Showing posts with label black widow. Show all posts
Showing posts with label black widow. Show all posts

Thursday, October 22, 2015

To Thrill A Mockingbird

West Coast Avengers #1
(limited series)
I've been a fan of Mockingbird since the days of the West Coast Avengers back in the 1980s, as that was one of my favorite series.  I also loved her as half of the Hawkeye/Mockingbird coupling.  
Hawkeye & Mockingbird #6

Cut to: 2010.  I was excited about the Hawkeye & Mockingbird series...only to be disappointed that they didn't reunite romantically and the series was canceled after only six issues.  

While I'm not crazy about the emphasis put on her involvement with S.H.I.E.L.D. in the past few years, I decided to pick up her latest comic, a one-shot, celebrating 50 Years of S.H.I.E.L.D.  As I started reading, I thought, "Who wrote this?" and "Why isn't this a regular series?"  It was unlike a lot of the action-packed and non-character-focused crap that I've read as of late.  Turns out, it's a new writer to comic books -- Chelsea Cain.  Ah, that explains it.  She hasn't been editorialized to death yet.  She's a published novelist and, because it was a one-shot issue, Marvel probably let her write whatever she wanted to.  And what she wrote was an excellent story of mystery, romance, and character development that left me wanting more.  It's a shame I can't slap down $4-$5 on a comic book and get the same quality time and time again. 

Mockingbird #1 (one-shot)
The back-up story introduced the Red Widow who has some connection to the Black Widow.  Meh.  After a lead-in like Cain's Mockingbird story, the Red Widow story by a YA novelist was doomed to fail.  I would have liked another story of Mockingbird. 

With Mockingbird becoming more and more known through ABC's Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. TV series and Marvel wanting to increase the number of female-driven comics, I'd like to think it's only a matter of time before Mockingbird gets her own monthly series.  Let's just hope that Chelsea Cain writes it.

Friday, January 14, 2011

Gone Too Soon

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