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Uncanny X-Men continues "The End of
History." Theoretically this is the penultimate issue of
the story, but this is reading decidedly like one of those
arcs which exists more as an arbitrary cut-off point between
acts rather than a completed story in its own right.
The X-Men are still fighting the Fury,
who's decided to have a stab at taking over Sage's computer
network as well. So some of the X-Men fight the Fury
itself in Britain, and the other X-Men fight a possessed Sage
in the USA. And that's your plot.
And so far as it goes, there's nothing
particularly wrong with this. It's a fight issue.
It's reasonably paced, it's beautifully drawn and coloured,
and Claremont does at least come up with a workable device to
get rid of all the other characters you might expect to come
running to help when a villain attacks the Mansion itself.
If all you're looking for is a straightforward fight between
the X-Men and a bad guy, then this issue does it perfectly
well. (There's also a bit of character interplay between
the team, but nothing particularly new. And why doesn't
Nightcrawler trust Sage, anyway? Hasn't anyone explained
her back story to him yet?)
Still - a perfectly adequate and
attractively drawn action story. But it isn't quite
working for me.
For one thing, if you're familiar with the
Fury, it's immediately obvious that this is a drastically
watered down version of the character. Superheroes who
fight the Fury wind up dead - that's the point. They do
not stagger off to regroup with broken limbs. Equally,
the Fury does not piss about trying to take over computer
systems. He doesn't need them. He's the Fury.
Of course, there are obvious workability problems with the
character as originally designed - he was meant for alternate
reality stories where ploughing through the heroes was a
viable option. Come to think of it, he'd be a better
choice of villain for the Exiles.
Of course, this won't bother people who
didn't know the character before (and given that he comes from
Marvel UK's Captain Britain stories, there won't be too many
of them). Still, if you know the character, it's
inescapably obvious that he's been extremely toned down.
You can't really do the Fury in the mainstream Marvel
Universe, and the result is a character who is... well, not
really the Fury.
For another, the Fury is a weapon, not a
character. It has no real personality and no motivation,
merely programming. It's fine as a device for another
villain to exploit, but in this story, the Fury is the
villain. That leaves a plot where the X-Men stumble upon
the Fury, the Fury attacks because.... well, because that's
all he does, and a fight ensues. There's not much there
to get your teeth into.
And it's less than clear why we're getting
an X-Men versus Fury story to begin with. He's not an
X-Men villain, he has no connections with the X-Men's themes,
and you'd have thought the logical starting point for
post-Reload Uncanny X-Men would be to do a story
establishing the XSE set-up. We kind of got that in the
first issue, but now it seems to have been brushed aside in
favour of a big fight with a villain whose only relevance is
that he was co-created by the artist.
None of which alters the fact that it's a
very nice-looking action story and works perfectly well on
that level. It just doesn't do much beyond that.
Rating: B
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