Friday, October 14, 2016

MISTER HYDE versus GHOST RIDER
Engines of Vengeance: Part 5 (Marvel)
Where:
All-New Ghost Rider #5 When: September 2014 Why: Felipe Smith How: Tradd Moore

The Story So Far...
Dr. Calvin Zabo has relocated to Los Angeles to use his skills in biochemistry to forge a new criminal empire away from the heroes and villains of New York!


He's selling drugs based on the Mr. Hyde formula that gives his alter-ego incredible size and strength, but when the batch goes bad - it's time for a recall!

Hired mercenaries attack a street race to retrieve the drugs from a dealer's dodge charger, killing the driver behind the haunted car's wheel: mechanic Robbie Reyes! Engulfed in flames, Robbie is revived as a spirit of vengeance!

Local dealer Grumpy has delusions of grandeur when the drugs mutate him, sparking a turf war between Zabo's mercenaries and Grumpy's gang! When the bullets threaten innocent suburban residents -- including Robbie's younger brother Gabe -- the new Ghost Rider drives in to take them all out! Vengeance is triumphant, but now Robbie faces his biggest threat: The one true Hyde!

Tale of the Tape...
Strength: Mr. Hyde 5 (Super-Human)
Intelligence: Mr. Hyde 3 (Straight A)
Speed: Draw 3 (Athlete)
Stamina: Ghost Rider 5 (Marathon)
Agility: Draw 2 (Average)
Fighting: Draw 3 (Street Wise)
Energy: Ghost Rider 5 (Lasers)


It's a battle of something old and something new as we delve into the All-New world of Marvel Now!

Dr. Calvin Zabo is a brilliant biochemist whose criminal career was influenced by Robert Louis Stevenson's story: The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. The classic literature inspired him to create a hormonal formula capable of transforming him into his own super-human alter-ego of Mr. Hyde!


As Hyde; the scientist undergoes a physical transformation that increases his size, strength, stamina and durability. Hyde has been shown to be strong enough to go toe-to-toe with the likes of Iron Man, Hulk, and Thor! He gains this strength at the expense of his intellect and personality. The Hyde persona is much more volatile, as seen when Batroc The Leaper was compelled to turn against him during a plot to defeat Captain America [Captain America #252].

Zabo's desire for criminal power eventually led him to Los Angeles, to create super-drugs for street sale away from the crowded super-population of NYC. When a bad batch of his pills got loose, he sent mercenaries to retrieve them from the dodge charger driven by his dealer. Unfortunately, LA mechanic Robbie Reyes had taken the car to compete in a street race at the time!


Riddled with bullets, Reyes was revived by the demonic spirit of his deceased devil worshipping uncle: Eli Morrow. Bonded to the dodge charger and now his nephew, Morrow transforms Reyes into the flame spewing driver: Ghost Rider!

At this early stage in his career, the all-new Ghost Rider is still learning to use his hellish powers. He wields infernal chains, and can manipulate his black dodge charger in a variety of ways - including physically merging and passing through it! Ghost Rider himself also possesses some degree of increased speed and strength, but must still fear the threat of death against stronger opponents!

Prior to this fight, Ghost Rider has battled gangsters using the defective Hyde formula. Even so, inexperience is still his greatest weakness against the veteran strength of the one true Mr. Hyde!

Fortunately, an unstoppable, flame spewing car is a great equalizer in the fight with Hyde. As we saw when The Punisher took Hyde on [Punisher #5], he can also be susceptible to inventive strategies that target natural physical weak spots. If Ghost Rider can turn up the heat, he might be in with a shot. It's a long shot - but any chance is better than no chance!

The Tape: Ghost Rider Ranking: Mr. Hyde (#351)


What Went Down...
An overturned school bus, frightened children, bullet holes... Consequences of a suburban gun fight between the wannabe gangsters selling Mr. Hyde's drugs and the mercenaries hired to work for him. Dead and beaten - the two sides lie around a smouldering new sentinel of vengeance: The Ghost Rider!

A chopper hovers overhead and one of the mercenaries sneers: "Here come the reinforcements." A hulking figure leaps from the helicopter and plummets to the street below with a spectacular crash: Mr. Hyde towers over Ghost Rider!

The Rider tosses his blade tipped chain, but Hyde snatches it with two hands in the air and yanks him off his feet! His demonically possessed body slices through the emptied school bus, and ruptures the street as Hyde brings him crashing down with devastating effect!


Hyde recognizes the rookie errors of his flaming foe - clumsy, unskilled and weak. He yanks him off the ground and into the waiting embrace of his chemically bulging biceps!


Trapped in the grip of a super-powered sleeper hold: Robbie Reyes consults his ghostly mentor on the case of mistaken identity and fatal peril. Eli has no desire to die with his host again -- summoning the flaming dodge charger for the save!


The card takes Hyde's legs out from behind and sends both spilling wildly into the air! The villain loses his grip on Ghost Rider's chain in the chaos - coming to land on his face with a hard thud.

Ghost Rider nimbly lands on his feet and uses speed to capitalize on the shift in the fight. He leaps into the air - landing boots-first on Mr. Hyde's facedown skull! He then quickly hops away, leaving the path clear for the super natural charger to run over Hyde's head!

Hyde's super-enhanced body is able to cope with the trauma, but his psyche is unwilling to accept defeat! Ignoring the internal cries of biochemist Calvin Zabo - the Hyde persona pinches at a bag of defective pills and swallows them!


The influx of formula sends Mr. Hyde's already impressive body into an explosive transformation! His muscles grow and stretch to gigantic proportions!

It looks bad for Ghost Rider and then - Mr. Hyde pukes!

Zabo's past warnings that the pills weren't for them come to pass. The perfect balance of ANA-XILLIK-32 is upset, sending his rapidly deforming body into shock as Hyde overdoses on the formula!


The beastly villain shrinks down to the meek, mild form of Dr. Calvin Zabo! Sweaty and cowering, he shrieks as residents of the neighbourhood warzone surround him. Sirens ring out in chorus with Zabo's cries as Ghost Rider blazes into the night.

The Hammer...
It looked hairy for a while there, but the all-new Ghost Rider picks up a big win in the first super-villain showdown of his heroic career!

If you were reading Hero of the Week about a month ago, you already know I've been a big fan of All-New Ghost Rider since it launched in 2014!

The battle with Mr. Hyde is just one piece of an appealing puzzle that exceeds several of Marvel's attempts to launch new versions of their classic characters.

He's a figure with a strong sense of identity, deviant from other better known versions like Johnny Blaze or Dan Ketch, but not so removed that there isn't great potential for legacy interaction. Indeed, Robbie Reyes was quickly confronted by the classic Blaze version of Ghost Rider in issues following this one. A clever order of events, allowing Reyes to be showcased in his own environment, with his own villain, before confronting the obvious comparisons.

Every hero needs good arch-villains, and tying the new Ghost Rider to Mr. Hyde is a wonderful way of feathering him into the living Marvel Universe.

It's a case of giving and creating all around. Mr. Hyde is a longstanding Marvel villain, but he hasn't been inescapably married to one particular arch-nemesis, nor been defined by one famous story. That gives Marvel, and writer Felipe Smith, a lot of room to shape their characters to suit the circumstances of the story, and high concept. That Hyde relocates to Los Angeles is easily forgiven, both for the in-fiction reason of escaping a crowded market place in Marvel's New York City, but also for the quality of Hyde's role in the story.

In All-New Ghost Rider: Hyde provides a larger-than-life personification and anchor for a story about the very real issue of gang violence and drug abuse in suburbia. This is a superhero comic through and through, so of course, it's nothing as mundane as crystal meth, or ice. Instead, a reduced street version of Hyde's formula is the demon in a pill. Too up front to be considered metaphor, but none the less superb in its balance between reality and hyper-fiction.

There are clichés at work: Robbie Reyes is a good kid struggling to maintain his grades and his job, while also looking after an energetic younger brother with special needs.

These 'facts of life' provide all the usual short-hands to motivate the hero in his journey. Fortunately, the world on the page is heavy in contrast, and much too frenetic to make it feel rote. Behind the saccharin sibling moments of sharing ice cream, or putting a happy face on a hard life, is a real sense of authenticity.

It's no mean feat that a motorhead student who loves his brother can seem so real in a comic that defies the laws of reality!

Artist Tradd Moore is one of the high selling points for the series, laying down high-octane fuel injected pages! Does this guy have a flaming pencil from Hell, or what?! It's dizzying the way action spits off the page and characters bend in animation! The Comics Code Authority may be a decade behind us, but if this keeps up, there are going to be speed limits put on comics!

Colorists Val Staples, Nelson Daniel and Ester Sanz deserve a lot of credit. Their work is vital to supporting Moore's fast, furious, and maniacal pencils -- especially when Ghost Rider is in action! Blinding yellows and deep reds sell the heat of Ghost Rider's flames, and the face stretching momentum of his speed!

The arrangement of all its various pieces help make Robbie Reyes a success as a new Ghost Rider -- but it's without a doubt the visual identity of this first arc that made it a thrilling, exciting, instant success!

Individual panels like the ones featured in this post just don't do it credit. To get the full experience - you need to see the entire page. I'm not the biggest fan of digital comics at the best of times, but I really pity the fool who doesn't hold this comic in their hands when they're reading!

Perhaps the only drawback is that I could never recommend this for all readers. It looks and sounds like it should be a spectacle for everyone to enjoy, but the content and themes are strictly T for Teen. Even then - I would worry about a young mind taking the wrong message from the life of power fantasies, Faustian pacts, and stringbean wannabe gangsters hiding behind guns and threats.

If you want to be any one here kids, be Robbie Reyes. He's a nice guy with a strong skill (mechanics), a great work ethic, and a killer sense of style -- I love that skunk stripe, and the jet black leather with white!

This Ghost Rider is currently appearing on TV's Agents of SHIELD - a rare bright spark on an otherwise painfully boring show. The real money would be getting this character into animation. A slick production with a style similar to Moore's would be an instant, bona fide hit! Something Marvel haven't had in animation in a long, long time!

If you want to see what all the excitement is for yourself, I strongly recommend you swing by Amazon to pick up the collected trade! It's a great way to read it! Plus: If you use the link provided to the right, you'll help contribute to future entries of the site! I don't even need your soul!

If you're looking for more featured battles featuring Mr. Hyde or any of the other Ghost Riders, you should follow links throughout this post, or dive into the Issue Index Archive for other classic entries!

Secret Wars on Infinite Earths is really going to Hell this month, diving into demons and terrors for a big Halloween! Stay tuned for the next installment, which will feature some of those other Ghost Riders we mentioned! It'll be a blast!

Winner: Ghost Rider
#296 (new) Ghost Rider (Robbie Reyes)
#500 (new) Eli Morrow [+1 assist]
#359 (-8) Mr. Hyde

Wednesday, October 12, 2016

OLD COMICS WEDNESDAY: LEGENDS OF TOMORROW!
Legends of Tomorrow returns to The CW for a second season of TV super-heroics - tomorrow!

The ensemble series spins out of the television universe spawned by Arrow and The Flash: A pale comparison to the comic book originals, but a nice bridge to the Justice Society and other classic comic book characters!

This Old Comics Wednesday we're flashing back to some of the legendary struggles that made these characters the heroes for tomorrow! By clicking the covers below, you'll find adventures starring: Firestorm, Atom, Hawkman, Hawkgirl, Captain Cold, Vixen, and some of their biggest all-star allies!




Monday, October 10, 2016

HERO OF THE WEEK: VIXEN (DC)
Real Name: Mari Jiwe McCabe
First Appearance: Action Comics #521 (July, 1981)
Fight Club Ranking: #344

Featured Fights:
- vs BRIMSTONE: Legends #2 (Dec 1986)
- vs JUSTICE LEAGUE: JLA: Classified #3 (Mar 2005)
- vs INJUSTICE LEAGUE: Justice League of America #15 (Jan 2008)

An unexpected result of spending time with the Suicide Squad this past August was digging back into the DC Comics of the post-Crisis eighties. Along with the issues of Suicide Squad and Legends that were featured, I also spent some time re-reading JLA. This was the period when the Justice League underwent a major revamp - relaunching with the eclectic all-star group eventually known as Justice League International.

JLI was a revamp necessitated by the small scale, urban-minded adventures immediately preceding it -- the infamous "Detroit" era of the League. We saw one of their last outings as a group in Legends #2, but the real end for the JLA came shortly after, when there were just two members remaining: Martian Manhunter and our Hero of the Week - Vixen!


Vixen hasn't been a character I've thought a great deal about over the past twenty years, but it seems one good turn deserves another! Comic Book Resources reports Vixen is about to make another comeback to the JLA starting with a spotlight special: Justice League of America: Vixen #1.

The copy reads a bit like pandering catch-up to Marvel's Black Panther hype, but it does allude to a time in Vixen's life when things weren't so bright. That's ultimately what engaged me the most in my journey back to the eighties!

Where most of the Detroit era League flitted into obscurity, Vixen instantly became a more interesting character by personifying the pathos of that era's demise. She mourns lesser JLA heroes Vibe and Steel -- killed off in a plot by Professor Ivo. Volume 1 of Justice League of America ends with a roar when Vixen descends into the underworld of the city gripped by a lust for revenge.

Vixen's crusade to take down Ivo borders on a suicide mission, which may've been the inspiration for her admission into the Suicide Squad. It's another example of that series' wonderful ability to play with the meta-text of characters who aren't thriving, but aren't necessarily ready for cancellation! It plays particularly well when the Justice League come to blows with the Squad. While others fight, Vixen shares a tender moment with Martian Manhunter - the only Leaguer who was there to the end.

It would've made a lot of sense to keep the African heroine around for the Justice League International run, but the path she ultimately took made her a much more interesting, complex character than before. A compliment to the otherwise serviceable concept of a character who can channel the powers of a pantheon of animals.

Vixen is also starring in an animated series spun out of TV's Arrow. It's significantly cooler than its mediocre TV universe ties, but for real thrills I recommend Batman: Brave and the Bold. It's generally one of the best DC cartoons around, notable for playing with references from the forties all the way up to today. They develop a very fun relationship with B'wana Beast. Well worth a look!

Friday, October 07, 2016

THE DEMON versus SOLOMON GRUNDY
Christened On A Tuesday (DC)
Where:
Solomon Grundy #2 When: June 2009
Why: Scott Kolins How: Scott Kolins

The Story So Far...
In the 19th century, Gotham City was home to a wicked soul named Cyrus Gold. With much blood on his hands, he was cursed in death to forever rise from his unmarked grave in Slaughter Swamp as the beast Solomon Grundy!


Caught in an endless cycle of death and rebirth, the shambling monster is forever drawn to new acts of evil as an unstoppable undead creature - until now?

A mysterious force has intervened to give Cyrus Gold seven days to end his curse and finally put his soul to rest! His former nemesis The Green Lantern is charged with aiding him in his quest, but as they soon find out, not everyone wants Solomon Grundy gone before The Blackest Night!

Infernal forces intend to keep Cyrus Gold's soul in turmoil - sending an agent to keep him from his mission. While Green Lantern struggles in the cursed marsh of Slaughter Swamp - The Demon, Etrigan attacks! Now Solomon Grundy must fight for his death - or be dragged to new depths by his newest nemesis!

Tale of the Tape...
Strength: Solomon Grundy 6 (Invincible)
Intelligence: The Demon 2 (Average)
Speed: The Demon 3 (Athlete)
Stamina: Solomon Grundy 6 (Generator)
Agility: The Demon 3 (Acrobat)
Fighting: Draw 3 (Street Wise)
Energy: The Demon 3 (Explosive)


Can you say Round 2? It was almost a year ago when last we saw The Demon versus Solomon Grundy! It was a battle right out of Hell - waged on Devil's Night, to signal the impending return of Secret Wars on Infinite Earths!

In that particular showdown: The Demon was decreed the victor - even though the circumstances of the win were left open to continuation. For twelve months the ultimate fate of that fight has thus been left undecided - until now!

The beginning of their battle was a showcase of distinct advantages. Solomon Grundy demonstrated an obvious physical strength, allowing him to manhandle The Demon and turn chunks of the surrounding scenery into deadly weapons!

Etrigan took everything the powerhouse zombie was able to throw at him - practically relishing the pain! The Demon's resilience is an obvious asset in this case, but he's also able to give as good as he gets with little concern for himself or others! The fight ended when he sent Solomon Grundy (and himself) plummeting from a demolished bridge into the waters below!


The change in arena isn't an insignificant detail!

Solomon Grundy may be carrying the wear and tear of Round 1 into today's feature fight, but he does so into water - an environment more closely resembling the swamp from which he rose! He certainly looked at home splashing around in sewer water when he dealt an all mighty defeat to Killer Croc in Faces of Evil: Solomon Grundy #1!

Water probably shouldn't douse the deadly demonic flames spewed forth by Etrigan, but in traditional lore, water can at least be considered an unfriendly element to any spawn of Hell. That might be enough to slow The Demon down!

Grundy's no stranger to being water logged, but will a late night dip spell a comeback for the shambling monster once called Cyrus Gold?l Let's find out!

The Tape: The Demon Ranking: The Demon (#45)

What Went Down...
The carnage happening around them hardly matters as they plummet towards the water below! Solomon Grundy and The Demon: locked in battle - engulfed in flames!


Etrigan, in that way he does, asks prophetically if Grundy has ever died on a Tuesday. He has seven days to put the soul of Cyrus Gold to rest. A fools quest when The Demon is charged with waylaying it with a fresh death!

The fire is extinguished as the warring monsters smash into the water!


Solomon Grundy clutches at The Demon's cape as the hellspawn rides his foe into the darkness of the water. Bubbles toil as they thrash in trouble.

Etrigan plunges his clawed fist into the marshy bog of Solomon Grundy's chest. He expects to find a beating heart, but instead pulls away a fist of the muck that constitutes Grundy's endless form!


The zombie's eyes burn with intensity - something resembling a wry smile across his toothy grin. Undeterred, he returns the favour by ramming his own hulking fist through The Demon's trunk!


The impalement draws a lone, wailing shriek in a chorus of hellfire from the usually rhyming Demon! Perhaps it was agony - or something else?

Aggression turns to uncertainty as Solomon Grundy recognizes something changing at the end of his fist. Still attached to The Demon by the hole he made with his fist - Grundy is at ground zero as hellfire explodes from Etrigan's chest!


Bathed in the inferno, Solomon Grundy is reduced to a weighty charred corpse!

The zombie drifts silently into the dark abyss, his body bubbling as the hellfire engulfing it dissipates. Etrigan watches with demonic glee as his cargo slowly sinks. He swims to meet it, pulling the lifeless head from its burnt body.

The Hammer...
Last time we needed careful deliberation to determine the winner of the fight via decision. This time the result is as plain as the look on Grundy's decapitated face: The Demon, Etrigan wins!

I've been eager to get back to this one, if only for completion's sake. The seven issues of Solomon Grundy pit him against a different foe for each day of the week, and if you paid attention to the cover at the start of this entry - you know Bizarro is the real marquee opponent of the second issue!

As much as I would've liked a decisive Etrigan win in the first issue (for purely selfish reasons), I do appreciate the way this eases the series into what is ultimately a seven issue gauntlet. I imagine in collected or digital formats, the pause goes mostly unnoticed. We aim to deal in original format here.

The more I come back to it, I find myself appreciating a lot about this series. By not rushing to contain The Demon to that first issue, Scott Kolins gets a chance to play his action big and rough at all the right times. It suits the monster comic tone of the story, and really gives him room to create atmospheric panels and some signature art. I'm not sure if it's the best work of his career, but it was a period where he seemed to be coming into his own (again).

Green Lantern shows up just as the fight is ending -- too late to serve in his role as guiding light to the soul of Cyrus Gold. I'm always happy to see the Golden Age heroes in contemporary action, GL especially. The fact that their existence has been so precarious in the last five to six years of DC Comics makes it all the sweeter to go back and read these issues. It isn't deep, but it's fun.

The classic, heroic Grundy nemesis will play a continuous role throughout the 2009 mini-series, which ties indirectly into the conspiracy of events that is and was Blackest Night.

I'm hoping over time we can work our way through each battle leading up to Blackest Night, when the action spills over into bannered issues of Superman/Batman. It was an interesting extension you might miss if you didn't know to look for it. We've got a long way to go before then, though!

I was hoping October might be the month to get a couple of Solomon Grundy feature fights on the books, but it looks like Secret Wars on Infinite Earths will be going to Hell for the next few weeks. Literally!

If you're really hungry for more Grundy, be sure to share this link and leave a comment below. In the mean time, you can get yourself the full story by using the Amazon purchase link provided! Doing so helps keep the secret wars infinite!

You can also find plenty more review and retrospective by following links throughout, or diving into the Secret Issue Index!

Winner: The Demon
#33 (+12) The Demon (Etrigan) [+1 kill]
#361 (-2) Solomon Grundy

Monday, October 03, 2016

HERO OF THE WEEK: LUKE CAGE (Marvel)
Real Name: Luke Cage (formerly Carl Lucas)
First Appearance: Luke Cage, Hero for Hire #1 (June, 1972)
Fight Club Ranking: #9

Featured Fights:
- vs EGGHEAD: Defenders #43 (Jan 1977)
- vs CONSTRICTOR & SABRETOOTH: Power Man & Iron Fist #66 (Dec 1980)
- vs UNUS THE UNTOUCHABLE: Power Man & Iron Fist #90 (Feb 1983)
- vs UNUS THE UNTOUCHABLE: Power Man & Iron Fist #90 (Feb 1983)
- vs THE UNTOUCHABLES: Cage #3 (Jun 1992)
- vs PURPLE MAN: New Avengers #3 (Mar 2005)
- vs OWL: The Pulse #14 (May 2006)
- vs AVENGERS: Civil War #3 (Sep 2006)
- vs THE HAND: New Avengers #27 (Apr 2007)
- vs MIGHTY AVENGERS: New Avengers #36 (Jan 2008)
- vs THE HOOD & DORMAMMU: New Avengers #54 (Aug 2009)
- vs AVENGERS: New Avengers #2 (Sep 2010)
- vs JUGGERNAUT: Thunderbolts #150 (Jan 2011)

As the star of the newest Marvel live-action series (September 30th): Luke Cage could've been Hero of the Week any number of times throughout 2016! He was one of the stand-out characters of July's San Diego Comic Con [see; Hero of the Week 7/25/2016], and continued to excite every time a new trailer revealed the yellow-tinted world of Netflix's bulletproof Defender! Sweet Christmas!


Star Mike Colter seems to bring a kinder, warmer edge to his version of Cage, but trailers show encouraging signs that when the time calls for it, his Power Man can get mad and bad. There are even whispers he'll find his way to a yellow shirt somewhere in the series, and trailers have already dropped an all mighty "Sweet Christmas". Pretty much everything this Luke Cage fan could ask for!

Like all the Marvel Netflix series, there are issues at first glance. An inherent cheapness in the hi-def look of all the shows challenges the notion of a "Golden Age" of TV. Low contrast, flat depth of field, straight-forward composition, with nothing too extraordinary happening in the frame - always something I'm a little saddened to see. The absence of aesthetic signature has been one of the great failings of Marvel's domination of movies and television -- low-budget without the charm of film stock, or film culture. That's certainly where Quentin Tarantino could've excelled with his long rumored, long aborted movie version -- raised again recently by Comic Book Resources.

It's not all doom and gloom, however. Luke Cage appears to be continuing the steps forward made by Jessica Jones, which particularly impressed when wielding a strong purple hue. Cage follows, imbuing the world with a golden glow that matches his signature color from the (classic) comics. Even when the hero chooses from a catalogue of low key hoodies when his gear gets shot up, there's an excitement in seeing yellow lining beneath the dark blue ensemble, and the slamming soundtrack.

Yellow is the color I'm personally most interested in when talking about the series, but there will be an inevitable wave of social commentaries coming out of the show, and I'm becoming aware of it.

I hadn't given much thought to the poignancy of a bulletproof African-American walking troubled streets, but whether we live in America or not, we all read the same headlines, wondering about social tensions with the same human concern.

If you were setting out to create a brand-new American superhero for today's adult contemporary audiences -- this is exactly the territory you'd start with! Over the past few years, America has made social anxiety and race politics one of their major cultural exports. Superheroes have always been good for offering an outlet for exploring social issues such as these. The plight of violent police corruption and bigotry - combatted by a good man who cannot be shot -  presents a bold and appealing mirror image of the reality some parts of the world face.

Yet, in Luke Cage, I don't get the sense these issues will take central focus, and I think it's better for it. In the eighties and nineties, I grew up taking the pairing of Power Man & Iron Fist for granted. Just two friends and heroes trying to make a positive difference in the fictional world. One was super-strong and tough, the other a kung-fu whiz. To paraphrase the educators of Sesame Street, they were just 'heroes in the neighbourhood.' Part of the landscape the heroes all share. Which is the value Luke Cage and all these heroes will have into the future.

Of course, not all superheroes are created equal - and if you've been following Secret Wars on Infinite Earths in the month of September, you know our spotlight on Luke Cage has pushed him into the Top 10 rankings! If you wanna know how that happened, be sure to scroll back to the top of this entry to check out all the featured fights!

Next year Luke Cage's buddy Iron Fist joins the Netflix heroes, before they converge as one in The Defenders! If you can't wait for that, be sure to check out our Luke Cage & The Defenders spotlight for more fun with the Marvel Knights! Stay tuned in October as well as the fights get spooky!

Friday, September 30, 2016

AVENGERS versus LUKE CAGE
(Marvel)
Where:
New Avengers #2 When: September 2010
Why: Brian Michael Bendis How: Stuart Immonen

The Story So Far...
For years the Avengers were torn apart by philosophical differences that erupted in Civil War. A secret invasion by Skrulls exposed holes in the new regime, allowing Norman Osborn to replace SHIELD as the corrupt Director of HAMMER! His tyranny went unnoticed until finally a siege on Asgard exposed the true evil!


With Osborn ousted in disgrace, Captain America is a natural choice to assume responsibility for SHIELD and a holistic approach to the superhero community. Thus, a new heroic age begins for The Avengers!

Having bought The Avengers mansion for $1 at the behest of Tony Stark, all seems well for Luke Cage and his new, fully authorized Avengers team! At least, until Dr. Strange and Daimon Hellstrom crash the housewarming in search of The Eye of Agamotto that's spontaneously appeared in Cage's hands!

Magic is afoot as strange forces manipulate The Avengers in a grand design they have no way of knowing about. Now they'll have to fight each other if they're to keep the universe safe long enough for Sorcerer Supreme Doctor Voodoo to do something about it!

Tale of the Tape...
Strength: Thing 6 (Invincible)
Intelligence: Dr. Strange 5 (Professor)
Speed: Iron Fist 4 (Olympian)
Stamina: Wolverine 6 (Generator)
Agility: Spider-man 5 (Cat-Like)
Fighting: Iron Fist 6 (Warrior)
Energy: Agamotto 7 (Cosmic)


The Avengers are: Thing, Ms. Marvel, Iron Fist, Jessica Jones, Wolverine, Mockingbird, Spider-man & Hawkeye.

Under ordinary circumstances, this incarnation of The Avengers would look to Luke Cage as their fearless leader. Alas, circumstances have it that he's been possessed by an agent of the mystic entity Agamatto!



Agamotto is a founding entity of the paths of magic, spawned from the elder goddess Oshtur. He is perhaps best known for his creation of powerful mystic artefacts: The Eye of Agamatto and The Orb of Agamotto. Both are frequently called upon in the arsenal of Earth's Sorcerer Supreme - Dr. Stephen Strange!

At the time of this episode, Dr. Strange has relinquished his post as Sorcerer Supreme, surrendering the mantle to Brother Voodoo. Voodoo was in command of The Eye of Agamotto, but saw fit to transport it to Luke Cage and The Avengers when he was attacked by two possessed agents of Agamotto: Daimon Hellstrom and Dr. Strange himself!

Along with their possessed teammate, The Avengers will have to contend with Hellstrom & Strange! Cage has grown to approximately thirty-feet tall and is showing signs of his already impressive strength being augmented. We saw Cage get the better of his teammates when they were infected with alien symbiotes [New Avengers #36]. Bad news all around!

Fortunately, the group have just added two high-level powerhouses to their ranks: Thing and Ms. Marvel! Both have the durability to pick up the defensive slack for the rest of the team. They also have the power to fight back!

The rest of the team aren't especially well suited to facing off against the magic of Dr. Strange and Son of Satan, but they have been in situations like this before. The group fought off The Hood (augmented by Dormammu) in New Avengers #54, albeit with the help of Strange and Hellstrom.

It's the numbers of The Avengers against the chaos and uncertainty of Agamotto's magic! That's spells a recipe for uncertainty if there ever was one! Let's dispense with the incantations and find out how it all went down!

The Math: Spider-man Ranking: Spider-man (#2)

What Went Down...
Chaos erupts in Avengers Mansion as the heroes are confronted with the sudden appearance of The Eye of Agamotto and hostile Dr. Strange & Son of Satan! The team scrambles to reorient themselves, unsure of the exact nature or intent of the magical threat that has also transformed their leader into an angry giant!


Wolverine tells The Thing to grab The Eye of Agamotto and make a run for it, choosing the team's newest recruit for his phenomenal strength and rocky hide! He makes a grab for it, but is sent hurtling out of Avengers mansion with a blow from his gigantic magically charged friend!


Jessica Jones unloads care of her and Cage's daughter to the arms of Spider-man, who makes a run for the stairs to get the baby out of danger!

Meanwhile; Iron Fist launches a fly kick in Daimon Hellstrom's direction, Ms. Marvel hovers over a toppled Luke Cage, and Wolverine pounds on Dr. Strange's chest with a fist full of adamantium! All of their efforts are temporary measures in an effort to keep the possessed heroes from the mystic talisman!


Hellstrom clobbers Iron Fist, Luke Cage tugs at Ms. Marvel's hair, and Strange wrestles with Wolverine -- each in a mad dash for The Eye!

Retired heroine Jessica Jones reaches into her untapped super-human reservoir to launch herself at her possessed husband! The super-human uppercut knocks him backward and launches The Eye of Agamotto into the air!


Wolverine catches the magic artefact and hurls it out the window as far as he can! Ensuring the possessed mystics cannot take chase, he rushes them with a calculated thrust of his claws! The unbreakable metal slices into their chests!


Outside the mansion, The Eye lands in the middle of a picnic in a nearby park! The giant-size Cage, Thing and Ms. Marvel take chase - prompting a terrified citizen to throw it into the air!

Ms. Marvel's aerial abilities allow her to snatch the amulet just as Cage and Thing are making a grab for it. The development gives Thing a chance to even the score with a haymaker that sends Cage flying!


Jessica Jones arrives on the scene to leap on her husband once he's landed. She desperately tries to reach the man she loves, but his words don't match his actions - an uppercut that sends the former Jewel flying through the air!

When the possessing entity fails to convince Thing and Iron Fist that it is the voice of their friend Luke Cage, the creature issues an ultimatum: Give him The Eye of Agamotto and he will return Cage. Ms. Marvel counters with an ultimatum of her own: leave Cage or she'll smash The Eye into a million pieces!

The spirit lunges at Ms. Marvel with Cage's gigantic arms outstretched, incidentally launching Thing and Hawkeye into the air. Marvel effortlessly avoids the attack and returns fire with a super-charged hit of her own!


Even though the possessed Cage eats a hard shot, he's still able to wrap a giant hand around Ms. Marvel! She loses her grip on The Eye, but Iron Fist makes the running play with Thing taking chase in the distance!

Sick of the demonic possession - Iron Fist turns and thrusts his mystically charged weapon-hand into Cage's gigantic chest!


Cage goes down hard and Thing jumps on top of him to make sure he stays down with a massive right cross! Jessica Jones and Ms. Marvel hover in support.

The recovered and healed Dr. Strange & Daimon Hellstrom follow Wolverine urgently to the battlefield! They arrive as Doctor Voodoo teleports onto the scene and the possessing demon leaves Luke Cage's body, transferring to the victorious Iron Fist! A revoltin' development as the fight comes to an end!

The Hammer...
Delivering a knock-out blow to a giant possessed Luke Cage probably made Iron Fist an attractive host for Agamotto! He disappears into the other realm of the Vishanti with the hero's body, just as Doctor Voodoo enters the scene -- the story to be continued!

It's an added detail that doesn't impact our result: The Avengers victorious against their possessed comrades!

The victory is shared with Wolverine, Thing, Ms. Marvel and Jessica Jones, who all contributed to the win in a pro-active manner. Mockingbird stopped to film the possession on somebody's phone, which I'm sure has tactical value. Hawkeye was there, but doing his best Where's Wally throughout. I genuinely wonder if Stuart Immonen forgot all about him while drawing the issue. It's almost comical when he appears floating in mid-air in the latter third of the issue. Spidey was on baby duty and generally loafed about, as well.

The line-up reflects a blended group mostly made from the street-level Secret Avengers who formed after Civil War. Ms. Marvel is the biggest trade from the more traditional "Mighty" Avengers. Thing was the most surprising addition, despite a similarly brief stint in the late 80s launch of West Coast Avengers.

We talked about the idea of "JLA-ing" the Avengers in our last entry, concluding that the original 2005 New Avengers line-up didn't really go there.

By the time this second volume was launched in 2010, there was much more credence to the idea of a non-traditional, all-star line-up of disparate pre-established acts. Spider-man, Thing, Wolverine, Iron Fist, Luke Cage and Dr. Strange (who eventually made his stay permanent) are a very JLA arrangement.

Much like the JLA; the successful Avengers began to expand beyond their core team formulas. The "Heroic Age" relaunch maintained a brand-traditional Mighty Avengers, while also installing a third "Secret Avengers" title in the oddball hodgepodge mould of The Defenders.

In the years that followed The Heroic Age, the lines between Avengers groups would blur further. Famous hold-outs like Daredevil would join the team. Even the X-Men, who had a few unique ties through heroes like Beast and Quicksilver, would finally be more aggressively blended through the Uncanny Avengers!

The net result is what opponents of Avengers Disassembled and the original New Avengers were afraid of all along: The demise of identity and a tradition.

Thanks to the success of Marvel's blockbuster film franchises, "Avengers" has become synonymous with the company. Almost interchangeable with Marvel itself. Yet, ironically enough, it's the movies that have to date best represented the traditional flavour of The Avengers: Iron Man, Captain America, Thor, Black Widow, Hawkeye, Vision, Hulk and so on.

In comics: It's now a lot easier to name characters who haven't been part of the monstrous Avengers uber brand. It's a muddying of the waters that's affecting many of Marvel's mainstay brands, extending to the dilution of individual characters who now share their identity with multiple alternate characters [see; Hero of the Week: Dr. Doom].

The traffic hasn't been exclusively one-way, though. Earlier this year, Marvel relaunched Power Man & Iron Fist for a new age, restoring the Heroes For Hire to their iconic buddy team roots away from The Avengers! The result is one of the more exciting, upbeat offerings reinvigorating the classics while also revamping them!

Luke Cage is also part of a reinvention of the Marvel identity on screen! September 30th marks the official launch of a thirteen episode live-action Netflix series! Mike Colter stars as the man with bulletproof skin, who we've been celebrating all throughout September on Secret Wars on Infinite Earths!

This celebration helped Luke Cage break into the Comic Book Fight Club Top 10 [see; Cage #3] at the expense of perennial favourite The Thing! The ever lovin' blue-eyed Thing fell to #11 as a result of Cage reaching #9 -- an unplanned result that made today's pre-scheduled feature fight all the more interesting!

Fans of the rankings will be excited to know Thing's shared victory returns him to the Top 10 just two weeks after he fell out! The defeat isn't enough to disrupt Luke Cage's spot at #9, though. Instead, it's Daredevil who will be shunted down from #10 to #11! Keep scrolling to the bottom of this update to see where all the characters finished in the ranks!

If you'd like to get the full experience of today's feature fight, use the Amazon link provided to purchase the collected edition! Doing so helps keep the wars infinite!

You can find more spotlights on Luke Cage, The Avengers and the individual characters by following character links, or diving into the Secret Issue Index! There you can browse battles by series, issue and publisher!

Stay tuned to Hero of the Week for a final spotlight on Luke Cage! Then be here in October as things start to get a little spooky for Halloween!

Winners: Iron Fist, Wolverine, Thing, Ms. Marvel & Jessica Jones
#4 (+2) Wolverine
#10 (+1) Thing
#30 (+10) Iron Fist
#76 (+53) Ms. Marvel (Carol Danvers)
#92 (+197) Jessica Jones
#2 (--) Spider-man [+1 Assist]
#120 (-2) Hawkeye [+1 Assist]
#407 (+79) Mockingbird [+1 Assist]
#9 (--) Luke Cage
#65 (-2) Dr. Strange
#101 (-12) Son of Satan (Daimon Hellstrom)
#807 (new) Agamotto