CALL IN THE CORPS!
Earths lay in ruin all across the Multiverse. Avengers are assembling from every corner of creation as never before, knowing that the war of all wars is looming. And when there's war, you know it's time to call in the Corps. The most hard-hitting special ops squadron of elite high fliers and photon-armed commandos ever called to service. The Carol Corps.
RATED T+
With a little bit of this, and a little bit of that, and a new member of the Carol Corps. The two Aarons are creating a whole host of new universes, and adding a lot of fun to the stew. Jason Aaron seems to work best when his work isnt going up against previously established continuity, meanwhile Aaron Kuders dishing out a lot of great new designs for some familiar faces. Read Full Review
This Carol Danvers' life is another example of the creative risks that Aaron and Kuder are willing to take on this book and the slow-burn is still working for me. Read Full Review
This comic would be enjoyable as a one-shot if not for the fact that we read a variation of this story multiple times over the past few months. This feels a bit excessive and gratuitous. Read Full Review
I really enjoyed this one. I wish Avengers Forever had a real ongoing narrative to put these vignettes together, beyond a Ghost Rider appearance at the very end.
I immensely enjoyed the first half of the comic book where Jason Aaron Aaron Kuder brought a great story to life That I think needed a bit more time to breath even if I criticized this series before for taking way too much liberty running around. The second half was way too quick and the leap (pun intended) for Carol Danvers came out of the blue. Aaron Kuder's art is so good and he is a great strength for this series. Guru eFx on colors was right on.
It's #7 all over again, but with Captain Marvel instead of Captain America. I rate this one higher despite it being a retread because the formula's been tweaked to fit Carol. (And the art is great.) And most importantly, this time around, the good-guy variants aren't ACTIVELY IMPRISONING THE PROTAGONIST. (Looks like I'm never not gonna be raw about that.)