Checking in a year later on my Marvel Legends wish list! Last year, Hasbro made only four figures from my list...this year, a little better, with six. From my previous list, Hasbro has made (or announced): Crystal, Daimon Hellstrom (Son of Satan), Destiny, Marrow, Husk, and Nemesis. I still want to see: Essentials Brood Deathbird Agent Abigail Brand Dr. Cecelia Reyes Phoenix (Rachel Summers Excalibur costume) Mantis (comic version) Hepzibah Pixie Starhawk Wiccan Hulkling Belasco Magma Lyja Ahab Madame Masque Longshots Amanda Sefton (Daytripper) Aleta Manta Oracle Saturnyne Sat-yr-9 Shard Fascination (Scatterbrain) Amelia Voght Chinadoll Tommy Pete Wisdom Warwolves Cerise Elixir Broo Mercury Silver Fox Phantazia Nocturne Illyana Rasputin (Earth-4210) Margali Szardos Kylun Douglock Victoria Hand BAFs Armor Mephisto Devil Dinosaur Celestial The Fury Krakoa Boxsets Technet Acolytes Imperial Guard
Osama Tezuka Ode To Kirihito is an acknowledged classic, and deserving of the title. This mammoth 822-page work is a steal at $25 (Thank you, Vertical, Inc.), and a rich, deep work to boot. It has the feel of a real epic as the characters travel to several exotic locales in their quest to escape tyranny and to expose the culprit behind the disease that leaves people in the form of Dog Men. Physicians the world over struggle to understand the epidemic and its nature, meanwhile hiding truths for personal gain. Two young doctors are at the heart of this story, one idealistic man (Dr. Osanai) and one with, well, real issues (Dr. Urabe). As Dr. Osanai ventures to a remote village with hundreds of cases of this "Monmow Disease" on record, he steps into a terrible conspiracy and leaves behind Urabe and a fiance to deal with several consequences of this trip, while having to struggle in his own horrific battle as well. Ultimately, this is a science suspense thriller with real ...
Roger Langridge & Chris Samnee With all of the buzz out there about how great this incarnation of Thor is, I decided to check this series out for myself. Only after I ordered the first few issues, it was promptly cancelled by Marvel due to low sales, which is unfortunate since it hardly had much time to build word of mouth, but that's the way the industry works sometimes (and to be fair, its first issue sold over 20,000 copies (placing #104 for the month) while its latest sold about 8,400 (placing at #186), so it was bleeding readers). My only real issue there is it seems that people who hear about a book tend to buy the collection rather than hunt back issues, so I kind of feel like a book like this, especially for young readers, should have had a chance in another format before it got the axe. The last issue of Mouse Guard: Legends of the Guard placed just ahead of Thor, the Mighty Avenger in November at #185, but its collection ranked #15 for t...
Comments