Marvel Max comics
The Marvel Max line is Marvel's hey-kids-these-comics-are-off-limits-unless-you're-18-or-older no-seriously-we-mean-it, please-put-your-money-away-and-don't-try-to-buy-these line of comics. They feature an attention-getting parental advisory on the cover. Some feature graphic violence; some, a little nudity; some, generous usage of 4-letter words.
The majority of Max titles are mini-series. Apache Sky and The Hood, a pair of minis, have just concluded, so it's too late to recommend those here.
Alias # 15
story by Brian Bendis; art by Michael Gaydos
Marvel Max; monthly, continuing; 32 pages, color, $2.95 cover price
The one ongoing series is Alias, the story of Jessica Jones. Jessica has super-powers (the nature of which are unspecified, and which she doesn't use in these stories) who tried a career as a super-hero, didn't like it, and gave it up to become a private investigator who runs her own agency.
The writer, Brian Bendis, writes more like a playwright than a comic book scripter. His stories consist largely of extended dialogues between the characters. The current issue, # 15, consists of 2 conversations: a 9-page talk with Luke Cage (who Jessica had drunken sex with in the first issue, and is upset with about that); and a 12-page conversation with Scott Lang as the 2 sit in a restaurant on their first date. (Luke Cage, as Marvel fans know, is a super-hero once called Power Man; Scott Lang is Ant-Man. Luke and Jessica are standing guard outside the office of Matt Murdoch, aka Daredevil. None of these characters appears in costume.)
The closest to super-hero action that occurs is when Doctor Octopus races by the restaurant Jessica and Scott are sitting in, with Spider-Man and the Human Torch in hot pursuit. That takes up two panels. Jessica turns to Scott and asks, "You, uh -- you want to go help?" Scott replies, "I didn't bring any of my Ant-Man stuff. Do you want to go?" "Mmmmmmmmmm -- nah. They got it. And I really -- I don't do that anymore." End of subject.
Initially the Max comics seemed to be set an in alternate version of the Marvel universe. Recently, however, the Alias and Daredevil continuities seem to be inter-connecting. Since Bendis writes both, if you pick up one you will likely enjoy picking up the other as well.
Alias looks at what life in a world with super-heroes might be like, but it is not about heroes fighting villains or other standard comic book staples. If you don't mind a comic in which the letters c, f, k and u appear together with sometimes surprising frequency, this is worth a look.
The Marvel Max line is Marvel's hey-kids-these-comics-are-off-limits-unless-you're-18-or-older no-seriously-we-mean-it, please-put-your-money-away-and-don't-try-to-buy-these line of comics. They feature an attention-getting parental advisory on the cover. Some feature graphic violence; some, a little nudity; some, generous usage of 4-letter words.
The majority of Max titles are mini-series. Apache Sky and The Hood, a pair of minis, have just concluded, so it's too late to recommend those here.
Alias # 15
story by Brian Bendis; art by Michael Gaydos
Marvel Max; monthly, continuing; 32 pages, color, $2.95 cover price
The one ongoing series is Alias, the story of Jessica Jones. Jessica has super-powers (the nature of which are unspecified, and which she doesn't use in these stories) who tried a career as a super-hero, didn't like it, and gave it up to become a private investigator who runs her own agency.
The writer, Brian Bendis, writes more like a playwright than a comic book scripter. His stories consist largely of extended dialogues between the characters. The current issue, # 15, consists of 2 conversations: a 9-page talk with Luke Cage (who Jessica had drunken sex with in the first issue, and is upset with about that); and a 12-page conversation with Scott Lang as the 2 sit in a restaurant on their first date. (Luke Cage, as Marvel fans know, is a super-hero once called Power Man; Scott Lang is Ant-Man. Luke and Jessica are standing guard outside the office of Matt Murdoch, aka Daredevil. None of these characters appears in costume.)
The closest to super-hero action that occurs is when Doctor Octopus races by the restaurant Jessica and Scott are sitting in, with Spider-Man and the Human Torch in hot pursuit. That takes up two panels. Jessica turns to Scott and asks, "You, uh -- you want to go help?" Scott replies, "I didn't bring any of my Ant-Man stuff. Do you want to go?" "Mmmmmmmmmm -- nah. They got it. And I really -- I don't do that anymore." End of subject.
Initially the Max comics seemed to be set an in alternate version of the Marvel universe. Recently, however, the Alias and Daredevil continuities seem to be inter-connecting. Since Bendis writes both, if you pick up one you will likely enjoy picking up the other as well.
Alias looks at what life in a world with super-heroes might be like, but it is not about heroes fighting villains or other standard comic book staples. If you don't mind a comic in which the letters c, f, k and u appear together with sometimes surprising frequency, this is worth a look.