Friday, May 10, 2024

What I Bought 5/8/2024

I took a little driving trip Wednesday to run an errand and check out a few stores. Got the errand done easily enough, didn't find much of the stuff I was hoping to. But I did find two of this week's comics in a store I checked at random, so that's good.

Fantastic Four #20, by Ryan North (writer), Carlos Gomez (artist), Jesus Arbutov and Fer Sifuentes-Sujo (color artists), Joe Caramagna (letterer) - Crap, Reed's miniaturized HERBIE. At least Ben's got him under control. . .for now.

Ben and Johnny, independent of each other, get jobs at the same grocery store. Annoyed with each other, they each decide to win Employee of the Month. Johnny opts for cheesy flattery and shameless flirting, Ben by showing interest in the everyday lives of the customers. Sounds exhausting.

The first month ends in a tie, so the two keep it up into a second month, until some guy comes up wanting to writing a story poking fun at the Human Torch working a minimum wage job and living in a house with a large number of other people. Hey, that's environmentally friendly, or so I've been told by articles I've seen touting shared living spaces as the future! I mean, no thanks, I did my time on that shit, but if other people want to be close to their loved ones or total strangers, great. More elbow room for me, suckers!

Anyway, Ben comes to Johnny's defense, not that it stops the article from running, but the important thing is they care about each other, even as they fight like wet cats. Ben even compliments Johnny's mustache and implies Johnny would be an excellent exotic dancer. It makes sense in context.

So the story issue lives or dies on the bits North and Gomez get out of the framework, and it does pretty well. Ben and Johnny messing with each other is well-established, so it doesn't feel weird when they argue at dinner, or when Johnny annoys Ben by saying, "It's collaboratin' time!" Although the touch I like best is that Gomez draws the Thing with a regular pencil taped to his index finger. Presumably because it makes it easier to use than trying to hold it like most people would. (Gomez draws an excellent Thing. He avoids placing Ben's head too high up on his body, which is I think what Coello and Fiorelli did, which was why it looked like his head was barely connected to the rest of him sometimes.)

Now the book starts Blood Hunt tie-ins, so I guess I'll see it in later in the summer.

Deadpool #2, by Cody Ziglar (writer), Roge Antonio (artist), Guru-eFX (colorist), Joe Sabino (letterer) - Nice to see someone remember Taskmaster has a bow. Seems like you only ever see the sword and the shield these days.

Deadpool makes enough money killing people to afford to buy the place the guy he killed last issue owned to set up his new Mercs for Money operation. Understanding that he's lousy at organization, follow-through, details, budgeting. . .basically everything, Deadpool brings in Taskmaster for that, and Taskmaster brings in some guy from the previous run of Amazing Spider-Man (the one that ended with Ben Reilly as, whatever the hell he is now) as their IT guy. Taskmaster doesn't know much about Death Grip to justify wasting even the 3 or 4 panels spent on it, but they get a job protecting some loser at an "influencer-con", only to have Crossbones show up trying to kill. . .I think Deadpool? For Death Grip?

I mean, one Taskmaster's exposition panels actually shows Death Grip talking with Crossbones - about what we don't know, it's video footage from, somewhere - and then Crossbones shows up, which makes Taskmaster suspect set-up. Which I don't really get. They were hired by the influencer, because he thought there'd be an attempt on his life (or he thought they'd get him more notoriety.) But Deadpool was taking jobs that involved killing, not protecting. Why would anyone think that was going to draw him out?

Of more interest is the subplot with Ellie. She didn't hide the fact Deadpool gave her a phone to contact him, but she's annoyed he'd only come see her when she's in trouble. So she's figured out how to connect the GPS in one of Preston's LMD hands to the phone to find him. Which I thought meant Ziglar was changing her mutant power to some technomancer thing like Forge, especially after she said just watching a few online videos made it click for her. But she cuts herself and her hand heals in a couple of panels, so. . .it's still a change to her mutant power, but not as far off. I'm actually most surprised Preston is annoyed Deadpool wouldn't chat with her. I figured she was still kind of pissed at him from the end of Duggan's run.

Man, I hope Eleanor's not going to get herself in the crossfire and end up injured enough she combines with the symbiote dog. Although I could see a jealousy subplot that Wade has another "daughter" he does let hang around him all the time.

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