{"id":13817,"date":"2013-06-18T09:00:38","date_gmt":"2013-06-18T08:00:38","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.badreputation.org.uk\/?p=13817"},"modified":"2013-06-18T14:02:03","modified_gmt":"2013-06-18T13:02:03","slug":"join-the-revolution-x-men-1-review","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/badreputation.org.uk\/2013\/06\/18\/join-the-revolution-x-men-1-review\/","title":{"rendered":"Join the revolution? X-Men #1 Review"},"content":{"rendered":"
It’s been a long time since I’ve bought a paper comic. I was deeply in love with comics at one point in my life<\/a>. I swore off them a while ago for reasons of both taste – I’d run out of titles with female characters that I was interested in – and budget: it was one too many expensive habits for a theatre professional, and in the end, red wine won the day.<\/p>\n
I’ve kept a weather eye on the comics world, and the announcement of
an all-female line-up for
X-Men<\/strong> was enough to send me to Forbidden Planet. But what
made me actually buy the thing despite the \u00a33 price tag was writer
Brian
Wood<\/a> (DMZ<\/strong>,
Channel Zero<\/strong> and
Northlanders<\/strong>) and colourist Laura Martin (Planetary<\/strong>,
Authority<\/strong> and
JLA Earth 2<\/strong>, which all sit beautiful and bold on
my shelves thanks in part to her palette choices and ability
to make heroes look truly heroic).<\/p>\n
Marvel introduce the issue on their website<\/a> as follows:<\/p>\n
Because you demanded it! The X-Women finally get their
own book!<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
So, a fan-based revolution in the world of comics?
Perhaps. The title is part of Marvel NOW, the 2012
relaunch of the brand aiming to bring new readers into
the market, or in my case, perhaps to bring readers back
into the fold and into comic stores.<\/p>\n
Could it be that the comic industry is\u00a0 tackling
the gap in the market for mainstream titles that are
interesting to women? I’m heartened by the weight
put behind this comic; it doesn’t seem to be a
gimmick or an afterthought. The issue was heavily
trailed with an XX teaser campaign<\/a>, which was
hard not to notice. And what I’ve also been
interested to note is the supportive voices around the
line-up, with Bleeding
Cool<\/a> praising Marvel for “raising their game
in this regard” and other commentators using the
launch as an opportunity to dedicate space to interviews
with women in the industry, and to the importance of
more titles about women, for women.<\/p>\n
There’s a
good piece here in
Clutch<\/strong><\/a>, an interview
with editor Jeanine Schafer over at
The Mary Sue<\/strong><\/a>, and another piece here
at
Bitch<\/strong> magazine<\/a>.<\/p>\n
To me, my reviewers!<\/strong><\/p>\n
The series features an all-female team
including Storm, Jubilee, Rogue, Kitty
Pryde, Rachel Grey (daughter of Scott and
Jean) and Psylocke. They’re based at
Jean Grey’s School for the Gifted and
pitted against runaway trains, teenage
tantrums in the hallway, and the arrival of
John Sublime with a request for help.<\/p>\n
I’m very pleased to see Storm’s
mowhawk back in business, and Jubilee was
always a favourite of mine from the TV
series<\/a>, even if she was often cast as a
mutant girl version of Snarf.<\/a>
She spoke to me of teenage wish-fulfilment,
her mutant power always waiting in the wings
for the right moment to shine, exactly like
mine. Except my mutant power hasn’t
developed yet. I’m sure it
will.<\/p>\n
What’s good about it? Lots. Lots and
lots. The storyline moves on nicely, with a
strong introduction that sets up future
intrigue. It’s issue one, so
I’ve not got a lot to go on, but so
far it feels well-paced and with good action
scenes and themes of homecoming (positive
and negative) alongside the usual
“outsider” politics that have
always been a solid foundation for
mutant-related plot.<\/p>\n
The main characters get set up nicely and
all showcase their abilities, personalities
and range of powers. Jubilee and Kitty are
set at a similar age and look like they are
set to play out the roles of younger,
naive\/vulnerable characters, although there
are two pupils at the school who look like
they might also fill that position, so
we’ll see. In terms of more
experienced or older figures, Storm takes
centre stage on the cover and is the team
leader and headmistress with Rachel Grey as
her second-in-command. Rogue is the
powerhouse, and is shown enjoying herself
being gung-ho in saving the day during a
classic runaway train sequence, whilst
Psylocke is pleasingly intimidating in the
role of bad cop when Rachel interviews John
Sublime.<\/p>\n
There’s the usual balance of
action\/adventure with high school drama,
much as you might expect, so in the future
I’m hoping for something along the
lines of Grant
Morrison’s
New X Men<\/strong>.<\/a> This is
referenced clearly through the young
people at the school, so in those panels
you can play a fun game of Guess Who?
Mutant High Edition. This does also tend
to lead on to a less fun game of Where Are
We In What Passes For Continuity Around
Here, but generally I take the Doctor Who approach<\/a>
on that one, so try not to get cross-eyed,
basically.<\/p>\n
I can’t write this review without
talking about how the characters look,
partly because comics are a visual
medium, but also because it’s so
good to see a lot of the traditional
problems of female representation
overturned here. We have two non-white
characters in the line-up, neither of
whom are the xenophilia standard sexy blue lady.<\/a>
Almost all of the outfits in Olivier
Coipel’s artwork are really
nicely, thoughtfully designed and look
very practical, including Rogue’s
costume which comes complete with a
hooded top. No spiked heels – or
any of the break-your-legs Girl
Power stacks of Frank Quitely<\/a>
– are in evidence.
Everyone’s zippers go all the way
up, with the sad exception of Storm who,
in the words of a friend of mine, seems
to have developed a secondary mutation
allowing her outfit to stick to her
breasts despite flying at speed.
She’s clearly the Emma Frost
replacement in the line-up.<\/p>\n
I’m going to be charitable and say
that the instances of female characters
doing needlessly sexy poses is fairly
low, but having passed the issue around
a few friends (male and female) the
mileage varies. That said, it’s
certainly way below what I would have
expected and certainly nowhere near the
awful debacle that is DC’s recent
treatment of Starfire<\/a>. I could
easily imagine a world in which an
all-female X-Men line up could have been
all bikinis, all the time…<\/p>\n