Credits: John Francis Moore (writer), Jeff Matsuda (penciler), Al Milgrom (inker), Starkings & Comicraft (lettering), Glynis Oliver (colorist)
Summary
A Lear jet crash lands in Tokyo. The door blasts open and Havok emerges. Seven hours later, Forge and Polaris are joined by Mystique and Wild Child in Japan. They’re attacked by Dragon’s Claw, a group of cyborg ninjas who work for the crimelord Tatsu’o. After subduing them, one of the ninjas reveals that they were hired to detain X-Factor as a favor for one of Tatsu’o’s associates. Meanwhile, Fatale lands in Tokyo as a disoriented Havok runs into Scarlett McKenzie at a train station. He remembers that she brought him here from Canada. She explains that she was trying to take him to Genosha, but he awoke early and knocked out the controls. Still confused, Havok runs away. Fatale meets with Tatsu’o and thanks him for distracting X-Factor until she arrived. As X-Factor continues to search for Havok, he stumbles into a nightclub where Yukio is hanging out. X-Factor tracks Havok down and tries to give him a containment suit to inhibit his powers, but he refuses. When Wild Child tries to subdue him, Havok blasts him. Fatale suddenly appears from behind and stabs Havok in the back. Meanwhile in America, Random receives a mysterious phone call. He drops the phone and grabs his housemate Vera, absorbing her into his body as he turns into a pile of goo.
Continuity Notes
Fatale makes her first real appearance, although she was later retconned into being the mysterious waitress from Uncanny X-Men #299. A narrative caption implies that she’s wanted in Genosha.
Scarlett McKenzie first appeared in the Havok & Wolverine miniseries, where she was also killed off. That series was a fully painted, older readers title published by the Epic line in 1988 that was essentially ignored by the other titles. There’s no explanation for her resurrection here, or for why she wanted to take Havok to Genosha. She’s also given the cryptic line “the man’s not going to like it when I tell him the competition’s arrived” when Fatale appears.
The new X-Factor team makes a strange debut. Wild Child’s presence is later explained when Polaris says that he was in Department H when Havok was kidnapped (Havok was taken there after he accidentally destroyed the Wyoming Dam in X-Men Prime). What’s not made clear is the fact that Wild Child was an Alpha Flight member, and Department H is their base (at least, I think that’s right). Forge tells Mystique that she has to join X-Factor or go to prison. Wolfsbane’s absence isn’t explained.
Miscellaneous Note
The Statement of Ownership lists average sales for the year at 299,700 with the most recent issue selling 220,000 copies.
Review
Yeah, this is as much of a mess as I remembered. The AoA storyline did a lot to revive interest in some of the spinoff books that were treading water, but the effect it had on X-Factor after the event concluded was disastrous. Not only is the cliffhanger with Guido ignored, but Wolfsbane has also disappeared in-between issues with no explanation. Mystique has been added to the team, a major development that’s briefly covered in a two-sentence explanation. Wild Child, a character in the running for the title of “Most Obscure Mutant in the Marvel Universe”, is now hanging out with the team with another weak explanation. Bringing Wild Child into the Age of Apocalypse wasn’t a bad idea, since that world is supposed to be different from ours and his established backstory had no bearing on the actual storyline. He might as well have been a new character (I thought he was until the letters page revealed otherwise). Now he’s being clumsily inserted into X-Factor, even though he doesn’t appear to have any role in the actual story. He’s there solely because the AoA event raised his profile, and Marvel apparently wanted to create some connections with the AoA and the mainstream reality. Scarlett McKenzie, another obscure character brought back for the AoA, is also revived for the same purpose. It’s awkward, arbitrary, and just poorly handled in general. There’s not even one issue dedicated to setting up these changes, just a few rushed pages in X-Men Prime that showed Mystique getting captured and Havok’s powers erupting.
I guess opening this issue in media res is supposed to evoke the mysterious “what’s going on here?” feeling the AoA titles had, but instead is just seems like sloppy writing. The AoA titles were introducing us to a new world, while this issue is only supposed to pick up on what happened to X-Factor two or three weeks after their last issue. All of this confusion comes across as a way to just gratuitously screw with the audience. Having the team coincidentally run into some of the more obscure X-characters living in Japan, like Yukio (who serves no plot purpose in this particular issue) and Dragon’s Claw (lame villains from the end of the original X-Factor’s run) also feels shoddy.
Jeff Matsuda shows up as the fill-in artist, a year or so before he becomes the regular penciler. This is early in his career, when he was still trying to combine manga with a Rob Liefeld look. It’s not pretty. There are tons of thin, scratchy lines everywhere, awkward poses, exaggerated expressions, and strange-looking faces throughout the issue. Starting towards the end of the issue, the art looks particularly rushed and chaotic, which doesn’t help the muddled story. Even though Steve Epting soon returns as artist, I’m really not looking forward to the rest of this run.
The disaster begins. And it's a shame because I do think Moore is a better writer than incoming Howard Mackie. But this is bad. I've read stories that have chaotic changes with little transition where it can work, but this one is awful. And it is because the changes are so arbitrary - especially Wildchild. And it's a crime that Wolfsbane and Guido are basically ignored. And as to Matsuda - it gets even worse. I have to wonder how this title managed to last almost 40 more issues.
ReplyDeleteIt's a little frustrating to think that, in another world, Peter David's run might have been continuing with this issue.
ReplyDeleteAs for the X-Factor of our reality, I guess it's a sign of Howard Mackie's "talents" that he could take a poorly written, directionless title and make it considerably worse.
Mackie/Matsuda might be the single worst creative team in X-book history. Check that, Mackie/Matsuda might be the single worst creative team on ANY mainstream book.
ReplyDeleteSeriously, wrack your brains on this one. Chuck Austen might match Mackie when it comes to utterly incomprehensible writing, but was he ever matched up with an artist as awful as Matsuda? Vado/Campos on Extreme Justice maybe?
Oy, I remember being very angry that the Guido cliffhanger got zero resolution.
ReplyDeleteAlso, I consider myself fairly well-versed in meaningless X-Men trivia, but until I read this entry, I had no idea that the Scarlett that knocked boots w/Havok in the AoA was an alteration of an existing character.
When she was introduced in this issue, I figured she was being created in the "regular" universe after debuting in the AoA(similar to what happens w/Bedlam in X-Force later). I had no idea she was a pre-existing (albeit minor) character until now.
Also, fully agreed, this run is painful to behold.
The X-franchise as a whole fell off the rails post AOA, but this title fell off the worst. The pre-AOA issues weren't that bad, in hindsight, though not as good as the PAD glory days. Sadly, the worst (the Mackie issues) is yet to come...:S
ReplyDeleteRe: Chuck Austen - let's not go overboard. Mackie is terrible, but Austen will always be the worst.I haven't read these X-Factor issues in awhile, and I tend to remember them being bad, but not having the ridiculous plot contrivances (exploding communion wafers, for one) that Austen used every month. And the characters acted halfway human, and didn't just transform into whatever Austen wanted them to be (slutty, in love with a teenage girl, homophobic, psychotic) within the span of two pages.
ReplyDeleteMan this issue made me so mad and it's around another 6-12 issues I dropped it, I've since picked up the end but have never read it.
ReplyDeleteGuido's story was huge thing to me and having him look like he was dead and then no mention of it sucked.
The last time we saw Mystique she was going crazy at Forge's place and now she's on the team. WTF.
We saw Mystique a few times in-between, Scott. First in Unlimited # 4 (horrible issue!) and the X-factor issues that began the Legion Quest. They 'retconned' her into not being insane, just pretending to be so she could access Forge's files.
ReplyDeleteChuck Austen paired with an horrible artist ? That would be Philip Tan, who drew a good chunk of "The Draco". He may be getting better these days on a Final Crisis spinoff, but his art back then was terrible.
ReplyDelete