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Thunderbolts #156 – Review

By: Jeff Parker (writer), Kev Walker (pencils), Jason Gorder & Walker (inks), Frank Martin & Fabio D’Auria (colors), Albert Deschesne (letters), Rachel Pinnelas (assistant editor) & Tom Brennan (editor)

The Story: While the Thunderbolts head out on a dangerous mission with their new magic user, Songbird tries to recruit a B-team of “Underbolts” from the inmates on the Raft.

What’s Good: A common problem with team superhero comics is that they get stale: “We’ve seen this team tackle that bad dude before!  Yawn!”  Jeff Parker isn’t taking any chance of that happening to Thunderbolts as last issue he introduced a new magic-based villain to the team (Satana) and in this issue he has Songbird trying to recruit a B-team of villains to serve as a minor leagues of sorts should any of the Major League Thunderbolts need to go on the disabled list (whether it is the 15 day DL or the more permanent kind).  So, this issue has all the fun of “first mission with the new team member” and “getting the new team together”.  Seriously, how does Parker jam so much into his comics?  I think this is his 12th post-Siege issue of T-bolts and we have covered 4-5 stories.  Pretty amazing when you consider there are a LOT of other superhero comics that can’t do more than 2 stories per year.  Bravo!

The mission for the A-team is pretty cool.  It’s basically just some kinda thing that Parker made up (I think) where there has been a mystical fortress that popped up in eastern Europe and the hero community has known about it for awhile, but was letting the problem wait until some team had (a) time and (b) an appropriate magic-based team member.  It kinda gives the impression that in Steve Rogers office, there is a big “To Do” list on the wall and this problem has been festering because Dr. Strange is busy and Brother Voodoo is dead, so he keeps tasking the various Avengers teams to tackle some other problem.

Satana is a neat addition to the team.  For one thing, the first scene we see her in, she is climbing around on Man-Thing (heh) and covering him with glowing, mystic tattoos.  This causes Cage to yell, “Woman, what are you doing to that Man Thing?”  (heh)  It’s also cool to see how uncomfortable Satana makes Juggernaut, Ghost and Moonstone.  They’re the “core” villains of the team and as readers, we’ve kinda gotten to like them, so having a new teammate who may be tempted to betray them will be fun.

Kev Walker and the rest of the art team really do a bang-up job.  The style of the book is very unique, but I’ve really grown to enjoy it during his tenure on the book because he does such a good job emphasizing the differing natures of the characters on the team.  When you thing about it, this book has to be a bitch to draw because of the character types: Juggernaut (hulking, but w/o muscles ripping through his clothes), Cage (hulking, but WITH muscles rippling through his clothes), Ghost (small, spectral & skinny), Moonstone (basically a lithe female nude with colored-on uniform), Mach V (a mech/tech type character) & Man-Thing (hulking shambling plant).  Tell you what: There are a LOT of artists working in mainstream superhero comics who would struggle with this title because they can’t manage one of those character types, but Walker seems able to draw anything and his versatility allows Parker to put whatever characters on the team he wants to.
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Weekly Comic Book Review’s Top Picks

Dean’s Top Picks


Best From The Past Week: Uncanny X-Men #535 – I should go back through my notes to see if I’ve ever let Uncanny X-Men wear the Big Sombrero and get to strut around as Best of the Week, but I don’t think I have before.  This comic made me so happy.  As a child of the 1980’s, Uncanny X-Men was the comic book for me and when I got back into comics as an adult, it really pained me that it often wasn’t a very good title.  Sure, there were often other X-books that were pretty good, but I wanted Uncanny to be good dammit!  So, I was extremely tickled to see Kieron Gillen knock his first issue out of the park with a fun and fast paced story that takes a small group (thank you) of X-Men off on a cool mission to mop-up some Break World leftovers from Whedon’s Astonishing X-Men run.  Great art by the Dodson’s too!  Runner-up: The Unwritten #24

Most Anticipated: Dark Horse Presents #1 – I LOVE me some anthologies and not many anthologies have a stronger pedigree than Dark Horse Presents.  Dark Horse properties such as Concrete, NextMen and Sin City are just a few of the properties that were first printed in earlier iterations of DHP.  This issue promises the first Concrete story in awhile, a Star Wars story and a sneak-peak at Xerxes (Frank Miller’s follow-up to 300).  Chances are there will be at least one awesome story in this issue.

Other picks: 68 #1, Hack Slash #3, Super Dinosaur #1, 28 Days Later #22, Thunderbolts #156, Hulk #32

Alex’s Top Picks


Best From The Past Week: Journey into Mystery #622 – Despite it being a big week, this was an easy pick.  Journey into Mystery was possibly the best first issue of 2011.  If you are at all interested in Thor, or fantasy in general, you need to be reading this comic.  If future issues are as good as this one, this may end up being Marvel’s best book, or at the very least in the running for that title.

Most Anticipated: Uncanny X-Force #8 – Whoa, two weeks in a row of Rick Remender’s Uncanny X-Force?  That’s awesome.  More awesome still is the fact that this issue sees the return of Jerome Opena on art.  I like Esad Ribic fine enough, but Opena’s work on this series has been outstanding.  Couple that with a plot that sounds like some over-the-top, 80s/90s, goodness and I am very excited.  Even if you can’t stand X-books, I highly recommend you give this book a shot.  It’s one of the very best team-books on the market.

Other Picks: Green Lantern Corps #59, Green Lantern #65, DMZ #64, Avengers #12, Invincible Iron Man #503, Iron Man 2.0 #4, Wolverine #8, Scarlet #5

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