
by Ed Brubaker (writer), Patrick Zircher & Mike Deodato (artists), Paul Mounts (colorist), and Joe Caramagna (letterer)
The Story: Captain America tries to put down Scourge, not knowing that it’s an old friend under the mask.
The Review: Who the hell is D-Man and why should I care?
I suspect that’ll be the reaction of most readers to this issue. Brubaker never tells us who exactly D-Man is, what the nature the nature of his friendship with Cap is, or why we should feel even remotely attached the character (who, thank you Comic Vine, has only appeared twice in Brubaker’s 8 year run). For some reason, Brubaker has decided that it would make good sense to write an issue, and by extension an entire story-arc, that was contingent on a reader’s being familiar with Mark Gruenwald’s run on Captain America 20 years ago. Unless a reader has working knowledge of those early 90s stories, he or she is going to be totally in the dark about why D-Man is important.
The result is an issue that I can’t help but feel apathetic about. Brubaker hasn’t given us a reason to care about D-Man or his fate and never really even seemed to try to. The HYDRA elements were never explored. Worse still, this entire issue is basically just one extended punch-up between Cap and Scourge. Making the issue feel even more phoned in is the fact that said punch-up ends up being yet another return to the tired old “mind control” comic book trope. I half expected Steve to cry out to D-Man to “fight it.” As talented a writer as Brubaker is, it really didn’t seem like he was trying very hard here. D-Man’s motivations and insane rambling were entirely vapid and trite and we were basically just given a bunch of pages of punching. And when the tragic ending strikes, who cares? Maybe those two readers who fell asleep last night hugging onto their twenty-year-old Gruenwald comics, but that’s about it.
Continue reading
Filed under: Marvel Comics, Reviews | Tagged: Alex Evans, Captain America, Captain America 14, Captain America 14 review, Comic Book Reviews, comic reviews, D-Man, Diamondback, Dum Dum Dugan, Ed Brubaker, Henry Gyrich, Hydra, Marvel Comics, Marvel Universe, Mike Deodato, Patrick Zircher, Scourge, Sharon Carter, SHIELD, Steve Rogers, Weekly Comic Book Review | Leave a comment »