By Craig Kyle, Christopher Yost (Writers), and Clayton Crain (Artist)
I have to admit, this one surprised me quite a bit. I never thought that Craig Kyle and Christopher Yost would manage to get a satisfying conclusion out of the increasingly convoluted “Angels and Demons” arc, but, lo and behold, they have. While there are a few things keeping X-Force #6 from being truly great, it is easily the best issue yet.
In an effective change of pace, the storyline is framed within a status report given by Wolverine to Cyclops. Long story short, all hell breaks loose at the Purifier base as all the various tensions and plotlines explode into an orgy of violence. Wolverine breaks up a standoff between Risman and Bastion, Archangel goes on a rampage against the choir, X-23 and Warpath kill a lot of Purifiers before facing off with someone changed by Magus, and Rahne stands up to her Purifier father. All of it works extremely well to bring the first arc of the re-launched series to a satisfying and appropriately, open-ended conclusion. That said, I have to acknowledge that are a few gaps in the storytelling that I wish Yost and Kyle would have taken the time to explain. While I won’t spoil anything here, the gaps involve the nature of Magus and transformation of Warren Worthington.
I have to hand it to the writers for changing the storytelling style for this issue. The decision pays off in a big way and allows the few plot holes to be fairly understandable given the context. If I have one complaint, however, it is that Wolverine’s narration is a little bit heavy on the “tough guy” image from time to time. Also, he swears quite a bit (which actually works well in giving the narration a conversational tone) and it made me realize the series would be much better off as a MAX title. Clayton Crain’s artwork (which I’ll get to in a moment) is already shockingly (MAX level) graphic, so why the need for censorship for some commonly used swear words? I know that’s a discussion for another day, but I feel it’s worth bringing up.
Crain’s artwork (see, I told you I would get to it) has never been better. The color palette is still a bit too dark and the characters occasionally look oddly proportioned, but those flaws can’t overshadow how visually compelling the action in this issue is. It is brutal, disturbing, and (oddly enough) beautiful all at the same time. Some of the pages have to be seen to be believed.
I really don’t know how much more I can say. I went into X-Force #6 fearing the worst and came away from it more than pleasantly surprised. If the momentum from this issue can be sustained, X-Force is going to be one series worth keeping an eye on. Action fans and “X” fans, consider this one a must buy. (Grade: B+)
- Kyle Posluszny
Filed under: Marvel Comics, Reviews, X-Men | Tagged: Angel, Archangel, Bastion, Christopher Yost, Clayton Crain, Craig Kyle, Magus, Marvel, Purifiers, Reviews, Risman, Warpath, Warren Worthington, Wolverine, X-23, X-Force #6, X-Men
I have really liked this arc but something has irked me from the beginning that came in full force this issue. Why, oh why, did Wolverine (or the writers for that matter) comprise the team of only hand-to-hand fighters. No long range attacker? No guns or energy beams or anything that would make a plane get-away more difficult? (How many times did the Purifiers slip away from Wolverine using planes?) This little tactical slip-up could have solved a lot of problems that the team had to deal with and it just seems like Cyclops is way smarter then that and would have wanted Logan to have a more well-rounded team.
I can’t possibly argue with that point in any way. While I did notice it as well, I just chalked it up to how the team kind of naturally came together during The Messiah Complex…who would you have picked as a long-range character?