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WEST COAST AVENGERS No. 2, February 2025 |
Furthermore, the book initially provides Spider-Woman with a significant amount of ‘screentime’, and this really helps sell the covert operative background to Jessica Drew’s colourfully costumed alter-ego, before she then just brutally batters Flag Smasher and his minions aboard Grant Rogers’ re-papered sea vessel. Such an insight proves a great reminder to the reader as to the character’s lengthy background, and also helps inject some humour into the tense situation by showing how grossed out she becomes when the lecherous Blue Bolt pays some interest in her.
Equally as enjoyable however is this book’s much more sedentary second-half, which focuses upon Angelica Jones’ arrival at the Los Angeles Avengers Campus. There’s a very clear suggestion in this publication that all is not what it seems with Tony Stark’s supposed “A-List Hero”, and her extreme overreaction upon first encountering the former, would-be world conqueror Ultron, does not bode well for whichever reformed villain Chris Claremont’s co-creation is meant to be mentoring.
Unfortunately, the same praise can not be heaped upon the interior artwork of this comic due to some occasional, jarringly weak pencilling by Danny Kim. There is no doubt that the illustrator can create some dynamic, adrenalin-fuelled moments with his drawing – such as when Spider-Woman singlehandedly takes down a helicopter crammed full of heavily-armed goons. Yet, every now and then, a panel or two will look disconcertingly amateurish at best, like one picture where an exasperated Stark is shown clasping his hands to the sides of his head. Sadly, such sketches will undoubtedly snatch any perusing bibliophile straight out of the moment, and make them question just how much time the creative team were given before this particular title was thrown together.
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The regular cover art of "WEST COAST AVENGERS" #2 by Ben Harvey |
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