
By: Charles Soule (story), Javier Pulido (art), Muntsa Vicente (colors)
The Story: Ant-Man and Hellcat cut She-Hulk down to size.
The Review: I’m sure Soule had his reasons, but it was still kind of bizarre for him to break off the one ongoing mystery of this series, just as it was really starting to take off. For one thing, his choice required all the characters involved to suddenly decide the case they had dedicated themselves to investigating wasn’t worth the effort anymore, going against all of their usual tenacity. That inconsistency would nearly be a plot hole if Soule hadn’t suggested a touch of the supernatural might be involved.
Still, shelving the Blue File for the time being allows Soule to take another stab at that delicate genre balance between superhero and legal drama, and he succeeds this issue. Past premises have been heavy on the law, light/repetitive with the vigilantism, but this one reverses that trend: Rufus, an inventor working out of Jen’s office building, wants her to negotiate a contract for the purchase of his and his partner Reza’s shrink-ray technology, but he needs her to find Reza first. Here’s the wrinkle: Reza, in a fit of proprietary rage, may have shrunken himself into hiding.
Continue reading
Filed under: Marvel Comics, Reviews | Tagged: Ant Man, Charles Soule, Hank Pym, Hellcat, Javier Pulido, Jennifer Walters, Marvel, Marvel Comics, Muntsa Vicente, Patsy Walker, She Hulk, She-Hulk #7, She-Hulk #7 review | 1 Comment »