stolisomancer: (Default)
stolisomancer ([personal profile] stolisomancer) wrote in [community profile] scans_daily2010-10-26 04:20 pm

Heroic Age: One Month to Live

One Month to Live is a five-issue limited series from Marvel, set in mainstream continuity, and all five issues came out in September of this year. The idea came from a conversation between Stephen Wacker and Rick Remender, and each issue has a different creative team. (John Ostrander wrote issue #3, which is what originally got my attention.)

It's very much the kind of project that's characteristic of modern Marvel: it's got decent writers, decent to good art, and it's an okay read, but it's gotten very little exposure and it sold like a juice box full of Ebola. (Each single issue did between 12,000 and 14,000 copies, which is actually better than I thought it did before looking it up.)

The book is a "man on the street" view of life in 616. Dennis Sykes is a bank manager, dealing with a job he despises and with becoming, as his wife puts it, the "instant parent" of his ten-year-old niece Kelly. His life is about to get worse.



Dennis gets stuck with the thankless job of telling a children's hospital that their grant has been withdrawn. On his way out the door, he makes the mistake of interfering with a robbery in progress; two junkies are trying to get drugs from what they think is an ambulance, but which is really just a medical waste disposal truck. One of them upends a bag of waste over Dennis's head...

Photobucket
Photobucket
Photobucket

(Yes, Kelly's a brat. She's also ten, she's lost both her parents, and she gets better over the course of the series.)

Since he lives in a comic-book universe, this has the bizarre upside of giving Dennis the power to telekinetically manipulate inorganic matter, which he discovers while fixing a picture frame. He immediately realizes that he can go get the children's hospital their money back, but after pulling it off, has second thoughts:

Photobucket

The rest of the series is Dennis getting a sort of guided tour through the Marvel Universe, guest-starring the Avengers, Spider-Man, and Wolverine. It's a pretty decent series, although it's very much a deliberate tearjerker, and the last issue has great art by Jamie McKelvie. If you're a trade-waiter, the trade paperback comes out in January.
ext_353826: (Still Gay!)

[identity profile] windiebird.livejournal.com 2010-10-26 11:47 pm (UTC)(link)
This certainly wasn't a perfect series but I thought it had some truly touching moments. It is what it advertises, I wouldn't say more than that =)
angelophile: (Death's Head Eh?)

[personal profile] angelophile 2010-10-27 12:14 am (UTC)(link)
This is the first I've heard of this. It seems interesting, but interesting enough to want to pick up? Hmmm. McKelvie art IS tempting...
lucky_gamble: (Default)

[personal profile] lucky_gamble 2010-10-27 12:16 am (UTC)(link)
Color me interested. Think i'll do some amazon shopping right now if I'm not dirt poor
jcbaggee: Jesus (Default)

[personal profile] jcbaggee 2010-10-27 12:24 am (UTC)(link)
Really enjoyed this, and was pretty surprised it ended like it did (though I won't ruin that here). It had some pretty cheesy, PSA like moments, but all in all a damn fine mini-series.
big_daddy_d: (Default)

[personal profile] big_daddy_d 2010-10-27 01:16 am (UTC)(link)
Perhaps I'll pick this up afterall.
halloweenjack: (Default)

[personal profile] halloweenjack 2010-10-27 03:56 am (UTC)(link)
Had some second thoughts myself; I'd assumed it was a redress of Strikeforce: Morituri (which I enjoyed, but it's already been done), but this seems quite different, and not bad.
elwood: (Default)

[personal profile] elwood 2010-10-27 04:03 am (UTC)(link)
I don't comment much, but I thought I would speak up on this one.

I knew nothing about this book until I flipped through an issue one day. This is the sort of book that I guess I don't see mainstream publishers do anymore. It had solid art but was really carried through the writing on a solid concept. This is the sort of book that I can give my kid and I know he will enjoy, but at the same time I can read as well.

And for people that are facing end of life issues, or kids living with someone facing those issues, it has a sort of Judy Bloom "how to deal with this crappy situation" feel to it.

[identity profile] jocutus.livejournal.com 2010-10-27 05:02 am (UTC)(link)
This is one of those series that really doesn't feel like a typical Marvel book, even though there are Marvel heroes all over it. The "True Believers" mini felt the same way to me. That scene above where he talks Spidey into letting him go sold me on the series, along with a recommendation from my local Comic Shop Guy.
gehayi: (Default)

[personal profile] gehayi 2010-10-27 07:30 am (UTC)(link)
I never heard of this book,but based on the title, I'd have avoided it too. It sounds like a predestined downer.
auggie18: (Wanda)

[personal profile] auggie18 2010-10-27 08:34 am (UTC)(link)
On one hand, this looks like a really cool concept. On the other hand, it was helmed by Rick Remender, the man who single-handedly dismantled everything cool and unique about Ryan Choi and got his series cancelled.

...so, don't know.
shadowpsykie: Information (Default)

[personal profile] shadowpsykie 2010-10-27 03:18 pm (UTC)(link)
heh monthly Bank Robber Quota :)

oh I miss Spidey.... but you have wronged me faaar too often.