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Nov. 13, 2009
  • themaskedhero had a submission approved for and earned 1 point (for a total of 5,543 points).
    1 week, 1 day ago
Nov. 10, 2009
  • themaskedhero replied to the topic Marvel Events Trend in the Marvel Publishing board.
    Avengers Disassembled : Hawkeye & Thor "died"  Avengers stop being House of M  Scarlet Witch went missing Mutants drop to "198" Civil War Captain America died Superhuman Community becomes divided Some heroes become outlaws Secret Invasion   Wasp died Marvel Universe falls into the Dark ReignThe "Avengers" are really the villains  Siege  Iron Man dies? The Avengers come back? The death of Norman Osborn?  Your thoughts?
    1 week, 4 days ago
  • themaskedhero just started a topic, Marvel Events Trend in the Marvel Publishing board.
    1 week, 4 days ago
  • The reason why his arm didn't grow back is because Apocalypse took Wolverine's powers away when he ripped his arm off, setting him on the path to becoming Cable 30 years later. You may notice in the Cable arc that he comments that Apocalypse took away his healing factor when he fought him. That's also why he ages.
    1 week, 4 days ago
Nov. 4, 2009
  • themaskedhero had a submission approved for Count Nefaria and earned 25 points (for a total of 5,543 points).
    2 weeks, 3 days ago
Oct. 29, 2009
Oct. 28, 2009
  • themaskedhero had a submission approved for Necrosha and earned 2 points (for a total of 5,543 points).
    3 weeks, 3 days ago
Sept. 17, 2009
Sept. 13, 2009
Sept. 12, 2009
  • themaskedhero replied to the topic Kitty Pryde die........... in the Kitty Pryde board.
    I was in Astonishing X-Men, at the end of Joss Whedon's run around the time of Messiah CompleX.  I thought it was stupid and that there were better paths to go down. But she'll be back, they can't kill Kitty Pryde.
    2 months, 1 week ago
Sept. 10, 2009
  • themaskedhero replied to the topic Black Lanterns... in the Black Lantern Corps board.
    I think that's part of the point, they take the heroes and turn them into something that can make the readers and fans sink to their stomachs. It really works on a few different levels. It's not just a zombie story, these guys still have the personalities and memories so they effect the characters very deeply.  I don't like everything their doing, but I'm going to see this through before I ...
    2 months, 1 week ago

  • Will. Rage. Fear. Will. Rage. Fear.: This issue was very long awaited for me, I've gotten some high off of reading the direct Blackest Night tie-ins and this was one that ended at such a point last issue that I was very excited to get this one home. And maybe long-term readers of Green Lantern and Green Lantern Corps might not agree with me, this hasn't been a mind blowing story and neither has what's going ...
    2 months, 1 week ago
  • themaskedhero had a submission approved for Heart of Darkness and earned 2 points (for a total of 5,543 points).
    2 months, 1 week ago
  • themaskedhero had a submission approved for Heart of Darkness and earned 4 points (for a total of 5,543 points).
    2 months, 1 week ago
  • themaskedhero had a submission approved for Heart of Darkness and earned 1 point (for a total of 5,543 points).
    2 months, 1 week ago
  • themaskedhero had a submission approved for Heart of Darkness and earned 1 point (for a total of 5,543 points).
    2 months, 1 week ago
  • themaskedhero had a submission approved for Heart of Darkness and earned 1 point (for a total of 5,543 points).
    2 months, 1 week ago
  • themaskedhero had a submission approved for Heart of Darkness and earned 54 points (for a total of 5,543 points).
    2 months, 1 week ago
Sept. 8, 2009

  • May This Light Burn Out: Okay, so the first issue of this mini-series is really really good & the second (I feel) was really good too, though some people said the stories didn't compare. This, this was a rip off for $3.99. I realize that the Green Lantern Corps is part of the Emotional Spectrum, but I really don't feel like we need two stories about two characters that if you pay attention to Green ...
    2 months, 2 weeks ago
Added by themaskedhero on July 21, 2009

I think beyond the creation of Superman, which changed comics and the idea of what they could be period. Jack Kirby did more to change what a comic was and how a comic looked, if you look at a comic in 1958 compared to a comic in 1969 you can see big differences, those changes were Kirby. He was a huge Pop Culture sponge, you look at what is in the background of New Gods, Fourth World or Fantastic Four or strictly what the story was you can see elements of Star Trek or themes from the book "Gods from Outer Space." 

He, with the help of Lee, made Captain America work after his return as kind of a modern day Hamlet who was the product of a different time. The art was fantastic and with almost no effort, told a story and made the the idea of a picture inspiring 1000 words true in the pages of Fantastic Four or The Avengers. I think elements of Marvel Comics that I really love come from Kirby and Marvel's nature to embrace maverick writers and artists and I think it started with Kirby. 


Added by themaskedhero on July 1, 2009

I'm up in time to walk or bike over as the store opens on Wednesday. I have a pull list, so I don't know what I'm so worried is going to happen. Speaking of which, I should get going.

*Runs to the store*


Added by themaskedhero on May 5, 2009

I think there are really good examples of great characters being portrayed as being really great. Batman, Spider-man (in 1 & 2), The X-Men & of course our recent Joker. 
But the characters that stick out the most are always going to be the one's that really sucked. And there is a certain amount of pandering as I see it, if people like Venom or Sandman, then the studios think that as long as they make it on screen we'll love them. My belief is, mainly regarding Deadpool on this one, is that if you can't make an intelligent character out of a fan favorite (which in the comic book world is everyone because every character has fans) then don't put them in the film. And changing powers or origins can be really cheap. And don't get me started with having Gwen Stacy in Spider-Man 3, you commit to Mary Jane being a mix between the two in the context of the film and don't go around trying to change things. We're smart enough people to understand a love triangle, and Spider-man 2 could have been the place to have that. Make Peter choose between Spider-Man and Parker & Mj and Gwen.
Spider-Man 2 still stands out in my mind as one of the best comic book films ever, and that's because they took characters and made them very strong. So what if they changed Doc Ock and gave him a wife, for the terms of the film it all worked. I didn't feel like they were making changes because they thought we wouldn't notice or because they wanted to fit another character in there for a cameo.


Added by themaskedhero on April 14, 2009

I think the Civil War storyline would made a wonderful game. I'm not sure what kind of game fits the best, maybe an RPG where you can pick a side and survive the war, just don't play as *spoiler* Captain America.


Themaskedhero's Reviews
Reviewed by themaskedhero
Sept. 10, 2009
This issue was very long awaited for me, I've gotten some high off of reading the direct Blackest Night tie-ins and this was one that ended at such a point last issue that I was very excited to get this one home. And maybe long-term readers of Green Lantern and Green Lantern Corps might not agree with me, this hasn't been a mind blowing story and neither has what's going on in Green Lantern. But this, to me, is good stuff. If not simply for the fact that we still don't completely understand what the intent of Blackest Night is, and that's what's bringing us back for more.  
 
Some people that may have seen my choice words about Rulk and the mystery surrounding him might turn and say, "But Ryan, you hate misleading covers and false promises of purpose. How can you like these books that don't seem to be getting anywhere?"  
 
To those I say, this is building, this is going somewhere & a month from now, when Blackest Night pulls the rug from under you, it will be Green Lantern and Green Lantern Corps that you go running to the LCS to pick up as they sell out after a delayed reaction. 
 
This issue deals with the reaction to countless Fallen Lanterns rising and the eventual return of all those criminals they executed two issue back. Arisia returns to Oa, with the bad news that Sodam Yat had sacrificed himself for the safety of his home planet. She of course finds a much different welcoming party, the entire planet is crawling with Black Lanterns. 
 
Kyle and Black Lantern Jade have a few choice words, her trying to seduce him and in the back of my mind, reach through his chest for some of that sweet heart/power level action. But he doesn't completely fall for act, believe this can't really be Jade, he then learns that Black Lanterns will be harder to kill then he suspected. 
 
We witness the beginning of a long-term story with Kryb returning to her home world looking for "her children" who she no longer hears. We'll find out more I trust in the next few issues. 
 
And then we get the scene that may play the biggest long term effect on the Corps. Now without Guardians, there is a conflict between Lantern Salaak and the Alpha Lanterns over who has say on how the law and order of Oa will be handled. This being cleared but by an almost last will and testament of the Guardians if they are ever unable to preform their duties, leaving Salaak in charge. And what does Salaak do as his first mandate? Place a moratorium on all power ring recruiting, routing all power rings back to Mogo. I don't feel this will end well. 
 
The issue comes to a close not long after, leaving the Corp in a very tricky position, but I look forward to the next issue.  
 
The art was great, the writing was good. I wasn't as pulled in as I was by the last issue, but this didn't disappoint me in the least. Pick this book up.


Reviewed by themaskedhero
Sept. 8, 2009
Okay, so the first issue of this mini-series is really really good & the second (I feel) was really good too, though some people said the stories didn't compare. This, this was a rip off for $3.99. I realize that the Green Lantern Corps is part of the Emotional Spectrum, but I really don't feel like we need two stories about two characters that if you pay attention to Green Lantern Corps you already know plenty about. 
 
We get a story of Kilowog was a newbie, he plays the role of the fresh corps trainee who gets pushed harder then any of the other newbies, which he usually plays the role of the hard pushing general. It's a nice story, but we've seen it all over the Green Lantern books over the history of the Corps. And it's not a very riveting story, there's no reason to believe that Kilowog won't survive the story or anything. And the ending feels rushed, I feel if we're going to pay the $4, this could have had more pages to fill in gaps near the end.  
 
Story two, which stars Arisia and her father being part of a family line of Green Lanterns. This was also a fairly good story, but what point does it serve? Gosh, I don't know what else to say about. I mean, I guess I have some questions as to where this fits in the history of Green Lantern, only because I was under the impression Arisia had been around longer then Guy, but I thought I saw him running around in here. 
 
Part three, this was Blackest Night #0, pencilled. Oh, I forgot to mention the commentary... which felt unneeded and I usually crave getting inside the writer's mind. Without the colors and inking, this felt like we were missing out on something they gave to us for free, why am I paying $3.99? 
 
I'm sorry, this isn't very helpful in term of what might be there to like, but I didn't like this.


Reviewed by themaskedhero
Sept. 5, 2009

I'll be honest, I read this the day it came out and was at a complete loss as to what to say about it or even what happened in the issue. Luke Ross is back & I feel like instead of giving us a copycat artist they could have given us someone who could make this book easy to follow. And while I feel that this story is leaps and bounds ahead of "Messiah War," I'm beginning to question where this is all supposed to go. I realize we've changed how mutants live, but why step into the Dark Avengers? I guess all that has described how I feel about the writing, which Fraction could have done better.

We open in Las Vegas catching up with Danni Moonstar & Hela from the last issue as Danni is asking for a bit of help in regards to SOMETHING that must have gone over my head, but I can only hope it plays off in New Mutants, which I picked up all of the current run in one swoop & loved.

We move to the Dark X-Men capturing a verse-spouting Trask and continue into a sequence displaying all the different ways these X-Men are doing everything right over the course of a week, which makes me feel more satisfied because it shows that the event as a whole happened over an extended amount of time, unlike Secret Invasion which happen in a span of time one might eat lunch in. Cyclops and his X-Men watch from the couch as everything unfolds, which I found rather boring.

Moving back to the Hammer bas, we begin to see cracks in the Dark X-Men's armor as they witness the effects the Omega Machine has on the captured mutants and we get a real idea of who has moral compasses. It was right around here I began to question Marvel's choice of artists in Luke Ross, because this stuff looks really off from anything I'm used to, like Emma in her diamond form, yuck! We get some Dark Avengers, I know what you're thinking, "In the book named after them? No way!" And then we transition to the Science Team! Okay, maybe my X-Men lore is off or something because the Science Team was acting like we should know what the hell their doing & I keep staring at pages wonder what the big deal was.

Beast gets depowered-ish. X-Force shows up & looks like crap (could Choi have just done the panels they were in or something?). Omega powers up. The Dark X-Men go to fight X-Force. Pixie does some teleporting of people "home". There, you don't need to read about 4 pages.

We get a big reveal that mutant kind has moved out to their own private island, which the Science Team lifted off the ocean floor, entitled 'Utopia' and Osborn calls the Dark Avengers to do his dirty work, end book.

Now I realize my last few paragraphs are kind of vague & that important pieces of plot and dialogue were skimmed over, but this is not to blame the writing on this one, the art is really a joke here, no lie. I can't get through this book, I have trouble understanding what is going on in panels and it's not like the art is messy or anything, it's just not using the panels to their full effect. This crossover is not a let down, it's going places, but even with the same writer across the board (which might have saved Messiah War if Yost had writing duties on both books), Utopia seems to be going in different directions in different books and I question if the Dark Avengers series even needed to play in this sandbox. Marvel, just pull an "Amazing Spider-Man" & put out Uncanny twice a month for the event!


Don't buy this if you don't want to apart of the entire Utopia event.



Reviewed by themaskedhero
Aug. 26, 2009
I'm still fairly new to this whole Green Lantern business, but this was one of my favorite issues so far, in fact, I liked this more than the main Blackest Night book. I read it about 4 times just trying to find something new, find something I didn't see or catch before. The art was fantastic and the story, while jumping around a little bit, gave me a grand look at the world outside of Earth in the Blackest Night event. 
  
------SPOILERS------

We start out with John Stewart witnessing a swarm of Black Lantern rings shooting through space and calling from back-up. Unknown to him, they're entering into the astroids around him. The cryptic message, "Worlds have died." is thrown out and on the next two pages we see that the Black Rings have formed a planet from it's piece with the caption, "Worlds will rise." It's a jarring image and only continues to make you wonder what Black Lanterns real objective is. 
 
We then find Carol Ferris fighting off the Sinestro Corps, while also fighting off the Sapphire Ring's mental control over her. The Zamaron queen believing that Carol's time as Star Sapphire before may have given her a resistance. There is also a throw-away line about how Ferris may be perfect for taming the Predator, a.k.a. the Violet avatar.  
 
The battle is really brought to a halt when Sinestro himself shows up and begins breaking out all the captured Sinestro members that the Sapphires were intending to convert to their side. He questions Carol's motives for taking up the ring again, this time willingly. He believes that even if she is doing to save Hal that it will all be for nothing and that Hal will never really love Carol back and that love is a lie. Carol demonstrates her powers and puts Sinestro in a Sapphire crystal where we see that he had a relationship with Abin Sur's sister. As he frees himself he's about to go all out on Carol when he is stopped by the Black Lantern Abin Sur. 
 
Across the Universe at the Red Lantern Homeworld we witness the Alpha Lanterns trying to procure the body of Liara, only to themselves witness a rain of Black Rings, one which lands on Liara's finger. 
 
The story comes to a close with one of my favorite new characters, Agent Orange, as he watches the battle at Odym through his lantern. He's interrupted by a swarm of rings too, all of which animate the corpses around him, causing me to wonder if that means his constructs are gone. This of course is shown in another wonderful 2-page spread. I also really loved that when the Black Rings were buzzing around, all he really wants is his own one. I love Larfleeze!  
 
I loved this issue, it was pretty great. The Art was good, the Story was good, even if some people think it was too hard to follow. 
 
PICK THIS UP!


Reviewed by themaskedhero
Aug. 19, 2009
Talk about a complete turn around after reading Green Lantern #44, this was awesome. And I think it really lies in the scope of the effect Blackest Night is having all around the universe. And how royally screwed the Green Lanterns seem in the wake of all of it. 
 
 We start out with Kyle and Guy talking about their love life and how they spent their time on Earth during the Superhuman Memorial Day event from Blackest Night #1. We dig deeper into Kyle's mind and wear his turn feeling lie in terms of his "soul mate" who we discover was not Natu, but his dead lover, Jade. I think the cover kind of gives away how that plot thread might end. 
 
We see the rise of the newly titled Mongul Corps in place of Sinestro. And the last ripples of the freed planet of Daxam as they purge all their enemies in corpse bonfire. I really hate to spoil too much of the exact nature of this issue page by page, because it's such a good read and that I really think the story and the art work wonderfully hand-in-hand on this. I can't say much more then pick this up, because I know I'll be back for the next issue.


Reviewed by themaskedhero
Aug. 19, 2009
Blackest Night. I feel like a betrayer of Marvel for jumping ship over to DC for Blackest Night. But it's really good. 
 
This, well it's worth reading, I almost feel like it's worth reading when it comes out in the trade form, which I see no reason it won't. We get some action tying the first two issues of Blackest Night together in terms of where Hal falls in all of this and we get the Guardian, Scar, explaining that all this killing is just bringing order to a universe that needed it. I hate to put this book down because of all the really good praise Johns gets and I don't discredit that he's a great writer,  but I didn't feel like I was getting anything I might not have just stumbled upon if I read the main series. It wasn't  must read. 
 
We get a few looks into the mind of the Black Lanterns and how they see the emotions bleeding out of the people they wish to kill. It was very pleasing to see that at first The Flash displayed Hope, so we know how he differs from Hal who is constantly displaying will power. 
 
I'm really grasping at straws here trying to say something about this book at makes it a book worth picking up, the art is good and clean, but I get the feeling that this is some of DC's best art and it doesn't rank in my mind to the inventive art styles Marvel has me used to. It's not a boring read, just not fantastic. 
 
Green Lantern fans should pick this up and maybe people that want more Geoff John's material to drool over.


Reviewed by themaskedhero
Aug. 19, 2009
There is really not much I'd like to say about this issue in terms of how it ranks up with the work we've seen in the past from Carey, I loved his first few story arcs when he first got X-Men and didn't really feel exploring Professor X's past as something I wanted to read, though I've only heard heard good things about it. 
 
Though I do feel this book is getting the short end of the stick as far as artists go, Carey's writing might be one of the best as far as X-Men books go and this issue was no different. I liked it, it could have looked better, but I liked it and I understood what what was going on in each panel. So it could have been worse.  
 
The story picks up where the last issue left off, which I read and chose not to review. Rogue, who currently has Ares' powers and Gambit are working to keep the riots (we're still on the first night circa Utopia #1) in as much control as possible. We get most of our story revolving around Trance (who until last issue I'd never heard of, but now my girlfriend wants to Cosplay as) who is kind of stuck between her physical and astral forms. She goes on a bit of a rampage as police trying taking her out and her powers kind of freak out take the whole squad out. 
 
Rogue gets words of the disturbance and she, Gambit and Danger take one of the military tanks to Trance's location. Rogue does her best to talk Trance down and try to focus her power, but Ms. Marvel (Moonstone) shows up to continue the fight Rogue and she had last issue. Rogue's powers she drained from Ares run dry and it's up to Trance to level Marvel before the team gets their butts to somewhere safe.
 
In the end we're left leading into the Annual that I now believe I'll have to buy I guess. 
 
 This issue was good, not as important as the main story, but I like Rogue and now I like Trance. 
 
Pick it up.


Reviewed by themaskedhero
Aug. 12, 2009
The Summer Blockbuster is back for another installment and while I disagree with some reviews of this book, saying it is a horrible issue. I'll admit that it doesn't completely have me begging for more, but it's not bad, just stumbling due to the Part Two CompleX that many story arcs fall prey to, it's lacking a solid beginning and end.  
 
There isn't a lot of reveals in this book and the plot of each story thread is so thin that it's hard to get a real fix on what exactly the reader should be paying attention to. I'm not reading the Green Lantern Tie-Ins (the core book and Corps), but I know what is going on in general with the books so I don't feel lost when it comes to The Flash and Green Lantern's storyline, but anything involving Aquaman -- and believe me, that's a big factor in this issue -- I find hard to follow. Even paging through it I find it hard to really nail down anything else important that happens here. And I think it all falls on John's writing, he's trying to take a very big story and stick it in one place. Not that things like Secret Invasion or Civil War haven't done that, but I guess as an outsider to the history of DC I don't feel as pulled in by the high counts of "Rising" going on and really am just in for Hal Jordan.  
 
The art is wonderful and is beautifully spread across the board just like the last issue, it's just at the end of the day I think it could have been better. Not the best comic of this week, and it's hard to live up to the first issue, but I don't see why someone wouldn't pick it up.


Reviewed by themaskedhero
Aug. 12, 2009
I'll be honest, I really wasn't sure if the next chapter in life of Ultimate Peter Parker was going to be on my reading list. 
 
I was wrong. Dead wrong. 
 
This issue is exactly what I, as an Ultimate Spider-Man fan, have been waiting for. I really don't want to give away the two big reveals, happening at the 3/4 mark and the last two pages, but it's setting this series to live up to it's quota, bring us Spider-Man stories we'd get no where else. 
 
Without hitting anything important I'll try to glaze over the issue real quick. Peter, now without the Bugle to employ him, is working at a McParody called Burger Frog and the job is, as anything in customer service would be, very very annoy and rough. But I loved it, the scene rings true to anyone who has even had an annoying customer would has no idea what the heck they're doing and a boss who could care less about their side of the story. 
 
We go onto a two-page spread of New York six months later and finally "open for business" again, echoing the world after 9/11 in many ways. All from the prospective of Mary Jane as the school's internet reporter.  
 
Next we get a look into the crime world as a small store gets ran into by car. The driver and his assistant get out of the car and try attempt to rob the place, only to get stopped by the new hero in town who fight crime wrapped in a crimson trench coat and with their face in shadows (based on the way the fight goes down, my bet is it's Kitty Pryde). Spider-Man shows up after the fight dies down and the cops show up. Best part: The cops are honored to meet Spider-Man and want to shake his hand, a much different relationship that even Peter hasn't gotten used to. 
 
From this point on in the book, the rest is kind of spoilery and I'd hate to ruin anything for anyone, but I'm very excited with where this is going. I can even get used to Lafuente's art, which at first glance was just too targeted at female readers for me.
 
PICK THIS UP!


Reviewed by themaskedhero
Aug. 12, 2009
This was an action packed issue and it surprised me a little, I know that paging through an issue at the shop before you buy doesn't always give you the best impressions, but as I paged through it in line I thought I was buying the next flop like Messiah War was. But no, this was a good 4th Chapter. 
 
Trask's army of humanoid Sentinels make a big impression in this issue, slowly infecting people and in a bit of irony, mutating them into something inhuman. Cyclops makes a very quick move setting up four or five teams to handle different situations around San Francisco; 
  • Mirage gets sent to Vegas to meet with a yet-to-be-seen gentleman, even though Cyclops repeatedly asks her if she's ready for it and offering to let her back out.
  • Domino there as the face of X-Force. Being that X-Force is still kind of swept under the rug, everything is rather vague.
  • Mindee, one of the Stepford Cuckoos, is asked by Scott to allow herself to be captured, I would think due to her hivemind powers.
  • And finally Psylocke seems to be heading up an underwater mission.
 
As the issue continues we get to watch the Dark Avengers and Dark X-Men continue their bickering from the last Chapter, ending as Emma breaks the fight up due to Sentinel attacks. Though the feeling that this is just the beginning of a larger story is very present between Bullseye and Daken.    
 
There is some fight of Sentinels (which didn't feel needed), some fighting among the Dark X-Men and Scott watching from above to get into the mind of how the Osborn's X-Men fight. It all wraps up pretty quickly and sets up the last two issue, which I'm excited for, if not simply for the return of Bends to Dark Avengers.   

All and all though; 
BORROW THIS FROM SOMEONE ELSE.




Date Joined: Jan. 21, 2009
City: Minneapolis
Gender: Male
Alignment: Neutral
Points: 5,543 Points
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My Weaknesses:
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Clone Saga
issue - 382 points
Nick Fury: Agent of Nothing, Part 6
issue - 119 points
Ultimate Six
issue - 116 points
Utopia : Chapter One
issue - 116 points
Spider-Man
character - 111 points
The Ugly Truth
issue - 110 points
Heart of Darkness
issue - 96 points
Superstars
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Babs 6 hours, 39 minutes ago
Guess what @jamessime? @andrewgapen and I found you this! http://twitpic.com/qfvgf