The New Avengers #50 REVIEW

new_avengers_50
Sorry for the lateness; I had a little problem involving my lungs flooding with infected fluid, making every breath a drowning agony, which impeded my ability to review comic books. Anyhow, here are my comments on New Avengers #50. Read them and post your own!

THE NEW AVENGERS #50
WRITER: Brian Michael Bendis
ART: Billy Tan, Matt Banning, and Justin Ponsor
LETTERER: Albert Deschesne

Guest Artists:
Bryan Hitch and Rain Beredo
David Aja and Dave Stewart
Michael Gaydos
David Lopez and Alvaro Lopez
Alex Maleev
Steve McNiven, Dexter Vines and Morry Hollowell
Leinil Yu, Mark Morales and Dave McCaig
Steve Epting
Greg Horn

PLOT:
Once the Avengers deduce the Dark Avengers’ identities, they formulate a ploy to lure Osborn’s crew into a trap at the abandoned Hellfire Club building. Mama Goblin didn’t raise no dummy, however, so Stormin’ Norman anticipates the deception. Instead of rushing in headlong with his own posse, our villain tips off the Hood’s gang of goons and lets his enemies clash with an army of lameasses. After our heroes win and escape, Ronin announces the truth about the Dark Avengers on television and encourages the public to resist the psychopaths who now rule the country.

THOUGHTS:
I should mention a couple things that do NOT effect my final evaluation in this and other reviews. The first is price. To criticize, and to read criticism, approaching creative work as art rewards the mind far more than looking at it as mere consumer product. While I realize $4.99 divided by 37 pages of story equals a comparatively inferior value than to what we are used (assuming, of course, that one values all comic pages equally), I’d rather gauge how well the creators improved upon 37 blank pages and let you decide whether that’s worth the Lincoln.

The second is the cover. I struggle to get past this because, while many comic covers abstractly interpret the interior, this one breaches the line between that and outright lying. For now, though, I’ll separate the marketing from the content. Conversely, I do find it fair to criticize how Brian Bendis raises and dissappointes expectations within his pages. Last issue blatantly teased an “Avengers battle royal” and this one builds up to that anticipated battle right until the swerve. In ways, this bait and switch serves the plot because it demonstrates Norman’s calculation and restraint, necessary qualities for a major Marvel player. However, while I don’t mind writers throwing us for a loop now and again, I take issue when a surprise proves less exciting by massive degrees than the expected outcome.

The New Avengers #50 illustrates what I call the Inverse B-Lister Coolness Principle. This theorum posits that obscure villains get lamer the more of them you put in one place. Alone, baddies like The Wrecker and Thunderball have their charm, but fill a two-page spread with dozens of second-string foes and they become a mass of personalityless tights and colors. Marvel adds some spice by having different artists draw each page of the fight, an increasingly common gimmick that usually ruins comics but works here because each page features a new character’s perspective, justifying the changes in style by coupling them with changes in perception. Better yet, the various talents handle strongly associated characters, with Epting on Captain America, Aja on Iron Fist, McNiven on Spidey, and so on. Unfortunately, the individual soliliquies rarely say anything interesting and the art quality spans the entire map.

Besides the fight, we get a dialogue-heavy first half. Sometimes I envy Bendis. I wish I could write

Panel 4
WOLVERINE: Yeah, yeah…
IRON FIST: Yeah?
MS MARVEL: Yeah.

and get paid for that. He makes it easy for Billy Tan too, because often the same piece of art repeats for three panels in a row. Used sparingly, this cut-and-paste technique can help pace out a scene, but when overused it looks lazy regardless of the issue’s overall art intensiveness. At least we finally witness Spider-Man’s full reaction to Osborn’s ascent, which, while not half as epic as I would have liked, makes him seem a bit less annoying now that he’s in his element. With his arch enemy seizing power beyond with what Spidey can compete, his role as the ADHD kid throwing a fit in the background makes sense. Hell, one exchange with Wolverine actually made me laugh.

FAVORITE QUOTE:
“You’ve had sex?”

RATING:
3 webheads out of 5. Adequate. Only a few of the better guest artists save it from total mediocrity.

REVIEWED BY: CrazyChris

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17 Comments

  1. While you’re right that the price should not take any part in the review of the actually inside CC, I cannot help but ask when I read a more expensive book “was this worth what I paid for.”

    This was not, so long NA, I’d like to say I had fun, but I’d be lying. Now if only DA lost deodato I could drop that to.

  2. Oh yeah, anyways, Spidey will never not be the funnyman. The book doesn’t even need him, it just has him for sales (but I’m being reduntant for fun). I think thats the reason why it doesnt bother some people (like me), since the role could be filled by any modern teenaged/middle-aged hero and it just happens to be Spidey. If you dont think of him like Spidey it kinda slides off. But, to my contradiction, this could fuel the fire more because why use Spidey if it COULD be anybody?

  3. Comic releif? What’s he releiving by being a retard? (hahaha, I’m kinda kidding, but y’know……)

  4. New Avengers is the only Spidey book still on my pull list, so I don’t really hate it. I just wish he’d stop using Spidey solely as comic relief.

    And I’m probably in the monority, but I really miss Lenil Francis Yu on this book. Tan’s just not doing it for me.

  5. lol, i always proof read them in the comic shop b4 i buy them nowadays cause the standard is so low now. lol 😛

    like Hulk#10 – the defenders one… the first issue is all just a waste of paper…lol i gotta check em first now.

  6. oh yeah also. love the artwork -but- maybe if they develop a more efficient method they can create more actions and less posing.

  7. I wish bendis would get that Spider woman-shaped dildo out of his a** and stop writing Spidey like he’s only good for wisecracking.

  8. I thought the writing was fine in this (just my oppionion though). It’s kinda like how it would go in real life, since not everybody has a speech prepared for them…. The idea of that kinda hurts that too (a little), ‘cuz arent we in real life? (whoa…If you say no…..) Do we need realistic banter? Idk lol. Nice review anyways!

  9. Cool review.
    I totally agree about the guest artists, not really necessary and none of them really suited their characters (apart from Aja).

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