
By: Dan Abnett & Andy Lanning (writers), Leandro Fernandez (art), Andres Mossa (colors), Joe Caramagna (letters), Sebastian Girner (assistant editor) & Nick Lowe (editor)
The Story: A new creative team takes over New Mutants and sets them on a new direction.
What’s Good: It’s just so nice to see the New Mutants with something to do. The action here seems to pick up shortly after the New Mutants return from Limbo, thankfully without mentioning Age of X. So, we find Cannonball kinda out of action due to injuries and loss of confidence and Karma still reeling from the loss of her leg in Second Coming last summer, not to mention Illyana isn’t going to be trusted by Cyclops for a good long time after the end of the Limbo mission. In the face of all that, is there even a need for the New Mutants team? Who’s left?
We open with a fun and well executed opening showing the New Mutants + Wolverine, Kitty and Colossus smashing up a car factory where a piece of Nimrod (from Second Coming) seems to have taken refuge and has been corrupting the machines. Once they get back to Utopia, Dani Moonstar gets summoned to Cyclops office and while she expects to hear that the New Mutants are being scrapped, he instead puts her in charge of the team and gives the team a mission: To mop up after the X-Men’s big events by taking care of things like the “piece of Nimrod”.
And, you know what…. That’s not a bad mission for these guys. It makes sense that there will be loose ends after any big X-story and the New Mutants are an appropriate team to take care of those problems. One of my problems with the New Mutants is that the writers are always devising threats for them that are too damn big. If the threats were really that big, they would be taken care of by the X-Men, Avengers, FF, etc… Not by a bunch of B-list mutants. So, with this mission, Abnett and Lanning can just riff on whatever X-story has just wrapped up and give us a new and cool angle. Furthermore, they can probably pick and choose which X-stories to play with and just skip the bad ones. For example, I’d be surprised if they fiddle with that whole Lobe story from Uncanny X-men. Why do that when the much more enticing Curse of the Mutants or Apocalypse stories are laying there?
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Filed under: Marvel Comics | Tagged: Andres Mossa, Andy Lanning, Dan Abnett, Dean Stell, Joe Caramagna, Leandro Fernandez, Marvel, New Mutants, New Mutants #25, New Mutants #25 review, Nick Lowe, review, Sebastian Girner | 4 Comments »