
by Brian K. Vaughan (writer), Tony Harris (art), JD Mettler (colors), and Jared K. Fletcher (letters)
The Story: It’s the return of the Great Machine as Mitchell Hundred throws down with Suzanne, one last time.
What’s Good: Well, it finally happened. In its second to last issue, Ex Machina finally became what no one ever thought it’d be: a superhero comic. This makes for a really remarkable issue. Ex Machina has been such a giant twist on the superhero genre that when it finally brings back some tried and true mechanics of that very genre, it feels shocking. It also feels downright cool.
With the Great Machine taking to the skies once more, Vaughan and Harris hit us with some classic Superman imagery that is impossible not to smile and fist-pump at. We get Mitchell Hundred doing the Clark Kent trademarked shirt-ripping. Then we get onlookers on the ground pointing upwards, speculating on what some flying, and noisy, speck in the sky might be. Seeing Vaughan turn Hundred into a bona fide superhero is awesome in ways that are indescribable. The comic, by concept alone, has tried so hard to divorce Mitchell from superheroics that it’s really satisfying to see it all reversed, particularly given Hundred’s love for comics and superheroes. For once, his efforts even see a grateful damsel in distress and an epic conclusion. It’s a lot closer to the stories he was inspired by and certainly a far cry from his usual bumbling efforts as the Great Machine.
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Filed under: DC Comics, Reviews, Wildstorm | Tagged: 9/11, Alex Evans, alternate universes, Amy Angotti, Bradbury, Brian K. Vaughan, Comic Book Reviews, comic reviews, DC Comics, Ex Machina, Ex Machina #49, Ex Machina #49 review, Great Machine, January Moore, Journal Moore, Kremlin, Mayor of New York, Mitchell Hundred, New York, New York City, nullifier, NYC, opener, parallel realities, Parallel Universe, Suzanne Padilla, Tony Harris, Weekly Comic Book Review, white box, Wildstorm | Leave a comment »
The Story: The first issue of the Astonishing X-Men limited series consists of two “What-If?” styled stories about parallel universes that Subject X could have completed his mission in. The first story is set in a place very similar to the current Marvel universe, where it shows what might have happened if Subject X had succeeded in securing the universe for those he worked for. The second story is set in the Victorian styled Earth-889, and features the “X Society” working to solve a mysterious murder case.