
By: Kieron Gillen (writer), Rich Elson (art), Sotocolors (colors), and Clayton Cowles (letters)
The Story: Loki brings an unpopular kind of peace to Otherworld and fulfills his debt to Hela.
The Review: KIERON!!!!!! Seriously, this issue made me feel like Captain Kirk in Wrath of Khan.
That’s actually not really a bad thing though. It’s just that Gillen delivers an absolutely heart-rending, downright unfair character death this month that almost hits too hard. Given that it’s a character that Gillen has done such a great job of building from the ground up, and one with a really great dynamic with Loki, it’s hard to read. Gillen also shows his skill as a writer: this is one of the best written death scenes that I’ve read in a big two comic in some time. In just a couple of pages, Gillen makes the scene truly emotional by capitalizing on the reader’s investment, using dialogue that recalls former elements of the character’s relationship with Loki. I guess that’s what makes it so sad as well: those elements are, chiefly, a running joke between the two that now takes on a very sad and ironic, and hence very different, meaning. I guess this touches upon why this death is written so well – it feels meaningful because Gillen has spent so much of the series getting us invested in the character and his/her relationship to Loki. Gillen spent the time in the script, he made the investments, and now he’s reaping the dividends.
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Filed under: Marvel Comics, Reviews | Tagged: Alex Evans, All-Mother, Asgardia, Captain Britain, Comic Book Reviews, comic reviews, Daimon Hellstrom, Guy Fawkes, Hela, Ikol, Journey Into Mystery, Journey into Mystery 641, Kid Loki, Kieron Gillen, King Arthur, Leah, Loki, Manchester Gods, Marvel Comics, Marvel Universe, Otherworld, Rich Elson, Son of Satan, Surtur, V for Vendetta, Weekly Comic Book Review | Leave a comment »