Backlog Blast: The Infamous Iron Man #1-8 (Marvel Comics)

OR

The Conundrum that is Marvel Comics in 2017

Reviewed By Jesse Kiefer
Backlog Blast: The Infamous Iron Man #1-8 (Marvel Comics)

 

Backlog Blast: The Infamous Iron Man #1-8 (Marvel Comics)

It has been awhile since I’ve done a written review so it only seems fitting that by returning to the fray I should do so with a Backlog Blast!

So I have a love hate relationship with Marvel Comics at the moment. Their comic universe seems to have a little bit of an identity crisis.

They have always prided themselves on the fact that they have not really rebooted their universe, that they have always just gone forward. I mean that seems like a wishy washy claim when you’ve had soft relaunches like Spider-man’s One More Day/Brand New Day which wiped out a LOT of continuity but  really that’s neither here nor there. Secret Wars seems to be that reboot they claim they’ve never done… it’s not… but it kind of is.

They used the Secret Wars event and its resolution (?) to remove certain characters (Reed and Sue Richards) from the fold.  They also used the event to implant others (Miles Morales Spider-man and The Maker among other Marvel Ultimate Universe characters) into the status quo universe while dissolving the redundant universe they used to inhabit. Well NOW (not to be confused with MARVEL NOW) we have Secret Empire… a Marvel universe run by a Hydra-retconned Captain America. So just to reiterate, we went from a world patch-worked together by a slightly benevolent (sorta?) Doctor Doom overlord GOD to a world with an America ruled by an evil Captain America overlord.

So where does The Infamous Iron Man review fit in? You know what? That’s exactly the question I’m asking myself… but more to the point… WHERE DOES THIS ENTIRE SERIES FIT?

Let’s dive into this mess shall we? After Secret Wars… Marvel goes into a second Civil War, this is only notable because well (Vaguely Spoilery:)  it puts Iron Man on the shelf. Iron Man is not dead but he’s not really active as Iron Man either. This creates a vacuum which Doom in his arrogance just up and decides HE will fill. Wait… What? So Doom is Iron Man because he says so? YEP. (again… sorta)

So let’s just look at the series before we bother with how problematic it is… let me start by saying… I LOVE this premise. I’m not sure if that’s a popular opinion or not but what else do you do with the character of Doctor Doom at this point? We’ve made him a god and stripped him of that power, we’ve taken away his greatest rival with the absence of Reed Richards. What is left for Doctor Doom? He’s actually “had it all” and found that all the power in the universe did not actually satisfy his heart’s desire. This is a man who is really faced to reexamine his whole reason for being. So he does the only thing he has not attempted and that is: “to serve,” more specifically to serve humanity as a hero. How do you do that when you are Doctor Doom? You take up the mantle of another hero whether Tony Stark wanted that or not.

The series has progressed with Victor fighting heroes who are actually trying to stop him from being heroic mainly because nobody buys it. Likewise we have Victor fighting villains who are scared witless because a Victor gone “good” knows implicitly how and where to eliminate each and every one of them.

So if I have a criticism of this book on its own merits it is that it’s kind of slow going, eight issues in the plot has basically been Iron Doom trying to convince basically anyone that they should just leave him alone so he can be a hero. (Much like Doc Ock did in superior Spider-man, Victor basically rules face at this whole vigilante hero gig.) By issue six we are finally getting into an arc that reveals that The Maker (evil Reed Richards from the Ultimate Marvel Universe) is up to something and he’s coming after Doom but everything up till now has just felt like setup and character development for a decades old character.  Now that sounds like criticism but this is all being fleshed out really well and is some pretty compelling drama so it’s hard for me to really bust chops on a Brian Michael Bendis that seems to know what he’s doing so far.

The art? It’s bleak at times, it’s very noir-esque but that kind of really sells visually the tension behind whether Doom REALLY is a good guy or not. We really can’t ever say if he’s really sold on being good because as is often the case with Doom he’s doing it his way without any real consideration for anyone else. Has he actually changed? Or has he merely changed what direction he’s going?

Okay I do have problems they just aren’t really with this title so much as how it does or rather doesn’t fit into the bigger Marvel universe picture…

So they are doing a great job of having this book be a Secret Wars/Civil War 2 fallout story, the problem is they’ve already moved on and this Doom would potentially be an Omega Level threat to an Evil Captain America regime in Secret Empire. But he’s not… because as far as I can tell he is NOWHERE. Unless there is a tie in book I missed or that is forthcoming that will eventually explain his absence from Secret Empire I am utterly perplexed by what seems to be an absolute lack of explanation as to the lack of Doom. I feel like you ignore Doctor Doom at your own peril and it just seems lazy to leave him out without any explanation at all.

So what’s going on here Marvel? Is Secret Empire existing mostly out of canon? Is Infamous Iron Man existing mostly out of canon? Or do you care so little that you refuse to explain it at all? You are in the business of storytelling…. So what’s the story morning glory?

Okay all that aside I love this book, which means Marvel is probably planning to cancel it. (I honestly have no intel to support that,  it just seems like they are cancelling anything I actually like.) This is not my usual kind of pull but it vaguely reminds me of the Madrox limited series that brought back Peter David’s noir take on the X-Factor team. It’s the closest thing we’re going to get to a Fantastic Four book at the moment and it really reminds me just how much I actually do miss the Fantastic Four. I’d recommend it, just be aware that this book is kind of an island unto itself… try not to get too worried about how it impacts the Marvel U… because clearly Marvel isn’t. That being said, ever since Tom King left The Vision to start his tenure at DC comics, Infamous Iron Man is the Marvel book that I actively look forward to most each month. I’m really curious to see where this will all wind up.

Three word review?: Victor’s Stark reality.

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