Crimebuster
CCF Podcast Guru
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Post by Crimebuster on Aug 15, 2020 19:44:59 GMT -5
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Post by steveinthecity on Aug 15, 2020 22:17:43 GMT -5
Was the ASM book referred to #226? You guys made it sound like a much older issue.
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Crimebuster
CCF Podcast Guru
Making comics!
Posts: 3,958
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Post by Crimebuster on Aug 16, 2020 0:51:31 GMT -5
Was the ASM book referred to #226? You guys made it sound like a much older issue. Yes, it was Spectacular Spider-Man #226. While the issue isn't as old as Avengers #213, it's actually pretty old now — hard to believe, but it's been 25 years since the Clone Saga came out. Thank goodness I dropped Spider-man before that mess!
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shaxper
CCF Site Custodian
Posts: 22,860
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Post by shaxper on Aug 17, 2020 15:21:35 GMT -5
I've waited many many years to hear Icctrombone speak. I was not disappointed.
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Post by Farrar on Aug 19, 2020 15:50:24 GMT -5
What a great episode! Icc's exuberant entrance cry was awesome and set the tone for a very lively and passionate discussion. Looking forward to parts 2 and 3.
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shaxper
CCF Site Custodian
Posts: 22,860
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Post by shaxper on Aug 19, 2020 22:01:34 GMT -5
This was the push I needed to start reading these issues. I plan to start within the week and then listen to this podcast (I stopped after the Q&A session in order to avoid spoilers). Thanks for the inspiration!
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Post by Farrar on Aug 21, 2020 14:03:47 GMT -5
I loved it when Icctrombone said that Hank gave Jan better powers than he (Hank) had. So true! I remember that when Hank decided to permanently (at the time) adopt the YJ identity in Avengers #63, he proudly proclaimed that he had updated his YJ costume so now he could fly when he was at insect-sized. I wondered why he didn't have, say Bill Foster, graft wings into him as Hank had done for Jan.
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Post by spoon on Aug 22, 2020 0:16:08 GMT -5
This was the push I needed to start reading these issues. I plan to start within the week and then listen to this podcast (I stopped after the Q&A session in order to avoid spoilers). Thanks for the inspiration! I did almost the same thing. I got a little bit into the description of #211 before I decide to stop and read the issues. I've read very few of the Avengers from #201 to around #250, but over the past few years I've bought most of those issues. I've tried way too hard the past few years to delay reading classic comics until I have a bunch of consecutive issues to binge. Maybe I should back to the kid mode of reading comics even though I don't know what happened in the preceding issues. It was interesting to hear from icctrombone. I usually agree with on comic-related posts, but not so much on other topics, so I didn't know what to expect. His enthusiasm and directness was a great addition to this episode. As far as the content of #211-213, to me the storyline came across as forced. I don't know if there's supposed to be continuing mind control from Moondragon going on (not having read the issues that follow this), but a lot of the behavior seems inauthentic. Like in #211, I don't know if Beast is being more over the top than usual due to somehow being manipulating to annoy people and justify being written out, or if it's Shooter commenting that he dislikes how frivolous the Beast had become. Since his move to the Defenders came shortly thereafter, I wonder how much of the motive was to push him out of the Avengers and how much was to bring him to the Defenders. To me, the decision by Captain America to pursue the court martial is really galling. It has echoes of the denoument of the Korvac Saga that I hate so much, where the Avengers are made out to be jerks for not realizing something that they would've had a right to be skeptical of. The fact that Gorn and Linnea speak another language and can't communicate with English speakers is a huge point of emphasis in the story. But Shooter (and in a sense Cap) fault Yellowjacket for not having the omniscence of the reader. It's really not clear at all that Linnea was willing to cease fighting. Given the communications barrier, seeking to de-escalate was a risky move by Cap, and reasonable minds could disagree and take Hank's position. Of course, #213 vindicates Cap's position by having Hank go off the deep end, striking Jan, triggering the robot, etc., but that's not known to Cap when he initiates the proceeding. I'm not sure what to make of Jan's portrayal. Earlier in the issue (before Hank hits her), she seems very self-effacing and appeasing. I'm not sure if that's supposed to be portraying her as a cowed, mentally abused spouse or if it's a retrograde portrayal of a female character than Shooter thinks is normal. If it's the former, then it's well-done. But given the way other women are dealt with in these issues (and since you guys mention Shooter didn't intend to make the one scene an intentional act of violence), I suspect it might be the latter. I'm looking forward to parts 2 and 3. I'm missing 5 issues that would be covered in those parts, so maybe I'll get those.
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Post by Icctrombone on Aug 22, 2020 8:29:01 GMT -5
This was the push I needed to start reading these issues. I plan to start within the week and then listen to this podcast (I stopped after the Q&A session in order to avoid spoilers). Thanks for the inspiration! I did almost the same thing. I got a little bit into the description of #211 before I decide to stop and read the issues. I've read very few of the Avengers from #201 to around #250, but over the past few years I've bought most of those issues. I've tried way too hard the past few years to delay reading classic comics until I have a bunch of consecutive issues to binge. Maybe I should back to the kid mode of reading comics even though I don't know what happened in the preceding issues. It was interesting to hear from icctrombone. I usually agree with on comic-related posts, but not so much on other topics, so I didn't know what to expect. His enthusiasm and directness was a great addition to this episode. As far as the content of #211-213, to me the storyline came across as forced. I don't know if there's supposed to be continuing mind control from Moondragon going on (not having read the issues that follow this), but a lot of the behavior seems inauthentic. Like in #211, I don't know if Beast is being more over the top than usual due to somehow being manipulating to annoy people and justify being written out, or if it's Shooter commenting that he dislikes how frivolous the Beast had become. Since his move to the Defenders came shortly thereafter, I wonder how much of the motive was to push him out of the Avengers and how much was to bring him to the Defenders. To me, the decision by Captain America to pursue the court martial is really galling. It has echoes of the denoument of the Korvac Saga that I hate so much, where the Avengers are made out to be jerks for not realizing something that they would've had a right to be skeptical of. The fact that Gorn and Linnea speak another language and can't communicate with English speakers is a huge point of emphasis in the story. But Shooter (and in a sense Cap) fault Yellowjacket for not having the omniscence of the reader. It's really not clear at all that Linnea was willing to cease fighting. Given the communications barrier, seeking to de-escalate was a risky move by Cap, and reasonable minds could disagree and take Hank's position. Of course, #213 vindicates Cap's position by having Hank go off the deep end, striking Jan, triggering the robot, etc., but that's not known to Cap when he initiates the proceeding. I'm not sure what to make of Jan's portrayal. Earlier in the issue (before Hank hits her), she seems very self-effacing and appeasing. I'm not sure if that's supposed to be portraying her as a cowed, mentally abused spouse or if it's a retrograde portrayal of a female character than Shooter thinks is normal. If it's the former, then it's well-done. But given the way other women are dealt with in these issues (and since you guys mention Shooter didn't intend to make the one scene an intentional act of violence), I suspect it might be the latter. I'm looking forward to parts 2 and 3. I'm missing 5 issues that would be covered in those parts, so maybe I'll get those. Thanks for the kind words, spoon. I was pretty passionate about this run because he was a hero to me and it seemed like EVERYTHING went wrong for him. It hurt in a way that I guess hurt the Hal Jordan fans when he turned into a psycho in Emerald Dawn. I was reading these books in real time as a monthly and, although I hated what was happening, I still couldn't turn away. As for Cap's insistence on a court marshal, I felt in a similar way that it should have been dropped. But consider that they have to police and review themselves as protection against them becoming facist in their behavior. Also, Cap has worked with Hank for years as an Avengers and maybe he pursued it because he saw something was "off" about Hanks behavior. Like you said, he was proven right. This court marshal was the Avengers's way of not just rubberstamping anything that happens. Shooter got savaged because of the Ms. Marvel " rape" in issue # 200, this is the opposite in that they don't just go along with the events as they unfold. As you will see as you read the following issues, it gets worse.
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Crimebuster
CCF Podcast Guru
Making comics!
Posts: 3,958
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Post by Crimebuster on Aug 22, 2020 10:35:14 GMT -5
I did almost the same thing. I got a little bit into the description of #211 before I decide to stop and read the issues. I've read very few of the Avengers from #201 to around #250, but over the past few years I've bought most of those issues. I've tried way too hard the past few years to delay reading classic comics until I have a bunch of consecutive issues to binge. Maybe I should back to the kid mode of reading comics even though I don't know what happened in the preceding issues. It was interesting to hear from icctrombone. I usually agree with on comic-related posts, but not so much on other topics, so I didn't know what to expect. His enthusiasm and directness was a great addition to this episode. As far as the content of #211-213, to me the storyline came across as forced. I don't know if there's supposed to be continuing mind control from Moondragon going on (not having read the issues that follow this), but a lot of the behavior seems inauthentic. Like in #211, I don't know if Beast is being more over the top than usual due to somehow being manipulating to annoy people and justify being written out, or if it's Shooter commenting that he dislikes how frivolous the Beast had become. Since his move to the Defenders came shortly thereafter, I wonder how much of the motive was to push him out of the Avengers and how much was to bring him to the Defenders. To me, the decision by Captain America to pursue the court martial is really galling. It has echoes of the denoument of the Korvac Saga that I hate so much, where the Avengers are made out to be jerks for not realizing something that they would've had a right to be skeptical of. The fact that Gorn and Linnea speak another language and can't communicate with English speakers is a huge point of emphasis in the story. But Shooter (and in a sense Cap) fault Yellowjacket for not having the omniscence of the reader. It's really not clear at all that Linnea was willing to cease fighting. Given the communications barrier, seeking to de-escalate was a risky move by Cap, and reasonable minds could disagree and take Hank's position. Of course, #213 vindicates Cap's position by having Hank go off the deep end, striking Jan, triggering the robot, etc., but that's not known to Cap when he initiates the proceeding. I'm not sure what to make of Jan's portrayal. Earlier in the issue (before Hank hits her), she seems very self-effacing and appeasing. I'm not sure if that's supposed to be portraying her as a cowed, mentally abused spouse or if it's a retrograde portrayal of a female character than Shooter thinks is normal. If it's the former, then it's well-done. But given the way other women are dealt with in these issues (and since you guys mention Shooter didn't intend to make the one scene an intentional act of violence), I suspect it might be the latter. I'm looking forward to parts 2 and 3. I'm missing 5 issues that would be covered in those parts, so maybe I'll get those. Thanks for the kind words, spoon. I was pretty passionate about this run because he was a hero to me and it seemed like EVERYTHING went wrong for him. It hurt in a way that I guess hurt the Hal Jordan fans when he turned into a psycho in Emerald Dawn. I was reading these books in real time as a monthly and, although I hated what was happening, I still couldn't turn away. As for Cap's insistence on a court marshal, I felt in a similar way that it should have been dropped. But consider that they have to police and review themselves as protection against them becoming facist in their behavior. Also, Cap has worked with Hank for years as an Avengers and maybe he pursued it because he saw something was "off" about Hanks behavior. Like you said, he was proven right. This court marshal was the Avengers's way of not just rubberstamping anything that happens. Shooter got savaged because of the Ms. Marvel " rape" in issue # 200, this is the opposite in that they don't just go along with the events as they unfold. As you will see as you read the following issues, it gets worse. I think Icc makes a good point here, and we discuss this some in the next couple episodes - the fact that some of what Shooter is writing feels like a reaction to the fallout from Avengers #200. As I said at the start of this episode, I think this is maybe the best written Avengers arc, especially in terms of character work. However, that comes with the big asterisk that the character work is based on Jim Shooter's versions of these characters, which don't always line up with the previously established characterizations. This is consistent with Shooter's work as a whole - he has his view of the characters and goes with it regardless of how they have been portrayed in the past. This isn't nearly as egregious as Secret Wars, where nobody remotely resembles the characters they have been in any other comic ever, but I do think the big (and for some, fatal) flaw of this arc is that he doesn't spend any time setting up this character shift. Just a few issues of groundwork would have made this all so much less jarring. But Captain America in particular does act in character with the court martial - it's just that the character is the Jim Shooter version of Cap, as this is very much in line with the way Shooter wrote Cap during his first run in the Korvac Saga. There, he was busting Iron Man's butt all the time for not being a good leader. Shooter's Cap is first and foremost a soldier; he's exacting, demanding, and expects excellence not just from himself, but everyone around him. He expects military discipline. He does soften from this hardline stance over the course of this arc, and we see in #213 he's already second guessing himself, something he will do more of as things deteriorate. But while Cap's actions are jarring for me as well, it makes sense in the context of Shooter's take on Cap as a soldier. I do think that after this very abrupt and jarring start to the storyline, Shooter does some fantastic character work with the classic lineup, especially Jan, but also Cap and Iron Man. Hank too, but it's really Stern that delivers the Hank stuff at the end. Shooter's last issue, #224, is one of my absolute favorites, and it's really all character interaction.
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Post by brutalis on Aug 22, 2020 13:08:30 GMT -5
Hail to thee Brother Icc! Great to have a voice in my head to go with your pics. Also wonderful you sh ok wing your love for our favorite Assemblers! You truly are my bro's in comic collecting. Gonna be a real fun 3 part listening.
I always liked Hank over the trinity and next to Hawkeye, Pym is my fave Avenger. I never really cared much either way for his Ant-Man/Giant Man incarnation. It was the return of Hank as Goliath through his turn to Yellowjacket I adore. I can see where Shooter was connecting the dots but big Jim really made things worse than better in my opinion. Shooter believes in putting real human characteristics to heroes/villains as a short cut to making them "interesting" to readers. Yes it's interesting to putting a hero through the ringer, seeing them fail and come back to triumph stronger and even better than they were before. BUT it needs to be in context of heroics, not to destroy them with human or "real" failings which walk the line of morality, like striking a wife and committing villainous actions all in the name of proving yourself and your love.
Shooter had the perfect set up with Hank already having mental issues with his turn as the strong willed Yellowjacket to his weaker lacking self worth/confidence as Ant-Man to defining himself as a "strong" powerhouse in Goliath. If Shooter had went with YJ taking control over those other personalities then it wouldn't have to be at the expense of destroying Pym the man and character.
Once you cross a line with having a hero doing something horrible or despicable it is nearly impossible to redeeming them. It turned Pym from a person we have sympathy or empathy for and made us realize how petty and pathetic he had become. No longer heroic in mind and stature, just a lowly sad failure to him, his wife, his team and us fans.
Realistic actions are fine in a comic, but I don't really need or want too much. The "reality" changes who/what/how we see our heroes. We expect such in villains but we want our heroes as better than the foes they face. Stark as alcoholic becomes just as much a writer's crutch as his weak heart failing in battle. Quicksilver being big brother overprotective of Wanda turning to bigotry/hatred of Vision and then humanity is ugly and not heroic. Xavier willing to use his mental abilities to cloud minds to protect his X-Men turns villainous when he willingly wipes minds of humanity and other heroes, even if his intentions are well.
I never really cared for the Doctor Who scientist type turn of Pym. It had great ideas and helped begin redeeming him in the readers eyes but until Busiek fully placed him back into action as Giant Man resolving his personal/mental issues was I happy again. But oother writers just as quickly focused upon his mental weakness once more for stories. Once the Genie is out of the bottle you can never really put it back so to say.
Can't wait for episodes 2 and 3 guys!
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Post by Icctrombone on Aug 22, 2020 18:15:52 GMT -5
I’m sure that if CB and I properly dissected that run, we could have taken a few more hours. Oddly enough, I never much liked the YJ persona for Hank. It was my least favorite of his ID’s.
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Post by spoon on Aug 22, 2020 19:14:45 GMT -5
Thanks for the kind words, spoon. I was pretty passionate about this run because he was a hero to me and it seemed like EVERYTHING went wrong for him. It hurt in a way that I guess hurt the Hal Jordan fans when he turned into a psycho in Emerald Dawn. I was reading these books in real time as a monthly and, although I hated what was happening, I still couldn't turn away. As for Cap's insistence on a court marshal, I felt in a similar way that it should have been dropped. But consider that they have to police and review themselves as protection against them becoming facist in their behavior. Also, Cap has worked with Hank for years as an Avengers and maybe he pursued it because he saw something was "off" about Hanks behavior. Like you said, he was proven right. This court marshal was the Avengers's way of not just rubberstamping anything that happens. Shooter got savaged because of the Ms. Marvel " rape" in issue # 200, this is the opposite in that they don't just go along with the events as they unfold. As you will see as you read the following issues, it gets worse. I think Icc makes a good point here, and we discuss this some in the next couple episodes - the fact that some of what Shooter is writing feels like a reaction to the fallout from Avengers #200. Interesting. Avengers #200 is an issue I have read (along with Annual #10), and that I'm familiar with for it's implications over in X-Men. I'm curious to see exactly how that plays out. That's one of those frequent pitfalls in monthly comics. A lot of changes to the status quo can make for great stories if they have time to develop and feel earned. I agree that a few issues of groundwork would've made this work better. Maybe Shooter was impatient to get to work on his idea and didn't have another idea he could immediately use to let the Hank Pym storyline simmer as a subplot. I think I probably have read stories with a bossier Cap, but I think of Cap as being more compassionate and merciful than that. Discipline is a trait that seems to show up in various portrayals of justa about long-term superhero team leaders though depending on who is writing. But to me it's not really about being disciplined or not. Cap's decision is that of a poor leader. Cap isn't going for a warning. He's looking at termination. If I analogize this in my mind to a criminal case (where Hank's defense is basically defense of others) or some sort of "superhero malpractice", in my opinion Hank wins easily if he doesn't go off the rails during the court martial. I don't know when the Avengers first saw Lianna, but here are actions leading up to Hank firing. She blasts some cops. She shoots at people and/or cars. She blasts a helicopter. She binds Iron Man in a fence. She slams Thor through a wall. She wields Thor's hammer (with the help of a stone hand) and smacks him. She sends Tigra hurtling toward outer space. She knocks down a wall of a building. She pauses as Cap lands near her to say something incomprehensible to the Avengers. Then Hank shoots her. Lianna demonstrates a lot of power and reckless. Many of her actions endangered civilians and it's entirely reasonable for Hank to believe civilians have died (particular in the building collapse, which happens on the same page). Saying something to Cap isn't an unambiguous sign of surrender. If Hank acting reasonably, and I think he did, I don't think it's a basis for dismissal. And I don't think it's a matter of insubordination either. Cap didn't a ceasefire order. He yelled in response after Yellowjacket had fired. Cap couldn't say I thought I could best avoid harm by talking her down. YJ could say I thought civilians were in imminent danger, this was the opening to strike, and I didn't anticipate talk down someone who spoke a language none of us understanding. To me, the closest I can get to Cap's view in instituting the court martial is to assume the imprecision of comic book storyline. With a specific indication from the script, precise time is unclear. So maybe Linnea's pause was a lot longer than I interpreting it as being when I read the issue. If she standing still and for 2 minutes then I looks different. But I thought it was a few seconds at most.
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Post by Icctrombone on Aug 22, 2020 20:37:08 GMT -5
The Avengers were faced with an opponent that was much stronger than all of them combined. Once the fighting ceased, Hanks flub was a major error that could have led to a lot of extra carnage. I agree that maybe they should have not had a court marshal, but that's the direction the story had to take in order to create dramatic tension. But the story indicates that no one expected the things that Hank said and did during the proceeding. They all wanted to let him off the hook. It was Hank at his worst and it made the story great.
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Post by james on Aug 23, 2020 7:46:42 GMT -5
Icctrombone must be my long lost brother! I love Hank Pym. My mom even made me a YJ costume for Halloween one year and my favorite issues ( 59,60, 93) Hank plays a major roll. I agree with his assesment at Hank was a strong character and always held his own. Frankly I've been disappointed by how he has been written since 230 or so.
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