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Continuity

Thunderbolts #121

by James Hunt ~ June 27th, 2008

Ellis’ run on Thunderbolts has had a relatively slow, menacing burn throughout its pages, even when all hell was breaking loose in Thunderbolts Mountain. With his final issue, he really blows the lid off of all of his building subplots, making the 12-issue run a nicely complete piece of writing, with every character tension finally bubbling to the surface, with particular fanboy glee at seeing the Doc Samson Vs Moonstone “battle of the psychiatrists.”

Even so, the book’s standout moment has to be seeing Osborn back in the Goblin costume and running riot. It was utterly brilliant comics, and it’s hard to imagine the character now without thinking of Ellis’ pill-popping, brilliantly intelligent take as being the definitive one. That said, the idea of this version of Osborn fighting Spider-Man is utterly laughable, if only because Osborn would probably have him torn in half before he had a chance to say “my spidey-sense is tingling!” Ellis is clearly having fun writing Osborn’s dialogue, with constant poor-taste references to his murdering of Gwen Stacy, and as a result he’s clearly the breakout character for the title.

That’s not to say that Ellis doesn’t get the rest of the cast - after all, Bullseye’s unexpected return was a great twist, and even Penance gets his moment. There’s not been a neglected member in the cast for the duration of his run.

Putting Songbird “in charge” of the team is a welcome development for all long-time Thunderbolts fans, and suggests that in future, the book will move slightly more in the direction of the standard superheroics that typified its run - not that the bleak, oppressive governmental version hasn’t been fun, but it’ll be nice to see a change of pace if Ellis can’t be the one writing it. Osborn’s ability to sleaze his way out of culpability for his rampage is almost too neat, as he gets away with everything American Psycho-style. Even so, this leaves incoming writer Christos Gage with some good opportunities - after all, is Osborn got away with it once…

It’s been a good run. Even with Ellis at the helm, Thunderbolts was never going to be seen as a top tier Marvel book, but for the last 12 issues, it’s definitely been one of the best reads. The one distracting thing is Deodato’s penchant for drawing the characters as recognisable celebrities. This week: Ed Norton as Penance is added to the “cast”. Can we please stop this?

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2 Responses to Thunderbolts #121

  1. Dom

    Oh man! Norman finally got the mask on!?! I dropped this two issues ago because I’d got fed up of waiting. I’ll have to pick them up now.

    While I think Ellis’ run on Thunderbolts started REALLY well, it lost a lot of its punch as time went on. The biting satire of corporate America and hawkish right wing politics made the first four or five issues must read, but things rapidly descended into a watered down beat em up (imho).

    Still I agree with you that he did nail Tommy Lee Jo…I mean Norman Osborn.

  2. hostile17

    I agree, great conclusion to the story arc. Even though I haven’t followed all of Ellis’ run, what I have read has been enjoyable even if it is strange to see Nornan Osborn used by the goverment. Chirstos Gage has been co-writing some great stories on Avengers Initiative so it’s good to see another top tier writer taking over the writing chores

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