Friday 18 October 2013

Superior Spider-Man #19 Review!

Hello everybody, Donlinedude here and welcome to my review of Superior Spider-Man #19, the conclusion of the "Necessary Evil" storyline and what looks to be the beginning of the return of Peter Parker (OMG!).

Synopsis:

On the Caribbean island Grand Tauro, Antoine Morant (banker to super villains like A.I.M, the Maggia & the Red Skull) is being pursued in a car chase by Carlie Cooper and Yuri Watanabe, aka the Wraith, who is on board his car. Wraith dives off the vehicle after being shot at and rendezvous with Cooper, who's close behind. Yuri suggests they play it cool since she got some of her fear gas in their vents, but Carlie insists that they need to nail him now since they can't risk losing this lead on uncovering "the Superior Spider-Man's" deception.

Back at Horizon Labs in New York, as people outside begin to notice the growing energy around the building. Otto Gunther (seriously?) Octavius defends his knocking out the Spider-Man of 2099 to the Horizon staff. Grady Scraps informs everyone of how Tiberius Stone's three separate acts of sabotage have led to this "time bomb" occurring. Stone unlocked the safeties on Peter Parker's Alpha energy generator (playing with the fabric of space), recalibrated Scrap's time door (explaining the chronotons) and tampered with Sajani's artificial vibranium (adding an alien harmonic frequency into the mix). SpOck dismisses the situation as "child's play", instructing Sajani and Uatu "Not the Watcher" Jackson (sorry, I just like saying that) to retrieve a sample of reverbium and the Alpha energy regulators respectively (Max Modell is annoyed by the former since Sajani was supposed to have destroyed all of it). He also frees Tiberius Stone to aide in constructing a counter device since he is familiar with the tech.

Max tells "Spidey" that they need Parker (don't we all) too since he was the one who solved the equation that cancelled out the reverbium's vibrations. Unfortunate, since he deleted all of Parker's memories (JERK!), Otto isn't sure if he has the equation. He can still recall the ones he's already accessed, so he furiously goes through them to see if the equation is among them. As this happens, we see a silhouetted figure lift and throw a ton of rubble off of himself in the mindscape (Could it be?!).
Otto is then shaken out of his deliberation by Modell, who reveals that he's been thinking for eight minutes! In that time, the group and Stone have patched together the counter device. All that's left is for someone to input the correct frequency, Peter's equation. Miguel comes to as Otto attempts to calculate the equation instead. Realising that "Spider-Man" doesn't know the equation, Max orders a full evacuation of the building. Everyone leaves except for Stone, who O'Hara webs back and holds down, deciding that Stone should die, regardless of the cost of his own existence.

As the staff of Horizon dash outside, they are confronted by Mayor Jameson who, after yelling at them, asks if they are about to blow up his city. Modell answers that there's still hope as "Spider-Man" is still in there, which doesn't give Jameson any confidence. Inside, Otto thinks he's finally cracked the equation and enter it in, only to get it wrong and run out of time. As the implosion occurs, Miguel has a change of heart and legs it, just making it out of the building with Stone in time as Horizon Labs implodes, seemingly killing Otto. 

86 years in the future, in Nueva York, Alchemax CEO Tyler Stone is informed by his scientists that the timeline has been fully restored. Stone then immediately damages the time machine, stranding Miguel in the past, with nothing but a download of his holo-assistant Lyla, and an ancestor he can't lay a finger on for risk of altering his future. Tiberius smugly leaves, telling Max to look forward to the numerous lawsuits as he has places to be. That includes celebrating the formation of a new mega-corp with Liz Allan and her lawyer Mr. Banks, a mega-corp called...Alchemax. The celebration is interrupted however, by the arrival of a young man named Michael O'Mara (sounds familiar), who notifies Stone that he's been assigned as his personal assistant, which the "bithead" totally buys.

Jameson meanwhile uses his contacts in Washington to have the charges against Max dropped, on the condition that he not pull any "science shenanigans" in New York as long as he's Mayor. Max agrees, though as soon as Jameson leaves, he breaks his promise and he and Grady bring "Spidey" back to life with a Doctor Who reference...seriously, look!
With the so-called "superhero" safe, Max makes a deal of his own with SpOck, that they both go their seperate ways and consider this chapter closed. As they leave, Otto looks on at the wreckage of Horizon with a hint of sadness. Arriving back at "his" apartment, Otto goes through his voicemail, with a whole load having come from Mary Jane. Deciding it's time he told her once and for all that she needs to move on, Otto calls her only to be told exactly that by MJ.

Later that evening, Max, Grady, Bella and most of the staff board the Zephyr (which Max still owns since it's one of his personal possessions) and leave New York for new horizons. Sajani & Uatu stay behind, Uatu because his mother wants him to take a break from all this and Sajani because of her previous indiscretion with the reverbium. SpOck contacts her shortly afterwards with a proposition in mind.

Back on Grand Tauro, Carlie & Yuri break into Morant's private compound, stopping the banker from shredding any potential evidence. Carlie swiftly uncovers a document that proves that the henchmen and equipment were purchased with funds straight from the secret bank account of Otto Octavius (Gotcha indeed)...

Thoughts:

It seems that almost every story-arc in this series ends with a dramatic change to the status quo. Dan Slott has stated that this issue and the next one in particular will feature huge changes to the Spidey-verse, and unlike his repeated claims that Peter Parker is staying dead, he's not lying. There are plenty of exciting developments in this storyline that close it out very well, making this the strongest arc of Superior to date!

For starters its great to see what happens to Otto Octavius in this issue. After spending so long bragging that he's the best there is at what he does (but what he does best isn't very good), watching him not only fail, but have others save the day and him was extremely satisfying and a huge ego-blow to the enormous "bithead" (wow, 2099 slang sure is infectious). It was an especially nice touch of irony to have the one thing Otto couldn't solve be something that Peter managed to do.

At first, I was beginning to consider it a major criticism that Miguel and Otto don't interact too much in this storyline, but the fact that Mr. O'Hara is "sticking" with us for a while renders this point moot and sets up an exciting new status quo for the character that warrants a new series (please get Peter David to at least guest write if that comes to pass!).
Miguel's brief moment of possible self-sacrifice is good as it shows him to be a more selfless hero than Otto, but his change of heart towards the end is also gratifying as this character is way too interesting to die. Maybe now that he's in the present day he can alternate with Otto on the Superior Spider-Man Team-Up series. I'd certainly like to see Chris Yost's take on the character.

It's kind of sad to witness the end of Horizon Labs. It was one of the best things Slott brought into the Marvel Universe and it's staff were all very entertaining. I don't think this is the last we've seen of them though. They'll likely return once Jameson's tenure as Mayor is up. He did say "Not while I'm Mayor" after all, that's more than a little foreboding.

There are a few plotholes present however. Considering Grady successfully went into the past to retrieve evidence of Tiberius Stone's wrongdoing, I'm confused as to why he didn't show this to the authorities once the they were all safe? This shocking bithead is the main reason the building imploded, and yet their happy to let him go free and sue them for their intellectual properties? I don't get it? A throwaway line about Grady losing the evidence would have been enough to explain this.

Ryan Stegman's work here is brilliant. Spider-Man 2099 looks as awesome as ever and the splash page of all the classic moments of Spidey lore when Otto tries to recall Peter's memories is rather striking (not to mention that it seemingly features a certain hero clawing his way back to consciousness). While I stand by my criticisms of past issues, this story arc marks an exciting set of changes for Spidey's corner of the Marvel U and I've enjoyed this story-arc thoroughly...

Score: 4.0/5.0