Captain America Vol. 5 # 34 - The Death Of Captain America, Act 2, The Burden of Dreams: Part Four
is a comic book published by Marvel Publishing & released on 3 / / 2008Plot Summary
Overview
Is this the NEW Captain America?!
"Captain America" is back. First mission: take on A.I.M and R.A.I.D.
The world is in financial chaos as reports of the Kronas Corporation's CEO, Aleksander Lukin's death goes out. Oil prices have skyrocketed. Mortgage prices have gone up and people are starting to protest in the streets.
On a rooftop, the Black Widow asks Bucky if he's ready. When Bucky mentions that he told Stark he wouldn't answer to him, she says she's just there to give him a ride and help if he needs it. She tells him that there's no official record of him. The deal Stark made was a personal one as he can't be seen publicly supporting an unregistered hero. He asks how can she be with him since she's an Avenger. She tells him that the Black Widow lives among shades of grey. She tells him it's time to suit up and she's surprised he helped redesign the suit with Tony. Bucky says he just couldn't wear Steve's uniform. He is not him nor will he pretend to be. He just wants to honor his memory. Also, there's no way he'd let anyone else do it. She comments how she's seen him practicing with the shield yet he's still carrying a gun. Bucky tells her that he's one of the few that could actually handle the shield because of his arm. He still has a gun because he's always carried weapons. Now that he's got a "red, white and blue target" on him, he'll need them more than ever.
They see a crowd of protesters gathering. Bucky mentions that the Red Skull wants to weaken the country's economy. Their reports say that A.I.M. and R.A.I.D. were going after Wall Street's gold reserves. It's up to them to stop them.
A.I.M. and R.A.I.D. are getting ready to make their move when one is hit in the head by the shield. Captain America lives again.
Bucky thinks to himself how he hasn't handled this kind of action since the war. He's used to doing things with a stealthy approach. Charging in blindly was the way Steve did things. He has no problem adapting his methods. He knows that they have no idea who he is and seeing the shield is putting some fear into them. He thinks that he can almost feel Steve there with him.
There's four guys left. One aiming a gun at the Widow from behind. He throws the shield but it goes high above their heads bouncing off a steel structure. They laugh his attempt to stop them. To their surprise they see Captain America pull out a gun and shoot them each one time in the kneecaps. He tells them he threw his shield like that on purpose as it takes out the other agent about to shoot the Widow.
The Red Skull asks Arnim Zola if Faustus is ready for the next phase in his plans. On the S.H.I.E.L.D. helicarrier, Tony Stark is talking with the Secretary about the recent turmoil. Stark says how Kronas may be behind this. The Secretary says their just playing hardball and Stark asks how much has Kronas donated to him and his friends. The Secretary is outraged at Stark's accusation but they are interrupted by on of his agents. The missing S.H.I.E.L.D. agents have been found. They are outside the White House where a group of protesters have gathered. Fausus says "it's time." The rogue agents lift their guns and begin firing into the crowd, much to Starks horror.
Creators
Characters
Teams
Locations
Concepts
Objects
Story Arc
|
|
Nice new era... Especially Skull's plan
Reviewed by HaloKing343 on June 16, 2009. HaloKing343 has written 51 reviews. His/her last review was for Once Bitten, Twice Shy. 1 out of 1 users recommend his reviews. |
|
For someone who has read every Cap' issue prior to this one, I anticipated this outcome. I was in no way suprised that Bucky became cap, like other people were. If any body has read all the 33 issues before this, you'd see it coming from a mile away.
So bottom line, I've read all the previous Brubaker isues. All 33 of them. What l liked about this story was not that Bucky became cap, but alll the backstory of Red Skull. I happen to love that Bucky is being cap now, unlike lots of people who don't support it. Brubaker is awsome, and anything that he writes turns into perfection and solid gold.
Think about it. If you were told three years ago that Bucky would be brought back to life and that Steve were to get killed, you would probably abandon comics forever. But Brubaker somehow manages to take a story like this, one that's so outragous, and make it brilliant. That's what I love about Brubaker, and his sheer amazing story telling abilities come through in this issue.
The Red Skull has turned America into chaos. Riots break out all over the country and the suprise ending is so awsome that I gasped outloud.
I thought the setup to this issue was a little rushed. He could have expaned the period between when Red Skull started his plan and when chaos suddenly reigned all across the country. Oh well. He did what he could in the time period that he was given. But besides rushing the setup, l can't think of much that Brubaker did wrong here.
Brubaker's run started off a little slow and a little shaky, but these past several issues have been perfection. I love his work and give him the best of wishes.
9 out of ten for story
8 out of ten for art
|
|
I'll admit I'm impressed
Reviewed by Exusiai on April 1, 2008. Exusiai has written 18 reviews. His/her last review was for Surprise!!. 3 out of 3 users recommend his reviews. |
|
The one rule in comics was Bucky, Uncle Ben and Jason Todd stay Dead, well All we need now is Ben back and that rule is Shattered completely.
Needless to say it is wonderful to see the thoughts running through Bucky's head in this issue, comparing how he does things to how steve would, and the Talk with Black Widow about the suit and honoring Steve.
I'm really starting to hope they will keep Steve Dead. I mean someone has to stay Dead in comic (Ben Get back in your Grave this instant. And Bucky is starting to really grow on me in a very very short time as Captain America.
|
|
Letting go of the past
Reviewed by Amber on Feb. 4, 2008. Amber has written 123 reviews. His/her last review was for . 5 out of 6 users recommend his reviews. |
|
It was really hard for me to decide whether or not to pick Issues 33 and 34 of Captain America off the shelf. I picked them up. Put them back. Picked them up again and leafed through the pages. Put them back. I finally took the plunge to give the new Captain America a fair shot. This is a particularly big deal since he's my husband's all time favorite comic book character. He took Cap's death really hard and declared our home a MFZ (Marvel Free Zone).
Bearing in mind that I risked the backlash of my husband, I still felt somewhat obligated to see what Brubaker has been doing with the character since killing Steve Rogers like a bitch. I had been told that the title has never been better and had to see for myself.
Issue 33 is where the actual transition takes place. If you're reading this (Issue 34's review) then you already know what's going on and it isn't a spoiler. Bucky, Steve's former sidekick, agreed to take the job as the new Captain America as long as he doesn't work for Tony and isn't officially registered. This brings up a whole bunch of debates naturally since Tony agrees to these terms. If he's so willing to agree to Cap not being registered and his identity not being revealed to the public with Bucky behind the mask, then why was there a war with Steve Rogers? It's another Quesadaism that's part of the Marvelverse that fans just have to accept without question even if it doesn't make any sense.
One thing is for certain, since Bucky reappeared from the dead (maybe there's hope for Steve yet) as the Winter Soldier, he's been hotter than ever. He's supremely handsome, he kicks ass and he's gotten his American loyalty back (he was a Russian assassin for those that don't know).
Getting down to the nitty gritty, the story is exceptionally written. Brubaker has continued to irritate Steve Rogers fans not just because of the story line replacing Steve with Bucky but he's doing it well; some of us would be happy if Bru churned out crap that everyone universally hated but he's actually writing so well that it's annoying to those of us that want to hate him.
As for the new Cap design, well there's still a lot to complain about. Not only is the outfit horrifically ugly with super shiny red, white and blue over a black outfit, but there's this whole new gun & knife accessory kit. Bucky says on every other page that he's not Steve and never could dream of replacing him; he says he knows he's not as good and he says that he needs the gun and knife because he simply can't live up to Steve's talent with the shield. Ok, so he admits to why he needs it but it changes some of the very basic foundations of Captain America not just the man behind the mask. The Captain America most of us know wouldn't shoot thugs the way a mafia hitman would. Forcing Cap to behave this way reduces who he is. It knocks him down several levels in the eyes of the reader/fan. It makes Captain America different than an American icon and instead shows he's nothing more than a rogue hitman with a blank check from Tony Stark to do whatever he wants.
Giving Marvel your $3 only encourages them to continue on this path. Unfortunately, as I said, the story is still good and the artwork is consistently good. If you don't care about Cap's fashion statement and new gun-toting persona, then you might actually enjoy this book. For readers new to Cap, they won't have any nostalgia invested in the character anyway.
| Url: | |
| HTML: | |
| BBCode: | |
| Added by: | Baal Zak |
| Date Added: | Feb. 2, 2009 |
| Url: | |
| HTML: | |
| BBCode: | |
| Added by: | James Proudstar |
| Date Added: | June 6, 2008 |
| Url: | |
| HTML: | |
| BBCode: | |
| Added by: | G-Man |
| Date Added: | June 6, 2008 |























