Tom Brevoort Calls Cyclops ‘Heroic’

Want some justification in believing that Cyclops was the hero of Avengers vs. X-Men? Look no further than Tom Brevoort, Marvel’s senior vice president of publishing, and editor of the series. In a recent interview with Newsarama.com, Brevoort was asked about Cyclops’ role as the villain in Avengers vs. X-Men.

Nrama: Well, that was a very informative detour — and with Cyclops, there are people who, fair or not, think he’s been cast as a villain, even if the Phoenix force was influencing him. Taking him in this direction, was it motivated out of seeing that kind of potential in where he’s been going the past few years? Is labeling him, even at this point, as a “villain” still sort of missing the point?

Brevoort: Honestly, I think that’s a matter of individual perception. To some people, the things he did, the lengths that he went to, and the choices he made, make him villainous. In every case, he did them for the right reasons, as he saw them. It really depends upon whether you think those reasons were right and justified.

At the end of the day, as he sort of says to Cap, he got as good an outcome as he could possibly have wanted. All he ever wanted to do was safeguard what remained of his people until the point came when this world-changing event happened, and the mutant race was reborn — and he did it. There were casualties along the way, and that’s the tragedy, and that’s the burden that he’s going to carry going forward.

Your viewpoint on Cyclops really depends on where you stand on the choices he made. I think at the very least, if he’s not a heroic figure, he’s a sympathetic figure, and I wouldn’t necessarily even rule out that he’s a heroic figure. I think that’s completely up to the individual readers to decide for themselves. He made what he thought were the right choices, and ultimately, for the most part, everything worked out pretty well, with one glaring exception.

Brevoort went on to say that Cyclops will reappear in AvX: Consequences and All-New X-Men, the latter of which I don’t plan to buy. He said Cyclops’ story is far from over, so that’s pretty awesome.

But how’s that for justification? One of the Marvel big cheeses himself is saying that Cyclops’ actions could easily be viewed as heroic. Yes, heavy prices were paid, but none of it was Cyclops himself turning villainous. Captain America started the whole conflict. The Avengers shot the Phoenix with their big gun, causing it to accidentally possess Cyclops and his friends. The Avengers attacked Utopia and pushed the PhoeniX-Men to retaliate. Namor attacked Wakana. Colossus and Magik set up the evil prison.

The Phoenix killed Professor X. The Dark Phoenix threatened to destroy the world.

The most Cyclops did on his own was maybe threaten to kill a dragon in K’un Lun. He was thrust into several spots he didn’t want to be in, but made the most of it while fighting opposition form his closest friends and his mind being taken over by the Phoenix Force.

Cyclops was right. Pax Utopia.

Unknown's avatar

About Sean Ian Mills

Hello, this is Sean, the Henchman-4-Hire! By day I am a mild-mannered newspaper reporter in Central New York, and by the rest of the day I'm a pretty big geek when it comes to video games, comic books, movies, cartoons and more.

Posted on October 5, 2012, in Avengers, Comics, Marvel, X-Men and tagged , , . Bookmark the permalink. 6 Comments.

  1. Wanna know something even more hilarious?

    Y’know how Hope and Wanda said “no more Phoenix”?

    Here’s Jason Aaron’s explanation from his commentary track. (http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=41345)

    ———————

    CBR News: In this scene, is it just Hope rejecting ultimate power, or is Wanda giving up some of her power as well?

    Aaron: No, I don’t think Wanda is giving away any power here, as far as I’m concerned. Somebody could write things differently. It’s the two of them holding hands and sending that Phoenix power off with words that obviously echo Wanda’s utterance of “No more mutants” from back in the day.

    It’s the Phoenix power that’s blasting out and reigniting the mutant race, which was the whole reason Hope was born in the first place. She was born in that explosion of energy. On the first page of this issue, I break down something we had always talked about internally, but I’m not sure it had been represented in a story; how Hope and Wanda were connected.

    
When Wanda said, “No more mutants,” the Phoenix Force countered with, “More mutants,” and Hope was born. She grew up a mutant messiah and was heralded as the rebirth of the mutant race. There was this idea that these two opposing forces were battling each other, via their representatives in the form of Wanda and Hope.

    ———————

    The writer behind AvX#12 himself states that Hope relinquishing the power of the Phoenix. Ergo, the Phoenix is without a host. And the Phoenix reactivated the X-gene. And the Phoenix didn’t destroy the planet. It did its business and left. Just like that.

    Oh. My. Fucking. God.

    My jaw dropped when I read this. Maybe ‘host’ is not quite the most accurate description of Hope. She was the Phoenix’s beacon; telling it where to go.

    • Exactly, which is what Cyclops predicted all along, what he was training her to do. Before the Avengers stormed in and interrupted, starting a big fight instead. Cyclops was right.

      • Cyclops was so right that saying he is wrong just comes off as ignorant and petty.

        Bravo, Cyclops, Bravo.

      • Oh, there’s one more snippet I wanted to highlight.

        According to Aaron:

        “From Cap’s perspective, if Cyclops is the loser, then he should feel like the winner. Cap also takes some responsibility for what has happened, though. It’s not just finger-pointing at Cyclops. Certainly there is some of that. He realizes, though, that he’s partly to blame for how this turned out as well.”

        lol Cap. Just lol.

      • Cap doesn’t realize squat! He’s the winner, and that’s all that matters to him.

  1. Pingback: Cyclops Continues to Be Right « Henchman-4-Hire

Leave a reply to Sean Ian Mills Cancel reply