No recent wiki edits to this page.

DO YOU FEAR...TOMORROW?

In this time of global anxiety, of economic turmoil and mass hysteria, Sin, the new Red Skull, has made an awesome discovery...a shameful secret that will rock the foundations of the Marvel Universe! A revelation that will divide father and son, turn friend against friend, and herald the rise of Fear personified. HE IS RETURNING...and the world has nothing to fear but FEAR ITSELF. Matt Fraction and Stuart Immonen bring fans the biggest Marvel story since CIVIL WAR!

User reviews Add new review

5 (1)
4 (9)
3 (0)
2 (0)
1 (0)

3.73 stars 3.73/5 Stars Average score of 13 user reviews

A Good Start, But I'm Left a Little Wanting 0

Crossovers have a set formula, as any other works of fiction; you can't have all the action up-front, because it will either wear our your readers of leave you with so little gas in the tank that by the end, your story will be spluttering. The Good Fraction is quick to throw us into the thick of the action with a riot and storming-a-nazi-fortress sequence, then brings us back down with interspersed scenes that are a bit low-key. This is great because it keeps us on the edge of our seat, knowing ...

25 out of 29 found this review helpful.

Plenty to Fear 0

  Marvel officially kicked off 2011’s major cross over event: Fear Itself, today. Issue #1: The Serpent introduces the core conflicts that Tony Stark, Thor, and original Captain America Steve Rogers will have to face alongside the rest of the Avengers.   The Serpent focuses on Thor and his father Odin, and their disagreement concerning their homeland of Asgard, which lies in rubble within America’s heartland. Tony Stark has offered to rebuild the city of the gods, and in doing so employ thousand...

4 out of 6 found this review helpful.

There's A "Who's Your All-Daddy" Joke Somewhere In This Event 0

Fear Itself gets off to a good launch with a first issue that manages to actually to smooth out some of the concerns leading up to Marvel's latest mega-event.At first glance, it is a little hard to see an event starring Thor and Steve Rogers as anything other than an artificial cash-in to this year's Marvel movies, but this issue sells it as more than that. The combination of old Nazi sorcery and an ancient Norse evil does feel like a natural union that would star our two heroes. Reading this is...

12 out of 15 found this review helpful.
See all user reviews

This edit will also create new pages on Comic Vine for:

Beware, you are proposing to add brand new pages to the wiki along with your edits. Make sure this is what you intended. This will likely increase the time it takes for your changes to go live.

Comment and Save

Until you earn 1000 points all your submissions need to be vetted by other Comic Vine users. This process takes no more than a few hours and we'll send you an email once approved.

Use your keyboard!

  • ESC