Lately, Marvel Comics seems to be canceling its new ongoing series without any notice. Kinda like showing up at work one day and being given a pink slip (does anybody really have these "pink slips" anymore?). Case in point: Young Allies. Canceled abruptly after six issues. Hawkeye & Mockingbird. Canceled abruptly after six issues. And now Black Widow. Canceled abruptly after eight issues. You can breathe normally, though, X-Men fans. Your sixteen different series about the same X-Men team members in sixteen different simultaneously occurring situations still survive...and I'm sure there are more to come.
There is the new four-issue limited series called Widowmaker that stars Hawkeye, Mockingbird, and Black Widow, but so far (having only read issue #1) it's as lame as the Hawkeye & Mockingbird series was. I guess Marvel was trying to combine readers from the two series to see if they had a market and could increase their sales numbers?
The Black Widow series was started back in the spring, around the same time that Iron Man 2 was released in the theaters. I guess Marvel wanted to capitalize on her appearance in the film and was hoping that would translate to book sales. Apparently, it did not. And that's a shame. Black Widow was one of the best character-driven series to come along in quite some time. The stories weren't really superhero-ish; they were more James Bond-ish or Alias-ish. The issues focused on the stories and characters, not any special powers. The first five issues featured a storyline about someone trying to frame Black Widow for their crimes. It also dug up parts of Black Widow's secret past (SPOILER: dead baby) that she'd rather keep hidden. The last three issues' storyline felt like an international/political thriller. All eight issues were great. The finale tries to segue the reader into the new Widowmaker limited series.
Naturally, I bought Widowmaker because I love all three main characters. I loved Hawkeye and Mockingbird back in their West Coast Avengers days (unfortunately, their new canceled ongoing series didn't capture the magic they used to have) and I've always been a fan of Black Widow, despite her seemingly lack of good stories. So it only seemed like a given that I'd like a series with all three. Wrong. Widowmaker has all the flair that Hawkeye & Mockingbird did, that is to say: not much. Black Widow does better on her own without the superhero influence.
RIP, Black Widow. I hardly knew ye. At least there's still Scarlet.
1 comment:
I hate being an X-Men fan. It's exhausting, disappointing, and financially draining.
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