The
following is a review of “The Silver Surfer: The Infinity Gauntlet” graphic
novel by Ron Marz & Susan Kennedy with Len Wein, John Figueroa & Gavin
Curtis as presented in Marvel Epic Collection format. This is not a review of “The
Infinity Gauntlet” limited series.
Galactus is
a creature of cosmic destruction that sustains himself by devouring the life
essences of entire planets. Norrin Radd was a man on the peaceful planet of
Zenn-La. Galactus discovered Zenn-La and prepared to consume the planet. Norrin
wished to save his planet and made a deal with Galactus: if Galactus were to
spare Zenn-La, Norrin would now become Galactus’ herald, to search through the
spaceways for planets that may sustain Galactus. Galactus accepted this deal,
spared Zenn-La, and granted Norrin the Power Cosmic, and a surfboard that
obeyed Norrin’s every command. Norrin was reborn as the Silver Surfer.
The Silver
Surfer eventually discovered the planet Earth, and summoned Galactus. However,
as the Silver Surfer awaited Galactus’ arrival, he met humans, and learned the
value of life. The super hero team, the Fantastic Four learned of a doomsday
device called the Ultimate Nullifier that would defeat Galactus. Galactus
admitted defeat and agreed to spare Earth, but felt betrayed by the Silver
Surfer, so Galactus placed a barrier around Earth that prevented the Silver
Surfer from leaving Earth’s atmosphere. Galactus moved on and took on a new
herald named Nova, an Earth woman who served Galactus due to her unrequited
love for Galactus. The Silver Surfer was eventually able to leave Earth’s
atmosphere and now searches the spaceways for adventure, to help those in need,
and to eventually eliminate the threat of Galactus for the universe.
The Silver
Surfer was pulled into a time warp, placing him on a peaceful planet in the 26th
century. The leader of the planet, a long-lived man named Marshach used his
power to eliminate war, violence, and weapons. Unfortunately, this peace was
destroyed when the Guardians of the Galaxy arrived and a conflict broke out,
eventually bringing Marshach to accept mortality.
The Eternal
named Eros has a power that attracts almost every woman. He has never actually
fallen in love before, until a captivating woman walks into an intergalactic
bar. However, this woman is able to resist Eros’ charms.
The
Midnight Sun was experimented on and was mind-wiped with the mission to destroy
the Silver Surfer. He escaped his captors and went off through the spaceways to
establish a life of his own.
Nova and
the Silver Surfer have had an unspoken romance that they can never actually
understand or act upon, being literally from two different worlds and from
being in the service of Galactus. The Silver Surfer has been unsuccessfully trying
to convince Nova to leave Galactus, and the Silver Surfer now takes Nova into
the past to her Earth. Upon next planet she discovers, Nova sees the potential
of the life on this planet, but she is still unable to prevent Galactus from
consuming the planet.
Thanos is
an Eternal from Titan, a moon of the planet Saturn. He wishes to take over the
universe, hoping to impress the Mistress Death. Thanos had learned of the Infinity
Gems and set out on a quest to obtain them to create death on a massive scale.
Thanos obtains all six Infinity Gems and attached them to his device, the
Infinity Gauntlet. With a snap of his fingers, half of all the inhabitants of
the universe instantly dies. The Silver Surfer was unable to prevent this. The Silver
Surfer is able to contact Doctor Stephen Strange on Earth and brings Firelord
and Drax the Destroyer into a team with the intent to bring down Thanos.
The alien
Kree Empire have been in an upheaval and are now lead by the Emperor Clumsy
Foulup. The Kree Armada wish to eliminate their Emperor and try to trick the
Silver Surfer into doing the job.
Proceeding
Thanos’ snap, the Earth super villain the Rhino has now mentally spiraled out
of control and has decided that all animals should be free and begins to let
loose all the animals living in the Central Park Zoo. The Silver Surfer attempts
to convince Rhino to return the animals to safety, resulting in a conflict
between the Silver Surfer and the Rhino.
The demon
named Mephisto has formed an alliance with Thanos. With Mephisto’s help, Thanos
now creates a dream world where all of the universe’s remaining super heroes
and super villains who would oppose him have been eliminated. The Silver Surfer
and Adam Warlock are pulled into this reality and the Silver Surfer battles
Thanos and destroys the dream.
The Silver
Surfer is sent into the pocket dimension ruled by Virtual Reality that forces
the Silver Surfer to face the doubts, shames, and regrets the Silver Surfer has
experienced over the course of his life and triumphs with the memories of
friendship and love.
Upon
complete victory over all of the remaining super heroes and super villains,
Thanos leaves his physical body and becomes the universe’s Supreme Being.
Thanos’ granddaughter Nebula discovers Thanos’ body and snatches the Infinity
Gauntlet, stealing all of Thanos’ power. The Silver Surfer, Doctor Stephen
Strange, Adam Warlock, Thor, Drax the Destroyer, Firelord, Doctor Victor Von Doom,
and Bruce Banner/the Hulk unite and realize that if they hope to defeat Nebula,
they need the assistance of Thanos. The Silver Surfer needs further convincing,
so Doctor Strange sends the Silver Surfer and Thanos to the astral plane to
settle their conflict.
The Midnight
Sun finally encounters the Silver Surfer, but their battle is ended upon the
arrival of the Inhumans (Black Bolt, Karnak, Gorgon and Lockjaw).
Taneleer
Tivian/the Collector learns of a rare space virus, which intrigues him and
wishes to obtain a specimen. Having faked his death, he sends the Silver Surfer
in his stead. However, the Silver Surfer is not the only one seeking the virus.
The Collection Agency, a mercenary cadre, have been hired to obtain the virus.
The two forces are eventually able to put aside their differences, but the
Silver Surfer has now been infected by the virus himself.
In his
sickness, the Silver Surfer unites with the deceased Kree soldier
Mar-Vell/Captain Marvel in a fever dream.
Following
this, the Silver Surfer finds himself battling his dark side and his good self
and bad self must unite if the Silver Surfer is to survive.
After the
virus debacle is finished, the Silver Surfer battles the space monster Reptyl,
unintentionally drawing the attraction of Princess Alaisa Ruantha Pethnan of
the Second Royal House of the Kharta’een Empire, a woman used to getting her
way. Because of his near-immortality and her mortality, the Silver Surfer tries
to send her away to prevent him from heartbreak, something Alaisa will not
stand for. She turns to Mistress Love to gain immortality and becomes Mistress
Love’s Avatar. Mistress Love warns Alaisa of the other side of love. The new
Avatar, however, is corrupted by Master Hate. Alaisa is still spurned by the
Silver Surfer, but Alaisa still refuses to give up on her quest for Silver
Surfer’s love.
While on
his travels, the Silver Surfer hears a mysterious moaning, and upon
investigation, he learns that it is from an injured sentient spaceship, who
asks the Silver Surfer to do a difficult task for the Silver Surfer to complete.
When the
Silver Surfer is targeted by an assault force, he accidentally enters a
hyperwave, sending him on a massive collision course with Earth, and Reed
Richards/Mister Fantastic must act fast to save both the Silver Surfer and
Earth.
Nova spares
the lives of the Kehilla before their planet is destroyed by Galactus and
promises to give them a new planet to live on. However, the Kehilla fleet’s
leader Kastyx is not receptive of this, and Nova is caught in a conflict
between Kastyx and his wife Kasema for the future of the Kehilla race.
Let me
start by saying that the Silver Surfer is not a character I am very familiar
with, and I’ve actually never read “The Infinity Gauntlet.” When I bought this
graphic novel, I was expecting to have it contain “The Infinity Gauntlet”
limited series. After purchasing the graphic novel, I noticed that this book
actually did not contain any issues of “The Infinity Gauntlet” limited series.
This made me a little wary as I started to read the book. The first issue in
the book was an Annual issue that was Part 3 of “The Korvac Quest.” I’ve had
experiences with Annuals in Epic Collections, which, oddly enough, usually does
not require reading other Parts in the “story arc.” They don’t really
completely crossover, so this didn’t deter me, especially since a recap was
offered on the first page after the Table of Contents and a summary follow-up
explaining how the story ended. That said, the story of “The Korvac Quest”
contained in this graphic novel featured the Guardians of the Galaxy, but these
were the Guardians of the Galaxy from the 31st century, a team I am
very much not familiar with. This is not the team from the Marvel Cinematic
Universe films and shows, and I only know the current Guardians of the Galaxy
team, which was rather disappointing. Then, “The Infinity Gauntlet” issues were
issues of “The Silver Surfer” that tied-in with “The Infinity Gauntlet” limited
series actually had fill-ins periodically that guides the reader through the
main “The Infinity Gauntlet” limited series without actually reading the
limited series. This made the graphic novel a lot more comfortable to me. As I
continued through the whole book (which took me three days to read, but only
because I had other commitments, so I probably could have finished it in two),
I found myself rather enjoying it. I will say that I found no dull moments, the
book kept my interest, I never felt bored, and reading it never felt like a
chore, all things that can happen in any form of media, so that meant I found
it to be a relative good read. Yes, there were points where I could have used
more background information, but that wasn’t too much of a hindrance to me
since enough way explained. Nebula never actually appeared in the entire book,
but I could forgive that. Also, the Nova storyline at the end of the book felt superfluous
as the Silver Surfer never actually appeared and I don’t know why the editors
felt it fit in in the book, but I still thought the story was relatively interesting,
so that was also forgivable. Now, anyone who knows what a “graphic novel” means
knows that a graphic novel is a narrative storyline with supporting artwork.
Which means that artwork can be tricky to pair with a narrative. You could have
what you felt like a stellar story, but if the artwork is not to your liking,
it ruins the book for you. And there are also times there is what you feel is
amazing art, but you still can’t accept it because you hated the story, so it
seems like a total waste. You, at this point, can obviously tell that most of
the book was to my liking. My gripes actually did not hamper too much on my
numeric score, which we will get to in a couple of paragraphs, so hold your
horses (does anyone say that anymore or am I just old?). Now, many of my prior
readers know how I feel about comic book art. The period when the book is
written tend to have relatively standardized art styles. The issues contained
in this Epic Collection range from the years 1991-1992. Some of my prior
readers know how I feel about art from that time. If not, I feel like it’s
typically a good style. It’s from the point before we had computers to touch up
the artwork, but I feel like it still was relatively high quality. Now, I can
say that I felt like it was good artwork, or I felt like it was good artwork
for the time, which is a major distinction. Ultimately, I feel like it was just
plain good artwork. I still feel like it holds up to today’s standards. I never
felt like I was looking at low-quality work and I felt like it fit the story
very well.
I’m now
going to tell you how I feel about accessibility of the book. I know that some
of my readers have never read Marvel comic books before, but love the MCU films
and are now considering reading comics and are looking for a place to start. I
know some of you have no knowledge of Marvel at all and are only reading this
because you’re a fan of my work or personally know me and are only reading this
post out of what you feel is obligation. I also know some of you are longtime
Marvel comics readers but have never read this story before and are interested
in hearing about something you now want to read. Or, I know some of you have
already read everything contained in this book and are just interested in
reading my opinions. Like I said before, this book is not “The Infinity
Gauntlet” and that is a major deterrent to anyone who is unfamiliar with Marvel
or “The Infinity Gauntlet.” This is absolutely NOT a good place to start for
new readers. Some of my prior readers know I use the phrase “self-contained.” This
means that everything inside the book is completely cohesive and doesn’t rely
on outside stories aside from what’s actually in this book. If you’ve actually
really been reading this and actually paid any form of attention know that this
is not “The Infinity Gauntlet.” And that I’ve never actually read “The Infinity
Gauntlet.” And that there were points where I wish there was more information.
So, I’m saying that if you’ve never read a Marvel comic before, this is a
TERRIBLE place to start. I think the optimal reader should know “The Infinity
Gauntlet” if they hope to fully grasp the book’s entire storyline. Now, I’m a
longtime reader of Marvel comics, I’ve been reading for over twenty years (yes,
I’m old), so the fact that I haven’t read “The Infinity Gauntlet” didn’t hinder
me too much, but I can’t in good faith say you can do the same as me.
Okay, I’ve
been going on for quite awhile now, so we’re going to speed up the rest as much
as possible. So now I’m giving you my numeric score. I score on a scale of one-(the
worst)to-ten (the best). I have to take everything I’ve just typed into consideration
to give it a fair score. This may surprise you, but I still give it an eight. I
felt like it was a solid enough work, with both an enjoyable story and
enjoyable art. So if you’re a Marvel fan but have never read the content in
this book, I totally recommend this book to you, but if you’re not a longtime
Marvel fan, I totally have to say this isn’t the droid you’re looking for.
So, to finish up, this blog is all my opinions and my opinions only. I can’t expect you to agree with everything I say, and I actually like that you disagree with me. We’re all entitled to feel however you want about anything. So you’ll see that I don’t say “it was a good book,” I say “I felt like it was a good book.” This blog is primarily book reviews, mostly Marvel, having done literally dozens, but I also write short fiction and nonfiction, free-verse poetry, editorials and essays, and several other kinds of work, and I try to post at as frequent of a basis as I can (I do have a life outside this blog), usually a post or two a week, sometimes none, sometimes more, but I keep at this. I have plenty more content coming up for you to read, so if you liked this post, check out what I’ve already written and come back for more, and so, ‘til next time, Tim Cubbin… out!
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