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thebeardedpoet's review against another edition
2.0
First off, Avengers: Rage of Ultron has some spectacular artwork from Jerome Opena. Great splash pages and excellent action shots. Now to the story . . . it's part of the Hank Pym soap opera which has always been the least interesting thing about the Avengers to me. The story here is about father/son angst and animosity (again!). The son, Ultron, is so disturbed about his father (Hank Pym) he wants to devastate the universe. It's bleak and depressing. I found it overly serious. Only the artwork kept me in the story.
texaswolfman's review against another edition
5.0
I loved this book!! Great story by Remender and wonderful art by Opena. Kinda dark but oh so good. I love me the Avengers!!
ferrisscottr's review against another edition
2.0
Admittedly I've never been a big Ultron fan and this seemed like one big exploration of daddy-issues between Hank Pym & Ultron & Vision.
meh
The art was different - not sure I loved it but it was different.
The storytelling got on my nerves and the characters were grating.
This one was a miss.
meh
The art was different - not sure I loved it but it was different.
The storytelling got on my nerves and the characters were grating.
This one was a miss.
book_nut's review against another edition
3.0
My first foray into the GN world of Avengers. Not bad. A bit confusing, but the art was solid.
vernip's review against another edition
2.0
RESISTANCE IS FUTILE
...
Meh, what else you gonna do with this kinda Hank Pym?
...
Meh, what else you gonna do with this kinda Hank Pym?
trike's review against another edition
1.0
I don't like Ultron. He was okay when he first appeared back in the 1970s, but he's a one-trick pony and a one-note bad guy. He hates all of mankind because reasons and therefore wants to end us. And writers have been playing this same song for 40 years now.
The only thing they can do is up the stakes. It's fine when new technology comes out, giving Ultron new abilities. The Internet and infecting same is a good way to reboot the tale. Taking over Iron Man's armor and using it against him, also good. But randomly able to infect humans, robots, and alien immortals and turn them into Ultron-clones? That's stupid. And then releasing nano-spores so that the entirety of the Earth is an Ultron, AFTER he's completely taken over the moon Titan and somehow reshaped it into a giant Ultron face? Come on, Rick.
Plus, when Ultron takes over someone and you kill them - like when Spider-man is beheaded - is that person dead? Guess not. But who cares about explanations, because comic books. I get it, it's fantasy, but how freaking lazy do you have to be to not even attempt some handwavium?
This feels like a Cliffs Notes version of a larger story, too. Back in the day, people like Chris Claremont, Mike Esposito or Jim Shooter could set up a situation, explore the ramifications, give us a cool new bad guy, and wrap it all up in an issue or two. Check out some of those old Marvel Team-Ups and Avengers to see how he did it. How is it they take 30 pages more to tell a story yet somehow seem to have less content? THAT was the real trick here.
The only thing they can do is up the stakes. It's fine when new technology comes out, giving Ultron new abilities. The Internet and infecting same is a good way to reboot the tale. Taking over Iron Man's armor and using it against him, also good. But randomly able to infect humans, robots, and alien immortals and turn them into Ultron-clones? That's stupid. And then releasing nano-spores so that the entirety of the Earth is an Ultron, AFTER he's completely taken over the moon Titan and somehow reshaped it into a giant Ultron face? Come on, Rick.
Plus, when Ultron takes over someone and you kill them - like when Spider-man is beheaded - is that person dead? Guess not. But who cares about explanations, because comic books. I get it, it's fantasy, but how freaking lazy do you have to be to not even attempt some handwavium?
This feels like a Cliffs Notes version of a larger story, too. Back in the day, people like Chris Claremont, Mike Esposito or Jim Shooter could set up a situation, explore the ramifications, give us a cool new bad guy, and wrap it all up in an issue or two. Check out some of those old Marvel Team-Ups and Avengers to see how he did it. How is it they take 30 pages more to tell a story yet somehow seem to have less content? THAT was the real trick here.
mspris's review against another edition
5.0
I spent this weekend catching up on a lot of Avengers, X-Men and X-Force graphic novels. Of those I read, I think this one was the best (and it is only one I'm giving feedback on). I very much enjoyed this story, the tragedy of Hank Pym as it were, and the depth of humanity in Vision are what really made the whole thing for me. The artwork is consistently good through-out, I didn't get distracted by nagging thoughts over suddenly one character looked different than usual, or trying to figure out who someone was and overall the tale had a strong intensity that kept me reading.
gswizzel's review against another edition
4.0
Actual Rating: 4.25 out of 5 stars.
So I've just been blown away.
It's so funny because there are so many negative reviews about this comic yet really did love it! It kept me from start to finish. I originally thought that this was what The Avengers: Age of Ultron movie was adapted from. It was somewhat based off of it (but more just inspired by it really), but it was something I really did not expect.
I'm going to hit you with the PROs and CONs now
PROs:
- Really love that this follows the new avengers! We do get a little bit of a back story with the previous ones at the beginning to set the story up. The cast was great!
- This story really does reflect Hank Pym's mental health issues, which makes him a somewhat redeemable anti-hero
- Sam Wilson - Ultron is just as or maybe even more powerful than I expected him to be, yet he is such a snobby little child
- The art style and colour scheme was PERFECTION!
CONs:
- The ending was depressing, although it was the right thing to do
- I kind of wished this was a bit longer, as this was a standalone.
I did really enjoy this comic! I just freaking love the Marvel universe in general and I'm excited to read more from it XD
So I've just been blown away.
It's so funny because there are so many negative reviews about this comic yet really did love it! It kept me from start to finish. I originally thought that this was what The Avengers: Age of Ultron movie was adapted from. It was somewhat based off of it (but more just inspired by it really), but it was something I really did not expect.
I'm going to hit you with the PROs and CONs now
PROs:
- Really love that this follows the new avengers! We do get a little bit of a back story with the previous ones at the beginning to set the story up. The cast was great!
- This story really does reflect Hank Pym's mental health issues, which makes him a somewhat redeemable anti-hero
- Sam Wilson - Ultron is just as or maybe even more powerful than I expected him to be, yet he is such a snobby little child
- The art style and colour scheme was PERFECTION!
CONs:
- The ending was depressing, although it was the right thing to do
- I kind of wished this was a bit longer, as this was a standalone.
I did really enjoy this comic! I just freaking love the Marvel universe in general and I'm excited to read more from it XD
therudielibrarian's review against another edition
4.0
An interesting take on the pain of being human. The struggle for some to feel accepted and loved. The battle to figure out who you are and what your place in the world is. Well written.