knows Cable but at the same time doesn't. He knows he is dangerous but informs Cable he is with friends and that his cousin, Dr. Joshua Itobu helped treat him. T'challa mentions he just returned to Wakanda from his Avengers adventures. Cable says he knows who he is and where he is at... Wakanda.

- T'challa welcomes Cable to stay. During dinner with Cable and Itobu, there is a discussion about Wakanda that is oddly relevant to the current, Coates, Nation Under Our Feet, story.


- We discover the Itobu has smuggled Klaw into Wakanda as he wants to overthrow T'challa to push Wakanda into being a superpower with influence all over the world while Klaw's motivations are unclear.

- T'challa takes Cable down into the Techno Jungle, where they are running experiments on Vibranium in a vacuum for safety.

- Itobu and T'challa debate using Vibranium and Wakanda's resources for military might. Itobu meets with Klaw later, where we discover he is dying of vibranium poisoning from his sonic blaster. Klaw snaps, attacks Itwobu and decides to just do things himself.

- Cable notices the door to the Techno Jungle has been left open. He explores and discovers Klaw. They fight and Klaw eventually takes him out before being confronted by T'challa. T'challa attacks with vibranium knuckle bands and opens the vibranium testing door. With the help of Cable, Klaw is thrown into the room... which is a vacuum. Without sound existing, Klaw is essentially evaporated and killed.


- Itobu is alive but now deaf. T'challa gives Cable and aircraft and tells him that Wakanda is always a safe haven for him.


Importance to the Mythos

- Telepathic resistance feat by T'challa

- One of the few appearances from Itobu

- Another fight with Klaw where T'challa seemingly kills him



Other Thoughts

- I didn't know  a Cable comic with no giant gun existed.

- This is yet another Klaw/BP meeting where BP dispatches his "arch" nemesis with relative ease. Hell, he even offered to help the dude. That is so odd. T'challa is full on, "noble monk" in this comic.

- I have no idea what the, "I know you kinda but I can't remember" thing was about. Maybe it was a time travel story or something? I am not a big Cable back history reader. Cable made it sound like he knew Wakanda from the future though.


Should You Read It?

- For a guest appearance, it was a pretty substantial and solid issue that takes a look at a conflicted Wakanda (traditional vs western) and of course, another Klaw vs. BP fight. There is nothing earth shattering in here but if you can find it (it isn't on Marvel Unlimited), it is worth the five minutes to read it.

Monday, March 13, 2017

X-Men #45, Avengers #53 Retro-Review




Issue: X-Men #45, Avengers #53
Date: 06/1968
Writer: Gary Friedrich (X-Men), Roy Thomas (Avengers)

General Black Panther Spoilers

X-Men #45

- X-Men are prisoners of Magneto and the Brotherhood. Cyclops escapes and eventually ends up fighting Quicksilver. Right as he knocks him out, the Avengers arrive with T'challa's only panel appearance.



Avengers #53

- The Avengers think Cyclops is attacking Quicksilver (who was an Avenger) as they don't know he switched to the Brotherhood. Cyclops beats them, including blasting T'challa to kingdom come.


- Flash back to before this, where Angel arrives at Avengers HQ to recruit the Avengers against Magneto.

- Avengers discover a tracking device on Angel and think he is a traitor and tie him up. The device was actually put on by Magneto, in order to draw the Avengers to him.

- Flash back forward to post Cyclops beating and the Avengers quarrel and fight each other with some strong insults thrown T'challa's way (oh the 60's....).

- Magneto uses a machine to force to kill the Avengers. Beast attacks Black Panther and they brawl.

- The Avengers prevail and BP beats Beast.



- They attack Magneto who stops them... until Angel arrives. The tie up and fighting between each other was a ruse by the Avengers.

- Magneto ends up escaping but is betrayed by Toad, who blows up the island, along with Magneto.


Importance to the Mythos

-  First meeting with the X-Men

- Brawl with Beast


Other Thoughts

- The incessant "Tarzan" type comments is just grating to read in 2017. It is like in every single issue up to this point in publication. I get it was the 60's, but I figured if Marvel was progressive enough to put an African genius king in a book, they would be progressive enough to tone down the racist type comments.



Should You Read It?

- If you are into the Roy Thomas version of T'challa, then yes, as he is in this issue a lot. Just read the Avengers issue as he is in one panel of the X-Men issue. There is also a decent fight with Beast.

For more modern Panther fans, other than the fight with Beast, there really isn't anything worth reading.

Thursday, March 2, 2017

X-Men: World's Apart Retro-Review



Issue: World's Apart #1-4
Date: 12/2008-3/2008
Writer: Christopher Yost


General Black Panther Spoilers

- After Storm arrives in Wakanda and orders the release of the Wakandan mutant Gentle, she is confronted by T'challa, who tells the crowd essentially that marrying the her was a mistake he intendes to rectify. He then winks at Storm... and we learn the Shadow King has taken over T'challa (and Cyclops) bodies. 

- After that, all hell breaks loose as Storm refuses to surrender and eventually takes Gentle away and they run. After Storm eventually takes out the Dora's with the help of Gentle, T'challa himself arrives to essentially kill her. 

- In the confrontation, T'challa strikes a near fatal blow, but in that blow Storm realizes T'challa is fighting the Shadow King as it would have killed her otherwise. 


- Storm ends up unleashing on T'challa and knocking him out after he begs Storm for help (Storm knew it wasn't him because T'challa would never ask for help). She then takes his body to the altar of the Panther God, where she communes with Bast.

- Bast shows the people of Wakanda that Storm is still Queen, and orders N'gassi to keep T'challa under sedation until she returns. 

- Storm does X-Men stuff. The Shadow King enters her brain... only to see that Bast is there. Bast devours the Shadow King for messing with T'challa. 



- Back in the Wakanda, all is well again. Gentle returns with the X-Men. 


Importance to the Mythos

- Showed Bast in a more active role than what is normally seen.

- Reminded everyone that Gentle and N'gassi exist. 

- Demonstrated T'challa ability to somewhat resist the Shadow King.

Other Thoughts

- This was a Storm story through and through but it was cool to see Wakanda in the back drop. Yost wrote T'challa and Wakanda quite well and produced an interesting story about a character I do not really care for (Storm). It was also cool to see the forgotten Gentle used again. Yost did a great job showing how formidable Storm was without chumping T'challa or the Dora's.

- The return of N'gassi!

- I wish Bast actually made it impossible for a Black Panther to be mind controlled. It would make perfect sense in theory. Kind of how T'challa tricked Mephisto but with telepathy instead. 

Should You Read It?

- If you are a fan of Storm, yes. 

Monday, February 27, 2017

Avengers, vol 1, #51 Retro-Review



Issue: Avengers, vol 1, #51
Date: 04/1968
Writer: Roy Thomas

General Black Panther Spoilers

- The Collector watches BP and Cap during their adventures in Tales of Suspense #97-99 as he contemplates collecting them along with the other Avengers. 




- Cap asks Pym (I think) if BP can take his spot on the Avengers and Pym agrees. 



Importance to the Mythos

- BP was accepted onto the Avengers on the recommendation of Captain America


Other Thoughts

- n/a


Should You Read It?

- Nope. 

Friday, February 24, 2017

Daredevil #52 Retro-Review



Issue: Daredevil, vol 1, #52
Date: 05/1969
Writer: Roy Thomas

General Black Panther Spoilers

- Black Panther is looking for Hawkeye but instead starts to hunt for Daredevil at the behest of Froggy Nelson.

- Daredevil ends up knocking him out on accident.

- BP wakes up and tracks and follows Matt.

- BP hears a girl scream from Murdock's apartment and finds Saxon holding Karen hostage.

- DD bursts through and knock Saxon out. Saxon eventually wakes up and gets away with BP and DD in pursuit.

- BP acts like he is letting pursue DD alone but ends up stealth following him and overhears that Matt Murdock is Daredevil. He decides to keep that fact a secret should they meet again.


Importance to the Mythos

-  First meeting between Daredevil and Black Panther

- Black Panther discovers Daredevil's secret identity


Other Thoughts

- Without much background on what is going on in DD's book at the time, it is a bizarre little story that while features Black Panther a lot... he really doesn't do anything noteworthy. I guess being able to track DD is cool and all but story wise I am not sure he served much of a purpose. Maybe in future issues the whole secret identity thing is brought back up.

- This is some pretty dope art though.




Should You Read It?

- While BP is in a hefty amount of the book, I really wouldn't recommend it for BP fans as it seemed pointless and aimless and isn't a lot of fun, unless the secret identity thread became important in future issues.

Wednesday, February 22, 2017

Black Panther #11 SPOILERY Thoughts



Ten issues have been building to this... the confrontation between The People lead by Tetu and Zenzi vs T'challa. While this isn't the true conclusion to "season 1, " it is the conclusion of this particular story line that all started when Zenzi made some Wakanda miners act-a-fool in issue #1. 

When you build something up like this, 10 issues, 10 months, to tell one story, it really needs to deliver and make it feel worth the wait. Especially in a series that has been so slow moving with 3-5 story lines happening at the same time. You can make mistakes with shorter arcs or one-offs but when fans are spending nearly a year waiting for this confrontation... that builds a lot of anticipation. Even if I should have known better based on the previous nine issues... I still had hope. 

Unfortunately, while the issue wasn't bad in isolation... it fell flat. 

And once again, it came down to the same culprits that have plagued this entire run. The action scenes were only slightly improved from previous issues but were still flat, stiff, and unimaginative. At one point. Akili walks RIGHT UP TO TETU, gun in hand, and... hits his legs with the butt of the gun to trip him. 



There was no sense of scale with this invasion. The People seem to consist of 25 soldiers while the Wakanda army consisted of 12 with additional support from six Dogs of War. There were no tanks nor jets as teased at the end of issue #10. This is a massive failure in the art. Why are we to believe Wakanda could be taken by 25 mindless goons with AK-47's? The same country that beat back the Black Order, the same country that destroyed Atlantis... is bothered by this pathetic number of people? If Wakanda is truly this weak, then every villain in the Marvel Universe ought to be salivating right now. 

Art issue aside, the climatic fight between Tetu and T'challa was ridiculously brief. As in, one panel fight brief. There were no great philosophical discussions, no battle of powers between the mage and the warrior. Just one, well placed, force ghost spear to the chest and Tetu was done. 



I am being incredibly negative and it is hard not to be. But the issue was borderline good, but it just needed to be undeniably great. Coates world building came full circle, as Shuri, Akili, Hodari, Changamire, Eden, and Kwabena all played their roles in the climatic battle. Akili was a pleasant surprise and it was a nice touch to see Kwabena's story go full circle. In fact, that whole fan service page worked for the fanboy in me. 



However, the book is called Black Panther and Black Panther alone. Not World of Wakanda. Not The Crew. Black Panther. And, well, he did what he did for ten other issues. In the book but not really the main focus (in this case, the book really had not main focus as it was spread rather evenly). However, his plan and his powers were what saved the day: not Shuri or the Midnight Angels. His King of the Dead powers returned in a way that made much more since than commanding zombie fodder. And while I have huge misgivings that one of T'challa most talked about moments (The Cry) was essentially hand-waved off panel, it was nice to see T'challa and T'chaka reconcile once again. 


And well.. he won. Outright won. No speeches necessary. No dead relatives to mourn. I would have preferred a much more emphatic, physically dominating performance but at least it was a true win. Tetu is captured, The People were stopped, Zenzi is out there so she can come back in three years...

Now we just see what Coates has in store for the Wakandan government. And while I was hopefully excited for issue #11, I am dreading #12. 

Fantastic Four Annual, vol 1, #5 Retro-Review



Issue: Fantastic Four Annual, vol 1, #5
Date: 11/1967
Writer: Stan Lee

General Black Panther Spoilers

- BP searches for intruders on his newly purchased Panther Island

- He is attacked by Medusa and then attacked by Karnak. He gives Karnak the business before stopping due to Black Bolt's presence.


- BP decides to help the Inhumans after he realize they share a common friend in the Human Torch.

- They fight the minions of Psycho-Man


- Psycho-Man creates a monster humanoid beast using the Mind Ray that is what "Panther fears most." It beats up Panther as it is faster, stronger and more agile.

- Eventually the Mind Ray machine is broken and this beast disappears. BP uses this opportunity to take out the Psycho-Man at the last second... only the costume is empty.



Importance to the Mythos

- First meeting between BP and the Inhuman Royals

- First time BP gave Karnak the business


Other Thoughts

- All I want to know is, where is Panther Island now? Doesn't T'challa still own it?

- Old comics are so bizarre with their team-ups. "Hey, we just randomly ran into each other on a island... Let's go punch bad guys!"

Should You Read It?

- Not mandatory, but a pretty significant guest appearance for T'challa. If you like old school comics, this would fit the bill.