Articles for February, 2017

Download Episode 278 of This Week in Marvel

Hello Marvelites! We’ve got a brand new episode of This Week in Marvel. Well, what are you waiting for? Pull up a chair and press play!

Ben and Ryan give you the rundown on this week’s hottest comics releases, including INHUMANS VS. X-MEN, followed by part two of the Secret Empire interview with Nick Spencer and Tom Brevoort. Get the rundown on games, TV and film news from the West Coast. Plus, Marc and Christine take a look at Legion with X-MEN LEGACY in the latest Ultimate Reading Club!

Read X-23 for the next This Week in Marvel Unlimited Reading Club and share your thoughts using the hash tag #TWIMURC!

Download episode #278 of This Week in Marvel from Marvel.com, check out Marvel Podcast Centralgrab the TWiM RSS feed and subscribe to This Week in Marvel on iTunes, so you never miss an episode! We are now also on Soundcloud! Head over now to our new hub to listen to the full run of This Week in Marvel!

This Week in Marvel will focus on delivering all the Marvel info on news and new releases–from comics to video games to toys to TV to film and beyond! New episodes will be released every Thursday (or so) and TWiM is co-hosted by Marvel VP & Executive Editor of Digital Media Ryan “Agent M” Penagos and Marvel Editorial Director of Digital Media Ben Morse, along with Marvel.com Editor Marc Strom, Marvel.com Assistant Editor Christine Dinh, and Manager of Video & Content Production Blake Garris. We also want your feedback, as well as questions for us to answer on future episodes!  Tweet your questions, comments and thoughts about TWiM to @AgentM@BenJMorse, @chrissypedia or @Marvel with the hashtag #ThisWeekinMarvel!

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Avengers Point One: Earth’s Mightiest Fans

Those of us who love comics know that the stories and characters can stick with us for a lifetime. The truth of this certainly wasn’t lost on Jim Morton, who wrote letters to Marvel as a teenager, decades ago. The editors responded to and published one of these letters in the back of an AVENGERS issue decades ago, only for today’s Marvel staff to find it and reprint it in the retro-themed pages of AVENGERS POINT ONE—much to Jim’s surprise, when he stumbled onto it in his local comic shop.

We caught up with Jim about his experience, and what has kept him interested in comics.

Marvel.com: What has made you a lifelong fan of Marvel comics?

Jim Morton: From the very beginning, it was the outpouring of creativity in art, story, drama, humor, family and team and social dynamics. I already loved super heroes, having grown up with DC, especially enjoying World’s Finest and Justice League of America because of the interplay of different types of characters. Marvel took those concepts and pumped them full of energy! I experienced that first with FANTASTIC FOUR. AMAZING SPIDER-MAN had down-to-earth situations amid all the spectacle and fantasy. I actually wrote a term paper in high school about the social implications of X-MEN and its portrayal of people ostracized from “normal” society. And yes, I got an A on it!

I also loved the months-long sagas, which were in essence graphic novels in serial form. [Stan] Lee and [Jack] Kirby’s FANTASTIC FOUR tales achieved wonders in this style.

The early portrayals of strong and proud female heroes such as Scarlet Witch, Invisible Woman, and Marvel Girl were exciting and inspiring, and in that same vein, groundbreaking stories of minority heroes such as Black Panther, I found powerful and thought-provoking.

Marvel still honors these traditions and artistic aspirations today, and the world of popular entertainment is all the better for that.

Marvel.com: Can you tell us about your experience with reading your letter years later? How has your perspective on comics changed? It’s so interesting, and often funny, to re-read things that we wrote as kids.

Jim Morton: It happened at my favorite comics and game shop, Dr. No’s in Marietta, Georgia, managed and owned by Cliff Biggers, who produces the wonderful “Comic Shop News.” I picked up the AVENGERS #3.1 comic and recognized it as a retelling of the story from half a century ago about the first shake-up in Avengers membership, and it intrigued me. When I saw the letters column in the back, the layout alone told me it was a reprint of an old letters page. A split second after I thought, “Maybe one of my old letters….” I saw it! Definitely a moment of nostalgic thrill, evoking memories of the great enjoyment I had as a kid reading these tales. I realized that I had imitated Marvel’s own “house style” in the letter I wrote, and that was pretty funny. And I had fun reading the response, too, which had a classic bit of Marvel humor.

Avengers #3.1 letters page
Avengers #3.1 letters page
Avengers #3.1 letters page
Avengers #3.1 letters page

Marvel.com: Comics have really evolved over the years—everything from artistic styles to subject matter. What changes have stood out most for you?

Jim Morton: I love today’s more prominent roles for Marvel’s heroines, with Captain Marvel as a great example. I see the introduction of religious minority heroes, especially Ms. Marvel, as a provocative innovation.

I’ve greatly enjoyed the cross-over sagas like Civil War and the infrequent but wonderful intercompany cross-overs such as AVENGERS/JLA. Experimental graphic novels like Neil Gaiman and Andy Kubert’s 1602 bring joy and wonder. And I love the increased exposure of Marvel’s Universe through TV, film, and novels. I had wanted those movies to exist 50 years ago—and good things do sometimes come to those who wait.

Marvel.com: Whom did you consider your favorite Marvel characters as a kid/teenager? What about now?

Jim Morton: All of them, heroes, villains, supporting characters! The wonderfully wacky ones like Lockjaw, a giant dog with teleportation capabilities! Kid heroes, like Power Pack! Such unique concepts as the blind hero Daredevil. I’ve always loved Black Panther and his stories today are simply the best in the character’s history. What a coup Marvel achieved by getting Ta-Nehesi Coates to write these stories! I mean, a serious social commentator, a TV news analyst on the editorial board of “The Atlantic” whom Toni Morrison called the public intellectual most likely to carry on the legacy of James Baldwin! And he writes for Marvel!

Marvel.com: For someone just getting into Marvel comics, what books would you recommend they start with?

Jim Morton: In general, the graphic novel collections of classic stories are a great introduction, providing a complete reading experience in one volume. In particular, I’d ask a new reader what he or she has enjoyed in other media and let that guide my recommendations. One that ought to have broad appeal is the charming and hilarious MOON GIRL AND DEVIL DINOSAUR. But there’s something for every taste. The Marvel Universe is a big place. For fans of the recent Avengers films, I’d suggest the early Roy Thomas Ultron stories, especially the one ending with—spoiler alert!—the little boy finding Ultron’s head in a pile of debris, the panels brilliantly captioned with Shelly’s “Ozymandias.” Wow… “I am Ozymandias, king of kings! Look on my works, ye mighty, and despair!”

Marvel.com: Would you like to mention anything else.

Jim Morton: I’ll give you an example of how great a tug these stories still have on me at age 68. In late April of 2012, I was in Paris. I only had a week there, and I wanted to see, do, and eat everything! I had no time to stop and see a movie. But everywhere I saw enormous, triple-wide billboards and other signage for the [“Marvel’s Avengers”]. I actually had to struggle to keep my concentration on the City of Lights rather than ducking into a movie theater. But I waited till I got back to Georgia, and saw it. To use Pauline Kael’s phrase about the cinematic experience, I was spellbound in darkness.

Pick up AVENGERS #4.1 by Mark Waid and Barry Kitson, out this upcoming Wednesday, March 1, for more nostalgia-fueled action and letters from yesteryear!

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Navy: Arrest of AWOL sailor and new mother was 'last resort'

Navy: Arrest of AWOL sailor and new mother was 'last resort'FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) — A 24-year-old U.S. Navy sailor who had a baby in August was arrested and remains on a military hold after being accused of deserting her post, court records show.


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Woman Stunned to Learn She Won $2 Million in Lottery: 'I Can't Even Speak Right Now!'
New Jersey attorney Jessica Macarone had no idea she was holding the winning ticket.
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Girls’ Final Bottle Episode: Matthew Rhys, a Penis and Lots of Debate
One of the traditions of Girls has been to take one of the girls, in this case Hannah Horvath, and transplant them into a situation, usually a single one, for an entire episode. In "American...
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Real Housewives of Beverly Hills Star Erika Jayne Joins Dancing With the Stars Season 24 Cast
Pat the puss is going primetime! The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills fan-favorite Erika Girardi aka Erika Jayne (her stage name) is set to join the cast for the upcoming season of...
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Trump vows military build-up, hammers nationalist themes
By Emily Stephenson and Steve Holland NATIONAL HARBOR, Md./WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Donald Trump said he would make a massive budget request for one of the "greatest military buildups in American history" on Friday in a feisty, campaign-style ...
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Dancing With the Stars Adds Saturday Night Live Veteran Chris Kattan
Dancing With the Stars better secure the rights to Haddaway's "What Is Love" for new contestant Chris Kattan. E! News has learned the Saturday Night Live veteran is in serious talks to...
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Leggings Legend LuLaRoe Sued for Overcharging Customers on Sales Tax

Leggings Legend LuLaRoe Sued for Overcharging Customers on Sales TaxLuLaRoe, the ridiculously successful fashion company known for its bright and comfortable leggings and genius marketing plan, is in trouble. While the company’s innovative direct sales model (one that relies largely on Facebook and other Internet communities) has made many women loyal supporters of the business because it allows them the unique opportunity to build their own pop-up shops and make commission as consultants, the business structure has also had its complications. The California-headquartered company was slammed with a lawsuit on Feb. 17 in U.S. District Court in Western Pennsylvania that alleges it has been illegally collecting sales tax in states that don’t have it.


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Black History Month: Moon Girl

Celebrate Black History Month by delving into the first appearances of Marvel’s most prominent African and African-American characters on Marvel Unlimited!

Lunella Lafayette had big things on her mind even before a giant red Tyrannosaurus Rex appeared in the pages of MOON GIRL AND DEVIL DINOSAUR #1. The story, written by Amy Reeder and Brandon Montclare with art by Natacha Bustos, featured a young genius worried about the spreading Terrigen Mist and how it would change her as a carrier of Kree DNA that will alter upon exposure to the clouds traveling all across the Earth.

Thanks to Moon Boy and Devil Dinosaur trying to get the Nightstone away from the Killer Folk in the past and Lunella finding the Kree Omni Wave Projector in the present, DD and the hairy pre-humans found themselves transported to our world. The would-be Moon Girl and Devil Dino teamed up to take on the Killer Folk, who developed into a street gang. To really get in on the action, Lunella even created her own costume complete with gadgets of her own invention. Completing the package, the duo made a cool secret headquarters in the form of the young lady’s lab located under her school.

Moon Girl and Devil Dinosaur (2015) #1

Moon Girl and Devil Dinosaur (2015) #1

What is Marvel Unlimited?

At the end of the first arc, Lunella could not outrun the Terrigen Mist any longer. In issue #7 she emerged from her cocoon, but couldn’t figure out her Inhuman abilities. Still, she carried on with her costumed hero career alongside her dinosaur partner. Later, in a fit of rage at school, she discovered that she could switch minds with Devil!

This happened right around the same time that Kid Kree infiltrated Lunella’s class in an attempt to capture an Inhuman to impress his dad. Eventually Ms. Marvel jumped in to help out. After that, our hero discovered she’s actually the smartest person in the Marvel Universe, much to the chagrin of people like Doctor Doom!

Lunella even played a huge part in MONSTERS UNLEASHED by figuring out the creatures’ language which also gave insight into their destructive mission. Not bad for a character with less than two years’ worth of stories out there!

History Lesson

In the wake of Inhumans Vs. X-Men, three new titles based on the first group will spring up: ROYALS, BLACK BOLT, and SECRET WARRIORS. That last one, by Matthew Rosenberg and Javier Garrón, will feature Daisy Johnson leading a team of new Inhumans like Moon Girl, Ms. Marvel, Devil Dinosaur, Karnak and Inferno. The series, as just announced, will tie right in to the epic Secret Empire event, so grab a copy in May to see how they do!

Next time we focus on Marvel’s most famous monster hunter, Blade back when he debuted in TOMB OF DRACULA #10

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