Thursday, 8 May 2025

Red Hulk #1 - Marvel Comics

RED HULK No. 1, April 2025
Announced by “Marvel Worldwide” in November 2024 as a new ongoing series which also has ties with the publisher’s 'One World Under Doom’ comic book event, Benjamin Percy’s tense, highly claustrophobic script for Issue One of “Red Hulk” arguably makes it easy to see why this twenty-five page periodical was the twenty-seventh best-selling title in February 2025. Admittedly, the actual, crimson-coloured behemoth himself doesn’t really make much of an appearance in this particular publication. But such is the American author’s mesmerising handling of an incarcerated Thaddeus E. "Thunderbolt" Ross that few bibliophiles will surely mind; “And I know its chip technology is the key to this prison. And to my power inhibitor.”

Indeed, the entire point behind “Think Tank” is to show the audience that the decorated U.S. Air Force officer can still outmanoeuvre his opponents using his coldly-calculating brain, rather than just utilising his considerable super-strength and brawn. Such a plot twist genuinely creates a thoroughly riveting read, especially once it becomes clear that the three-star general is in league with a number of other notable fellow prisoners, such as Deathlok and Machine Man.

Similarly as convincing is the premise behind Ross’ captivity, and just why a top-tier villain like Doctor Doom would be interested in holding him “in a cell deep below the ground.” Latveria’s armoured monarch has always been obsessed with undermining the world’s status quo so as to give his small country within Eastern Europe a chance of global domination, so building a prison complex which houses some of the planet’s most “brilliant military, criminal and political minds” makes perfect sense – as well as a compelling adventure once the inmates band together to outwit the Fantastic Four’s arch-nemesis.

Nicely complimenting Percy’s prodigious penmanship are Geoff Shaw’s proficient pencils, which do a very good job of showing Thunderbolt as a somewhat vulnerable, aging man, rather than an unstoppable wrecking machine. Furthermore, the illustrator somehow manages to imbue Thaddeus’ escape attempt with all the meticulous patience and timing an onlooker would expect from such a tactical genius, who knows full well that every ill-timed movement or wasted second could be the difference between life and death.

The regular cover art of "RED HULK" #1 by Geoff Shaw & Marte Gracia

No comments:

Post a Comment