Pulse en una miniatura para ir a Google Books.
Cargando... Avengers Disassembled: Chaos (edición 2005)por Brian Michael Bendis (Autor), David Finch (Ilustrador), Frank D'Armata (Colourist), Danny Miki (Inker), Olivier Coipel (Ilustrador) — 38 más, Jack Kirby (Ilustrador), Stan Lee (Autor), George Pérez (Ilustrador), John Byrne (Ilustrador), Scott Kolins (Ilustrador), Kieron Dwyer (Ilustrador), Alan Davis (Ilustrador), Michael Golden (Ilustrador), Brent Anderson (Ilustrador), J. G. Jones (Ilustrador), Alex Maleev (Ilustrador), Steve Epting (Ilustrador), Lee Weeks (Ilustrador), Brian Reber (Colourist), Michael Gaydos (Ilustrador), Eric Powell (Ilustrador), Darick Robertson (Ilustrador), Morry Hollowell (Colourist), Mike Mayhew (Ilustrador), Avalon's Andy Troy (Colourist), Gary Franck (Ilustrador), David Mack (Ilustrador), Michael Avon Oeming (Ilustrador), Pete Pantazis (Colourist), Jim Cheung (Introducción), Justin Ponsor (Colourist), Mark Morales (Inker), Steve McNiven (Ilustrador), Mike Perkins (Inker), Neal Adams (Artista de Cubierta), Brian Michael Bendis (Epílogo), Nicole Wiley (Editor), Molly Lazer (Editor), Andy Schmidt (Editor), Tom Brevoort (Editor), Fred Hembeck (Autor), Fred Hembeck (Ilustrador), Chris Sotomayor (Colourist)
Información de la obraThe Avengers Disassembled por Brian Michael Bendis
Ninguno Cargando...
Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará. Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro. It's not just about chaos for the sake of chaos - Bendis crafts a compelling storyline that puts our beloved heroes in their most vulnerable state yet. It's like he took a sledgehammer to the Avengers and then watched as they struggled to pick up the pieces. The action is intense, the plot is intricate, and the emotional beats hit like a repulsor blast. ( ) A strong premise, but a shallow and underwhelming execution. Bendis' trademark dialogue skills help a lot, but while the series of (intentionally) confusing crises do a decent job of building stakes, the payoff is lacklustre. We get a talk-heavy exposition scene with complicated continuity ironed out by Doctor Strange deus ex machina style and then a by-the-numbers and over before you know it showdown follows. (In fairness, there might be more nuance in the various tie-ins, but they're not included in this collection, nor are they stated to be necessary for the story in the interview with the writer in the back.) I still ended up liking the story more than not, though, as the emotional goodbyes in the final issue landed well for me, despite the hurried nature of the story preceding and causing it. Perhaps this book was moving and deep and resonant and a powerful end to a long story, all the things it strives to be, if you had spent a few decades reading all the avengers comics that led up to it. As a part of a survey catching up on a bunch of the big marvel books of the past decades, it fell extremely flat and represented basically everything I dislike about a lot of the medium. My eyes were firmly rolled into the back of my head from the moment the skeleton arm of one of the few consistently likable marvel characters stuck out of the ground announcing his death indicated the tone of things to come. We then get a few issues worth of meandering grim darkness with some slowly doled out main character deaths from seemingly random events, before a conclusion of a pile of macguffins with a villain out of nowhere and a hero out of nowhere to give supposed context and resolution (which I know only sets the table for things to come, but it'll take a while for me to have any desire to pick up those plot threads.) And then the Avengers kinda just break up because they're sad. This book was not a tearjerker but it made me sad for all the wrong reasons. I desperately need a palate cleanser, thank goodness so many comics are actually fun nowadays. Part of my "Oh shit Captain America: Civil War is next week and I need to read the original" reading list. I haven't read any previous Avengers, but easily can see how this rocks the Marvelverse. (I have read quite a bit of the Uncanny X-Men, though, so I'm familiar with the Maximoffs and am looking forward to House of M) This started off really crazy, then settled down, then got weird, ended quickly and then to an entire issue with the Avengers saying goodbye. I guess if I would have read it when it came out I might have been more sentimental about the "end of the Avengers", but really no one ever thought the Avengers would be over. They just broke into a bunch of lines Secret Avengers, New Avengers, All-New All-Different, Uncanny etc... So yes this is an important part of Avengers history, but it really wasn't incredible. sin reseñas | añadir una reseña
Pertenece a las seriesThe Avengers (collects 500-503) Avengers, 1963 series (500-503, Avengers Finale) Pertenece a las series editorialesContenido en
It begins with the return of a team member thought dead and by the time it's over, everything you know about the Avengers will have changed! It's the worst day in team history, as Earth's Mightiest Heroes try to deal with the shocking tragedy around them. Who is behind this, and why? Will it tear the team apart? Who will fall at the hands of the Avengers' greatest enemy? Guest-starring every Avenger...ever!. No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
Debates activosNingunoCubiertas populares
Google Books — Cargando... GénerosSistema Decimal Melvil (DDC)741.5973The arts Graphic arts and decorative arts Drawing & drawings Cartoons, Caricatures, Comics Collections North American United States (General)Clasificación de la Biblioteca del CongresoValoraciónPromedio:
¿Eres tú?Conviértete en un Autor de LibraryThing. |