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UNCANNY X-MEN No. 7, February 2025 |
Of course, the biggest hook to this publication occurs once Anna Marie LeBeau and Scott Summers have decided to attack Professor Xavier’s former home independently of one another, and some of the two squads' biggest hitters plough into the prison with an unbridled passion. These subsequent action sequences are absolutely chock full of pulse-pounding pugilism, such as when Rogue takes out the Blob within an instant of the Brotherhood of Evil Mutant-turned-Trustee making a startling appearance, or a brutally battered Beast finding the physical strength to renew the fight with his overconfident jailers, and should resultantly take any long-term fans back to the glory days of Chris Claremont, when his co-creations took few prisoners and arguably asked even fewer questions.
Another intriguing aspect to the American author’s script though is undoubtedly the short-lived tussle between Rogue and Cyclop’s ‘opposing’ squads. Misunderstandings between some of the New York City-based publisher’s top tier super-teams and the X-Men were always occurring during the Bronze Age of Comics. Yet it’s rare (and thoroughly enthralling) to see the veteran comrades-in-arms slugging it out amongst themselves, even if the kerfuffle is sadly rather short-lived; “This ain’t done, Scott. We both know it. You laid hands on mine.”
Disappointingly, what does probably let this comic down is the decision to intermittently utilise the artistic skills of both David Marquez and Edgar Salazar in the same book, as the two proficient pencillers arguably have disconcertingly different drawing styles. These differences debatably jar the reader from out of the adventure whenever a swap occurs, with Fred Dukes’ tubby alter-ego most notably suffering one of the more overt changes in appearance.
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The regular cover art to "UNCANNY X-MEN" #7 by David Marquez & Matthew Wilson |
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