Friday, July 12, 2024

What I Bought 7/5/2024

My usual comic guy got shorted on his Marvel stuff last week, but I had to visit a different store to pick up a new longbox for Alex, and that guy had Deadpool, so let's take a look at one of the only comics I'm planning to buy this month.

Deadpool #4, by Cody Ziglar (writer), Roge Antonio (penciler), Eric Gapstur (penciler/inker), Jonas Trindade (inker), Guru-eFX (colorist), Joe Sabino (letterer) - Can't stop staring at Death Grip's swollen-looking lower lip.

Taskmaster puts Eleanor through her paces, where we see she can eventually figure out how to do acrobatic stuff by watching. The move she does when that happens doesn't entirely match the Spider-Man flip Taskmaster used on her two pages earlier, mostly because she kicks him in the back of the neck on the way down), but I don't know if that's her combining the stuff she's seen him do or something else.

I'm also not sure who's drawing which parts. The lines seem smoother is the first half of the book, fewer extraneous little lines, which makes me think that's Gapstur. There's also one panel where Wade's eyes turn into big hearts because he's so happy about how cool Ellie is that doesn't feel like something Antonio would do, based on the previous three issues.

And her healing abilities also let her build strength faster because she doesn't need to rest long between workouts, though Taskmaster doesn't think she can get super-strength out of it. That's a relief, I was worried Ziglar was going to go nuts with this idea, he said, insincerely.

Still, Deadpool is not prepared to let Eleanor join him on missions, especially not when Death Grip sends a persona video advising Wade to either visit, or prepare to receive visitors. Never one to overlook the chance to ruin someone else's toilet, Deadpool and Taskmaster go to temple. The cannon fodder are, well, cannon fodder, but Death Grip does something that seems to remove Deadpool's healing factor, then cuts him across the chest.

It seems like, if you've incorporated a blade that nullifies healing factors, there's no need to do a specific move to remove said healing factor. Just cut the guy. But I don't really get this cult, either. The acolytes are hoping Deadpool will teach them his ways of being unkillable, but Death Grip is trying to kill him. If they see death as a gift, shouldn't they not want to learn how Deadpool is so hard to kill? Shouldn't they all see him as an abomination?

Maybe this'll make more sense if I read the whole arc after it wraps up next month.

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