Artists: Leinil Francis Yu (Penciller) , Gerry Alanguilan (Inker) , Jonathan Hickman (Writer)
2 Comments - 188 Views - 4 Likes
Artwork Details
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Description11x17 bristol board, inks over printed bluelinesIn the early days of the Krakoan era, a mysterious island appears in the Pacific and spurs mutantkind’s sentient homeland to charge towards it. Cyclops heads out on a recon mission to this new island and decides, what better opportunity for some family bonding? He invites his time-displaced/replaced (it’s complicated) son and his alternate reality (it’s complicated, also) daughter to tag along and the kids keenly accept because a family road trip (on a supersonic jet) to punch giant monsters on some weird island is way better than sitting around doing nothing in their plant house on the moon. Alright, after writing all that I paused and honestly thought to myself “man, X-Men is kind of stupid” and you know what? Hell yeah it is. I’m sad to see the Krakoa era go because it pulled me back into comics after a nearly 10-year hiatus but I think I’ll always cherish its early days. After the incredible House of X/Powers of X, Jonathan Hickman did a lot of fantastic worldbuilding in his X-Men run. The early issues feel almost magical, like anything can happen because the rules haven’t settled, and I think it’s rare for mainstream superhero comics to have that sense of wonderment to them. The later parts of the era don’t hit the highs of the opening but overall it was a strong return to form for a legendary comic property that had to languish for a decade thanks to a movie franchise that starts with “M” and ends with “CU”. (if you think I sound salty there, you’d be guessing correctly) The team of Leinil Francis Yu and the late Gerry Alanguilan deliver strong work, as always, in this run’s early issues which cover a considerable gamut of cyborg science apes, monster islands, belligerent grandmas, and philosophical fine dining at the World Economic Forum. Yu’s distinctive linework is strong as ever and Alanguilan’s accompanying inks are crisp and meticulous. And speaking of meticulous, this page came with a second partially-inked blueline copy of the bottom panel and it took me a while to realize that it was a patch for the pilot seat’s hatchlines in the published version. I don’t know the story behind why Gerry Alanguilan wanted the revision but I can appreciate that a comic master would have some pretty exacting standards. I love this whole page because I adore the ridiculous and inscrutable Summers family but the last panel stands out to me in particular: Rachel and Nathan may have inherited the powerset of their moms but the profile they carry clearly belongs to dear ol’ dad. Social/Sharing |
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James Dornoff
Member Since 2019
1 - Posted on 6/5/2024
Wonderful early representative piece of the amazing Krakoa era. Nice page featuring the oddest family in comics. Cheers!
Marcus Wai
Member Since 2005
1 - Posted on 6/5/2024
Great example of Gerry's inks and how much clairty it provided to the story. Yu puts Cyclops front and center and you can feel he has a head of the family presence.
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