Deadpool: Black, White & Blood #1 will include three stories for $4.99, and one of them is both written and drawn by James Stokoe, which seems like reason enough to pre-order the first issue of this five-issue series (Also contributing to the issue are Ed Brisson, Phil Noto, While Portacio and Tom Taylor).
Anyone know who the cloudy lady is...? Because I do not.
I like the basic idea of this Fantastic Four #35 cover by Mark Brooks, and the way the various members and their differing costumes evoke the whole long, varied, strange history of the team. I think the "60 Years!" cut-out sort of gets in the way of the idea, though.
The issue, evidently celebrating the 60th anniversary of the Fantastic Four comic book, will feature artist John Romita Jr. joining writer Dan Slott, plus a special back-up by Mark Waid and Paul Renaud. The lead story involves various versions of Kang attacking various versions of the FF throughout their history. Sounds kind of fun, actually, but I'm so far behind on Slott's FF that, like Nick Spencer's Amazing Spider-Man and even Al Ewing's Immortal Hulk, I don't think I'll ever catch up.
Keeping up with super-comics gets to be actual hard work, at a certain point...
Kang The Conqueror #1 kicks off a five-issue miniseries by Collin Kelly, Jackson Lansing and Carlos Magno. I'm curious why Kang is getting this push now, and if it has something to do with the Cinematic Universe, as so much of what Marvel does with their publishing seems to be reflective of the movies and television.
I was genuinely surprised that Kang's existence wasn't teased in that last Avengers movie, given that it involved the invention of time travel, and the MCU was in need of a new archvillain to threaten the heroes of multiple franchises...
Marvel answer's DC's DC Festival of Heroes: The Asian Superhero Celebration #1 with its own Marvel Voices: Identity, a $5.99, 56-page one-shot featuring Shang-Chi, Jimmy Woo, Jubilee, Silk and Ms. Marvel, from "new and established Asian creators." Eight creators are listed along with the words "and more", and it's noteworthy that some of them—Gene Luen Yang, Greg Pak, Marcus To—are among the same creators to contribute to DC's book. It's almost as if there aren't that many creators of Asian descent working in mainstream super-comics!
Also curious? Why the fuck this book needs eleven variant covers, seven of which are "STORMBREAKERS" variants...
Still, I like enough of these creators and characters that I'm going to pre-order this, making it one of only two Marvel books this month I want to read badly enough to to order (the other is the Deadpool comic with a Stokoe story).
5 comments:
Maybe the cloudy lady is....Cloud?
https://marvel.fandom.com/wiki/Cloud_(Earth-616)#:~:text=Cloud%20was%20a%20nebula%20in,Cosmic%20Cube%2C%20Kubik%20to%20her.
I think the “ the cloudy lady ” is probably Cloud a Defender from JM.DeMatteis’s run (but she wasn’t always a lady).
I would third the guess that that is Cloud, who carried over from DeMatties' run into Pter Gillis' (which is where the 'wasn't always a lady' aspect came from).
Me, I want to know who the wannabe Spider/Shadow/Copperhead guy is...and where are my favorite Defenders are...where's Nighthawk? Where's Val?
Kang's getting a push because he'll appear in the next Ant-Man and Wasp movie, "Quantumania."
The Defenders team looks to be Dr. Strange, Silver Surfer, Harpy, classic New Defenders member Cloud and the Masked Raider, the origins of which were written by Ewing in Marvel Comics 1000, 1001 and Incoming. I loved the character in that series and have been waiting ages for him to revisit the Raider, so I'm excited that this looks to be a continuation of his tale.
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