mercredi 25 octobre 2017

The Despicable Deadpool #288 Review


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Wade Wilson gets a cybernetic upgrade.

Gerry Duggan's long Deadpool saga is a strong testament to what's possible when a writer remains on board a series for years at a stretch. Duggan has spent years building up Wade Wilson, giving him a defined family unit, helping him win the respect of his fellow heroes and generally making him a more dynamic and critical presence in the Marvel Universe. And now Duggan gets to pay off on all that buildup as he pulls the rug out from under Wade and brings it all crashing down. This darker direction for Deadpool works precisely because it builds on the last five years' worth of stories.

Granted, those hoping for a comedy-driven Deadpool comic may feel a bit left out by this new direction. But it's not as if fans are starved for alternatives these days. And more to the point, Duggan's run has always been at its best when it focuses on the darker, more emotionally raw side of Wade's existence.  There's plenty of absurdity at work in this issue. Wade wearing Cable's cybernetic arm and interacting with his own AI assistant adds a nice bit of comedic punch to the conflict, but ultimately it's mere garnish for a very dark tale of two former allies becoming bitter enemies.

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Duggan really taps into that fractured Cable/Deadpool dynamic here, channeling both their buddy cop dynamic and the fact that neither character has ever fully trusted the other. As played out as the whole "hero vs. hero" angle is these days, it works in the context of this book and in light of the tragic direction Wade's life has taken since Secret Empire. Duggan's script also makes great use of Stryfe (not something that happens too terribly often in the X-books). The villain is less an overt player in this conflict than an unseen, lurking presence.

Having Scott Koblish on board helps maintain a high level of consistency even as the series renumbers and renames itself for Marvel Legacy. Koblish's quirky style has rarely suited Duggan's scripts better. Koblish captures the grim, depressing quality of this conflict and Wade's generally bleak state of mind. At the same time, Koblish is able to balance that out with a zany energy. The tone may be fairly dark as far as Deadpool comics go, but there's still plenty of visual comedy afoot as Wade slices and dices his way through the Time Variance Authority and gears up for his rematch with Cable.

The Verdict

Gerry Duggan has been writing Deadpool in one form or another for five years now. That saga has only seemed to improve in 2017. This issue continues building on the momentum of Secret Empire, with Duggan and Koblish delivering a dark, emotionally charged look at a major falling-out between Wade and the man who once called him "partner."

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