Rate this book

Mighty Avengers Volume 1: No Single Hero (2014)

by Al Ewing(Favorite Author)
3.46 of 5 Votes: 3
ISBN
1846535689 (ISBN13: 9781846535680)
languge
English
publisher
Panini UK LTD / Marvel
review 1: Marvel Exec #1: We’re going to reintroduce the Heroes for Hire with Luke Cage and everyone in their own series. Head Honcho: I don’t hear the word AVENGERS or X-MEN in the title. Marvel Exec #1: … that’s because they’re the Heroes for Hire. Head Honcho: Are you fucking retarded?! Nobody knows who the fuck that is! It’s gotta have AVENGERS or X-MEN in the title! This is a goddamn 21st century Marvel comic, Thor-fucking-dammit! Marvel Exec #1: Sir, maybe… maybe not every comic needs to be branded as either Avengers or X-Men? Head Honcho: So, who’s in this thing?Marvel Exec #2 (after Marvel Exec #1 is carried away, his groin thoroughly kicked by Head Honcho): Luke Cage, Power Man…Head Honcho: They’re not the same thing?Marvel Exec #2: Not any more, sir, an... mored Superior Spider-Man, and… Head Honcho: THAT’S GREAT! Let’s call this Superior Spider-Man and the whatevers! People LOVE Superior Spider-Man and I LOVE money! Marvel Exec #2 (shielding groin): We’ll call it Mighty Avengers or something, sir, that seems more representative of the series. Head Honcho: Whatever. I’m gonna go look at the sales figures for the New 52 and laugh til I pee on a statue of Superman! *So this is the new Heroes for Hire comic titled Mighty Avengers, a superhero team designed for street-level action even though they do the exact opposite during this entire first volume! Let’s get Greg Land, the “artist” for this series, out of the way first. Print out a photo of a human. Take some tracing paper and place it over the photo. Then, using an unsharpened pencil, turn off the lights and get to work copying that photo! Turn the lights back on. Congratulations, you’ve surpassed Land’s abilities with that worthless scrawl in front of you! You know those comics scripts you sometimes see in the backs of collected editions? I’d have actually preferred reading this book in that format. Get some eyewash when you’re done with this comic, you don’t want any Land getting in there - it’s nasty stuff! Writing-wise, this isn’t a bad comic but doesn’t seem to be the likeliest of foundations for a lasting series. I mean, it’s immediately tied into the Infinity event comic when the Avengers all left Earth and Thanos and his fleet invaded. Luke Cage, Superior Spider-Man, Power Man, Jessica Jones, White Tiger, Spectrum, Falcon, Blue Marvel, a mystery man wearing a Spider-Man knockoff suit, and, in a cool cameo, She-Hulk, are all left behind, and decide to form a rudimentary Avengers team. They battle Thanos’ emo lieutenants, a Lovecraftian monster, some rogue Inhumans, and Superior Spider-Man himself because Otto’s a dick and he can’t help himself! But, with Infinity over and done with, do they need to remain a team? Weren’t they brought together because of the dire situation Earth was in - with the Avengers back on Earth, aren’t they basically redundant? Al Ewing’s script is fine but not amazing. He’s got Cage’s voice down and Otto’s, and the book moves along nicely, even if there’s nothing very original happening on the page. That said, there is a super-corny moment when ordinary New Yorkers stand up to Thanos’ troops, lobbing bricks at them and yelling AVENGERS ASSEMBLE! Maybe I’ve become too cynical but I would’ve loved for the granny that started all of that to get her head punched off by one of Thanos’ men. But no, like Hulk Hogan, the chant gives a felled Luke Cage the power to stand up and fight. You can practically hear Real American playing in that scene. (When it comes crashing down and it hurts inside, Ya gotta take a stand it don’t help to hide! Seriously, I bet those lyrics were central to Al Ewing’s pitch for the series. ) I wasn’t too bored with Mighty Avengers nor was I terribly impressed either. It’s a middle of the road Marvel comic with some middle of the road characters (despite being in this first volume a lot, Spidey’s gone by the end). I suppose though for an Avengers comic these days, it’s pretty decent.
review 2: This was interesting. Not all that great, but there's potential here. I like the idea of a group of second-tier heroes pulling together to defend the Earth while the "big guys" are all busy in outer space (but what's going to happen when the "real" Avengers come home?). I sort of wish the story was more standalone and not so tied to the Infinity crossover. There's a sense of a "blue collar" work ethic among these guys and girls, and a lot of racial diversity (the one exception is the rather dickish Superior Spider-Man, though it looks like he won't be staying around for long). Also interesting to meet the Blue Marvel, an older scientist/superhero I hadn't heard of before, who is off fighting some grade-Z baddies in Germany (W.E.S.P.E.?) in one sequence. I'll definitely want to read the next volume, but hope it's just a bit of a step up from this starting point. less
Reviews (see all)
izzy
Like Matt I agree there is some great unrealized potential here. Start the soundtrack.
motherleopard85
Individual issues on marvel unlimited
palo1997
The Avengers team we deserve.
merde
Good story, appalling art.
lydiascott
3.5
Write review
Review will shown on site after approval.
(Review will shown on site after approval)