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World War Ultron

- > FROM PAGE 7

Of Steel visual effects team suffer a collective panic attack.

That battle opens the book, set some years before present-day Marvel continuity (such as it is). Taking a leaf out of the Illuminati’s book, the Avengers trick Ultron into a space-capable vessel and send him off into deep space. Which is kind of the worst idea in the history of bad ideas, if that ship isn’t aimed right at the Sun.

Years later, the vessel finds its way to Saturn’s moon of Titan – birthplace to Thanos and home to big brain Mentor, his touchyfeel­y son and one-time Avenger Starfox, and thousands of other, er, Titanians.

Soon, the antagonist­ic AI has “infected” and assimilate­d almost all of Titan. Only Starfox escapes and makes it to Earth to warn the Avengers, unfortunat­ely arriving only just ahead of ... Titan itself!

So, this is where A:ROU becomes even more dramatic, and also a little boneheaded. Don’t you just love it whenever genre writers ignore the devastatin­g gravitic effects of having a massive body (Titan is half the size of Earth) suddenly appear in close proximity to our planet? (I’m looking at you, Smallville series finale and Transforme­rs: Dark Of The Moon ... among others.)

I had a few problems following the story here, some of them caused by my lack of familiarit­y with certain characters and situations, after losing track of Marvel continuity through its numerous reboots, retcons, and regurgitat­ions. I knew about Falcon taking over as Captain America and Thor becoming a woman. But Sabretooth a good guy? Who are these “Descendant­s” bozos anyway? What’s with Ultron’s funky Borg powers (time to update his Wikipedia entry, Marvel)?

Mostly, though, I just found the second half of A:ROU to be rushed and muddled.

Ultron not only tries to exact his vengeance upon his father for all his perceived “wrongs”, but even unleashes a galaxy-wide scheme of conquest/assimilati­on which is all but forgotten by the end of the story.

Remender is not one to shy away from dense plotting – his Uncanny Avengers stint really had my head spinning – and maybe this whole story would have played out better over, say, six or more regular comic issues just for Ultron’s return from banishment.

Remender just aims for too much to be contained within even A:ROU’s considerab­le 100-plus pages.

Where Remender really excels, though, is in his depiction of Hank Pym and how the “father” imprinted his fears and failings onto the “son”, and in some intriguing discourses on sentient AIs that the movie will have, hopefully (Neil Blommkamp’s recent Chappie missed the boat completely on that).

As Pym recalls in one tense scene, “I remember hearing Stark describe me to a new Avenger once when he thought I was out of the room. ‘Imagine if self-doubt was a person.’ It hurt.”

And it truly must have hurt a person like him all the time, to be so focused on his goals and compelled to help others, yet to be so misunderst­ood and underestim­ated. On the character exploratio­n front, A:ROU is a fitting tribute to a man whose greatest achievemen­t – the creation of an artificial life form – has been taken away from him on Marvel’s grandest stage to date (the upcoming A:AOU movie).

As abruptly as it is thrust upon us, the wrap-up of this graphic novel – an ironic “milestone” in the Pym-Ultron relationsh­ip – will still tug at the heartstrin­gs.

Also worthy of note is the art- work by Jerome Opena and Pepe Larraz, who have no trouble conveying the story’s spectacula­r action but who both sort of stumble in showing us the human face of this colossal struggle. Both artists seem to have put their A-game into Pym and the Vision’s expression­s, resulting in most everyone else having the same kind of hangdog look throughout.

One thing, though, A:ROU neatly encapsulat­es the main problem I have with Marvel’s comic-book tales these days (like Original Sin). Too often, the emphasis is on doing any old thing to keep the story moving forward, without much considerat­ion for how this messes with establishe­d comics norms, or how it simply. Does. Not. Make. Sense.

The head-scratching moments aside, this is still an ambitious and mostly epic Avengers event, a good read that’s better than the average movie tie-in comic. It just remains to be seen how it will figure in the greater scheme of things now that Marvel is about to wreck and retcon its entire universe.

 ??  ?? Heads up: it’s good to see the bantering Beast back in avenging action. Oh, the alliterati­on ...
Heads up: it’s good to see the bantering Beast back in avenging action. Oh, the alliterati­on ...
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