Friday, July 25, 2025

There's a splendid example of Dire Wraith-dom on the cover of this one, but mostly I'm struck about how this Avengers roster feels powerful, yet also designed to cause problems in-story: I can almost hear Cap trying to work through it. "We've got four members that can fly, but only one of them can carry anything while flying...and it's the space pervert." (OK, Cap probably never really took to Starfox, but he probably didn't call him that. Probably.) From 1984, the Avengers #244, "And the Rocket's Red Glare!" Written by Roger Stern, pencils by Al Milgrom and Carmine Infantino, inks by Joe Sinnott.
The current Avengers roster was on a little boat trip, but despite the encouragement of Jan and Starfox it wasn't a pleasure cruise: the Dire Wraiths had been sabotaging recent launches at Kennedy Space Center. These were the Wraith "Rocketeers," possibly the last of the science-oriented Wraiths, as the sorcery-types had taken over and wiped out most of the others. The Rocketeers wreck another rocket, then manage to escape as a third-party deploys a mysterious gas that even delays the Vision, who is later furious--furious by synthezoid standards, anyway--at the failure right out of the gate in his chairmanship of the team. (Jan had recently given up the chair, so she seems to be flighty again without that responsibility; although I also figure she does that to Steve on a regular basis: "Good lord, what are you wearing? Take that off, right now. And the pants.")
The Rocketeer-Wraiths realize the Wraith Sisterhood had assisted them, but only in hopes of drawing them out. Still, they were going to stick with their plan, and had wristwatch sensor-jammers to keep them from being detected. That almost works, but the Vision has better eyes than that, and can see them. (From the art, it's unclear if Vision can see the Wraiths' true form, or just a distortion giving them away.) While the Avengers give them the what-for, with Wanda revealing their Wraith-forms; the head scientist/lead Wraith makes a break for it, in a rocket with a cobbled-together FTL drive. Which, one of the Wraiths notices, looked like it was about to explode, and the Wasp was on that rocket...
There was a fun bit in the opening, where Captain Marvel (Monica, still my Captain!) is pretty enthusiastic about being on a boat: she had been harbor patrol before getting powers. Although, in Amazing Spider-Man Annual #16, she also appeared in a very distracting bikini, which she seemed unwilling to do here around Starfox...(Actually, her super-suit might've been the only clothes she had that would change when she did, so...) And, subplots galore, as Hawkeye and Mockingbird arrive on the west coast; and Quicksilver arrives at Bova's cabin, finding it leveled.

5 comments:

Mr. Morbid said...

Outside of ROM, were the Dire Wraiths EVER successful in ANY of their schemes? Because it feels like, at least to me, they were nothing more than the nuisance of the month for the hero or heroes to fight, but nothing more serious than that. Eh.

Good point about Jan. I’m surprised she was ever allowed to be leader given that attitude. The fact the she was shows clear character growth, so then why does the same writer partially responsible for said growth then have her acting like her old air head self? Uh.

googum said...

I think when Jan's on the job, she's on the job; but if she's not the boss she doesn't feel like she has to act like one. That and certain crimes against fashion may take precedence: "Is that--a trucker cap? Well, it'll be gone before you regain consciousness..."

H said...

Hmm, why are we looking at Dire Wraiths so much all of a sudden? Is that where the AoA story is going, somebody’s actually a Dire Wraith?

Speaking of space perverts, the Wraith on that cover kind of reminds me of the nude scammer aliens from the first Futurama DTV movie.

Mr. Morbid said...

Fair enough

Anonymous said...

I believe that’s why EXACTLY why the AoA X-Men were so determined to make sure their Kurt ( and friends) was who he said he was.