The little hints dropped recently by X-scribe Gillen that Scott and Emma, one of the longest standing X-couples of late, are headed for rocky times keep getting more and more obvious. Namor may be a pompous ass, but he makes a point that Emma might be right to consider. The X-Men saga is well known for its romantic/soap opera side, but the social consciousness of the overall X-Men mythos is what is most poignant about this group of characters, and is on full display during Scott and Mayor Sadie’s conversation. Sadie is not a bigot, but she is a representative of the people of San Francisco who, while highly progressive, still have their elements of fearful (or fear mongering) residents. To some, Sadie’s question has weight, to Scott it is pure and simple bigotry. Either way, the fear that the mutants residing just off the coast will eventually herald the destruction of the city is made manifest when the Asgardian hammer of fear wielding Juggernaut comes calling in order to wipe out “this degenerate city.” So, perhaps Scott’s leap to judgment that the people asking the questions are ALL bigots might be a bit of a knee jerk reaction. Some type of X-Men related destruction is headed their way. Maybe some of the concerned citizens have a point as well… Mayor Sadie’s questioning concern over Scott’s possible involvement in the making of any “deal” though, coming from her, IS out of place. She should know that Scott and company wouldn’t do such a thing…Gillen manages to craft an ideological debate that, while obviously (and rightly so) weighted on the progressive side of spectrum, isn’t necessarily clear cut or black and white. This is why X-Men stories are so great in the hands of a great writer. They provide their readers with so much to think about, and some of you thought that Uncanny X-Men was all romance and superhero fisticuffs…well, maybe just a few of you…
The artistic team of Land, Leisten, and Ponsor continue to deliver solid, photo realistic inspired artwork. There isn’t much, if anything wrong with it in any serious way, but it reminds me a little too much of Daniel Acuna’s artwork, just with heavier inks. Their rendering of the fear hammer powered Juggernaut is impressive, as is Land’s excellent character body language and posturing. It’s all solid work, it just seems to not to really stand out much from the other books on the stands with the same art style. It is leaps and bounds better than a Rob Liefeld penciled Hawk and Dove though. (Okay, I had to get in one more cheap shot at the DCnU thing…I just couldn’t resist.) Overall, while the whole Fear Itself crossover has its moments, once we get past these few required crossover issues and get into SCHISM, Uncanny X-Men is going to really be a must read, based on all we’ve seen about SCHISM thus far at least… © Copyright 2002-2026 by Toon Doctor Inc. - All rights Reserved. All other texts, images, characters and trademarks are copyright their respective owners. Use of material in this document (including reproduction, modification, distribution, electronic transmission or republication) without prior written permission is strictly prohibited. |