The following is a review of the graphic novel “Astonishing
X-Men: Gifted” by Joss Whedon as presented in Marvel Modern Era Epic Collection
format.
Mutants are humans born with a genetic quirk that give
them abilities that ordinary humans do not. Because of this, regular humans
fear and even hate mutants. Charles Xavier formed the X-Men on the hope that
one day, humans and mutants will one day live together in peace and harmony. He
founded the Xavier Institute for Higher Learning as a home for the X-Men and as
a school to teach mutants how to use their gifts properly. However, he left the
school to reside on the devastated mutant island nation of Genosha to help rebuild
and left the Xavier Institute and the X-Men in the hands of Scott Summers/Cyclops
and Emma Frost.
Cyclops
assembled a team of X-Men consisting of himself, his lover Emma Frost, James
Howlett/Logan/Wolverine, Henry “Hank” McCoy, and Katherine “Kitty” Pryde as a
public face for mutants aiding humanity. However, the team had not been gelling
right away. Kitty met Emma Frost the day she first met the X-Men, Emma having
formerly been the White Queen of the Hellfire Club, an organization that the
X-Men clashed with for many years, and Kitty was apprehensive about a former
villain now leading the X-Men. Logan had been unaccepting of Scott and Emma’s
new relationship, Scott having just lost his wife Jean Grey, the woman both
Scott and Logan loved.
The
day for the X-Men to go public arrived when an alien named Ord led a team of
mercenaries to an art preservation gala. They came wielding stolen S.H.I.E.L.D.
technology. (S.H.I.E.L.D. is a world peacekeeping organization led by Colonel Nick
Fury.) Scott led the team against Ord and the mercenaries. Though the X-Men
were able to safely evacuate all the hostages and take out the mercenaries,
they were unable to defeat Ord. It took Kitty’s alien dragon companion Lockheed
to drive Ord away. While the X-Men were on their first mission, a scientist
named Doctor Kavita Rao dropped a major bombshell at a press conference. She
had been working with a young mutant subject named Tildie Soames, who was able
to physically manifest her nightmares. She announced to the world that the
laboratory Benetech had developed a “cure” for mutation, a vaccine that would
permanently turn a mutant into a normal human being.
The
students at the Xavier Institute were highly divided. Some wanted the cure, wanted
normal lives. The X-Men were tasked with holding the students together. Wanting
to know if this cure was legitimate, Hank broke into the main Benetech
laboratory in New York in an attempt to steal the cure. He was caught by Doctor
Rao, who agreed that Hank should, in fact, test the cure and gave him a sample.
This led to a conflict between him and Logan that Emma had to resolve
telepathically. While testing the cure, Hank noticed that the cure had traces
of DNA from a mutant in the Xavier Institute files, and he went to Scott, who
gathered the X-Men to break into the Benetech laboratory to investigate. Scott
and Hank were under the assumption that the was being done on a corpse, as the
mutant on file was believed deceased. While investigating, Kitty used her phasing
powers to pass through a metal that gave her difficulty. Upon arriving in a
subbasement, Kitty discovered Piotr “Peter” Rasputin/Colossus, the mutant who
was the test subject, who was believed to be deceased, and was Kitty’s former
lover.
While
the X-Men were investigating Benetech, Ord went to the Xavier Institute,
looking for the X-Men. Upon learning that the X-Men were not at home, he
decided to “leave a message” by using the cure on a student who called himself
Wing, a young mutant whose wish upon graduating the Xavier Institute was to
join the X-Men.
The
X-Men encountered the government organization Sentient Worlds Observation and
Response Department, led by Special Agent Abigail Brand, who informed the X-Men
that Ord’s people were actually the ones behind the cure and not Benetech. A
mutant, probably an X-Man, was destined to destroy the Breakworld, Ord’s home,
sometime within the following three years, and the cure was a preventative
measure to avoid a war between Earth and the Breakworld. Ord returned to
Benetech and attempted to escape with the cure and Tildie, and it was up to the
X-Men to prevent Ord’s escape and rescue Tildie.
The
X-Men then teamed up with the Fantastic Four to drive a giant monster out of
Manhattan. The Xavier Institute had a training facility called the Danger Room.
It was equipped with alien Shi’ar technology that could replicate enemies and
environments. It also had sentience. Its artificial intelligence tricked the
depowered Wing into helping it break its programming. It then used a frequency
pulse that incapacitated all the psychics in the Xavier Institute and took over
all the electronics in the school. It also brought a Sentinel (a robot
programmed to hunt and destroy mutants) to the school to attack the X-Men. The
X-Men herded all the students into the Danger Room where they thought the
students would be safe, but Kitty discovered that the Danger Room was now
attempting to gain form. She was unable to prevent the other X-Men from
destroying the Danger Room’s power core, which inadvertently freed the Danger
Room’s programming and created a new threat: Danger. The X-Men then confronted Danger
but were all taken down quickly. Danger knew all the X-Men’s moves, powers, and
strategies, having trained with them for years. But defeating the X-Men wasn’t
enough for her. She decided that to attain fulfillment, she had to take out her
“father” and captor: Charles Xavier. She then set off for Genosha to complete
her mission. Scott revealed to the other X-Men Xavier’s location, which had
been kept secret from them, and the X-Men then set off for Genosha to save
their mentor.
Okay,
so some of you may remember from way back when that I did a review of the prose
novelization version of “Astonishing X-Men: Gifted,” right when I started this
blog. The book in Marvel Modern Era Epic Collection format just came out last
week. So some of you may already know some of this story if you’ve read that
review, and this current review does have spoilers to the previous review,
having a second story arc contained in it, so sorry if you’ve been with me an
still haven’t read either version of this story. Anyway, you probably want to
know my thoughts. I opted not to go into detail about all of the individual
X-Men’s powers and histories, I thought that might take too long and really
would have no true impact on this particular review, so if you couldn’t follow this
review because you had no idea who the heck I was talking about, I apologize. If
this were just an individual character, I would have gone into more detail, but
seeing as how this is a team, I felt that just explaining the point of the team
itself should suffice as background information. Besides, it gets boring when I
yammer on forever, which I am doing right now, so let’s just move on. Now, the
issues in this book were released between 2004-2005. I remember it from back
then. I remember getting “Astonishing X-Men” #1 in 2004 and reading “And now,
at last… we have found a cure.” And thinking “HOLY (word I’m not using; this
blog is G-rated)!” It was a HUGE shocker. Joss Whedon handled this series so
well. He had so many good twists and turns in his narratives. Bringing Colossus
back wasn’t my favorite choice at the time. Colossus died curing the Legacy
Virus, which was basically Marvel’s allegory for superhuman AIDS, and I did
feel like it was an affront to both the character and the writer who made the
choice to kill him off to bring him back this way, but I did eventually get
over it as he proved useful in future storylines. Grant Morrison was the one
who decided to ship Scott Summers and Emma Frost, which, at the time, I thought
was bizarre, but Joss Whedon made it work. “Dangerous,” the second story arc, also
had its surprises. The Danger Room becoming sentient was actually an interesting
concept, especially making this a villain who knew everything the X-Men were
going to do before they did it, having studied them for years, the only one she
didn’t know was Charles Xavier. I know some AI stories can come across as
rather cheesy, but I have to say I didn’t feel like this was one of those. I
also have to give great praise to the artist, John Cassaday. His artwork, to me
at least, was BRILLIANT! I know a lot of my regular readers hear me moan about
the artwork a lot in my reviews, especially my reviews from this year, 2024. I
don’t think I’ve yet been able to say I consistently liked the artwork in any
of the Modern Era Epic Collections I’ve reviewed, so me saying that is a big
deal. Also, this has been the only one with only one artist, so that’s another
reason, but kudos to Cassaday, both to his talent and to his dedication to the
series, ultimately penciling twenty-five consecutive issues of the series, so
if Marvel releases a second consecutive Modern Era Epic Collection of “Astonishing
X-Men,” you can expect to see my praise for him again. I just thought he had
such amazing talent, I loved his style, his details, it was just so appealing
to me, and I really appreciated it. Hopefully Marvel does release a second Modern
Era Epic Collection of the series, I would love to review it.
Anyway,
if you know my reviews, you always see me write about accessibility. For those
of you who are new and have no idea what I mean, let me explain. My use of
accessibility means how easy it is for casual or new readers to be able to pick
up this book and understand it. I have to say, if you’ve never even HEARD of
the X-Men but saw this book on the shelf in a bookstore or found it browsing
online or if someone told you about it and you still want to read it, I wouldn’t
say it’s a PERFECT jumping on point, but it’s a GOOD one. What I mean by that
is, to me, it feels like I think you should have SOME background knowledge of
the X-Men, but I don’t 100% feel like it’s a necessity. It helps to know about
it, sure, especially since this follows the works of forty years, but this book
is very self-contained and doesn’t crossover with any other series or
storylines from the time period like many other Epic Collections and Modern Era
Epic Collections do. I felt like the main characters were all adequately explained,
their names and powers established. There are also a bunch of characters that
debut in this volume, so they have no prior backstories. I feel like if you
want to start reading X-Men comics, this is a good place to start. Again, not
perfect, but good. There are other points you could start at that would be better
for sure, but this is also the first X-Men Modern Era Epic Collection published,
so if you’re planning on starting there, you really have no other choice at the
moment of my posting this review.
Okay,
I’ve probably bored you long enough, you just want to know my numeric score. It’s
very simple, all my prior readers know it, but I have to say it again for the
newbs, so bear with me. I score on a scale of one to ten. One means it’s such a
failure it didn’t even deserve to be published; ten means sheer perfection. Now,
since this is a graphic novel, I have to take EVERYTHING into consideration,
story AND art. Some of my prior readers know that artwork has actually knocked
points off some of my reviews and added points to others. John Cassaday’s
artwork deserves a ten, but there was just something about “Dangerous” that
detracts from me calling Joss Whedon’s story perfection. So, you can probably guess
that that means that this book is receiving a… NINE! Hey, that’s still pretty
darn good! I’m a hard scorer, I don’t just go around handing out perfect
scores.
Now,
I’m obligated to tell you if I recommend this book to you or not. If you’re
reading this review and have ANY interest in reading this book whatsoever, then
I TOTALLY feel like you should go for it! I’ve always thought this was stellar
work for twenty years now and still holds up to this day. If you’re an X-Men
fan, this is, in my opinion, a must-read, and I honestly DO NOT say that often,
so if I say it, then there must be SOME meaning to it.
Well,
I feel like I’ve rambled on long enough. There’s plenty of other content on
this blog, I’ve posted literally dozens of other book reviews, I’ve posted
short stories, poetry, editorials, articles, all kinds of content, so please,
feel free to continue browsing. And you can expect another post from me within
the next couple of weeks, so be sure to be back for that if you liked this review.
And I leave you now and say until next time, Tim Cubbin… out!
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