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Astonishing X-Men #24 Review [Archive] - Buffy-Boards

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Buffy Summers
01-28-2008, 12:20 AM
Astonishing X-Men #24 Review

The end of the Breakworld arc? Not exactly.

by Daniel Crown

January 23, 2008 - Welcome to another IGN Comics review. If you've been here before, you know the drill. If you haven't, here's how it works. We grade on a 100-point scale. Numerically this is represented as a 10 point system with 0.1 increments. These scores also translate to particular labels. To learn more about our rating system, look for the red link near our final score at the bottom. For trade, arcs and manga reviews, we'll comment on art and writing along with a final score. Weekly books get a faster treatment due to their shorter length.

One thing to keep in mind is we're providing you with multiple reviews and multiple scores. To keep things simple (for you and for us), we're limiting this to one Additional Take. The Additional Take reviewer will have his or her score listed directly after their opinion. The Final Score is not affected by this and is directly determined by the Main Reviewer (who is listed in the article's byline).

Any time you feel like commenting on our reviews, you may. Our weekly review index, which is published late Wednesday night, has a comment section. Every review we publish does as well (look below). You can also find our message boards by clicking the link on the left-hand side. Enjoy!


I'm usually hesitant to throw around the phrase "instant classic". It's the exact type of dangerous expression that can be easily decimated by proper hindsight. (After all, there was a point in my adolescence, during my all too brief roller-blade obsession, when I used the very same idiom to describe the movie Airborne.) That being said, with their last Astonishing X-Men arc, Whedon and Cassaday are crafting the type of story that will easily merit countless re-readings - each of them undoubtedly as entertaining as the first. Now, I don't have a dictionary present, but that accomplishment alone would be as close to the definition of the word "classic" as anything I could come up with myself.

Anyway, now that I've thoroughly bored you with my personal debate over phraseology, we can get into the good stuff. Astonishing X-Men #24 continues the recent trend of twists and turns that have become a staple for the title during the unpredictable Breakworld arc. Allegiances are questioned, missiles are pointed and, perhaps most
importantly, questions are answered - all of this leading up to the explosive conclusion in the upcoming giant-sized finale. As with most penultimate chapters, the issue isn't lacking for action, as the X- Men split into two different teams, both of them intent on stopping a massive projectile from being launched towards Earth. To those sophisticates out there, all of the witty exchanges and well-timed gags you can usually count on in a Whedon penned title are more than prevalent here, but make no qualms about it, this installment is at its heart a good old fashioned blood-fest.

One of the main strengths of the issue (and for that matter the whole Breakworld arc) comes from Whedon's mastery of the character of Cyclops. This is a guy who has been through unspeakable tragedy in nearly every facet of his life, and despite surviving through it all, was perpetually stuck in a constant state of self-doubt. What started in Grant Morrison's New X-Men, Whedon has continued brilliantly as he has infused the character with a newfound sense of confidence. Nearly void of outward emotion, the leader of the X-Men now demands respect rather than asking for it; a trait that has breathed new life into the character, making him interestingly complicated as opposed to the bland Scott Summers of old. And it appears that this version of the character is here to stay, as the general-like attitude has made its way directly into the pages of Messiah Complex - a story where he takes very little time making a nearly unending series of life-or-death decisions.

Moving on to the artwork - I honestly wish John Cassaday could draw every book that I read. Okay, maybe that's going a little bit too far, but I'll be damned if he can't paint a pretty picture. I don't know that there is one artist out there better at packing emotion into each and every panel. What impresses me the most about Cassaday's pencils are their ability to combine the realistic with the aesthetic, crafting scenes that are as believable as they are fantastic.

On one hand, I'm eagerly anticipating Giant-Sized Astonishing X-Men #1, but there is also a part of me that doesn't want this series to end. To me it represents that rare level of quality- the perfect combination of great art and storytelling- that helps me retain faith in the future of superhero comics. I tip my cap to both of its creators as they head into their new projects, of which I can only hope will be of the same golden standard.

Source: IGN: Astonishing X-Men #24 Review (http://comics.ign.com/articles/847/847375p1.html)

Courtesy of Whedonesque.com

Buffy Summers
01-30-2008, 12:34 PM
Another review:

Posted By Mark Stoddard on 01.28.2008

REVIEW: ASTONISHING X-MEN #24

WRITER: JOSS WHEDON
ART: JOHN CASSADY
COLOUR: LAURA MARTIN
PUBLISHER: MARVEL COMICS

I am going to try very hard throughout this review not to say how absolutely awesome Joss and John's work on Astonishing is. But it will be hard. And now I don't really know what else to write about.

We are now on the penultimate issue of this stellar run (which will end sometime in 2008 with Giant Size Astonishing X-Men #1, which already seems to have been pushed back twice). Broken up into four albeit interconnected arcs, the series has not been without a couple of mishaps and mis-hits - the Danger arc had some wonderful moments but didn't quite hit all the right notes, while the Hellfire Club story was perhaps a little too decompressed. And now the X-Men are off-world, fighting to save the Earth from destruction from a giant missile pointed towards it from the alien Breakworld.

Following on from the genius revelations of Cyclops' plan to infiltrate the enemy stronghold in #23 (definitely one of my favourite X-Men issues across the line in recent times), the X-Men make their move to disable the missile - from the rather complicated scenario of the previous issue, this story really is pretty much that simple. Instead of delicate and clever plot twists, we get action and snappy banter. But this creative team can do both equally well. Even the cliffhanger is fairly straight-forward, though it will certainly call for some rather interesting and not immediately obvious solutions. Oh, and we also get a fairly predictable death.

The one issue still not fully resolved is the role of Colossus in the 'prophecy' of the destruction of the Breakworld, though the conspiracy grows even deeper in these pages. In essence, this story is really about the internal politics of this new world, with the X-Men thrown in at the deep end. Whedon has been pretty clever about dealing with this so far, though there will be plenty to cover in the next issue - it is no surprise that we will need a giant-sized issue to bring this all to a head.

Ok, I can't go any further without saying it - Whedon and Cassaday just produce the most wonderful X-Men comics, as long as you are ok ducking and diving around the continuity every now and again. Usually this would bother me like hell, but as long as a decent attempt is made to address these issues somewhere down the line, I am really enjoying this whole adventure to worry about it just yet.

While this story has been (and still is) a little on the slow side, Whedon's strength has always been in the journey, rather than big plot reveal; though I still have no clue how Whedon and Cassaday are going to bring this all to a head, even in a giant issue, and I certainly have no idea how they are going to try and shoe-horn this into current X-Men events, this is still a thoroughly engaging story, with the X-Men portrayed (both character-wise and visually) at their very best. As talented as Ellis and Bianchi are, they are going to have quite an act to follow.

Source: ComicsNexus (http://comicsnexus.insidepulse.com/articles/73320/2008/01/28/review-astonishing-xmen-24.html)

Courtesy of Whedonesque.com