Saturday, 17 August 2024

Daredevil [2022] #6 - Marvel Comics

DAREDEVIL No. 6, February 2023
Featuring an unbelievably tiring thirty-two panel sequence depicting Matt Murdock chopping up some tomatoes in a kitchen, Chip Zdarsky’s script for this comic probably did cause its readers to believe it was “the most shocking issue” of the author’s “landmark Daredevil epic yet”. However, such an accolade is arguably not a good thing when its due to a severely sedentary narrative, which only occasionally pops into life whenever the spotlight moves away from its titular character; “Would you mind prepping some garlic? Knives are to your right.”

Indeed, despite the pre-publication promises of "Marvel Worldwide", the actual highlight of this twenty-page periodical solely rests upon the shoulders of Elektra Natchios’ so-called “international incident” concerning an apparently undead incarnation of the United States Commander-In-Chief. This well-penned and intriguing confrontation between the deadly assassin and Frank Castle's presidential puppet is made all the more dramatic when an overconfident Iron Man smashes his way into the fracas, and gets swiftly ambushed by a pair of stooges armed with one nanometre thick Symkarian steel swords.

Unfortunately though, so pulse-pounding a predicament is just as short-lived as the rest of the publication’s rambling plot is long-winded, so soon gets swallowed up amidst the Man of Fear’s bemusing dialogue-driven desire for redemption with some of the world's more notorious B-List criminals. In fact, many a bibliophile will probably be left scratching their heads in wonder at just what the blind lawyer’s overtly-religious plan is for the likes of Stegron, Speed Demon, Stilt-Man, Agony and Bullet – Unless Murdock genuinely believes in simply busting the mass-murderers out of their lawful imprisonment on the Raft he is somehow doing God’s work..!?!

Desperately attempting to hold the audience’s attention with his drawings is Rafael De Latorre, who appears to squeeze as much action as an artist can manage from the aforementioned broth-making debacle. This conversational piece does admittedly contain one moment of melodrama when the Brazilian illustrator pencils felon Buck Cashman being asked to use a kitchen knife whilst Daredevil has his back turned to him. But even this potential threat is quickly quashed as flat as the vegetables being prepared for dinner once the felon quietly sets about crushing the plant with the flat of the blade.

 The regular cover art to "DAREDEVIL" #6 by Marco Checchetto & Matthew Wilson

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