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Ed Brubaker's other big release of the week
is Captain America #25, in which Captain America gets
killed yet again, but has the good fortune to do it in a
slow news week.
The usual observation is that, of course,
we all know he's coming back. Well, yes we do.
This issue doesn't have a back door, so much as a clearly
signposted fire exit. But that's missing the point.
You can predict the finish in most genre stories. It's
all about how interesting the journey is. The usual
reason to be cynical about this kind of thing is that it
tends to be done as a cheap stunt to boost sales, and the
details - such as the plot - are hammered out later on.
This is an Ed Brubaker story, and Ed Brubaker is a proper
writer. If he's writing it, I'm prepared to give it
the benefit of the doubt and assume there's an actual story.
Basically, the issue consists of Cap's
supporting cast - who'll have to carry the book for the
remainder of this story - reminiscing about him and then
failing to stop a sniper attack which is evidently part of
some dastardly scheme by the Red Skull. It's a fine
opening chapter. If you divorced the comic from the
hype, and treated it as an issue like any other, it would be
a great start to a storyline. No reader would actually
believe Captain America was dead, but the story doesn't rely
on you believing it. It relies on the fact that the
characters believe in it, and that's why it can work even
though we all know these things are almost invariably
reversed in the end.
Now, having said that - given all the
hype they've spent on this story, I'd be seriously tempted
to leave Cap dead, or at least keep him out of circulation
for a good long time to come. He's a difficult
character to write - he was created for a much simpler type
of story, and he doesn't really accommodate much in the way
of moral complexity. Fitting him into modern superhero
comics is tricky. He's also one of a handful of Marvel
characters capable of being turned into a "legacy hero" -
you can't really have a new Spider-Man, but you can have a
new Captain America. And since most people barely know
anything about Steve Rogers, it wouldn't much dent his
marketability. In the modern world, perhaps the best
stories you can tell with Captain America involve him as a
dead icon that other heroes try to live up to.
At the very least, I think that beneath
all the hype, there's a potentially good story to be told
here. And Ed Brubaker is the sort of writer who can
make it work.
Rating: B+
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