
By: Greg Pak & Fred Van Lente (writers), Neil Edwards (penciller), Scott Hanna (inker), Jesus Aburtov (colorist)
The Story: Uh-oh…does the incredible Hercules have a little boo-boo?
The Review: Despite being one of the most likable and collaborative heroes around, Hercules’ godlike powers don’t really allow him to mix up with his fellow Avengers and their usual foes too often. But with his superhuman powers diminished and the title of his newest ongoing reduced simply to his nickname, Pak and Van Lente show that Herc’s going to have to rub shoulders with the rest of us mortals for a while. There’s of course a lot of potential for that kind of storyline, and Pak-Van Lente have already begun mining it in this first issue.
Nothing starts the blood pumping for an action series like guns and fisticuffs on a speeding train. Herc’s takes down the gang of Warhawks in neo-classical fashion, proving his power loss hasn’t affected his battle skills any. Pak-Van Lente also smartly use the opportunity to give brief intros to his arsenal of weapons and demonstrate their surprising effectiveness against conventional arms (his arrow piercing through one thug’s Uzi into his shoulder is especially great).
There are plenty of other myth-based superheroes that don’t really figure their mythological roots into their stories except as a theme, so it’s really impressive how present Herc’s ancient Greek origins stay throughout the issue beyond his weapons. The prayers of his worshippers seem to be guiding him toward a more Herculean challenge than disarming the Kingpin’s street mafia. No doubt the two tie together somehow, but this issue remains determinedly vague on that front.
And Herc wouldn’t be the hero we love without his enthusiastic embrace of modern American culture. His delight in liquor gives us a pretty good joke (seeing a can of beer offered at his altar: “Best. Offering. Ever.”) and gets him a temp job, which can only mean more hilarious beats to come. And there are few heroes in either of the Big Two who are as sexually comfortable as Hercules—the cut from meeting Rhea to him sprawled naked in bed is possibly one of the best scene-jumps you’ll have read this year.
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Filed under: Marvel Comics, Reviews | Tagged: Fred Van Lente, Greg Pak, Herc, Herc #1, Herc #1 review, Hercules, Hobgoblin, Jesus Aburtov, Kingpin, Marvel, Marvel Comics, Neil Edwards, Scott Hana | 4 Comments »