Saturday, April 30, 2022

X-Men Vignettes, Chapter Thirty-Nine (1989)

 

X-Men Vignettes #39 (1989)
"Briggs' Revenge"
Writer - Ann Nocenti
Pencils - Jim Lee
Inks - Joe Rubenstein
Letters - Jim Novak
Colors - Gregory Wright
Edits - Edelman, Harras, DeFalco
From: Classic X-Men #39 (November, 1989)

Today we've got... say it with me... something weird! Weird in that, it actually feels like any old X-Men story. We've got good guys, bad guys, a conflict... it's so "normal" that it almost feels out of place here in the Vignettes!

It's also got art from a fella who's like two years away from pretty much remaking the entire franchise in his own image... so, there's that too.

--

We open with Storm flying over the streets and seas of New York City. She is in an amazingly good mood... so much so, that she almost hates to have to settle her feet on the ground -- she just wants to stay soaring. She does, however, land... gotta keep looking the part of an ordinary New Yawka, I suppose. As she sets down, she is spotted by... a creep. Well, maybe that's too harsh... we shouldn't judge a book by its cover, right? Anyway, this cree--err, fella sees Storm land, assumes she's a mutant... and wonders hopefully that she might be able to help him out. Ya see, he too is a mutant... and he doesn't know how to deal with his uncanny abilities. Ororo walks the streets, heading toward the nearest bus stop... and, since she's a six-foot tall supermodel with long, shockingly white hair, all the dudes start to ogle her. Our new creepy pal approaches to chat her up. She takes one look at him, and knows she's gotta get away. She ignores the poor dude. His name is Billy Briggs, by the way.

Billy keeps persisting... until some Tony Stark-looking dude pushes him away. Storm is immediately smitten by this handsome man. Interestingly, and this might just be me, but the "handsome" man looks a lot like a stock Jim Lee-drawn character... which, since this is Jim Lee, probably stands to reason. The "ugly" Billy Briggs... well, he kinda looks like a stock Rob Liefeld character... lotsa lines on his face, and even a bit of the broccoli floret hair! I'm sure I'm just seeing things... but, I tell ya... those are funny things to "see". Billy knows what's up... Storm doesn't have time for chat with some ugly dude in need -- she'd rather talk to a rich handsome dude. Well, way of the world, I guess...

From here we hop over to Xavier's, where Colossus and Wolverine are in the middle of a bet. Logan's bet Piotr that he can't nyoink a tree stump out of the ground... and has a case of beer riding on it. Colossus manages to do it... but struggles. Wow, Colossus struggling while yanking a tree stump out of the ground? Somewhere on dry land, John Byrne is seething! Maybe he'll even quit the book again! Storm arrives on the scene to help out by whisking the mangled root system away.

Wolverine wants to go double or nothing... and claims he can use his Razor-Sharp Adamantium Claws to hack the tree to bits in no time... well, thirty-seconds. And so, Pete and Ro begin to count as he chops away... as we pan back to see that, ol' Billy Briggs... somehow managed to follow Storm back to the school? I mean, it's like an hour and a half drive from Manhattan to North Westchester... and, it doesn't appear that our homeless Mr. Briggs has a car. Google Maps says it'd be a sixteen hour walk! Am I thinking too hard? Yeah, I'm probably thinking too hard. Maybe Briggs skitched the whole way on the back of Ororo's bus? Anyway, Briggs interrupts the proceedings by blowing up the car that Pete and Logan drove out... to the yard. Did they need to actually drive from the house to the yard? I dunno, gang.

Anyway, it's here where B.B. introduces himself... claiming that he has the ability to disintegrate the lot of 'em in a heartbeat... but, here's the thing: he's going to let Storm, the woman who ignored him sixteen and a half hours ago in the city, choose which of her friends he's going to kill -- a decision she'll have to live with for the rest of her entire life! It's a regular Stormy's Choice!

Rather than, ya know, attacking and restraining this clearly unhinged homeless man, Storm actually considers her options! She looks at Peter... who is so sweet and innocent, then Logan... who can survive being hit by a meteor. I mean, all told, it's an easy choice -- but, still... they're giving this baddie a lot of power here. Anyway, she ultimately does choose Wolverine... who, kinda saw it coming, and doesn't appear to be terribly surprised.

From here, Briggs makes like a Sentinel from the cover of Uncanny #142... and lights our Logan up!

In the distraction, Colossus picks up a chunk of tree and smashes the dude in the head with it... killing him. Okay, not really... but, c'mon now, this should have killed him. I mean, it'd kill an elephant. Storm joins in on the fun, whooshing Briggs into the sky, and giving him his first shower in months. She also hits him with lightning... killing him. Okay again, not really... but... it probably should'a! By now, Wolverine is back up and at 'em.

Colossus grabs Briggs, pressing his own hands into his head. It's now time for Wolverine to offer him a choice. He can either go via Razor-Sharp Adamantium death... or, he can use his own disintegration powers on himself. The choice is his. Well, it would'a been -- but, Storm butts in to get everyone to settle their tea kettles. She takes the blame for ignoring a man who was clearly in need... and suggests that the best course of action would be to help him. Worth noting, it looks like Piotr was totally on board with murdering this man... which seems a bit (read: a lot) out of character.

We close out with Storm approaching Wolverine to apologize for, ya know, offering him up to be killed three minutes ago. Logan says it's cool... but, it's clear that it isn't. I mean, it's not like this will ever be mentioned again... so, it's hard to say how deep the hurt-feelings go. Anyway, Billy Briggs sees this tension between Lo and Ro... and smiles sinisterly, knowing that... despite his "loss", he still kinda "won".

--

Before we get into it... good GRIEF is WordPress being a pain in the ass today. I've been trying to upload these pics for the better part of an hour. Is blogging, regardless of platform, just all-around awful nowadays? I don't remember being a part of that decision.

Anyway...

So, what'd we have here? I mean, we're in full-on X-Men Unlimited territory now... almost to a T. We're introduced to a new mutant, who we'll never, eeeeeeever hear from again. Said new mutant is nearly able to beat/kill some of the A-List X-Men. And, there's some dramatic tension introduced between the characters... which, like our new mutant, will never be mentioned again.

Which, kinda makes it difficult to say a whole lot about. I guess our main takeaway here might be the moral lesson of "don't judge a book..." since Storm was so quick to dismiss ugly Briggs when he approached her in the city. Which, hey -- let's talk about that for a second. That, in and of itself, kinda feels out of character for Storm, doesn't it? She's usually depicted as being (almost too) kind... it's a bit odd seeing her dazzled by the Tony Stark-looking dude while rolling her eyes at the annoying ugly fella, who is clearly in need of some sort of assistance.

Keeping on the topic of acting out of character - I mentioned during the synopsis how strange it was seeing Colossus playing along with Wolverine's threats of murdering Briggs. As still sort of the wide-eyed innocent that Piotr was, you'd think he'd contest such a thing -- but instead, he's there holding this dude's deadly hands up against his dome.

Finally, Wolverine himself -- when Storm was presented with the "Sophie's Choice", you'd almost think that he'd offer himself up, rather than putting Storm in such a position. He would know that, between he and Piotr, that he had the best chances of surviving the attack. That is, of course, assuming that Wolverine would've let this dude unload on either of them before slicing him to ribbons -- which might just be another sorta-kinda "out of character" bit.

I dunno about this one, gang. It's... interesting, just not terribly good. It's an early Jim Lee X-Men story, which I suppose makes it a bit notable? I believe he'd only had a single-issue fill-in on Uncanny to this point (#248 - September, 1989) -- he was just about to hop on full-time. Oh well. This one was what it was...

Friday, April 29, 2022

X-Lapsed, Episode 333 - X Deaths of Wolverine #3 (2022)

X-Lapsed, Episode Three Hundred Thirty-Three

X Deaths of Wolverine #3 (April, 2022)
"Do or Die"
Writer - Benjamin Percy
Art - Federico Vicentini
Colors - Dijjo Lima
Letters - VC's Cory Petit
Design - Tom Muller
Edits - Baumgartner, Basso, White, Cebulski
Cover Price: $4.99
On-Sale: February 23, 2022

We're back over in the Moira-half of our event miniseries's's's... and this time, her heel-turn is in full swing!  Back in the long ago we'd refer to this as a "shoe drop" issue - In that Mighty Marvel Fashion: some'a the stuff we thought we knew... might not exactly be right... sorta.

Plus: I talk s'more about how the original vision for Krakoa seems to have changed over the past couple of years.  Yes... still.

--

Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/xlapsed

X-Lapsed Voicemail: 623-396-5375 (or, 623-396-JERK)

Twitter: @acecomics / Instagram: @90sxmen

weirdcomicshistory@gmail.com

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The All-New, All-Different chrisisoninfiniteearths.com

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X-Men Vignettes, Chapter Thirty-Eight (1989)

 

X-Men Vignettes #38 (1989)
"Strangers on a Lift"
Writer - Ann Nocenti
Art - Kyle Baker
Letters - Bill Oakley
Colors - Glynis Oliver
Edits - Edelman, Harras, DeFalco
From: Classic X-Men #38 (October, 1989)

Y'all ready for something weird? Cuz... today, we got a weird one. We've also got Ann Nocenti back, which I don't remember approving. Oh well.

Before we get into it though... how ya like my fake-ass cover, eh? Pretty spiffy? Y'almost can't even notice how horrid the transparency on the logo is!

--

So, we open... and, I guess Ann wanted to have her say with Dazzler in the Vignettes as well, cuz this is another one starring Ali. Anyway, it's late at night, and she's shuffling her way into an elevator at a multilevel parking lot structure. Inside the tin box stands a very portly fellow. If this were a movie, he'd probably be the racist sweatshop owner, or the dude who acts all moralistic... later being discovered as having a refrigerator full of body parts in his basement. You know the type, yes? He's the Elevator Man. He asks where Ali's headed... she tells him to take her to the top. The elevator whirrs into action... and, things get weird. The Elevator Man gets pretty close into Ali's personal space while attending to the lift-box's mechanism... while creepily leering, square in her eyes.

Moments pass... then, the lights go out. When they come back on, the fella is stood like right up on Dazzler's back. I'm sure she's getting a nose full of stale stogie and liverwurst. Ali begins to panic and asks what the dollar store Kingpin is up to... he simply tells her that he's the Elevator Man... and he's running the lift.

They reach the top level, and Ali goes to leave. The E.M. insists that he walk her to her car... since it's late... and, ya know, dangerous. He really impresses upon her how dangerous it is for her to be up here alone. As she begins her walk to her hooptie... another car hammers the gas and drives right toward her. The Elevator Man grabs her, pulling her out of harm's way... then... uh, handcuffs her to a metal pipe? Um, what?

The Elevator Man tells her it's all a joke... then, checks his pocket -- realizing that he's left the key to the cuffs somewhere else. He leaves to go fetch them. No sooner does he waddle away than Alison uses her Disco-paffin' to break herself free.

She then rushes to the power box and shuts off all the lights to the structure... leaving our fat friend just as confused and outta sorta as she was on the elevator. Next, she runs over to her car... flips on the radio... and prepares to engage in some Disco Dazzlin'.

What follows are a couple pages of Kyle Baker pencil candy, during which the Elevator Man gets bombarded with terrible music and light. Our gal introduces herself to her would-be fake-ass attacker... which takes us to our ending.

In which the Elevator Man reveals that... while he works as a humble Lift Operator, his true passion is film... and his obsession is fear. Ya see, this whole scene was orchestrated so he could observe and study "true fear" for his next film. He drops to his hamhock-sized knees and apologizes. Alison asks him, after what he's just experienced, if he now has enough "material" for his fear-film.

--

Welp.

Toldja this was a weird one. Thing of it is... there ain't all that much to say about it. Least nothing off the top of my head. It was interesting to look at, even if the story itself kinda read as nonsensical. Like, we know the Elevator Man's "goal" was to study true fear... but, really, at what cost? You pull a stunt like this... your ass is going to jail, right? Maybe that was his goal... he wanted to know the fear of being a literal cushion of a man in jail? Heck, even if that was the case, there've gotta be easier ways of going about it.

Up to the "grand reveal", Ann and Kyle did a great job of evoking the kind of fear and dread we might find ourselves with, when all alone... in the dark... away from our (non-current-year) safe spaces. The tone of the story is pretty great. Part of me wonders how a John Bolton would've drawn this... but, I'm more than pleased with Baker's take.

The title of this story is likely a play on the Hitchcock film, Strangers on a Train -- which, outside of the similar title, doesn't appear to share a single other thing with this story. Speaking of the title... here's an irrational "Chris Problem" for ya... use of the word "lift" instead of elevator by an American. Though, I suppose if we're replacing the word "Train" in our homage title, we gotta find a monosyllabic word to fit the bill. To me though, it always makes me think that the writer is trying to appear more "cultured". Like I said, irrational Chris Problems... they are debilitating. It's a wonder I'm able to pull myself outta bed every morning.

It reminds me of a comics podcast I used to listen to... back when I still had the time to listen to comics podcasts. It was hosted by an American and a Brit, and oddly, the Brit -- perhaps knowing that most of their audience was American, would use words like "elevator", "apartment", and "bar"... whereas, the American co-host would say "lift", "flat", and "pub". It always struck me as funny. Oh well.

Overall -- this is about three-quarters of a good story... which, at least for me, falls apart pretty hard at the end. How this Elevator Man didn't wind up arrested at the end of it makes zero sense. Plus, who was in the blue car that barreled at Ali? Was that part of the plan... or, just a happy coincidence? Also, what was E.M. planning to do to Ali when he returned with the keys? Lotsta silly questions... but, no answers are comin'.

Thursday, April 28, 2022

X-Lapsed, Episode 332 - Devil's Reign: X-Men #2 (2022)

X-Lapsed, Episode Three Hundred Thirty-Two

Devil's Reign: X-Men #2 (May, 2022)
"Truth & Consequences"
Writer - Gerry Duggan
Art - Phil Noto
Letters - VC's Clayton Cowles
Design - Tom Muller
Edits - Amaro, White, Cebulski
Cover Price: $3.99
On-Sale: March 2, 2022

Straight outta the... "oh yeah, that's a thing we still need to talk about" pile -- the X-Men tie-in to the Devil's Reign event rolls on!  As we've become accustomed, Emma Frost is our focal character... and, as usual, she's being ever the altruist -- still doing bad things, but with only the purest of intentions.  So, yeah - it's basically every Emma Frost story!

In the mailbag we talk more about Thunderbird as the X-Men's Barry Allen, and what it means to lose the Crucible.  It's a fun time as always!

--

Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/xlapsed

X-Lapsed Voicemail: 623-396-5375 (or, 623-396-JERK)

Twitter: @acecomics / Instagram: @90sxmen

weirdcomicshistory@gmail.com

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The All-New, All-Different chrisisoninfiniteearths.com

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X-Men Vignettes, Chapter Thirty-Seven (1989)

 

X-Men Vignettes #37 (1989)
"Was Not What Will Be"
Writer - Fabian Nicieza
Pencils - Rick Leonardi
Inks - Bob McLeod
Letters - Joe Rosen
Colors - Mike Rockwitz
Edits - Edelman, Harras, DeFalco
From: Classic X-Men #37 (September, 1989)

How ya like that "cover" image, eh? Pretty pro-friggin-fessional, ain't it? It goes to show that anybody with a fake-ass Photoshop program can make something passable. Speaking of which, I'm not sure there's a program on the planet that'll make discussing this story in the usual "CioIE style" work -- because, it's basically a dozen pages of annoying twentysomethings engaging in "deep" conversation...s. That's right, we're not going to be focusing much on any of these "intellectual" chats... we're going to be bouncing around from subject to subject -- which, don't get me wrong, is what real people do -- it just doesn't really facilitate some idiot trying to synopsize it thirty-some years later.

Let's give it a shot anyway, eh? Hey, at the very least this one'll give everyone the opportunity to share their "unpopular opinion" that they think Dazzler's a pretty cool character!

--

Our story opens with Disco Dazzler (it's weird that they're calling her that... in fact, even among her friends, she's only referred to as "Disco") wrapping up a gig at a... I dunno if it's supposed to be a seedy place, or just a club that's sorta-kinda behind the times. Sliding timelines being what they are, I can't be totally sure when this story is/was taking place. Ali's going to reference Ed Koch, who was Mayor of New York City from 1978... but, she's also going to mention Ronald Reagan, who wasn't sworn in as President until 1981. Though, it was just a passing reference... he could've still been a front-running candidate, I suppose. She and her intellectual pals also talk about the "Sins of the 80s" -- Figure "safest" bet (as if it even matters in the slightest), is that this story is from 1980? Wow, now that was a waste of several sentences, wasn't it? Anyway, she wraps up her set -- checks in with "Gags", the owner of the club... finds out it's later than she thought it was, and bugs on out.

The next three pages feature Disco strappin' on her skates and skitching all the way from the club in Brooklyn, across the bridge to the Nighthawk Diner in Manhattan. Skitching might not be the right term for it... as, growing up you'd "skitch" by holding on to the back of a car while the roads were icy... so, you'd kinda glide behind it. Ali though, has skates... so, she's just rolling behind the various vehicles she's bumper-tugging. Along the way, she gives us the quick 'n dirty tour... pointing out the sorta stuff folks usually mention when they wanna make it clear that they're "real" New Yawkas. She also stops a car full of a-hole kids from drinking and driving, so there's that too.

She finally arrives at The Nighthawk... where we meet a trio of her friends. They're "starving intellectuals", all on the lower end of the socioeconomic spectrum, which they can't help but to keep mentioning... but, also smarter than everybody else, which they also can't help but to keep mentioning. You might be wondering why I have this weird kneejerk dislike for them... and, well -- it's probably because, back in my early 20s, I was them -- and boy, I'd like to go back and kick myself in the nuts... cuz, I must've been prrrrrretty annoying. Disco sits with the crew, who call her out for always being late. Looks like they have a standing appointment for their mutual irritation admiration society every Friday night. Oof, the poor diner staff... I can only imagine how they dread seeing these four. Though, I suppose they're slightly better than having to pull intravenous drug users outta their bathroom stalls.

Anyway... the rest of the story is basically beboppin' from discussion to discussion... even to the point where they seemingly run out of things to gab about. Like I said at the jump, this all feels very "real"... but, sadly, real doesn't always equal "interesting"... and, this is not. I suppose I could talk a bit about Edward Hopper's Nighthawks (1942) painting to vamp for word count? The diner in this story isn't Nighthawks (well Phillies, actually -- the diner in the painting isn't called "Nighthawks"), though I'd guess that the use of the name is intentional to evoke that sorta vibe. Actually, I'm not gonna waste your time trying to talk about the painting... if you're interested in some fun NYC history, here's a link to someone trying to track down the actual diner.

One of the topics of conversation... the only one worth digging into, pertains to Alison's mutant ability. Ali's pals know she's a mutant, and how she uses her lightshow powers as part of her stage act. The question is raised here as to whether or not Ali is wasting her "gift". Rather than using what she can do to try and fight the good fight... she's playing music that gets less trendy by the millisecond. Disco don' wanna be no "stupidhero" though... she likes her life the way it is.

We wrap up with a shift change at The Nighthawk, and our know-nothing caucus given the boot. Ali skates away from her pals, vowing that she'll never... eeeeeeever be a superhero.

--

Well that was whole lot of pages to say... not a whole lot.

This was one of those "pages in need of a story" situations, rather than a "story in need of pages". Dazzler was "introduced" in the last issue of Classix, and so... I suppose it stands to reason that she'd get a one-off backup Vignette here. Gotta strike when the iron's hot, am I right?

And, I suppose, as a "before they were stars" sorta look at her, this served its purpose. We know that Ali kinda got swept up into the superhero life... and didn't immediately dig it. It was one of the things that made her unique... which, sadly wasn't a trait that stuck around. Hell, nowadays, she's doing the Krakoa thing like everybody else. Here we see her chatting up her pals about not wanting to be a superhero -- I think one of them suggested she join the Avengers here. Ali ain't too keen on that as, a) she thinks her powers aren't suited for it, and b) she likes her life the way it is -- or, was -- back in the 70s. She doesn't seem all that jazzed about the 1980s... which, the way it's written, seems more due to the fact that Fabian Nicieza didn't care much for Ronald Reagan.

Ali's friends were... as mentioned... annoying. This entire scene reminded me of those little bits and pieces from Friends, where the gang would try and act like they're deep intellectuals, rather than (do I use the word "privileged") douchebags who can afford to live comfortably in one of the most expensive cities in the country who never seem to have to go to work. It's insufferable to watch... and, not all that much fun to read.

Not to get too far into the weeds or anything... but, the "deep" discussions these goofs had here... while projecting this "starving intellectual" image. Like I said, back in my early twenties... this was me. It wasn't until a handful of years later where I'd literally be starving. I wasn't projecting anything. Thinking back to the days where I would pretend to be a philosophical man of culture... who was among the smartest in any room I occupied. Yeesh, like I said above - I'd like to kick that guy square in the nuts.

If you've ever taken a PSY class... and, this ain't no attempt at "gatekeeping", this is some of the most basic psyche stuff there is -- this is 101 level, the kind of stuff even Tom King probably knows. If you've ever taken PSY101 (or done some surface-level research on the internet), you'll likely have heard of Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs. If not, here it is:

Looking back at myself (and our quartet of goofs at The Nighthawk), sitting around and having intellectual discourse woefully worried about reaching your potential -- with undertones of "secret superiority" (ie. anything you don't achieve isn't really your fault -- because the entire system is against you, you see?) -- the ability to worry about all'a that... relatively speaking, puts you pretty high up on the pyramid, dunnit? Like, tippity top tier! And while, yes, I'm clearly projecting here -- it's hard for me to really take these people seriously. As in, damn near every page of this made me roll my eyes. Not a fault of the story! If this were an episode of X-Lapsed, these are the sort of things we'd file under "Chris Problems".

Hopefully you have a higher tolerance for this sort of thing than I do... but, even if you do -- this still got far too many pages.

Wednesday, April 27, 2022

X-Men Vignettes, Chapter Thirty-Six (1989)

 

X-Men Vignettes #36 (1989)
"Outside In"
Writer - Fabian Nicieza
Pencils - Mark Bright
Inks - Joe Rubenstein
Letters - Joe Rosen
Colors - Glynis Oliver
Edits - Edelman, Harras, DeFalco
From: Classic X-Men #36 (August, 1989)

Now, here's an odd little ditty to revisit -- taking into account the massive changes that hit the line in mid-2019. If "old" Moira is a new character or concept to you -- I'll do my best to make this as easy and unconfusing a read as possible. Well, to the best of my own somewhat lacking ability, anyway!

Basically, what you need to know is - Moira's not a mutant, and her son's conception wasn't some odd "orchestration" between she and Xavier to ensure they had the most advantageous offspring(s). Now that I think of it -- I hope I'm able to keep it all straight!

Anyway... let's welcome Fabian Nicieza to the scribe-seat (we survived our detour though Nocenti-land, more or less unscathed!), and take a look at Moira's first futzin' with the concept of... Resurrection!

--

We open, I'm assuming on Muir Island, where Moira MacTaggert (Life Ten, for all y'all in the know) is stood before the gravesites of her son Kevin, and abusive a-hole ex-husband, Joe. This is shortly after the Proteus storyline in X-Men, naturally. Moira is chatting with herself about her current situation -- and it's pretty bleak. She notes that her beau, Banshee is waiting for her, a respectable distance away -- by the car, while she mourns in the rain. She wonders why she hasn't let him try and help her grieving process... as it's clear he'd like to. She hops back in the hooptie, and barely even addresses Sean, other than to tell him to take her home. Which he does. Next we know, we're at Moira's place, where Sean is offering her a cuppa tea. She... snaps at him, calling him dense for not realizing that she'd like to be left alone for a bit. So... he leaves her be.

Banshee heads over to the in-house gymnasium to get in some upper-body work and wallow in his lost powers... leaving Moira to engage in some sketchy studies. Ya see, she's been studying cloning. The potentially-peer-reviewed piece is titled: Cloning: The Possibilities and the Ramifications. So... Resurrection Protocols 1.0? Can someone hook a lady up with some Goldballs? It's worth noting that Moira feels very bad about being such a "witch" to Sean.

Sean returns from pumpin' iron a little bit later... only to find the living room empty, Moira's cuppa tea still steaming on the coffee table. Wow, that was either a really short workout... or some really hot tea. Where's Moira? Well, she's in the lab, along with her freeze-dried son! Kevin MacTaggert's corpse lay in an airtight tube for preservation... which might tell us that Moira's been considering this clone endeavor from the very start. In her "voiceover", it's confirmed that Kevin's conception was an act of hatred and violence -- the implication is that Moira was raped -- confirmation is forthcoming in just a few pages. It's been many minutes, and I can't remember if this was made clear in the original Proteus story... or, if it was only alluded to and still maybe too taboo a subject for comics to tackle in the late-70s? Of course, we "current year" post-HoXPoX types know that Kevin's conception went down somewhat differently than this.

Sean somehow immediately knows what Moira's got in mind... and he goes charging down to the lab. Unfortunately for him, it's locked... and his personal access code (SUCRETS -- geddit?) has been deactivated. He shouts through the thick metal door for Moira to truly consider her actions before... well, acting. She assures him... or, at least she narrates to herself... that she knows what she's doing.

Sean retreats back to the living area, where he proceeds to... sit down with Moira's family photo album. I'm not completely sure why he's doing this... maybe it's obvious and I'm just missing the point, or maybe it's just a way to semi-organically fill in some of Mo's backstory? I dunno. Anyway, Sean's flipping through the album, reading it for "the articles" ya see... and he comes across a trio of photos. One from Moira and Joe's wedding, another with she and Xavier clownin' around, and finally the snap from when she was awarded the Nobel Prize.

Meanwhile, back in the lab, Moira is delicately removing a sliver of skin from her dead son's corpse's right shoulder. The sample plops onto a slide... and SHOOMPs outta the canister for further and closer study.

Moira' ticker-tape lab gimmick starts squirtin' out paper... which our lady reads. It looks like, with what she has available - cloning is an option. Looks like it might be a race against the clock though, as Banshee comes to the realization that he can override the Lab Access keypad gimmick. Not sure why he didn't just do that the first time around, but... okay.

Sean enters just as Moira's about to dump the contents of a wide beaker into a pool of... I dunno, maybe it's the stuff from the Creepy Crawlers playset thing? Ya know, that goop that you'd heat under a lightbulb, ala the Easy Bake Oven, so it would harden into like (inedible... unless you're really hungry, I guess) "gummy" insects. Maybe it's a pool'a that stuff? Anyway, Sean tries to get Moira to reconsider her actions... but, she's pretty set on going through with it. She sees it as giving her son a second chance... to live a more innocent life. This odd cloning "conception" removes the violent taint, of Joe MacTaggert's rape. Moira reminds Sean that Proty is a reality warper... and could recreate himself. To which, Sean asks why he hasn't done so yet.

Sean continues to try reasoning... and ultimately, Moira collapses into his arms, dropping the Creepy Crawler fluid canister, shattering it all over the floor. Sean reminds her of all the good she's done for other mutants... and how, so much of her research came from her attempts at curing (or counteracting) her son, Mutant X. With that in mind, Kevin actually has left a legacy... a good one.

We get a couple of pages of them chatting about doing something to Sean's throat... and having a whiskey, I'm not sure in which order. Before they leave the lab, however, Moira heads over to the console... and presses the button that disengages the airlock on Kevin's tube. His well-preserved corpse is kissed by the air... and decomposes almost instantly. Moira says that thing Ezio says when he kills someone in Assassin's Creed II, and we're outta here.

--

Ya know, back in the long ago, when I first read that Chris Claremont was hesitant to x-pand the X-Men into a franchise... I thought he was dead wrong in his thinking... for a few reasons. Of course, there's commercial and financial stuff -- but, I also "bought in" on this huge cast of characters, who I felt all needed a place where they could shine. Like, without an X-Factor... how much "paginal real estate" could a Guido Carosella x-pect to get? It might go without saying that I was a much younger fella when I initially had these thoughts.

Coming in to the fandom when I did, I never had the opportunity to see/read X-Men as the semi-tightly-knit four-color soap opera that it had been for the decade and a half prior. For me, it was about the sprawl... and I had a "more books the better" mentality (so long as those books were a buck 'n a quarter on the racks). I loved getting my "weekly fix" and couldn't imagine living in a world where I only got to read one X-Book a month. To say my mind has changed in the years since... well, I mean, that's pretty much what I've been building toward saying over the past couple of paragraphs...

Getting a story like this... which is, to my mind, so dependent on things occurring a certain way -- makes me yearn for an era of X-Men I wasn't even a part of. Sure plotlines were left to "dangle", but for the most part, the stories presented were cohesive... made sense... and fit. That's becoming my main takeaway in doing this Vignette Project. The X-Men were in the "seminal stages of sprawl" in the mid-late 80s. It was a family of five at this point (not counting Classix), if I'm not mistaken: Uncanny X-Men, X-Factor, New Mutants, Excalibur, and Wolverine... there's also Alpha Flight, where yer mileage may vary. We had that many titles already, and yet -- everything still felt like it fit.

Even the oft derided (sometimes even deservedly so) 90's glut of X-Books managed to, at the very least, try and make everything work. It really wasn't until the "star writer era" after the turn of the century, where the X-Books kinda just went their own ways... contradicted one another... added and removed bits of history, which wouldn't even be acknowledged across the board. Characters would die in one book, yet still be alive and kicking in another. It became a cesspool of editorial incompetence and indifference.

So, what is it about this story in particular that's drumming up all these "entitled, gatekeeping, manbaby" (did I get them all?) feelings in me? Well, I suppose it's, in a way, the most relevant to what's going on today in the X-Books. A story like this... I suppose it could've happened in a post-HoXPoX world... but, it wouldn't hold near as much import -- at least not to me. I hesitate to use a word like "cheapen"... but, I'm struggling to come up with another that would fit as well. The current state of things... well, it kinda cheapens this, dunnit? Maybe it's just me.

First: I mean, it's all about the finality of death... and acceptance, which is something mutants don't have to do anymore. If you're following the current-year stuff, you'll know that Proteus is alive and well... and is a very important cog in the Krakoan engine. It's also been revealed (I wanna say I discussed this as part of the 12-or-so hour long X-Lapsed, Episode 200: X of Swords Handbook) that Moira and Xavier chose their mating partners with the x-press purpose of having some advantageous offspring. Charles with Gabrielle Haller (remember "X-Twitter X-Scholars", Legion isn't Moira's kid), Moira with Joe MacTaggert. In the post-HoXPoX landscape, Moira didn't marry Joe until her 10th Life... and, she only did so to produce Proteus. Was it still a rape? That I couldn't say... as I honestly don't remember. I've spent several thousand hours with the current year stuff over the past eighteen months... so, to say it's mostly a muddled mess would be an understatement.

All's I'm saying is... stories like this, sadly don't stand the test of time -- not by any fault of its own, but simply due to endless attempts at reinventing the wheel. In a vacuum, I quite enjoyed it... but, I gotta say, if I'd read this in 2018, I'm sure I'd have enjoyed it a whole lot more. All this to say, Chris Claremont was right. From a creative (and sensical) standpoint, the X-Line should'a remained "lean and mean"... even if that meant that 12-year old Chris wouldn't get his weekly fix.

Tuesday, April 26, 2022

X-Men Vignettes, Chapter Thirty-Five (1989)

 

X-Men Vignettes #35 (1989)
"Paper, Not Paper"
Writer - Daryl Edelman
Art - John Bolton
Letters - Joe Rosen
Colors - Glynis Oliver
Edits - Edelman, Harras, DeFalco
From: Classic X-Men #35 (July, 1989)

Howzat for a cursed cover? That one'll give ya nightmares! One of the most fun parts of this project has been taking in these, sometimes odd, sometimes eerie, almost always beautiful Bolton back covers... and perhaps even sharing them with a generation of readers who didn't even realize they existed! This one in particular has haunted me something fierce... I mean, just look at it!

Can the story even hope to live up to that sort of eerie madness? Well... it's written by our Assistant Editor, and it's one of three scripts he's ever written. Hopes high enough yet?

Let's do it!

--

X-Men #129 (January, 1980) - (w) Chris Claremont / (a) John Byrne

This is going to be one of the "between the panels" stories we get in Vignettes from time to time. Above, you can see the series of panels from X-Men #129 (January, 1980), where this odd and ethereal little ditty begins. There, Kitty Pryde, during her first appearance issue, phases through the wall of a malt shop into an alley. Below, we see Kitty trying to gather her thoughts and make sense of the situation. She is quite confused by her phase-ability -- and, while we know this isn't the first time it's manifested (it's not even the first time today), it may be the first time she actually sees it in action. This isn't her falling from her bedroom to the living room below while she was sleeping -- she's cognizant of her situation right now... and, at least for this very moment, awake.

From here, however, it's off to slumberland. Kitty finds herself shrunken down reading from a tremendous book. She's approached by... I don't know what the hell this is... but, our gal doesn't seem to recognize it. Kitty shoos the whatever-the-hell away so she might study in peace. Worth noting, the whatever-the-hell is in a gummed up wheelchair. I dunno if it's supposed to be Professor X? By now y'all know that I'm pretty dense... and I only see symbolism where there is none. So, if this is truly symbolic... well, it's all going over my head.

Anyway, Kitty is asked if she can dance... and the whatever-the-hell reveals that it's familiar with the book Kitty's attempting to study from. It's a book called Structure and Function of the X-Factor by Charles Xavier, by the by. Just then, from behind a nearby curtain, the White Queen trots out... uhh, another slew of whatever-the-hells. These look kind of like mannequins with tennis balls taped to their chests. Very bizarre, indeed. They're here to dance -- and, I'm assuming this is an avant garde take on the "wooing" of Kitty Pryde. The wheelchair guy is Chuck... and Emma is, well, Emma. They're competing to see who "gets" Kitty Pryde.

What follows here are... several pages of weird-looking stuff. Ya notice how, of late I'm starting more paragraphs with "What follows here are several pages of..."? I have! It might make one start to think that... the twelve pages allotted for these Vignettes might be... I dunno, six pages too many? Feels very padded. Thankfully that "padding" is drawn by John Bolton. Let's hit the main beats. Emma turns Xavier's book into mush... and we pop back out to reality, where sleeping Kitty is under a pile of books. So, is this real or not?

Next, Kitty's approached by another whatever-the-hell, which transforms into Storm. We get a platitude about not judging books by their cover... and how people will continue to grow and change. This scene appears to be taking place both inside Kitty's dream and in the now-bookless alley. Well, there's one book, which Storm's reading from... but, that pile's nowhere to be seen.

From here, Kitty and Storm dance back into the dream... eesh, I feel like I'm in the middle of a dream... to take on Emma and her booby mannequins. Well, to dance in front of them, I guess. I dunno. This displeases Emma greatly... and so, she unleashes a bunch of booby mannequins... in wheelchairs?

The wheelchairs crash into Storm, knocking her out. Kitty then places Storm into one of the wheelchairs... and beelines it toward Emma -- phasing right through her... and the wall behind her... back into Kitty's own home... which is actually a book itself? Ya know, I'm loving the art here... it's some really excellent stuff, but... this is getting stretched wildly thin at this point.

Next we know, Kitty wakes up in the alley -- just as Emma and the Hellfire Goons are loading the X-Men into their air-hooptie. We close out with Ms. Pryde phasing in and stowing away...

... which happened two pages later back in X-Men #127! There we go, we added... somethin' to the lore! I'm not x-actly sure what we added... but, yeah... somethin'!

X-Men #129 - January, 1980 - (w) Chris Claremont / (a) John Byrne

--

Ya know, I was gonna write this elaborate bit wherein I transcribed an imagined conversation between Daryl Edelman, Bob Harras, and Tom DeFalco about the creation of this little ditty -- with the overall "message" being, something along the lines of: "Hey, that's a great page and a half worth of story... you've got twelve!"

Since I am not creative or humorous in any way, I won't torture y'all with that -- instead, I'll just say that this was an interesting and worthwhile idea to pursue... but, it certainly didn't need a dozen pages to be told. Kitty's going through a pretty confusing time right now (plus, who knows what hoo-doo Emma is doing just on the other side of the wall), so it'd stand to reason that she might just "trip out" a bit. Good idea... decent execution... just wayyy too long.

At least it was rendered by our main man, John Bolton... who, at this point, sadly isn't long for this project. Things are about to take a turn for the... well, I don't wanna say "worse", cuz we've got some Nicieza stuff coming our way, and I'm a bit Fabes-fan... but, the X-Men Vignettes are certainly sliding down the list of Marvel's priorities at this point. When you see some of the art that's headed our way, you might think you sent in five Charleston Chew UPCs and got a free comic... or, ordered the Kid's Personal Pan Pizza at Pizza Hut... and got a free comic. Anyway, that's a concern for later -- let's just be happy for today that we've still got Bolton!

Overall - a neat little "trip", which I probably would've enjoyed more had I not been stressing about thinking up stuff to actually say about it here on the site!

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