Tuesday, June 22, 2010

X-FORCE #71-#72, November-December 1997


Previously in
X-Force…
Warpath was summoned by the mysterious Sledge to retrieve the Vanisher from a strange dimension. In exchange, Sledge gave Warpath info on reporter Michael Whitecloud, the one man who knows the story behind the murder of Warpath’s tribe. Meanwhile, following the events of Operation: Zero Tolerance, the remaining members of X-Force refused to assume false identities and parted ways with Cable.

Destination: Unknown

Credits: John Francis Moore (writer), Adam Pollina (penciler), Team X (inks), Comicraft (letters), Marie Javins & Digital Chameleon (colors)

Summary: X-Force is stranded in Minerva, Ohio after their car breaks down. While waiting for it to be fixed, they sneak into a hotel room for the night. In the parking lot, they rescue young Richie Alegria from armed men. Richie opens a suitcase filled with money and offers X-Force a job. Meanwhile, Domino learns that Zero Tolerance implanted a non-removable device in her brain that slows her reaction times.

Continuity Notes: Warpath has retrieved the Vanisher for Sledge, and been picked up by X-Force, in-between issues. While eating at a diner, Sunspot learns his credit cards have been cut off due to a lawsuit against his father’s estate.

I Love the ‘90s: Meltdown complains that she hasn’t seen Talk Soup in weeks.

Review: After finishing off a few of Jeph Loeb’s storylines, and dealing with a crossover, John Francis Moore begins to make the book his own. Based on interviews and some of the other comics he’s written, I know that Moore has an issue with authority figures and an appreciation for Beat writers like Jack Kerouac. Not surprisingly, once the crossover is done, he has the cast break away from their mentor, go on a road trip, and throws in a few counter-culture references (I assume Louise and Scooter, the two hippies who pick up X-Force in a van, are a nod towards some ‘60s thing I know nothing about). Moore’s already proven he has a handle on the characters, and he now places them in a situation Xavier’s brood rarely deal with -- they’re broke. The question of how they’re supposed to travel across country (or what their destination even is) makes for a fun setup and immediately separates the title from the other X-books.

Lies & Deception

Credits: John Francis Moore (writer), Adam Pollina (penciler), Mark Morales (inks), Comicraft (letters), Marie Javins (colors)

Summary: In Chicago, Sunspot, Meltdown, and Moonstar protect Richie Alegria from the mob. When they learn the mob wants Richie to repay them, and that he lied about the mob targeting his father, they’re tempted to leave. Richie convinces them to stick around for a few days. Meanwhile, Siryn and Warpath travel to Nebraska to meet Michael Whitecloud. Whitecloud reveals to Warpath that a genetics program named Project: Stepladder is responsible for their tribe’s murder. He claims that proof of Stepladder’s involvement is in a bus locker in Kansas. Suddenly, Whitecloud’s head violently explodes. Elsewhere, Domino stops a bank robbery, as a shadowy figure follows X-Force’s trail in Ohio.

Continuity Notes: Michael Whitecloud says that he learned of Project: Stepladder from radiologist Lucius DeWitt. Whitecloud offered to keep him, and a Stepladder test subject named Gordon Thorpe, at his Camp Verde home. While Whitecloud was in town one night, Stepladder destroyed Camp Verde and planted evidence implicating the Hellfire Club.

Miscellaneous Note: The Statement of Ownership has average sales for the year at 155,261 with the most recent issue selling 131,282 copies.

I Love the ‘90s: Two of the Chicago mobsters are arguing over which actor is the best NYPD Blue star. Their boss comments that every goon has to have an opinion “ever since that stupid Tarantino movie.”

Review: Splitting the cast up tends to be John Francis Moore’s take on team comics, and he’s already working on four plotlines at the same time (the mob story, Warpath’s investigation into the Camp Verde massacre, Domino’s continuing subplot, and now there’s a shadowy figure that’s trailing the team). As I’ve mentioned before, I like it when a lot of things are going on at the same time, and a team comic gives you a unique opportunity to explore various plot threads without making the title too schizophrenic. On their own, none of these threads are overwhelmingly interesting, but when they’re added together, the book takes on a real momentum. The new characters, Michael Whitecloud and Richie Alegria, might just be there to help set stories into place, but Moore also manages to give them enough personality to feel real. Whitecloud is a drunken mess after years on the run from Stepladder, but rather than skipping over the obvious, Moore has the character muse “I don’t know which stereotype I became, the alcoholic reporter or the drunk Indian.” Richie Alegria was initially the mob victim, but this issue we learn he’s a lying con artist, who’s good enough to keep X-Force around even when they know he’s probably running a scam. Moore also gets credit for not only resolving the long-forgotten mystery of the Camp Verde massacre, but for using it as the catalyst for new material.

5 comments:

  1. This is the good stuff. I loved this run.

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  2. I remember this arc fondly, although it has probably dated fairly dramatically (especially the Burning Man equivalent they visit where characters order "smart drinks". Man... ). I always thought Scooter and Louise were supposed to be Shaggy and Velma from Scooby Doo. The van even had the same design.

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  3. While some elements are dated, it's still a great run that is fun to read. And I was really glad to have Dani join the title.

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  4. I was just adding this issue to my CCL database, when I noticed my copy is lacking color in the characters and faces. and the money looks a different color as well. The scan posted above looks like mine, while the scan on CCL and the Marvel wiki both show additional color. ( http://marvel.wikia.com/File:X-Force_Vol_1_72.jpg )

    Is this just a case of image-processing making the scan overly vivid? Or do we have a previously unnoticed color variant.

    My copy has green money and a red tie, but grey-scale figures and faces. If anyone has an issue showing the additional red coloration, let us know...

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  5. Finally, an X-book that seems to happen in the real world.

    I only have two complains, both about Syirn:
    A. Most writers and artists, and Moore is one of them, just ignore the fact the Syrin has to scream in order to fly. It doesn't show in the art and it doesn't affect on the story, even though the heroes don't want to make ruckus. I guess you can handle this issue by saying she's making special sonic sounds that human ear cannot hear but it's never explained that way. Only occasionly someone complains about the noise when the heroes are together. They aren't even suppose to hear one another when Syrin is flying above them.
    B. Syrin is bitchy to the drunken guy about not trying to get sober, which is the opposite reaction you would'v expect from someone who himself had a drinking problem in the past (thus is suppose to has more compasion to the problem).
    I think the main personality attribute of Syrin in Moore's run so far is "bitchiness".

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