Wolverine (MAX) #1
writer- Jason Starr
artists- Roland Boschi/Connor Willumsen
Wolverine, Logan, James Howlett-
whatever you want to call him, he's the best there is at what he
does. This October, what he's doing is breaking into his own MAX
title. MAX is Marvel's “Explicit Content” imprint and it was
made for edgy violent characters like Wolverine. Let's face it, his
super power is to heal any wound, but why have that mutant ability
unless you're going to compliment it with a fist full of claws and a
boot full of butt kicking action? He's been slicing and dicing his
way through comics since Incredible Hulk #181 back in 1974, and finally
he's allowed to do it right in his own book.
At least that's what I'd hoped. In this issue, writer, Jason Starr throws the “F” word into some painfully
forced monologuing as well as a panel with a tiny image of Wolverine having sex,
and totally misses the point of writing this character into a MAX
book. With the comics code a thing of the past, mainstream comics
are edgier, darker, and go places they wouldn't have dared twenty
years ago, so he wastes the character's potential by writing just
another mainstream story. Starr also falls back on that old
Wolverine default of amnesia. When the X-Man's plane crashes near
Tokyo and he's the only surviving passenger, he emerges from the
ocean clueless as to who he is. Notice the sarcasm when I say,
“We've never seen that before.” Diehard Wolvie fans are going to
burst when they see what Starr is doing to their mutant. In the
scene where Wolverine fights a shark and swims to shore, we see that
he's had his legs severed in the crash. He grows them back by the
time the ambulance rushes him to the hospital. Why is this a big
deal? Everyone knows that along with claws and a super mutant
healing factor, Wolverine has an adamantium laced skeleton, and
everyone knows that adamantium is unbreakable. Everyone except Jason
Starr. There's also the standard flashback sequence we've seen a
million times. Even though he has amnesia, Wolverine contemplates
his brutal past and the wake of death and destruction he's left
behind. I hope I'm not making the story out to be more interesting
than it actually is. After all, he's supposed to have amnesia.
Unfortunately, the art in this book
isn't any better. Roland Boschi's main story artwork feels
inconsistent. It takes me back to Wolverine art from the early 90's
but after a page or two, Wolverine almost looks like a totally
different person. Connor Willumsen's flashback art tanks even more
than that. His style does no justice to this character or any other
and is actually the most offensive thing about Wolverine MAX #1.
I really don't like talking down a book
this much, especially when it's a character I love in a book I've
been anticipating, but I honestly can't find anything I like when
there's so many things that turn my stomach. I'll keep my hopes up
for the next writer/artist team to come on to this title, until then,
I urge Mr. Starr and company to read some comics. Maybe they'll
learn something.
*all artwork represented in this review is by Roland Boschi and Connor Willumsen for Marvel Comics
*all artwork represented in this review is by Roland Boschi and Connor Willumsen for Marvel Comics
Don't they have fact checkers or continuity experts or something like that? Everyone knows Wolverine has unbreakable bones.
ReplyDeleteIt looks like it's all up to the writer at Marvel MAX. I still have a hard time believing nobody told him. It killed the series for me, right out of the gate. And the sad part is that he's a good writer, or at least has been.
ReplyDelete