Thursday, September 05, 2024

Try to imagine meeting your mom for the first time, and she's wearing those pants. Unavoidable psychic damage!

I know I read X-Man from like the fifth issue, though at least #26, but I don't think I still have most of those, and a lot of the details are pretty vague. Still, it's way longer than I ever read Cable! From 1997, Cable #44, "Temptation in the Wilderness" Written by James Robinson, pencils by Randy Green and Allen Im, inks by Scott Hanna and Scott Koblish. 

In what appears to be a musty dungeon, in a hanging cage, Nathan Summers finally comes face to face with Madelyne Pryor, his mother. Who was wearing a slightly more modest version of her Inferno outfit! Those low-rise pants maybe aren't helping...They were on the astral plane, but at Mister Sinister's old lab: Madelyne had entered Nathan's mind while he was meditating, to introduce herself, and show him her life. She also got to Nathan just before Jean Grey could warn him, that Maddy had somehow returned as a "psychic ghost," in a really tiny editorial footnote, in X-Man #25, although she had been back since X-Man #5. There had been at least one other writer on that title since then, though; #25 might've just been the reveal of 'how.'
Anyhow, Madelyne takes Nathan on a magical mystery tour, of her depressing origin and life. She also tricks Nathan into fighting an imaginary monster at Sinister's lab, just to see how far he would go to protect her. They walk and talk for two pages that are positively Claremont-esque, in that the letterer (Richard Starkings and Comicraft!) deserves combat pay: I'm only scanning part of one of those pages, because I know you probably have other things to do today. Nathan tells Madelyne, while she had a rough start, that doesn't excuse the pain she caused, and he can't feel pity for her. She changes to a slightly more demure, winter outfit; to show Nathan where she was happiest: in Alaska, the brief window of a "normal" life between Uncanny X-Men #201 and X-Factor #1. (Maybe a month between those issues actually hitting stands? Really?)
Next, a visit to New York City, which they both hate: Nathan thinks of it as Babel, "...where no one takes the time to listen and understand." Maddy's just mad she died there, and Nathan points out, wasn't she trying to sacrifice him when she died? Maddy claims that was a lie of the treacherous X-Men, and Nathan throws her off the building. Really, but it's just to transition to something he wants to show her: real evil, that of Apocalypse. Of course, even here Nathan is still Johnny Tightlips about his real goals, as he mentions "he is the one I am sworn to defeat. Perhaps not in the manner you might think, but it is still a task that requires all my attention." Ergo, no time for Ghost Mom: he doesn't consider Madelyne, as she was then, even 'real.' Madelyne comes back, if that was his real goal, why hadn't he done it yet? Why was Apocalypse still alive? A cold glower is his only response, and Maddy then pushes too far: they could take out Apocalypse, Sinister, and the X-Men. She calls mutants "evil" one too many times for Nathan's taste, and he remembers Jean raising him in the future, as his mother.
Madelyne asks if Nathan feels nothing for her, and he grudgingly admits he felt a moment of peace in Alaska; so that would be neutral territory for them, if they needed to meet. Still, he warns if she threatens innocent lives, including the X-Men, he would fight her; but Maddy still seems to take it as a win. Nathan wakes up, with Scott and Jean there for him; a moment that makes him feel like a little boy again, and he welcomes it. Probably should've ended the issue there, but nope! There's two pages with villain Ch'vayre, who...yeah, I got nothing. From the context, he had been sent from the future, to make sure Cable stuck to the right path, but seems to have decided to change tactics, and work with Sebastian Shaw and the Hellfire Club. (I would've thought Shinobi Shaw would've still been in power then!)
I wonder if this is just because I reflexively oppose Cyclops nine times out of ten, but I'm still Team Maddy? And I kind of dig her new costume as well. I'm not positive where she went from here, but I'm glad she's around again. Also, I'm not sure how long he stuck around, but this was Robinson's first issue here: I feel like a lot of this was editorial-driven, but the Babel bit definitely feels like his. That might be the first time I've seen Cable explain anything, though.

8 comments:

  1. Mr. Morbid7:32 AM

    Had to look it up but Robinson’s run on Cable lasted from #’s 44-50 plus a -1 issue. Looks like the highlights of this short run are the Operation Zero Tolerance tie-ins & Cable fighting the Hellfire Club. And yes, Shaw’s son Shinobi should’ve been running things back then, except nobody at the X-offices seemed to really care about him.

    I myself read X-Man for as however long as artist Roger Cruz was drawing it then, left after he did. What can I say, I was like that back then when I was young, dumb & shallow enough to usually buy comics based mostly off how good the art looked to me. If the story was really good, that was an added bonus 🤷‍♂️

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  2. I don't know if Maddy appeared between this and when Fraction brought her back for some story in his X-Men run (back when they weer based off the coast of San Francisco.)

    I'm sure that, like you, some of my support for Maddy is because Cyclops is a tool, but then, part of the reason I hate Cyclops is because he did decide to be Deadbeat Dad and Husband.

    Even before he learns Jean's back, he was already checking out of his marriage, Maddy mentions to Storm in Uncanny 201 that while several of the X-Men called to check on her after returning from Asgard, Cyclops didn't think to call his very pregnant wife, who was entirely alone in the X-Mansion. Then he later tells Maddy he thought she'd handle raising the kid, because he's too important to the X-Men to be bothered with such things. Complete loser shit.

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    1. Mr. Morbid6:09 AM

      Absolutely. Claremont totally & irreparably damaged Cyclops when he wrote all that. He can only blame Shooter for so much, but ultimately he’s the one who decided Cyclops should abandon his family.

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  3. Wait, wait, wait: has anybody written Maddy and Stryfe together? Since he's like the opposite of Cable in about everything, I could see him just adoring his...clone-mother, once removed? "Hello, mother dear..."

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    1. Anonymous11:44 AM

      Good question. I mean, isn’t there a clone club or Clones Anonymous?

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    2. Mr. Morbid11:50 AM

      I’ve looked around on the internet and can’t find any proof that they’ve ever interacted with each other & I can’t believe it hasn’t happened yet.

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  4. The Krakoa era would have seemed like an opportunity, but if I remember right, Havok had to basically plead to get Maddy approved for resurrection.

    I thought I read somewhere the Quiet Council was like "no fucking way are we bringing back Stryfe," though I can't imagine who requested that, so maybe I imagined it. Still, funny to think they drew the line at him, given all the various murderous scumbags they welcomed into the fold. I mean, Stryfe's cloning technology is probably better than Mr. Sinister's. It's from the future!

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    1. Anonymous8:09 PM

      And yet Sinister’s tech gets all the attention.

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