alliterator (
alliterator) wrote in
scans_daily2024-05-29 07:40 am
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Rise of the Powers of X #5: "Now and Forever"

"Moira is quite big in this story because the end of the X-Men Krakoan era had to come back to her. It had to come back to Xavier as well. Because we basically started with those two people on a bench. For all the big ideas Jonathan Hickman started, it was a very powerful, personal story about these people trapped and wanting to be free. That's the thing that Moira gave everyone; a chance to try things a different way. Of course, in the end, Moira is not reliable or good, but she had a point."
-- Kieron Gillen
Moira finally asks Charles what his plan was with defecting to Orchis. He tells her.




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Also, she's not a mutant in a different timeline, so it doesn't really matter.
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And if the former, how did Krakoa even HAPPEN?
Time travel stories hurt my head.
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He won't say who it was, presumably out of professional courtesy, but I have to say that even I think it was probably intended to be Doug.
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The rest of her arc -- becoming a robot and afterwards -- wasn't written by Hickman, but it was discussed with him. I think they said he was in the room as they talked about the next two years of stories after Inferno.
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But this is thematically Moria's true l1th life.
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Oh, the rage that simple sentence brings me.
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"It's an ending, that's enough."
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I'm also very happy to see that Chuck gave her the choice and didn't force her. Or kill her. That he trusted someone else to do the thing rather than declare that he alone could do it.
I would love to know what Moira does with that last life.
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"This sucks" is not meaningful commentary. Quoting the Simpsons to complain about how much you think a story sucks is also not meaningful commentary.
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