Quick review: Iron Man 2.0, Secret Avengers and The Incredible Hulks

Incredible Hulks #635

by Greg Pak, Paul Pellitier and Tom Grummett
The Greg Pak era of the Hulk is at an end. It’s strange to think that Pak started on the book back in 2007 when his issues attracted a new insurgence of readers to Hulk’s adventures. World War Hulk was a dynamic story that shook up the status quot of the Hulk, placed him in an alien environment where he was weak and in exile from the Earth and challenged him to crawl back. Since that time, the Hulk has been a major hit for Marvel Comics and (good or bad) was the focus of reader’s attention.

Pak has said the relationship between Banner and Hulk was key to his run on the book. In this, his last issue, he touched upon this approach in an afterward that put his entire run on the book into better focus. The problem here is that there was a big red colored road block in the middle of Pak’s run by Jeph Loeb. This interrupted the story that Pak set out to tell and I have to admit that it seemed to me that he was desperately trying to make up for lost time in the subsequent Banner and Son, Fall of the Hulks, World War Hulks and later issues. However, the series still centered on the Hulk’s relationship with others and his desire to be left alone while seeming to accumulate a massive following of family members. So what is the Hulk to Banner and vice-versa? The Hulk is Banner’s bottled rage, but when Banner lost the danger of transforming into the Hulk, readers got a glimpse of a cunning and often times cruel genius.

It may be difficult to find an once of Banner in the Hulk, but there is certainly more than a little of the Hulk in Bruce Banner!

The final issue is the last part of ‘the Wishing Well War’ in which the central characters are doused in waters that grant them their deepest wishes. If I was very wary of a magical wish granting water, I grew paranoid when a wishing machine appeared. It all ended up with more bashing and smashing I have ever seen this side of a Herb Trimpe issue. Surrounded by monsters, the Hulk destroyed everything around him only to see it recreate in the blink of an eye. The artwork by Paul Pellitier is just amazing as always. I can’t imagine anyone else drawing a mystical realm of exploding monster better. But it was all very… odd. The Hulk fought against an army of foes, but his greatest was his wife (ex-wife?) Betty, who rallied against her lover as Red She-Hulk and the question of ‘should we just leave them to it?’ arose.

In his afterward Pak talked about his vision of the Hulk as a hero, but I can’t help but think of his run as the Hulk as a problem. In World War Hulk, our ‘hero’ is shot into space and becomes a threat to another planet. After he conquering Sakaar, he returns to Earth to unleash his rage. Finally beaten, the gamma radiation is drawn out of the Hulk, but even in his weakened state he is kept in close observation. This trend continues to the moment where Doctor Strange considers just leaving the Hulk to his own fantasy of never-ending violence. In the end, the Hulk is called back as the only solution to a radioactive threat, but everyone involved recognizes that they could be making a massive mistake by releasing him from his prison. I just can’t see the Hulk as a hero for some reason. He’s more of a force of nature in human form that just cannot be stopped.

While I can see the grand goal of Pak’s run on the Hulk and appreciate that he has that rare gift of actually finishing what he set out to do, it feels like a let-down. The build-up of the final few stories has been progressively more and more intense. The more Hulk-like heroes that surrounded him, the more alone the Hulk seemed to be. His rage grew stronger with each month and Betty drifted further away from him. This final confrontation seemed to be far more meaningful than it appeared to be as Hulk glowed with gamma radiation and struck at his grinning beloved who took it on the chin and delivered it back to him. If I’ve said it once, I’ve said it a million times, relationships in comics are complicated.

I did quite enjoy Banner staring down Amadeus Cho, telling him that he’ll never understand… but the following story ending with Hulk and Betty destroying a car and smashing out of it all smiles toward the reader was very corny even for me. I will definitely miss Greg Pak who remains one of the finest writers that has ever worked on the Hulk. Perhaps the resonance of this issue will grow over the years, especially after the new series by Jason Aaron debuts. I look forward to revisiting this run in the near future, but for now I just miss it.

Secret Avengers #16

by Warren Ellis and Jamie McElvie
Secret Avengers has taken up the mantle of the Dark Avengers, a monthly book that focused on over the top action. A covert ops group formed by former Captain America Steve Rogers consisting of Moon Knight, Black Widow, the Beast, War Machine, Valkyrie, Nova and more, Ed Brubaker and Mike Deodato’s run had a definite Roy Thomas/Neal Adams vibe going on. Incoming writer Nick Spencer was saddled with the Fear Itself cross-over and a Point One issue in addition to his work on Iron Man 2.0 and Thunder Agents. All things considered, his short term consisted of character-driven stories that not only fleshed out the team bur progressed the plot of the ongoing book. The Beast-centric and Valkyrie issues were especially good if the previous #15 disappointed slightly. Even so, Spencer’s issues featured characters almost as old as Marvel itself, all sounding and acting in character and engaged in exciting adventures.

The fan favorite writer Warren Ellis is hardly known for character-driven plots and more specifically his Marvel work veers more toward the absurd and bombastic. Since the success of Transmetropolitan, his followers are legion. I have read a healthy amount of his work and as for his ‘men in tights’ material I was especially happy with his work on Thunderbolts, a series that featured mainly vaguely written characters and sharply written action sequences. It’s a great run that is coincidentally available in collected form. When I discovered that Ellis was taking over Secret Avengers I was very happy. This month’s issue was heavily hyped, even by Brevoort himself who claimed that it was the best book on the racks.

Well… color me disappointed.

For his first issue, Ellis not only throws characterization out the window but he also commits the cardinal sin of writing by having characters provide their own profiles. Ugh. Thusly, the team is not only trimmed down to just four members but also trimmed from sophisticated to cartoonish. The Beast is a chatty know-it-all, Black Widow is a sharp-tongued vixen, Steve Rogers is the square jawed hero and Moon Knight is just plain nuts. The issue is a ‘done in one’ which is quite enticing for new readers and old, but it’s so goofy and silly that it flies in the face of the previous 16 issues. There’s something involving the Secret Society (why don’t THEY get any exposition?), a mega city and an atomic sports car.

The artwork is stripped-down and more at home in an indie book than a Marvel series. That of course has pluses and minuses, but it’s a bold move. For fans of Next Wave (of which I am in the minority in calling crap), this is the ideal book of the week. It’s fun, silly and explosive with lots of gun play, goons in helicopters and witty dialog. I just wish that it also honored the characters as they were written rather than presenting them as gags. Maybe my opinion will change in coming issues.

Iron Man 2.0 #8

by Nick Spencer and Ariel OlivettiThe ‘sister book’ for the Invincible Iron Man starring Jim Rhodes (formerly War Machine) had plenty of teething pains. A well written and drawn series, it nonetheless seems to have difficulty in actually using its lead hero.

The opening adventure deals with Palmer Addley, a brilliant yet twisted programmer and engineer who has become tied to terrorist acts after his own death. Assigned to the US Military, Rhodes is charged with solving the Palmer Addley mystery and given a team of experts to accomplish that goal. Nevertheless, the death toll continues to climb and Addley is still at large. But where’s Rhodey, you may ask. He has donned a newly designed Iron Man suit and is dishing out robot justice… only not in time to stop the destruction.

The series took a side-step with an Iron Fist and the Immortal Weapons plot that, while immensely entertaining, had nothing to do with Palmer Addley or Rhodey. It’s very frustrating because the book has maintained a high quality all the way through.

For some reason, I thought that the Palmer Addley story was going to be resolved in the Point One issue, but no dice. The latest #8 seems to be trying to get the series back on track, but it still feels like Rhodey is playing back-up in his own book. The previous War Machine monthly book by Greg Pak was very focused on Rhodey and progressed the character in just 12 issues. The new Iron Man 2.0 is still very much worth reading but as far as Rhodey is concerned, the character is treading water at best.

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I should mention that I am fighting a nasty cold and as my day job involves advertising and there’s a three-day weekend coming in the ‘States, it has been a tough week.

I have noticed some new readers to the blog and would like to open up the floor to what they are reading in terms of comics and what-not as well as what TV programs and films they enjoy. This site started as a ‘guide’ of sorts so let me know what you like and maybe I can better guide you to new material!

New Releases 1/26/11

For the complete list of this week’s comics, click here.

Not sure where your local comic shop is? Try comicshoplocator.com!

(note: all information including ad copy is from the publisher)

If you can’t make it to the shop, just click on any of the images below to be taken to an online retailer. I don’t get any referrals for these sales, I’m just doing my bit to spread the word on some neat products.

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Green Hornet Tv 1/50 Die Cast Vehicle Assortment

Green Hornet Tv 1/50 Die Cast Vehicle Assortment
The Green Hornet has been the star of radio, television, comics, and film for over fifty years, and with these 1/50-scale diecast models you can relive the adventure of Britt Reid’s underground war on crime! Collectors can choose from diecasts based on the television series from the 1960s or from the new film starring Seth Rogen!
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Beatles Famous Covers 1/36 Die Cast Bus Assortment A

Beatles Famous Covers 1/36 Die Cast Bus Assortment A
Your ticket to ride is ready, and your reservation has been made as the Beatles Die-Cast Buses are here! These 1/36-scale diecasts feature the iconic cover imagery of four of the Beatles’ albums – 1964’s A Hard Day’s Night, 1967’s Magical Mystery Tour, 1968’s The Beatles (better known as ‘The White Album’), and 1970’s Let It Be – imprinted on the side of miniature London double-decker busses.Collect all four and let the magical mystery tour take you away!

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Back Issue #46

Back Issue #46
This issue spotlights ‘The Greatest Stories Never Told,’ loaded with rare and previously unpublished art!Mike Grell reveals how his ‘Savage Empire’ strip became DC Comics’ The Warlord, Danny Fingeroth and Al Milgrom open the vault to reveal pages from the aborted Fantastic Four graphic novel Fathers and Sons, and we go beyond John Byrne’s Last Galactus Story.

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Thunderbolts #152

Thunderbolts #152
By: Jeff Parker, Kev Walker, Greg Land
The T-Bolts leap into HULK’s ‘Scorched Earth’! At the request of Steve Rogers, Luke Cage must take his hardened team to deal with a doomsday scenario unleashed in the pages of HULK!And now that the squad is a man short, Cage finally uses his power to recruit another prisoner to duty-and his pick will shock you! Will the Thunderbolts accept this new member as a part of their force?

Or will this heavy duty wild card destroy the balance of power? Find out in the series that Newsarama.com’s Best Shots calls ‘The Avengers title that not enough people are raving about it’s one of the best of the bunch.’
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Uncanny X-Force #4

Uncanny X-Force #4
By: Rick Remender, Jerome Opena, Esad Ribic
Written by RICK REMENDER Penciled by JEROME OPEÑA Cover by ESAD RIBIC ‘THE APOCALYPSE SOLUTION,’ PART FOUR It all comes down to this! To stop him from bending all reality to his will X-Force must kill Apocalypse.But at a terrible cost. The final set piece: lovers positioned against each other, old friendships irreparably shattered, and the future of the Marvel Universe forever twisted. The story X-fans will be discussing for years to come, the conclusion that will change one character evermore!

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Marvel Select Juggernaught Action Figure

Marvel Select Juggernaught Action Figure
A Diamond Select Release! Sculpted by Gentle Giant! The ranks of the best-selling Marvel Select line expand to include one of the most deadly mutants ever, the unstoppable Juggernaut. Sculpted by Gentle Giant and standing a massive 7″ tall, Juggernaut is the latest in the, in scale, over sized figures from the Marvel Select line.Charles Xavier’s half brother is ready to join Magneto in the fight against the X-Men and anyone else that stands in their way. Featuring Marvel Selects standard 16 points of articulation, Juggernaut, and the sans-helmet chase variant figure, are the textbook definition of Unstoppable!

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Alter Ego #99

Alter Ego #99
Alter Ego presents a special George Tuska showcase issue, emphasing the legendary artist’s career at Lev Gleason and Marvel, and in comics strips through the early 1970s!From Crime Does Not Pay and Buck Rogers to Iron Man, The Avengers, and Hero For Hire, all of Tuska’s high-profile strips are detailed by Dewey Cassell!

Plus there’s an interview with 1950s Timely/Marvel editor Al Sulman, ‘personal associate of Stan Lee!’
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X-Men #7

X-Men #7
By: Victor Gischler, Chris Bachalo, Terry Dodson
‘PROTECT AND SERVE,’ PART ONEIt’s a new age for the X-Men. Cyclops and company have declared it a time to be heroes. Wherever a citizen is in need, there’s an X-Man on the job. But strange rumors have come to the attention of the X-Men, and Storm and her team are off to New York City to investigate. What do they find in the dank sewers beneath Manhattan? Only New York’s favorite wall-crawler has the answers.

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Ring Of Dracula Coll Ed Prop Replica

Ring Of Dracula Coll Ed Prop Replica
The Ring of Dracula, bearing the Count’s crest, is a signet-style ring prop that was one of the hallmarks of the classic screen aristocratic vampire Count Dracula. Since its first appearance in 1944’s The House of Frankenstein, the Dracula ring, or a copy of it, has adorned the fingers of some of the most admired actors to have portrayed Dracula, including John Carradine, Bela Lugosi, and Sir Christopher Lee.The mark of the vampire, The Ring of Dracula prop replica will be a valuable addition to any collection, and collectors may choose from the Collector Edition or the Elite Edition. This stunning Collectors Edition replica is crafted with an antiqued metal finish and inset with a reproduction Carnelian ‘blood’ stone, while the Elite Edition (limited to 600 pieces worldwide) replica is crafted from sterling silver and inset with a genuine semi-precious Carnelian ‘blood’ stone.

Each replica, licenced by Universal Pictures, comes housed within custom designed packaging and includes a Certificate of Authenticity.
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DC Comics Presents Superman Sole Survivor #1

DC Comics Presents Superman Sole Survivor #1
By: JAMES ROBINSON, DANNY FINGEROTH, VAL SEMEIKS, RANDY GREEN, WAYNE FAUCHER, PAUL NEARY, KEVIN NOWLAN
Superman has his first encounter with one of his earliest and strangest foes, the Ultra-Humanite, in tales from LEGENDS OF THE DC UNIVERSE #1-3 written by James Robinson. Plus, from issue #39 of that series, Superman meets a billionaire who believes Earth is doomed to explode – just like Krypton!
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Dracula Company Of Monsters #6

Dracula Company Of Monsters #6
By: Kurt Busiek, Daryl Gregory, Scott Godlewski, Ron Salas
It’s bloodsuckers vs. bloodsucker, as Kurt Busiek brings an incredibly modern spin to the Dracula mythos.With Dracula’s army finally summoned, Evan and Barrington Industries begin to experience the true might of the Son of the Dragon!

Imperiled by both his craven, monstrous uncle, and Dracula’s calculating cruelty, Evan must consider making a pact with an enigmatic, deadly force.
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Green Hornet Movie 1/50 Die Cast Vehicle Assortment

Green Hornet Movie 1/50 Die Cast Vehicle Assortment
The Green Hornet has been the star of radio, television, comics, and film for over fifty years, and with these 1/50-scale diecast models you can relive the adventure of Britt Reid’s underground war on crime! Collectors can choose from diecasts based on the television series from the 1960s or from the new film starring Seth Rogen!
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Age Of X Alpha #1

Age Of X Alpha #1
By: Mike Carey, Chris Bachalo
Age of X Part One!Mutantkind’s final war starts here. If you don’t know which side you’re on, check your DNA.

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Namor First Mutant #6

Namor First Mutant #6
By: Stuart Moore, Ariel Olivetti, Phil Noto
NAMOR GOES TO HELL — PART ONE OF THREE! If Wolverine jumped off a bridge, would you jump too? That’s the question Namor must answer when the old Kings of Atlantis escape Hell only to drag him back down with them – into a burning desert wasteland.Can even the X-Men help him now? And with its king missing, what will happen to New Atlantis?

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Lone Ranger & Tonto TPB

Lone Ranger & Tonto TPB
By: Brett Matthews, Jon Abrams, Mario Guevara And Others
Collecting The Lone Ranger & Tonto one-shot adventures written by Brett Matthews and Jon Abrams with art by Mario Guevara, Vatche Mavlian, and others.
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Hawkeye & Mockingbird TPB Ghosts

Hawkeye & Mockingbird TPB Ghosts
By: Jim McCann, David Lopez, Paul Renaud
Hawkeye, the world’s greatest marksman is back-and reunited with the world’s most dangerous super-spy, Mockingbird! The deadly duo defied every obstacle to make their way back to each other and put together the all new WCA team-but now the one thing that divided them years before has returned to haunt them: the Phantom Rider!This ancient enemy is out to destroy all our heroes hold dear, and is teaming with Clint Barton’s arch-nemesis, the obsessed assassin Crossfire, to do it!

Writer Jim McCann and penciler David Lopez, the team behind the acclaimed New Avengers: The Reunion, reunite to aim the spotlight and crosshairs on Marvel’s terrorist-targeting tandem, delivering a healthy dose of classic threats, new enemies, shocking allies, unexpected twists and dysfunctional dynamics in the Mighty Marvel Manner!

This title collects
HAWKEYE & MOCKINGBIRD #1-6 and material from ENTER THE HEROIC AGE

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Avengers #9

Avengers #9
By: Brian Michael Bendis, John Romita Jr
The Avengers team up with the incredible RED HULK as the Hood makes a crazy power move to bring the Infinity Gauntlet together once more.But the Hood has no idea the power he is toying with and who is coming to earth to challenge him for it. Another earth-shattering chapter of Avengers crazy by Bendis and Romita Jr!

Plus: another illustrated chapter of the oral history of the Avengers!

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Spider-Man Fantastic Four HC

Spider-Man Fantastic Four HC
By: Christos Gage, Mario Alberti
The creative team behind the sellout X-Men/Spider-Man miniseries returns for a brand new tour through classic Marvel moments!Contains four stories, each revealing a heretofore untold team-up between Spidey and the Fantastic Four at a different point in Marvel history, with a mysterious common thread binding them all together!

Plus: relive some classic FF/Spidey team-ups with two bonus reprints!

This title collects
SPIDER-MAN/FANTASTIC FOUR #1-4, SPECTACULAR SPIDER-MAN #42 and FANTASTIC FOUR #218
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JLA Trophy Room Wonder Woman Tiara Bracelets and Lasso

JLA Trophy Room Wonder Woman Tiara Bracelets and Lasso
The latest addition to the JLA TROPHY ROOM is the paramount replica for any Wonder Woman aficionado! All in one place is the Amazon warrrior’s gear – the tiara, two gauntlet bracelets, and the Lasso of Truth.* Tiara is stamped and plated in gold-tone metal with a translucent star detail, measuring 2.75″ high (front top point) and 1.5″ high (sides) x 6.5″ wide x 7.25″ deep.

* Bracelets are plated in silver-tone metal, each measuring 5.25″ high x 2.625″ wide (top) and 3.25″ wide (bottom) x 2.25″ deep.

* The base is sculpted cold-cast porcelain, Classical Greek-inspired to display all the components of the replica in one place, and features a silver display plaque. It measures 7.25″ high (to the top of the column) and 11″ high (entire piece) x 9.75″ wide x 9.5″ deep.

* The lasso is comprised of braided gold-tone material with gold metal-plated endcaps, and measures 60″ in length.

Packaged in a 4-color box, with a 4-color Certificate of Authenticity. Limited Edition. Manufactured to order.
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Saga Of The Swamp Thing Book 04 HC

Saga Of The Swamp Thing Book 04 HC
By: Alan Moore
The fourth volume collects issues #43-50, in which Swamp Thing’s quest for self-discovery comes to its shattering conclusion. A harbinger of doom has been released with the sole charge of waking an evil beyond comprehension, and John Constantine, Deadman, The Phantom Stranger, The Spectre and other masters of the occult must unite.This title collects

Swamp Things #43-50

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Chaos War #5 (of 5)

Chaos War #5 (of 5)
By: Fred Van Lente, Khoi Pham, Brandon Peterson
THIS IS IT!! THE MARVEL UNIVERSE’S LAST STAND! The Chaos King unleashes his ultimate attack against reality as we know it — and our survival depends on a boy, his god, and their ragtag band of allies: The Mighty Thor! The Incredible Hulks! The Dead (and Living?) Avengers! The X-Men! Alpha Flight!But are they enough to stand against THE ANTI-ETERNITY … The force that seeks to negate all existence itself? In this issue, the universe dies and everyone wins!

. . . what?
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Captain America 70th Anniversary Magazine #1

Captain America 70th Anniversary Magazine #1
Marvel celebrates Captain America’s seventieth birthday in style with this gigantic glossy magazine bursting at the seams with thrilling action sure to please Cap fans young and old! Get the inside scoop on the Sentinel of Liberty from the people who know him best as Marvel’s top creators share their thoughts on the history of Captain America.Discover what’s next for Steve Rogers and company with exclusive previews from Captain America comics. And thrill at the storied history of the Living Legend with reprints of Cap’s greatest adventures culled from seventy extraordinary years of Marvel Comics!

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Shazam (One Shot)

Shazam (One Shot)
By: Eric Wallace, Cliff Richards, Cliff Chiang
Blaze, the current ruler of Hell, has an offer for Mary and Billy Batson that may be too good to pass up! Left powerless, will the two former heroes have the strength to deny the devil? Can Freddy Freeman save them? And how does the Titan Osiris fit into it all?

Find out here, in this one-shot special written by Eric Wallace (TITANS) with art by Cliff Richards (THE ROAD HOME: BATMAN & ROBIN #1)!
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Avengers Academy Prem HC Permanent Record

Avengers Academy Prem HC Permanent Record
By: Christos Gage, Mike McKone
Determined to keep the tradition alive, founding Avenger Hank Pym leads a core team of veteran heroes in creating a place where the next generation of Earth’s Mightiest can be trained by the greatest of those who preceded them.An institution where everyone who has ever been an Avenger can share their skill, knowledge and experience. The future is in their hands…and in the hands of the six young superhumans chosen to make up the inaugural class. But who are they? And what dark secret will turn their world–and potentially the entire Marvel Universe–upside down?

This title collects
AVENGERS ACADEMY #1-6 and material from ENTER THE HEROIC AGE

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Skrulls name-dropped as enemy in Avengers film

The Avengers by Paul Pope

Comic book fans and the movie going public are agog in the current superhero film excitement. From X-Men to Spider-Man to Batman and now Iron Man, the medium that was once the victim of ridicule is now in such high demand that there was even an Elektra movie made. The big difference now is in franchise building, however. Gone are the days of event movies built around comic book concepts and sequels are so 20th Century. If you really want to make something big, you knot together several movies into a cohesive narrative that establishes and entire universe of possibilities. In short, you build on the success of Iron Man (and to an extent Incredible Hulk) toward an Avengers movie. It’s a massive gamble, but if it works you’re gold.

I feel like a broken record for saying this, but nothing like this has ever been done before. Just imagine seeing Spider-Man mentioned in X-Men, or Wolverine pitching in against Doctor Octopus and you may get an idea of what I’m getting at but that’s still not close. This is a universe-building endeavor that will change the way Hollywood looks at making movies in general (for good or bad). The need to adapt series of young adult or fantasy novels will pale in comparison to the idea that a series of films could be made that are related to each other but not strictly sequels. I may have tunnel vision on this, but I cannot think of anything outside of comic books where this happens and it is blowing my mind that it is being entertained as a viable direction for a movie series.

This universe building concept is such a hot topic that across the street from Marvel at Warner Bros., the Distinguished Competition is plotting out a similar path toward a Justice League movie, but they have already hit a major legal snag regarding the use of Superman. The Green Lantern film is still deep in production, however and not only has Marvel nailed two major successes with their Iron Man films and a third modest hit with Incredible Hulk, they already have principal photography wrapped up on the Mighty Thor and filming is due to start shortly in London for Captain America: The First Avenger (both scheduled for release next Summer).

If Marvel continues to play its cards right, they may have won the war before a single shot has been fired!

But in planning the Avengers movie, it becomes almost immediately imperative to provide an opposition that demands their combined forces of Iron Man, Captain America and Thor (and possibly Hank Pym the Ant/Giant Man). The comic book involved Thor’s evil step brother Loki tricking the team into fighting the Hulk who had gone on a rampage. The final scene of the Incredible Hulk film featuring Banner willingly entering a Hulk-ed out state seems to support that this is the direction the film version of the Avengers may take, but there has been talk of an alternative that derives its influence from more recent events.

Word on the web is that an invasion of Skrulls will be the impetus behind the formation of the Avengers and the reason why Nick Fury has been drafting members. This dates back to an interview last year by C.H.U.D. when Marvel execs explained that they owned the screen rights to the Skrulls and intended to use them in an Avengers film. I have done some digging but aside from that, there has been no other official statement supporting it. That’s not to discount the Skrull rumor or shoot holes in it. The fact that the web is full of articles (like this) talking about the possibility says to me that maybe Marvel is testing the waters to see what fans think of the idea.

In Marvel Comics, the Skrulls are a race of shape-shifting aliens who have been at war with a neighboring alien race called the Kree for so long that neither remembers why. First facing off against the Fantastic Four, the Skrulls later became more of a viable threat as their secret invasion into human society caused many to doubt the identity of even their closest friends and family. More recently, the Skrulls attempted to dominate the entire planet Earth by manifesting as doppelgänger of trusted heroes to infiltrate super hero teams.

I can understand the need to make the Avengers movie BIG, but I think that introducing the Skrulls right away may be the wrong path to take. The only consistent negative criticism I have read of Iron Man 2 reviews is that it was a cluttered movie that lacked the intimacy of the first flick. If anything, the Avengers movie will be a crowded affair right off the bat with three leading men and the inevitable array of new supporting characters (possibly Hawkeye, Ant/Giant Man and more!). Using the Hulk as a threat that viewers are also more familiar with makes more sense to me.

The key attraction to the Avengers for me as a reader has been the interaction between the characters rather than the major explosive battles. Throwing the team against an entire alien armada from square one may dwarf that appeal entirely and cause the characters to appear more as action figures or stock characters rather than as ‘heroes with problems’ that made these creations so interesting to readers back in the 1960’s.

What do you think?