I like how crazy rosenberg was in his run.
He really told his story and even killed his favorite.
I like how crazy rosenberg was in his run.
He really told his story and even killed his favorite.
"We come into this world alone and we leave the same way. The time we spent in between - time spent alive, sharing, learning together... is all that makes life worth living." - Jean Grey
The whole point seemed to be to try and prove that Scott would never again give up on Xavier's original dream and would resist the temptation of going for the "easier" path, despite all the crap he and his friends went through and how foolish it is to cling to such lofty ideals.
Which is kind of weird, what with him doing that whole Washington march back in the time of Bendis. Oh well.
I thought this issue would answer my questions. Instead, it gave me more. The corny ending gave it some points.
Also, why does this issue feel as if everyone changed in behavior completely once again?
"This is starting to sound like a bad comic book plot"
-Spider-man
“Evil is evil...lesser, greater, middling, it's all the same."
-Geralt of Rivia
Ok, so, stupid question.....all of the mutants who died are still dead? LOL
I know there were people who posted that it would all be undone when AoXM was over, but since I didn't read that, can I assume that Chamber, Wolfsbane, and the others are still dead? Illyana is still stuck as Darkchylde?
Oh, and now is Jubilee going to be hunting down Karma to get her son back?
Instead on voting and approving the plan. Would it not have been better if Scott proposed the idea of chopping Calahans head off a few issues ago. Because that seemed obvious. It was rather pointless to approve one plan and change halfway through
Anyway I'm sure Callahan made a deal with Nasrth like Cameron Hodge.
Once again, it's not possible to analyze this only by the actual stories we were told; a "redemption story" for a character arc that only had no evil whatsoever in it, but most fans liked it, and was already done and finished in the last milestone issue by a writer who was the company's biggest at the time.