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Review: Scarlet Spider #17

Aracely is just adorable. I bet writer Chris Yost has a blast writing her alongside Kaine. The two of them – the straight man and the silly girl – are definitely the heart of this series, and Scarlet Spider #17 is the two of them on an adorable field trip to New York. Granted, Kaine is going there to kill Wolverine, but the trip is still a blast. No one says they can’t enjoy the trip while they’re there.

Scarlet Spider #17

This is one of the most fun issues of Scarlet Spider yet. Free of any other concerns, Yost dives into a free-standing crossover with the X-Men that’s mostly about Kaine and Aracely being awesome.

Comic Rating: 4.5/5 – Very Good.

I’ll share some of the best moments in the full synopsis. I suppose your enjoyment of this issue depends entirely on how much you can stand Aracely. I love her. Yost is clearly having a lot of fun writing her dialogue, and Kaine makes for the perfect companion. He’s willing to put up with her because he clearly cares for her, but everything she does seems to drive him bonkers. It’s a great buddy comedy set up. I think Yost could stand to start answering some questions about Aracely, or maybe explore a bit deeper her relationship with Kaine, but for now, I’m not complaining.

This is just a fun issue, and it works very well as a crossover too. Yost handles the X-Men just as well as he handles his own characters, and it’s great to see the Scarlet Spider interact with the larger Marvel Universe. I doubt he’ll be headlining any Big Events anytime soon, but any acknowledgement that Kaine is indeed part of the Marvel Universe is a welcome one.

Join me after the jump for a full synopsis and more review!

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Review: Scarlet Spider #16

I’ve been writing a lot lately about how my favorite comic book stories are the ones that focus on the characters as people first and superheroes second. I want to read about heroes who have real lives to worry about, with real drama, real friends, and who act like real people. Scarlet Spider is a comic that definitely gets it, but at the same time, it makes one crucial mistake: Kaine is the center of his social life, and everyone revolves around him. And considering the character and the story, that shouldn’t be the case at all, and it’s a little weird.

Scarlet Spider #16

Still, Scarlet Spider remains an entertaining comic. Here is a done-in-one story about love and romance, which I very much enjoyed, but which was hampered by terrible art.

Comic Rating: 4/5: Good.

The sooner Khoi Pham is gone from this comic, the better. I’ve disliked his style since he started drawing Scarlet Spider, and this is his worst issue yet. There’s a big, climactic moment towards the end of the issue that writer Chris Yost has been building towards for some time, and Yost nails the scene, but Pham fails to stick the artistic landing. And it’s a real shame too, because I thought the story served the moment very well. At least Pham draws a very good Armadillo.

Anyway, as I was saying, the one problem with Scarlet Spider is that Kaine is the center of his social life. According to the story, Kaine simply arrived in Houston one day, and just happened to meet Wally, Donald and Annabelle over the course of his first few days in the city. That they became friends isn’t the issue, it’s that Wally, Donald and Annabelle don’t seem to have lives outside of Kaine. One would think that they had their own friends and family, and entire lives in Houston before Kaine randomly showed up. Yet everything they do seems to involve Kaine, each other and Aracely. It’s a weird gripe, I know, but it reinforces the fiction of it all.

Still, it always makes for a good comic when your love story  involves Scarlet Spider fighting the Armadillo at a rodeo!

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Review: Scarlet Spider #15

I was perhaps a bit harsh on The Other last issue. I never read the original storyline, so I suppose I have no room to judge. And it helps when this follow-up issue uses The Other to turn Kaine into an ass-kicking, man-spider-fueled warrior of doom! He pushes his powers to the max in this issue as Kaine takes on the Wolves, and it’s a pretty great fight. Those Wolves have been cruisin’ for a bruisin’ for several issues now, and Kaine delivers.

Scarlet Spider #15

Otherwise, this is a pretty standard issue of Scarlet Spider. Kaine defeats the bad guys, we get a few answers about Aracely and there’s a series of epilogues pointing towards the next few stories. Solid, entertaining issue all around.

Comic Rating: 4/5: Good.

Even the art is better, I think. I haven’t been happy with Khoi Pham’s pencils since he took over, and I still don’t like them, but he does a pretty nice job with this issue. The fight scenes are good, though not as good as the former artist Ryan Stegman. That guy knew how to draw action scenes. Another artist shows up to help out with some of the epilogues, and I like his work a lot too. So the art is just as solid as the story.

I’m not sure how much this issue moves Scarlet Spider forward as both a character and a series. The Other might be here to stay…or it might be over with already. We won’t know until the series continues, the ending could go either way. I think I’d be cool if Kaine had the ability to randomly turn into a man-spider monster when the situation called for it. Definitely a power that Spider-Man doesn’t have.

Join me after the jump for a full synopsis and more review!

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Review: Scarlet Spider #14

Apparently, not only is Scarlet Spider going to be steeped in Clone Saga lore, but writer Chris Yost is also going to cover another mostly hated Spider-Man story: The Other. Why? Who knows. Seems like a silly course of action to take on a series like this. I don’t know the numbers that Scarlet Spider is pulling in, but I have to imagine any series starring Kaine is in constant danger of being canceled. So why try something so risky as to have Kaine tap into his inner spider from The Other? It’s a weird story choice, but this is an alright issue.

Scarlet Spider #14

Scarlet Spider #14 also features possibly the first in-panel appearance of Ben Reilly in, like, a million years. That’s got to count for something, right?

Comic Rating: 3/5: Alright.

I’m just not sold on this exploration of Kaine’s inner-spider. When writer J. Michael Straczynski first introduced the idea of Peter Parker having some kind of totemic connection with arachnids, it was a neat idea that led to some really good stories. Then the writers took it a little too far with The Other, which featured Peter Parker dying, his body being turned into a cocoon and all manner of other strange transformations. It was intended to give Peter some new powers…but the writers immediately moved on and ignored all of those new powers almost completely. Nobody particularly liked The Other and it had no lasting effects.

Until Scarlet Spider came along. I realize that Kaine pretty much has all the powers that Peter did in the wake of The Other, but that doesn’t mean The Other was a good story or needs to be revisited. Especially not so early into Scarlet Spider’s run. I’d rather see him being an awesome hero at this point, not having an existential crisis of person.

But this is probably neither here nor there. Personally I’m against the whole general idea, but Yost hasn’t steered us wrong yet with Scarlet Spider, so I should definitely give him a shot. At least the art is better in this issue.

Join me after the jump for a full synopsis and more review!

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Review: Scarlet Spider #13

What a difference the art makes. Khoi Pham is still drawing Scarlet Spider, and either his talents have gone completely downhill, or the inker and colorist have done a terrible job, because the art in Scarlet Spider #13 is atrocious. Sketchy, awkward, off-model, it brings the whole issue down. This might actually be a good issue of Scarlet Spider, but the bad art is just so distracting. It doesn’t help either that the villains are generic werewolf people. And that Pham can’t draw werewolves to save his life.

Scarlet Spider #13

We’re finally getting answers about Aracely, but whatever impact those answers might have is completely lost due to horrendous art. I hope this is just a bump in the road. A switch to bad art is always a sign that a series is nearing its cancellation.

Comic rating: 2/5: Bad.

The mysteries of Aracely have never been that big of a deal to me. She’s definitely come into her own in this series, and was a standout in the last issue. But I haven’t particularly cared where she came from. Still, writer Christopher Yost was definitely going to get around to it eventually. And it seems like he’s tying it deeply into Mexican folklore and more. I’ve never particularly cared about Mexican folklore either, but maybe he can win me over. Yost definitely does a fine job detailing how Kaine uncomfortably fits into this scenario. I think it will be a fun adventure for our hero. He’s already an outsider in the normal world, now he’s even more so. That should be good for him.

But like I said, the art is terrible. And the villains could use a big boost to make them interesting. Right now, they’re just generic evil werewolf criminals. How boring. Here’s an idea: why not make them were-something else? Why is it always wolves? There’s a lot of talk in this issue about ‘coyotes’, which are what they call the people who transport Mexicans over the border for a fee. Why not make them werecoyotes? That would be interesting and cool!

Instead, all we get is mostly bland.

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