Recently, the big news (that should have come to no one’s surprise) was that Marvel would officially start publishing Star Wars comics in 2015, just in time to coincide with Episode VII’s release and the end of Dark Horse Comics’ license that began in 1991. Shortly after the news was made official, fans began speculating about the statuses of their favorite Star Wars Expanded Universe stories from both the comics, video games and books and whether or not they’d just be thrown out. Zack Haddad and I even speculated a bit ourselves on last week’s podcast. Well, yes. The majority of them will be thrown out, especially because they’ve got to make room in the canon for new Star Wars movies… and because if anyone’s going to be printing money on an existing Expanded Universe you can sure bet it’s going to be Disney. They do own it after all.

And don’t be surprised if Disney’s expanded universe ends up becoming just as big, if not bigger, than the one we’ve had for the past three plus decades that’s about to be scrapped and replaced.

That being said, it is a sad time for many Star Wars fans as these stories meant a lot to them. And for the majority of my life (i.e. pre-Prequels) I counted myself as one of them. I read every book and comic and played every video game that had a Star Wars logo on it (you know, like Star Wars: Yoda Stories back in 1997). So I’m a bit sad as well because a lot of those stories were great, and in a time before the post-Prequels explosion, they were our only chance to visit that galaxy far, far away.

So without further ado, I present to you the Star Wars Expanded Universe stories that I believe should be preserved. May the Force Be With Them.

Tales of the Jedi
In a perfect galaxy, this Dark Horse Comics series would be safe from being scrapped to make room for future films and Disney’s Expanded Universe. These stories (all 8 story arcs) took place during the Old Republic era and catalogued the Great Sith War and older Jedi Order. That was an entire 5,000 years before the Battle of Yavin (or BBY to the Star Wars faithful) so they shouldn’t tread on anything Disney plans to do in Episode’s VII, VIII and IX. If anything, they laid the ground work, along with the video game Knight of the Old Republic, for a strong history to both the Jedi and the Sith. Written by Tom Veitch and Kevin J. Anderson (two of my favorite Star Wars comic writers), I hope these stories survive the purge somehow… but it doesn’t look good.

swtjedi1

The Thrawn Trilogy
This one is an obvious choice. In 1991, when the first book Heir to the Empire was published, the Star Wars brand was barely on any fan’s radars. Combined with Dark Horse Comics’ first title Dark Empire, these three books were instrumental in not only bringing Star Wars back to life but also establishing a strong sequel of sorts to the original trilogy of films. Following the campaign of Imperial Grand Admiral Thrawn, who got a pretty good promotion I guess after the explosion of the second Death Star, this series remains the bench mark for any of the Expanded Universe novels that came afterwards. I remember reading them in middle school and feeling like I was back in the theater watching the next series of Star Wars stories. Throwing these three books out of canon will hurt more than pretty much anything else on this list.

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Dark Empire
This one’s another biggie, especially for me, and is about on par with The Thrawn Trilogy. If it wasn’t for a younger me spying Dave Dorman’s gorgeous cover to issue #1 from across the street while on vacation with my father, I’d probably never have gotten back into comic books, much less be writing comics today. Written by Tom Veitch with incredible, striking art by Cam Kennedy, Dark Empire told the story of a resurgent Empire that has retaken Coruscant and is in the midst of it’s own uprising. Luke travels to a Dark Side world called Byss and discovers that Emperor Palpatine is being reborn through younger clones (oh, and Luke almost goes to the Dark Side). Not only does Dark Empire have the pace and tone of a great Star Wars story but it also introduced some great locations to canon, like Nar Shaddaa, the smuggler’s moon, the setting for the already jettisoned Star Wars 1313 game. While major scenes in the Prequels took place on familiar places like Tatooine, Dark Empire did what any good Expanded Universe properties are supposed to in making the Star Wars galaxy seem as limitless and awe-inspiring as the original films.

Star-Wars-Dark-Empire

The Star Wars Newspaper Strips (1979-1984)
These are enormously overlooked gems… but they shouldn’t be. In fact, these might be the purest forms of Expanded Universe stories out there, released concurrently with the original film trilogy. From 1979 to 1984, The Star Wars Comic Strip was published in newspapers. Really, though, what you’re looking for is the run that Archie Goodwin wrote with art by Al Williamson that literally took place between A New Hope and The Empire Strikes Back. Dark Horse collected and rereleased them years ago in a title simply called Classic Star Wars and did a great job of them. Seek these issues out if you can because unlike Splinter of the Mind’s Eye (the 1978 novel that at the time was the “sequel” to A New Hope), the Goodwin/Williamson stories felt like classic 70s and 80s Star Wars. Luke, Leia, Han, Chewie and the crew planet hopped from planet to planet looking for a new home for the Rebellion after the Battle of Yavin, the entire time trying to avoid Imperials and a vengeful Vader (who was not yet revealed to be Luke’s father of course). And Han continues to try and resolve his debt with Jabba the Hutt while escaping his bounty hunters as seen in the fantastic storyline The Bounty Hunter of Ord Mantell. These stories were fantastic and much better than the Star Wars comics that Marvel was printing at the time. Sadly, they may have already been thrown out of canon as this is the same point in the Star Wars timeline that Dark Horse’s current Brian Wood series takes place during. That being said, these stories are as pure original Star Wars as it gets on this list and they deserve their pace in the canon.

OrdMantell

The Han Solo Adventures Trilogy
If the rumors are true and Disney really wants to make films based on a younger Han Solo’s adventures, then they should look no further for a basis to them than this series of books released between A New Hope and The Empire Strikes Back. These three novels, Han Solo At Star’s End (1979), Han Solo’s Revenge (1979) and Han Solo and the Lost Legacy (1980), were not only chock full of swashbuckling space adventure but also shed light on questions left unanswered by the Star Wars films, like “what exactly were the circumstances of Han and Chewie meeting?” and “how did Han Solo get that scar on his chin (you know, the Harrison Ford scar!)?” Well, this trilogy of books answered all of them in classic 70s science fiction fashion! Like the Goodwin/Williamson comic strips, these stories were flush and consistent canon long before the Prequels started contradicting things (like how come Han doesn’t believe in the Force when his best bud die Chewie fought with Yoda in the Battle of Kashyyyk?). Lando did have his own mid-80s book series, The Lando Calrissian Adventures (made up of 3 books), but they needed some retconning to make them fit the Expanded Universe and are really only memorable because they cover the period of time Lando flew the Millennium Falcon before losing it to Han and because they introduced the Star Wars card game of Sabacc seen in other parts of the Expanded Universe.

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Dark Forces and Dark Forces: Jedi Knight
Aww, the good old days of PC gaming, when most games wanted to be Doom clones… but some of them were actually really, really good! Remember the giant jet-packed Stormtrooper mech suits you had to fight in Dark Forces? And the live action cut scenes from Jedi Knight (not to mention the incredible Boba Fett battle on the lava refinery planet)? Those were the days! Unlike in the X-Wing and Tie Fighter games which were incredible but basically stuck to the backdrop of the Star Wars rebellion we were already familiar with, the Dark Forces games took off on their own and placed you in new unfamiliar planets battling against brand new villains and characters (like the evil Sith Lord Jerec from Jedi Knight). For the first time, this felt like the Star Wars universe being expanded on, from the first mission in Dark Forces to steal the Death Star plans for Leia (just before A New Hope) to the final battle in the Valley of the Jedi in Jedi Knight. And your character of Kyle Katarn was the catalyst, giving you first person freedom to explore the Star Wars universe, moreso than you had ever had to that point. Heck, you could even turn to the Dark Side in Jedi Knight, which took place a year after the Battle of Endor. As great as these stories were, I have to give a shout out to Rebel Assault II: The Hidden Empire, the semi rail based shooter that employed the first live action footage filmed in the Star Wars universe since Return of the Jedi. I loved that game to death (mainly for the excitement of the cut scenes)… but like the first Rebel Assault, its not really something that needs protecting from continuity scrubbing (in fact, the trench run in the first Rebel Assault already contradicts Luke’s run in A New Hope so get rid of it!).

Dark-Forces

Kyle-Katarn-Jedi-Knight
This guy will probably not be in Episode VII

The X-Wing Novels
If you read one series of non-Timothy Zahn Star Wars novels in the 90s Expanded Universe, it should be these four books, X-Wing: Rogue Squadron, X-Wing: Wedge’s Gamble, X-Wing: The Krytos Trap and X-Wing: The Bacta War, written by Michael A. Stackpole. Yes, they might be pretty safe from the continuity scrubbing due to how well they mirror the events of the original trilogy but who knows what’s up for reinterpretation! Regardless, these books followed Wedge Antilles and Rogue Squadron from adventure to adventure across the galaxy as they fought for the Rebel Alliance (and then the New Republic). I preferred the Michael A. Stackpole books but you can’t go wrong with the Aaron Allston written X-Wing: Wraith Squadron, X-Wing: Iron Fist and X-Wing Solo Command either. Dark Horse Comics even did a few comic book adaptations of these books that weren’t bad as well (but the novels are preferred). Also worth mentioning, and probably continuity scrubbing proof, would be the Tales books Tales From The Mos Eisley Cantina, Tales From Jabba’s Palace and Tales of the Bounty Hunters… you know, because you just had to know what Max Rebo was up to before ending up on Jabba’s ill-fated sail barge that fine desert day. There are two more books, Tales From The Empire and Tales From the New Republic, that offer a bit more Expanded Universe stories in them and veer away from the films but their placement in the Star Wars timeline grant them a giant target on their heads. Welcome to retcon city, guys.

XWRogueSquadron-Novel-Star-Wars

Shadows Of The Empire
This one’s big, as it was one of the first major multimedia releases within the Star Wars brand that did not involve a film’s release. Concurrently with the novel of the same name was the release of a Shadows of the Empire video game on Nintendo 64 (and later PC), comic book and even a soundtrack (which was pretty bad ass… as we didn’t think we’d be getting any new John Williams music anytime soon)! The storyline bridges the gap between The Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi (so it might be safe from destruction!) and surrounded the planned rescue of Han on Tatooine and a new challenge to Vader’s place in the Empire at the hands of the crime lord Prince Xixor (who kind of looks like a Scarran from Farscape). In the game, you played as Dash Rendar, who is a bit of a scoundrel himself and tasked with tracking Han Solo’s capture as it passes hands Boba Fett to Jabba with some other bounty hunters thrown in for good measure. I don’t remember the game being that bad, and you do end up having to save Leia again, and the comics and the book were good if not pretty entertaining (although I told you before, the X-Wing and Zahn novels are really all you need). The comics might be the most solid version of the story (since the game has not aged well), mainly because of Kilian Plunkett’s dynamic artwork and because writer John Wagner (writer of A History of Violence and co-creator of Judge Dredd!) can write a great mega city chase sequence with tons and tons of your favorite Empire Strikes Back bounty hunters thrown into the story to boot!

The booming soundtrack to my highschool summers...
The booming soundtrack to my highschool summers…
It's best that we don't show you the graphics.
It’s best that we don’t show you the graphics.
The Shadows of the Empire comics were the best.
The Shadows of the Empire comics were the best versions of the story.

So there you have it, my list of the Star Wars stories that I don’t think should be scrubbed in lieu of a new Expanded Universe. Yes, you will notice two things: I removed the storyline in which Chewbacca dies saving Han and Leia’s kids (and I’m pretty sure Disney will too) and that I didn’t pay much attention to Star Wars and the Expanded Universe post-Prequels. The truth is… it just hurt too much! Clearly, from what you just read, I consumed and was passionate about all things Star Wars right up to May 1999 (which made dating in high school and college kind of hard) but then let my passion slide.

And that’s where you come in. If there are any other Expanded Universe story lines that you love and think should be protected from the Disney erasers, tell me about them in the comments below (you know, like the two Ewok movies…)! I am looking forward to the new Star Wars movies quite a bit and with fresh new eyes, knowing that all things must come to pass. But of course, as a fan running a fan site, I needed to take this time to earmark my favorites for you and invite you to share yours as well. May the Force be with you.

In this week’s issue of Entertainment Weekly, there’s quite a bit of coverage for Marvel’s upcoming “Phase Two” films. Earlier today we saw some new details and concept art for Captain America: The Winter Soldier and now we have some new concept from James Gunn’s Guardians Of The Galaxy. If you know Peter Quill’s backstory, you know definitely know what scene this is. If you don’t know the backstory, you should probably go pick up a copy of Guardians Of The Galaxy #0.1 and get caught up. Kevin Fiege talked about the highly-anticipated release, which included confirmation that actress Zoe Saldana has signed on as the film’s female lead:
 
GOTG-concept-1

“Guardians takes place within the continuity of the [other movies] but it’s on the other side of the universe. We’ve always wanted to do a space movie. I’m obsessed with Star Wars, I’m obsessed with Star Trek.”

“It’s a huge story on a massive canvas,” Feige says. “We can take it to all those crazy places as long as all the characters respond in an emotionally truthful way. That’s why I believe people are going to respond to Chris Pratt and to an alien Zoë Saldana—because they did respond to that one time before [with Avatar]. And to a tree and a raccoon who, it is certainly our intention, will steal the whole movie.”

Guardians Of The Galaxy hits theaters August 1, 2014

Source: EW

Three brand new high-resolution stills have been released from James Mangold’s The Wolverine. Seriously, what’s more bad-ass than Logan taking on a group of ninjas? Exactly. Nothing. Sink your claws into the new images below.

The Wolverine

The Wolverine

The Wolverine

Based on the celebrated comic book arc, this epic action-adventure takes Wolverine (Jackman), the most iconic character of the X-Men universe, to modern day Japan. Out of his depth in an unknown world he will face a host of unexpected and deadly opponents in a life-or-death battle that will leave him forever changed. Vulnerable for the first time and pushed to his physical and emotional limits, he confronts not only lethal samurai steel but also his inner struggle against his own immortality.

The Wolverine hits theaters  July 26, 2013

Source: Reviews STL

Did you think for some crazy reason that Superior Spider-Man would be coming to an end soon? Well, think again because Marvel will be launching Superior Foes Of Spider-Man this July from the creative team of Nick Spencer and Steve Lieber. The ongoing series will focus on Boomerang, Shocker, Speed Demon, the Beetle, and Overdrive. The majority of the story will be taking place from the point of view of Boomerang, who recently gained popularity in Jeff Parker’s run on Thunderbolts.

superiorfoesofspiderman

 

Source: Marvel

Following the events of Age Of Ultron, there’s going to be another Avengers team on the way. Coming this July from the creative team of Sam Humphries (Uncanny X-Force) and Andre Araujo (FF), we will see the debut of Avengers A.I., featuring a team unlike any Avengers team you’ve seen before.

AvengersAI_1_Cover

 

New York, NY—March 29th, 2012— This July, red hot writer Sam Humphries (Uncanny X-Force) and artist Andre Araujo (FF), shine an entirely new light on an all-new, all-android Avengers team – Avengers A.I.! Spinning out of the critically acclaimed event Age Of Ultron, Avengers A.I. sends fans deeper into the synthetic core of the Marvel Universe, great for new and lapsed readers alike!

 

A brave new world is unleashed and only one team of Earth’s Mightiest Heroes can save us from the future. Gathered together by Hank Pym, The Vision leads Victor Mancha, Doombot, and the mysterious Alexis in a race to contain an unfathomable Pandora’s Box of destruction! And which side will Monica Chang, Agent of S.H.I.E.L.D., find herself on?

 

“Springing out of the increasingly razor-thin crawlspace between the organic and synthetic worlds comes ‘Avengers A.I.’,” said Axel Alonso, Editor In Chief, Marvel Entertainment. “When one of the Marvel Universe’s preeminent brainiacs, Hank Pym, embarks on a long road to redemption, he must assemble a team unlike any other, a team composed of heroes that will challenge the very definition of ‘Artificial Intelligence’ and the way you look at super heroes.”

 

Following the harrowing events of Age Of Ultron, can Hank Pym & The Vision lead a team into the digital unknown?

 

“I could not be more psyched to be ushering the Avengers and the Marvel Universe into the Age of A.I.” explained Humphries. “This book is futureshock crashing into the world outside your window. Once the A.I.s are unleashed, there is no turning back. Even the phone in your pocket could be a threat against humanity. It’s an exciting and dangerous new era for Earth’s Mightiest Heroes.”

 

Each issue of Avengers A.I. features special augmented reality content available exclusive through the Marvel AR app – including cover recaps, behind the scenes features and more that add value to your reading experience at no additional cost.

 

This July, Sam Humphries and Andre Araujo redefine what it means to be Earth’s Mightiest in Avengers A.I. #1!

 

For more on Marvel NOW!, please visit now.marvel.com and join the conversation on Twitter using #MarvelNOW.

 

Source: Marvel

Marvel has released an image that combines five different images together as teaser for “Superior Spider-Week”. Starting Monday of next week it looks like we’re going to be learning just what Dan Slott and company have in store for the web slinger in the coming months.

What’s in store for the Superior Spider-Man in the coming months? Find out next week!

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The next big Marvel event is coming this March from the creative team of Brian Michael Bendis (All New X-Men. Ultimate Comics Spider-Man) and Bryan Hitch (Ultimates), the Age Of Ultron! You must submit or perish, what choice will you make?

 

 

This March, enter the darkest days of the Marvel Universe from the creative team of Brian Michael Bendis and Bryan Hitch in AGE OF ULTRON #1. Evil has triumphed over good and leading this new age is none other than Ultron, the deadly sentient robot created by founding Avenger Hank Pym who turned on his creator to achieve his twisted objective: the utter destruction of humanity. Now, it’s up to the few remaining heroes to band together and find any way to topple their new monarch. Can Wolverine, Emma Frost, Invisible Woman, Taskmaster, Beast, She-Hulk, Luke Cage, Spider-Man, and Moon Knight turn the tide? With the robotic revolution in full force, no fan can miss how Age of Ultron will ultimately change the Marvel Universe leaving no hero or villain unscathed!

Marvel’s The Avengers will be re-assembling again very soon. This time it will happen on the Oscar Stage. Cast mates Robert Downey Jr., Chris Evans, Samuel L. Jackson, Jeremy Renner and Mark Ruffalo will all assemble once again to present an award. Sadly, they couldn’t get Scarlett Johansson, Clark Gregg, Maria Hill and Chris Hemsworth to complete the full lineup. But then again that’s a lot of people to have one one stage. Check out the full press release below.

 

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“We are happy to re-unite the Avengers cast to present on our show,” said Craig Zadan and Neil Meron. “Audiences who enjoyed the year’s biggest box office hit will be excited to see these terrific actors back together again.”

 

Downey has twice been nominated for an Oscar, for his leading role in Chaplin (1992) and for his supporting role in Tropic Thunder (2008).

 

Evans, who will be making his first Oscar show appearance, will be seen in the upcoming The Iceman.

 

Jackson was nominated in 1994 for his supporting role in Pulp Fiction. He can also be seen in this year’s Best Picture nominee Django Unchained.

 

Renner was nominated for his leading role in 2009 Best Picture winner The Hurt Locker and for his supporting role in The Town (2010). Renner had roles in this year’s The Bourne Legacy and Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol (2011).

 

Ruffalo received his first nomination for his supporting role in 2010 Best Picture nominee The Kids Are All Right.

 

Oscars® for outstanding film achievements of 2012 will be presented on Oscar Sunday, February 24, at the Dolby Theatre™ at Hollywood & Highland Center®, and will be hosted by Seth MacFarlane live on the ABC Television Network. The Oscar presentation also will be televised live in more than 225 countries worldwide.

 

Source: Deadline

A new teaser shows that coming this April The Superior Spider-Man is…fired? Are The Avengers giving him the pink slip? Is Slott using this to return Spider-Man to being more of a loner? Does this mean he can collect unemployment? Guess we’ll find out in April.

Superior Spider-Man #1 hits shelves tomorrow, make sure you pick it up!

Deadline has revealed that Marvel Studios has a short list of actors for the role of Peter Quill aka Star-Lord in Phase Two’s Guardians Of The Galaxy. Joel Edgerton (Warrior), Jack Huston (Boardwalk Empire), Jim Sturgess (Cloud Atlas), Lee Pace (The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey) and Eddie Redmayne (Les Miserables) have all signed test deals for the lead role in the upcoming film.

Now, while these actors are all in the running Marvel Studios apparently also is interested Garrett Hedlund (Tron: Legacy), James Marsden (X-Men) and Sullivan Stapleton (Animal Kingdom). It’s still shocking and quite awesome that we’re actually reporting casting news for a Guardians Of The Galaxy film.

Source: Deadline

I didn’t even get out the front door of my comic shop before I opened up All New X-Men #1. As soon as I was done reading it I looked at the shelves hoping for more. Brian Michael Bendis and Stuart Immonen’s new series will launch the old children of the atom into the present of today after the events of AvX. Things are different now but a lot of the same. The mutant world is as chaotic as ever but now with the appearance of new mutants all over the globe we have Cyclops and his extinction team as wanted criminals fighting for mutants everywhere.

Bendis gets right to work with this issue building the stories of these new characters and re-establishing the longtime central theme that some X-books have been missing as of recent: a world full of fear and prejudice. We see the writer really do a great job of exploring both the fears of people coming face to face with mutants the first time as well as the people who discover they are mutants finding out that they are. We see the book bring in quite a few plot points at a fast pace but it works very smoothly and is an exciting read. It’s pretty impressive how well Bendis threads the plot points together in this issue.

The art work is beautiful and Immonen definitely is the right artist to be drawing the X-Men. Immonen’s characters are fantastically drawn in this dialogue heavy book and the moments never seem boring. The art never loses sight of being character-centric even when there’s a lot going on at the moment. And trust me when I say this issue has quite a bit going on in it.

Final verdict: If Bendis and Immonen can keep the series going as strong as this start…we’re in for a great run here. All-New X-Men #1 is definitely a solid  jumping on point for a new of generation X-readers as well as long time X-fans.

Grade: 4.5/5

The third Marvel NOW! ‘Next Big Thing’ press conference is going and during it writer Rick Remender revealed there will be three more characters joining the team in Uncanny Avengers.

Starting in issue #5 we will see Wonder Man, Sunfire and The Wasp join the team. Remender says that all three of the characters are there for a specific reason and explains the reason behind each character:

“Sunfire is brought in for a reason that I don’t want to give away yet, because it deals with the aftermath of the first arc. He and Wolverine have business. He has a natural reason for being there, and I love Sunfire. I’ve never had a member on any team that I feel I can write as surly as Sunfire.”

On the Avengers side, we’ve got Wonder Man, who’s going to play an interesting role. He’s now something of a pacifist, and a major reason he’s on the team is for PR purposes; using his Hollywood skills to help bridge the worlds of mutants and humans.

They don’t have a government source of funding. They’re not going to be getting orders from any government organization, so their funding comes from The Wasp.”

Source: Newsarama

The latest Marvel NOW! title revealed is Fearless Defenders, a new ongoing series from Cullen Bunn (Venom) and Will Sliney (Farscape). The new title is an all-female team book, with the only two members revealed at the moment being Misty Knight and Valkyrie. Dani Moonstar will also be a member of the team with the rest of the roster being filled out over the course of time. The story will also be featuring a female main antagonist that’s a creator creation from Bunn. Take a look at Mark Brooks cover for the first issue below.

Source: Newsarama

Love him or hate him, it’s undeniable that Deadpool has gone on to become one of Marvel’s most popular characters over the years. Many characters like Wade Wilson seem to hit a popular point with fans and then see a decline over time. That definitely hasn’t been a problem for ol’ Wade.

Some of his fans weren’t too fond of his last run with writer Daniel Way (who will still be writing Deadpool in Thunderbolts… sorry guys!). Myself, I am a huge Deadpool fan and overall I found his run to be just alright. It wasn’t bad but at the same time it wasn’t great. So, when Marvel announced that they’d be relaunching the series with the creative team of Gerry Duggan, Brian Posehn and Tony Moore… well, to say that I was interested would be quite the understatement.

Based on this first issue alone, they definitely chose the right guys for the job here. The first story arc alone is quite possibly going to be one of the most offensive and out of this world stories that Marvel has released in quite some time. If you haven’t read the issue or seen anything about it I am going to keep this short: zombie president is out to destroy the USA and start it from scratch. Trust me, when you get to the final few pages of this issue you’re going to be wanting more.

Hands down this was one of the most fun comics I have read in months… years even. The jokes are funny, the violence is ridiculous and just out there and it really returns Wade Wilson to the tone that the fans have been wanting. I think this was one of the main complaints about the last run, to be honest. Fans wanted less goofy and something more along the lines of how the character was treated in Rick Remender’s Uncanny X-Force.

Now, while the story is awesome… the thing that really stands out here is Tony Moore’s artwork. Who better to do a story about zombie presidents than one of the creators of The Walking Dead? And honestly, I can say that this is some of my favorite work by him. Who would have thought that one day I would call a Deadpool comic… beautiful? Not me. But there’s so much detail in each panel of this book that I don’t think any other word would be right to use.

Final verdict: The first wave of Marvel NOW! books is setting the bar high already. This was a perfect relaunch for the character and it definitely is going to be drawing in some new readers. If it’s not on your pull list yet… add it. In Wade we trust!

Grade: 4.5/5

Did you pick up this week’s issue of The Avengers? Well, you may want to run back out to your shop and pick this one up. During Brian Michael Bendis run the writer has killed a number of characters, and pissed off some people with who he killed, but this week we saw Bendis bring back a very iconic character. Spoilers lie ahead! You’ve been warned.

That’s right, ladies and gentlemen. The Wasp is back! Is it coincidence they brought her back just in time for Marvel Studios Ant-Man? Probably not.

So, how is she alive? Well, you’re going to have to hit your local comic shop and find out.

What, you really thought he was going to stay locked up? It really shouldn’t come as too much of a surprise that Cyke is back and looking more bad-ass than ever in this unlettered preview for Brian Michael Bendis and Stuart Immonen’s All New X-Men #2.  Bendis clearly has big plans for the character in this series and it appears that Scott and his team are going to be out there helping the new mutants popping up after AvX.

ALL-NEW X-MEN #1
Written by BRIAN MICHAEL BENDIS
Art by STUART IMMONEN

During the Amazing Spider-Man panel at New York Comic-Con this past weekend, a young fan asked:

“Why you don’t do ‘Spider-Man 2099’ comics anymore?”

The crowd got excited over this question. Steve Wacker then replied with:

“We’ll do it for you. We don’t know when and where.”

Could he have been just saying this to make the kid happy or could we possibly honestly see the return of fan-favorite Miguel O’Hara? I wouldn’t doubt this being that O’Hara has actually had a big role in recent Spider-Man games including Edge Of Time and Shattered Dimensions.

Ever since Edgar Wright debuted his test reel and Marvel dropped the logo for the film, the buzz around Ant-Man has been anything but small. Rumors have been floating around that the film would go in to production soon but we’ve yet to hear anything about a release date. That is until today. The film is confirmed to be hitting theaters November 6th, 2015.

 

That’s right ladies and gentlemen, sadly we will have to wait until late 2015 for Edgar Wright’s Ant-Man. Interestingly, the film is set to hit theaters after the untitled sequel to The Avengers. Could we see some “small” surprise in the post credits? It would definitely be a smart moves on Marvel’s part to get people interested in this film. We will keep you updated with all the news surrounding the film…big or small.

Well, we kind of already knew about these but it hadn’t been officially announced. Until today that is and with one big surprise. At New York Comic Con today Marvel revealed that next February we will see the release of Guardians Of The Galaxy #0.1 from the creative team of Brian Michael Bendis (The Avengers) and Steve McNiven (Nemesis). The first issue will then hit stands in March. The roster is the same team that will appear in the upcoming movie consisting of Starlord, Groot, Rocket Racoon, Drax, and Gamora. But, that’s not all. There’s a surprise member on the team…Iron Man!

February will also see the launch of a brand new Nova series from the team of Jeph Loeb (Batman: The Long Halloween) and Ed McGuinness (Superman/Batman) that will focus on the newest member of the Nova corps, the young Sam Alexander.

Source: Newsarama

Newsarama caught up with Marvel Chief Creative Officer Joe Quesada during New York Comic Con where they chatted it up about a number of things. The first thing Quesada talked about was Guardians Of The Galaxy. He revealed that you can expect the new Guardians Of The Galaxy title for Marvel NOW! to go along with the movie in some ways.

“There is stuff that I know is going on with the movie that we might be able to apply to the Marvel Cosmic Universe. And try and develop that Synergy. Not to copy one from the other, but to make it look like it’s on the same page.”

He also stated that it is important to make sure that not only is it important to capture what the comic book fans want in these projects, but also to make sure general audiences understand what they are seeing in these movies.

Quesada also revealed that there is currently a secret project that him and Marvel Studios are working on right now.

“There is a project I am very much involved in, and I’ll give you this hint. I have to go to the West Coast to work on it. There have been rumors about it little things have leaked here and there, but there has been no official announcement.”

So, looking at things, there are a couple of movies that have been talked about but nothing official up to now but there are definitely two major ones. We could possibly be looking at a Black Panther or Doctor Strange film to finally be announced but it will most likely not happen until next year’s San Diego Comic-Con most likely.

Deadpool killed the Marvel Universe…so who’s next? Cullen Bunn and Matteo Lolli will take the direct sequel to Deadpool Kills The Marvel Universe to somewhere you definitely aren’t expecting. Deadpool is about to embark on an all new killing spree in Deadpool: Killustrated that will see him take on some of the world’s most famous literary characters.

Writer Cullen Bunn on what to expect from the series:

In this story, Deadpool finds the means to travel through the Ideaverse. This is the place where the stories and characters that inspired the stories and characters of the Marvel Universe exist. Deadpool believes that if he can destroy them, he can retroactively destroy the characters and stories they inspire. Deadpool’s able to move in and out of different timelines and worlds to do his dirty work, but he’ll find that his presence in the Ideaverse may be having an adverse effect.

As for the characters he’ll encounter, I thought a lot about the tales of classic literature that mean a lot to me — and I thought about how to ruin them. I also tried to think about how those classic characters might correlate to the Marvel characters Deadpool’s trying to kill.

Characters he’ll encounter might include Moby Dick, Sherlock Holmes, Beowulf, and Don Quixote, among others. In every issue, Deadpool will be running into a few different characters, and I don’t want to spoil some of the surprises.

I loved Deadpool Kills The Marvel Universe and am definitely looking forward to this one.

Source: CBR

So the latest epic Marvel “event” Avengers Vs X-Men has come to a close, and to say opinions are mixed is putting it mildly. I’m gonna go on record here and say the series was mostly entertaining, but there were also a  ton of storytelling misfires along the way.
Unlike the past few years, the events of AvX actually felt like they mattered, and had actual repercussions on the Marvel Universe. This hasn’t been the case for some time…I mean, can anyone tell me what the point of last year’s “Fear Itself” was? Or “Siege?” How pointless did “Secret Invasion”  ultimately feel?

By the way, SPOILERS for the entire series of AvX in this article. If you haven’t read it, please do so now. Or you can just read the Wikipedia entry, I don’t care. I’m certainly not going to explain what happened here in detail, I’m going to assume if you’re reading this you know the basic plot and outcome of Avengers Vs. X-Men by now. All good? Ok, then let’s talk about the good, the bad, and the downright ugly of AvX….

The Good

AvX Was A Series That Lived Up To It’s Premise

So many of these crossover events don’t live up to their premise. Secret Invasion from 2008 is a perfect example, a series that promised that many of the characters we’d known and loved for decades had been replaced with duplicate Skrull agents. This could have been a truly wild revelation in the Marvel Universe. But it turns out, pretty much only C-lister Mockingbird was actually replaced by a Skrull. Yawn. But AvX really only promised Avengers fighting X-Men, and boy howdy, it sure gave us that (maybe too much of that) At least it was a series that delivered on the inside what the cover said it was on the outside. And far be it from me from denying the simple pleasures of super heroes beating up other super heroes.

The Return of the Mutant Race

Back in 2005, Marvel EIC Joe Quesada decided that there were way too many mutants in the Marvel Universe, therefore making them seem less like a feared and hated minority and more like a powerful majority. So in 2005’s House of M mini series, he had a now crazy Scarlet Witch use her reality altering hex power to erase the mutant gene in 99% of the world. (leaving only the X-Men and their villains as the world’s sole mutants. Convenient) Suddenly, there were only 198 mutants left in the Marvel Universe. Problem is, 198 mutants isn’t so much a race, as it is a really good turn out for a party. What Joe Quesada didn’t understand is that prejudice isn’t always about numbers; women are 51% of the population  after all, and they are discriminated against, in some countries even treated as barely human, merely because they’re not in positions of power. It’s not always just about numbers.

I’ll admit that this new “mutants as endangered species” scenario led to some interesting stories, although it seems the writers and editors at Marvel were too scared to make the comparisons to the Jewish Holocaust that to me were obvious. The mutant population is nearly exterminated, and the hardened survivors form there own tiny nation, armed to the teeth in an effort to make sure no one fucks with them ever again. Meanwhile, Wolverine takes his mutants to New York state, where he feels that integrating as part of regular American culture and not separating is the way to go. If this all doesn’t sound like an allegory for the Jewish post WWII experience, then you’re not paying attention. The X-Men have always fully embraced their allegories to the civil rights movements of the 60’s and the gay rights movements, but it seems they were too scared to fully commit to the Israel metaphor for fear of offending people. (people do understand that all metaphors are not exact) If you’re too scared to really go where you wanted to go for fear of backlash, then at least give us back the idea of a mutant race that’s thriving and growing day to day.

The Death of Prof. X

This has been a long, long time coming. How many near deaths has the man had? He was shot way back in the early 90’s only to recover, then again he was shot in the head at the end of 2007’s Messiah Complex, only to survive that too. He hasn’t been an interesting or vital character for a really long time, and with his original students now in teaching positions, he no longer really has a real role either. I know that as far back as the mid 80’s, X-Men writer Chris Claremont wanted to take ol’ Chuck out, but Marvel didn’t let him. Instead, he was sent off into space for six years with his alien girlfriend, and all the X-teams at the time talked about it as if he were dead, even though they knew he was just on a really long and far away vacation.

Marvel has always played with idea that Charles Xavier was this Martin Luther King type figure for the mutant community, and Magneto as kind of the Malcolm X. Well, to take that metaphor to it’s natural conclusion, then that means that Xavier has to die tragically, a martyr to his people. For decades, the various X-Men teams have been talking about “carrying on Xavier’s dream.” You only carry on someone’s dream if that person isn’t around to do it, and he was. But now that he’s finally gone, Xavier can be a more powerful a character in death than he could be in life.

The Redemption of the Scarlet Witch

Another event that was a very long time coming was the redemption of longtime Avenger Wanda Maximoff, the Scarlet Witch. She is to the Avengers what Sue Storm is to the Fantastic Four, or Jean Grey was to the X-Men. And yet for the past eight years, ever since 2004’s Avengers Disassembled, she’d been treated like total crap. In that series, years of misfortune (finding out her father was Magneto, having her android husband’s mind wiped, and finding out her children weren’t real for starters) caused Wanda to have nervous breakdown and cause major death and destruction to the Avengers with her Chaos Magicks. She then wiped out the mutant gene to piss off her father in House of M.

On the one hand, it is commendable that Marvel has made the most powerful character on each of their signature teams a woman. But on the flip side, it seems Marvel always has their most powerful females unable to cope with such power, as if estrogen + cosmic power must always lead to global catastrophe. I don’t recall Silver Surfer or Thor constantly going off the rails whenever bad things happened to them. When the original Dark Phoenix saga happened, it was new and innovative, but by the time they did the same story with Scarlet Witch, it felt like a rehash, with the character damage nearly impossible to overcome. But at least with the conclusion of AvX, they’re seemingly on their way to restoring this character’s reputation.

The End of the Storm/Black Panther Marriage

And good riddance too. When Marvel decided to marry their two most popular African characters, mostly because they just both happened to be African, it was one of the dumbest story ideas ever. It killed Storm as a vital member of the X-Men (“hey everyone, just dropping in to say hi, even though I’m Queen of a whole nation now. Remember when my character mattered?”) and forced Black Panther stories to involve mutants. It was all so lame, and in my opinion, kinda racist. I have to admit, one of the best moments of the series was when Panther tells storm the high priest of the Panther clan has annulled their marriage, and Storm says “but you’re the high priest” or words to the effect, and he just glares back. Cold T’Challa. Cold.

The Bad

The  Inconsistent Art

There were three artists in total on AvX, and much like the writing, the art was all over the place. The first few issues were drawn by John Romita Jr. who I’m afraid wasn’t bringing his A-game to the drawing table. While Romita can draw bulking giant characters like the Hulks and Thor to perfection, as well as the square jawed types like Cap, his women are almost always ugly looking, and his layouts, at least with this series, are kind of boring. Then came Olivier Coipel’s stunning art at the halfway point of the series, and suddenly everything looked much better. Andy Kubert finished out the series, but while the art wasn’t ugly, it wasn’t really his best either. When people read this book in trades in the future, it is going to feel really schizophrenic due to the art ranging from ugly to great to just ok.

Sloppy Storytelling

Ultimately, the main characters of AvX were Cyclops, Wolverine, Captain America, Tony Stark, Hope and Scarlet Witch, with everyone else there just to punch each other, give some needed exposition, and throw out a one liner or two. But for much of the series, Scarlet Witch was sidelined, so her importance at the end of the series felt like it came out of left field at the end. Xavier’s death at the hands of Cyclops was a huge moment in the Marvel Universe, yet in terms of this series, Xavier barely played a part, rendering his death scene less impacting than it should have been. And then there’s Nova, someone who was positioned to be an important part of the series at the very beginning, but is all but forgotten until a cameo at the end. Maybe if this series had one writer instead of many, it would have felt a lot more consistent. Too many different writers and artists made the whole thing feel really messy, with moments of greatness and equal moments of awfulness. And with so many different writers (the book was written by Jason Aaron, Brian Michael Bendis, Ed Brubaker, Jonathan Hickman and Matt Fraction) how can it NOT feel as if written by committee?

This Series Should Have Been Six issues, Not Twelve 

As entertaining as parts of it were, there is no reason this story took six months and twelve issues to tell, aside from milking it for as long as possible to get more money from loyal fanboys. It could have been told in half the time and with a lot less filler in the middle.

The Ugly

The Character Assassination of Scott Summers

Poor Cyclops just can’t seem to catch a break. Despite being the original X-Man, he’s taken a back seat to Wolverine in terms of popularity for decades now. But in the early 2000’s, Grant Morrison took steps to make Cyclops an equally compelling character as Wolverine or anyone else in the pages of New X-Men, and that was taken even further by Joss Whedon in his run on Astonishing X-Men. But subsequent writers have slowly taken “being strong” to just “being a dick.”

And for every fan who is now saying that at the end of this series that Cyclops was right all along, well yes… he was. The Phoenix force was indeed coming for Hope, and Hope reignited the mutant race. But that doesn’t change the fact that the Phoenix could have just as easily destroyed the Earth instead, and when Captain America and the Avengers showed up to remind him of this fact, he had a giant temper tantrum about it instead of acting like a rational human being.

What Cyclops should have done when Cap showed up on his doorstep is say “ok, you want to take Hope into custody to potentially save the world? Maybe take her into space or someplace she won’t do any damage? Fine, but she’s a mutant, so wherever she goes, we go to protect her.” But no, Cyclops had to act like a belligerent asshole, and be all “get off my lawn!” and hit Captain America with an optic blast. So all the actual Avengers fighting X-Men stuff that the series was named after was Cyclops’ fault.

What isn’t Cyclops’ fault is anything he or the other Phoenix Five did while being under the control of the Phoenix. The only reason they got possessed at all was because of something Tony Stark did, and yet I’ve seen little guilt on his part for his actions here. When Jean Grey went all Dark Phoenix back in the day, she destroyed a whole world with billions of inhabitants. When she got better, she got a pass. Yet under the influence of the Phoenix, the worst thing Scott Summers did really was kill one man. And yet, he’s now imprisoned like a war criminal. If the Phoenix was responsible for these actions, then none of the Phoenix five should be held accountable any more than Jean Grey was, especially now that the Phoenix is gone. You can’t have it both ways Marvel. Either the Phoenix controls you or it doesn’t, and if it does, then there is a huge double standard going on between Scott Summers and Jean Grey right now.

Having said all that, it seems bizarre that Cyclops has shown little to no remorse over the death of his mentor and father figure, whether he was really fully responsible or not. (there was some remorse shown in the tie in issue of Uncanny X-Men, but it was too little, too late) His attitude at the end of AvX seems to be  “It was all worth it, because my people were restored.”  All of that would be consistent if he hadn’t killed Charles Xavier, who was practically his father. But he did kill him, so it makes him seem strangely callous and almost like another character entirely. There is no way that the Scott Summers who has existed at Marvel for nearly fifty years would be so unrepentant about Charles Xavier’s death at his hands as he was. At the end of AvX, Cyclops is as broken a character as Scarlet Witch was for years, and I hope it doesn’t take eight years to restore him to true heroic status. Because none of the good things that came out of AvX are worth years and years of “villain Cyclops” we are now about to get.

Final Verdict

Now that it is finally over, I’d say there was as much good and bad to AvX, with only the shoddy treatment of Cyclops tipping the scale to more bad than good. However, on the plus side, This series finally brings about an end to almost a decade’s worth of stories in the Marvel Universe, creating an almost clean slate for a refreshed new world for the creators at Marvel to play in. Instead of separate X-Men and Spider-Man and Avengers universes within the Marvel U, we are getting one unified Marvel Universe again, as it was back when Stan Lee, Jack Kirby and Steve Ditko created it, and to me that’s good. If it took AvX to get us there, then it was all worth it. Well, unless you’re Cyclops that is. Then it just sucks to be you right now.

Marvel Animation Studios debut feature Iron Man & Hulk: Heroes United, is set to be released April 23rd, 2013. The film will “team Tony Stark and Bruce Banner in a fight against the villain Zzzax, a creature formed out of pure energy who can absorb human minds.”

The film will feature a mix of hand drawn art as well as computer generated animation, similar to MTV’s Spider-Man series from a few years ago. Adrian Pasdar (Heroes) will voice Iron Man and Fred ­Tatasciore (Ultimate Spider-Man) will voice Bruce Banner/The Hulk. Zzzax will be voiced by Dee Bradley Baker, who is probably best known as the voice of Klaus on American Dad. Jeph Loeb stated:

“The challenge was to pick up the banter between the two of them. Certainly, Adrian Pasdar’s performance is inspired by what Robert Downey Jr. does, and Mark laid down such an incredible path for us to be able to follow.”

Loeb also added the following about their future plans:

“It’s our hope that we will start doing more feature-length direct to Blu-ray and DVD stories. They’ll more than likely be in team-up situations. We find it works really well when we have big exciting adventures with two or more of our heroes.”

Source: EW

Marvel has started releasing another batch of teasers for their upcoming Marvel NOW! titles and the newest one is pretty obvious. It appears that Frank Cho is taking over on Wolverine. Three claw marks should be obvious enough. The most interesting part is the word savage being used due to Logan’s current ways of being. Could we be seeing a return to the more brutal berserker Wolverine?

Source: Marvel

Not too long ago we got a first look at three upcoming variants for Marvel’s team-up with Susan G. Komen For The Cure to help promote National Breast Cancer Awareness Month.
Now Marvel has unveiled the other five variants which you can take a look at below.

Source: Newsarama

This January, in Daniel Way and Steve Dillon’s Thunderbolts #3, we will see the debut of the Red Leader! Marvel has also revealed that all the Marvel NOW! new Thunderbolts covers have a red tint to them, and that there’s a “story reason” for that.

Source: Newsarama

If you’re planning on buying all the variants for Uncanny Avengers #1, I feel bad for your wallet. There are now eighteen revealed covers for the issue and the two most recent ones are sure to be sought after.

First up we have a Neal Adams variant, which is also available in a sketch version, which we are sure you’re going to want.

And then, being that issue comes out in October, we also have a special Halloween variant. No tricks, just a treat.

 

Following reports of several cancelled upcoming appearances due to, “a very serious circumstance”, many had worried that we would be losing the beloved Lee. Worry not true believers, Stan has released the following statement in which he confirms that he is in fact perfectly fine and definitely in good spirits after having a pacemaker fitted “in an effort to be more like fellow Avenger, Tony Stark”.

Attention, Troops!

This is a dispatch sent from your beloved Generalissimo, directly from the center of Hollywood’s combat zone!

Now hear this! Your leader hath not deserted thee! In an effort to be more like my fellow Avenger, Tony Stark, I have had an electronic pace-maker placed near my heart to insure that I’ll be able to lead thee for another 90 years.

But fear thee not, my valiant warriors. I am in constant touch with our commanders in the field and victory shall soon be ours. Now I must end this dispatch and join my troops, for an army without a leader is like a day without a cameo!

Excelsior! From all of us over here at Geekscape, get well soon Stan.

During Grant Morrison’s run on New X-Men quite some time ago, he made a very controversial decision to have Beast undergo a second mutation which gave the character a more feline-like appearance. Well, it seems that the the following excerpt from the script as well as the preview from Bendis & Immonen’s All-New X-Men #1  indicates that we may see the character undergo yet another mutation. Now the question is…to what?

ALL-NEW X-MEN #1
Page 2-3
1- Ext. Jean Grey School for Higher Learning- day
Wide shot of the mansion from the front gate looking in.
It is a gorgeous day and it’s a calm day at the mansion.
Reads: the Jean Grey School for Higher Learning
THE BEAST
JOURNAL
I am mutating.
And it is [REDACTED].

Source: Marvel

Prinicipal photography on Thor: The Dark World is currently underway and according to Shepherd Management Limited casting agency, not one but two of their clients have signed on for minor undisclosed roles in Alan Taylor’s sequel. Deadline has now revealed what roles the actors will be playing in the film.

The first being British actor Clive Russell who has appeared in Guy Ritchie’s Sherlock Holmes and its 2011 sequel, as well as numerous British television series, and he was recently cast as Ser Brynden Tulley the Blackfish in HBO’s third season of Game Of Thrones. Clive Russell will portray the god of war, Tyr, which is the all-father Odin’s other biological son and older brother of the titular God of thunder in the comics.

The second addition is Richard Brake, who is probably best known for playing the DC character Joe Chill in Christopher Nolan’s Batman Begins. The actor has also appeared in Hannibal Rising, Water For Elephants, & Outpost.The actor will play a captain of an elite group of Asgardian warriors that appeared in the first film, known as Einherjars.

Thor: The Dark World hits theaters November 8, 2013.