Marvel Comics gets ready for a Dozen Days of Vengeance and Earthfall

Just released are details on a pair of wide-reaching stories for Marvel Comics. Joe Casey (Avengers: Earth’s Mightiest Heroes) will chart a course reaching all the way back to the Red Skull’s first appearance in WWII. There have been many WWII-era stories in Captain America in the past few years, so it should come as no surprise that the latest story involving the star-spangled Avenger will involve his deadliest foe and a threat stemming from his earliest days as the sentinel of liberty.

A Dozen Days of Vengeance


Via ComicBookMovie.com:

CAPTAIN AMERICA COMICS #7 in 1941 contained the birth of Captain America’s ultimate foe and one of the purist embodiments of evil in the Marvel Universe: The Red Skull.

Johann Schmidt went from downtrodden youth to Nazi officer to Germany’s version of Captain America under the tutelage of Adolf Hitler himself. He battled Cap and the rest of the Allied Powers’ forces through World War II before placing himself in suspended animation. Re-emerging in the modern era, the Skull would continue his rivalry with his patriotic opposite number while also becoming a thorn in the side of the Avengers and many other Marvel heroes. Numerous times the Skull has appeared to perish, but always seems to turn back up by various means, including transferring his consciousness into a body cloned from Cap himself or utilizing the Cosmic Cube.

In recent years, The Red Skull orchestrated a scheme that saw the original Captain America, Steve Rogers, apparently assassinated—in actuality hurled backwards in time—and replaced by his former sidekick, Bucky Barnes. The Skull would lose his body in battle with Barnes and then fail in an attempt to subvert the mind of the returned Rogers, apparently dying once again. His daughter Sin has since succeeded him, but The Red Skull can never totally be counted out.

“There’s a thread to this story that stretches all the way back to World War II,” reveals Casey. “An atrocity committed by the Red Skull that has never been revealed—until now.”

Thanks for checking out A Dozen Days of Vengeance. Get ready for VENGEANCE #1, coming your way July 6!”

The second major storyline to be announced involves that team of cosmic heroes assembled by Dan Abnett and Andy Lanning, the Annihilators. This already renowned pair of creators have seen a successive steam of successes from their Annihilation, Annihilation: Conquest, Guardians of the Galaxy and Nova series over the years. With both Nova and the Guardians MIA, the Annihilators are the only ‘fix’ that cosmic Marvel fans have had and with that mini-series now ended, many have wondered what the next step could be.

It’s a big one…

Avengers Vs. Annihilators: Earthfall

Via Newsarama:

Announced this morning via Press Release and Marvel.com, Annihilators: Earthfall #1 will launch a four issue mini-series this September that sees Gladiator, Quasar, Ronan, Ikon and Beta-Ray Bill coming to Earth to square up against the Avengers. Co-written by Dan Abnett and Andy Lanning, collectively known in the industry as DnA, the story marks the continuation of years of cosmic action from the duo.
“A desperate and vital mission brings the Annihilators to Earth, and what generates the conflict with Earth’s Mightiest Heroes is basically the clash of jurisdiction, and the incompatible interests of both teams; what’s good for Earth might not be good for the Galaxy—and vice versa!” Abnett told Marvel.com.

Lanning also noted that this is a great jumping-on point to the Marvel Cosmic group, as they’ll be introducing the characters when they come to Earth. With folks like Gladiator and Ronan in the squad, who have traditionally clashed with Earth’s heroes, it certainly spells trouble.

The book will also once again feature a Rocket Raccoon and Groot back-up, similar to the first Annihilators series.

Nova – The Human Rocket!

 You have to hand it to Marvel Comics, they never let an old idea lay dormant for long. When the introduction of Nova, a comic book character intended to recapture the innocence and energy of Lee and Ditko’s Spider-Man for a new generation fell flat, you’d figure that would be that. But the arrival of Dan Abnett and Andy Lanning’s Annihilation cross-over event changed everything both for Nova and the cosmic comic characters of the Marvel Universe.

Richard Rider, Nova

Richard Rider, Nova

Richard Rider is a simple suburban kid from Long Island. Chosen seemingly at random to join the Nova Corps, Rider finds himself a member of a galactic organization committed to upholding the peace on a large scale and assisting those in need (… kinda like Green Lantern Corps, which would be viewed as a rip-off if the GLC itself were not loosely based on the Lenseman series). Nova had his day in the sun and moved on to that shadowy venue of third-tier character, showing up in the pages of the Fantastic Four and later as a member of the New Warriors.

However it was not until the Annihilation series that the character found a new lease on life and his title became something of a cult hit amongst comic book readers. I myself picked up the first trade on word of mouth alone.

With the opening of the Annihilation series, the Nova Corps is destroyed, leaving Rider as the only survivor. This is odd given that he was never really regarded as the best of the corps by a long chalk. The power source of the corps, not having anywhere else to go, resides in him, giving him access to untold amounts of power and the combined knowledge of the Nova Corps referred to as World Mind. This allows for the standard ‘floating head’ scenario that proved so successful years ago in the pages of Firestorm the Nuclear Man. The series follows the adventures of Rider as he attempts to play the part of one man Nova Corps, traveling at light speed from one disaster to the next.

One of the interesting threads that begins to play out in the series is one of free will. Rider is constantly communicating with World Mind who feeds him advice and often argues with the strong-willed human as to what to do next. Rider commonly disobeys World Mind only to face the consequences of near destruction to later concede that the floating head was right all along. Later in the series, the sequel to Annihilation, Annihilation: Conquest, pits our hero against the Techno virus known as the Phalanx. Crippled near death, Nova eventually succumbs to the lure of the Phalanx only to find that being part of a hive mind isn’t that bad of a thing. Rider muses that it feels good to be part of something larger and that he has not so much been subsumed as he has been welcomed into something larger than himself. In time, he rejects the Phalanx, but the experience takes a heavy toll on him and he loses his connection with World Mind entirely. Eventually he realizes that he must return to Earth and seek the assistance of Project: Pegasus (kinda like STAR Labs for DC readers) in reviving his mentor.

World Mind returns but is no longer only in Richard Rider’s mind. Free of the human restriction, World Mind begins to rebuild the Nova Corps… without Richard’s knowing. This causing a schism between the two ‘characters’ and in the end Rider is kicked out of the organization he had so long defended. World Mind muses that Rider had taken on too much by embodying the entirety of the Nova Force and has lost part of his sanity. However, Rider has a feeling this is not the case at all. With the help of the Project: Pegasus team he establishes that World Mind is dousing the new corps members with endorphins, clouding their judgment (kinda like what happened with the Phalanx). To make matter worse, Rider discovers that holding the Nova Force in his body has greatly limited his remaining lifespan… giving him precious few days left to live.

This has got to be one of the hidden gems of the current comic book market. Full of intelligent plots, high drama and exciting suspense, Nova is a series that is well worth a try.

Recommended:

Annihilation, Book 1 
Annihilation, Book 2 
Annihilation, Book 3 
Nova, Vol. 1: Annihilation – Conquest
Nova Vol. 2: Knowhere