Fotografía de autor

Jorge Lucas

Autor de Annihilation Book 2

20+ Obras 281 Miembros 14 Reseñas

Obras de Jorge Lucas

Annihilation Book 2 (2007) — Ilustrador — 134 copias
House of M: The Incredible Hulk (2006) — Ilustrador — 71 copias
Counter X: X-Force: Rage War (2012) — Ilustrador — 11 copias
The Darkness #74 - Crooked, Part 3: Black Teeth (2009) — Ilustrador — 2 copias
The Incredible Hulk [1999] #86 — Ilustrador — 2 copias
The Incredible Hulk [1999] #85 — Ilustrador — 2 copias
The Incredible Hulk [1999] #84 — Ilustrador — 2 copias
The Incredible Hulk [1999] #83 — Ilustrador — 2 copias
The Darkness #79 - Regicide Prologue: Pros & Cons (2009) — Ilustrador — 2 copias
The Darkness #73 - Crooked, Part 2: The Road to Hell (2008) — Ilustrador — 2 copias
The Darkness #71 - La Bruja En Las Paredes (2008) — Ilustrador — 2 copias
The Darkness #72 - Crooked, Part 1 (2008) — Ilustrador — 2 copias

Obras relacionadas

Batman, Incorporated Volume 2: Gotham's Most Wanted (2013) — Ilustrador — 139 copias
Talon (New 52) Vol. 2: The Fall of the Owls (2014) — Ilustrador — 23 copias
Broken Trinity TPB (2010) 20 copias
DC Comics: The New 52 Villains Omnibus (2013) — Ilustrador — 7 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Género
male

Miembros

Reseñas

Access a version of the below that includes illustrations on my blog.

After his run on Black Panther came to an end, Christopher Priest began a short-lived ongoing called The Crew, a team book that included one-time Black Panther Kasper Cole (now the White Tiger) among its members. I wasn't super into Kasper part of Priest's Black Panther run, but The Crew was included in the Christopher Priest Black Panther: The Complete Collection volumes, which you can read for free on Hoopla, so I figured why not read it? (I'd already read the issues from the main title collected here, #50-56 & 59-62, so I did not reread them.)

It was kind of worth reading, kind of not. Certainly it wasn't worth it for Kasper, who continues to spin his wheels as a character, arguing with his girlfriend and expectant mother of his child, chasing promotion so he can afford to support his mother and girlfriend. The ongoing thing about his dad wasn't picked up at all, and by the end of these seven issues, Cole isn't really anywhere we haven't already seen him.

The other three members of the "Crew" (never called that in the story) are James "Rhodey" Rhodes, the one-time Iron Man and War Machine; Junta, a superpowered information broker whose mom is a robot who I think appeared in one issue of Black Panther vol. 3; and Josiah X, the son of a black man who was experimented on during World War II in an attempt to create super-soldier serum. The first few issues look at each man in turn; the "team" really only kind of comes together with issue #7, when of course the title was cancelled. Junta probably could have become fun with time, but the real standouts here are Rhodes and Josiah.Rhodes I don't think I have ever actually read a comic about before, but I liked what Priest did with him here; a man who use to be on top but has found himself at the bottom trying to climb his way back up using his sense of justice as a guide. I don't know how the character is in actual Iron Man comics, but I would read more stories about him if they were like this.

Josiah X (called "Justice" in behind-the-scenes information but not in the actual book) is a really interesting character, a black Muslim community organizer who dons Captain America iconography. Can such a man reconcile the contradictions that led to his own existence? How can he wear the emblem of the country that treated him and his father so disposably? Priest and artist Joe Bennett do their best work with Josiah, and unfortunately only scratch the surface of the character. I gather he hasn't really appeared since, but I am curious to pick up the Captain America: The Truth miniseries where his father originally appeared.

As I've alluded to, it's a bit of a slow burn, which was probably a mistake for a book that bundled together a bunch of has-been and also-ran characters; I cannot imagine it sold well at all. I enjoyed it well enough, but by the end of seven issues, I wasn't convinced we needed seven issues to see the Crew take down some pretty ordinary gangsters. A decent read, but not really for Black Panther–related reasons. I gather the Crew returns during Ta-Nehisi Coates's run, but not with this line-up.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
Stevil2001 | 2 reseñas más. | Feb 28, 2024 |
1 vota
Denunciada
nrfaris | 2 reseñas más. | Dec 23, 2021 |
This was another very good comic - but not without its issues. In particular, there was some odd plagiarism in Silver Surfer #2 which somehow slipped past Marvel Editorial. In particular, several backgrounds from Annihilius' throne room were lifted directly from Emperor Palpatine's Observation Room on the Death Star II in Return of the Jedi. I don't know how that got by, but it did, and I can't not see it.

Otherwise, this is some great writing, and a great cosmic superhero comic. I'm in for Book Three.… (más)
 
Denunciada
Count_Zero | 6 reseñas más. | Jul 7, 2020 |
The whole idea behind the positive and negative universes eating each other was fun. I don't read this for the science, after all. All these big players on a big scale story is so delicious.
 
Denunciada
bradleyhorner | 6 reseñas más. | Jun 1, 2020 |

Listas

También Puede Gustarte

Autores relacionados

Gregory Titus Illustrator
Renato Arlem Illustrator
Joe Bennett Illustrator
Jim Calafiore Illustrator
Dan Fraga Illustrator
Patrick Zircher Illustrator
Frank D'Armata Cover artist
Andy Brase Cover artist
Adam Kubert Illustrator
Lary Stucker Illustrator
Danny Miki Illustrator
Norm Rapmund Illustrator
Mark McKenna Illustrator
Rich Perrotta Illustrator
Whilce Portacio Cover artist

Estadísticas

Obras
20
También por
4
Miembros
281
Popularidad
#82,782
Valoración
½ 3.4
Reseñas
14
ISBNs
15
Idiomas
3

Tablas y Gráficos