• Teenage Jean Grey is willing to do whatever it takes to avoid the fate that befell her predecessor.
• But when Jean is cast through time and comes face-to-face with the newly possessed Phoenix, will she find the key to saving herself...or learn that her fate is sealed?
Rated T+
Was Generations: Phoenix and Jean Grey fan service? Sure. But thats pretty much what the Generations line was intended for. Beyond that, it also serves as the standout moment for the character. Greys persistent internal examinations combined with the central question, What is the Phoenix? is a larger analogy for the humanitys age-old question What is the mean of life? and search for understanding regarding our own individual and greater purpose. Not to mention, the was one hell of a fun book! Read Full Review
Generations: Phoenix & Jean Grey #1 is a great entry in this series, and while the story feels a tad long, the art will keep you deeply invested in this tale of two Jeans. Read Full Review
Generations: Phoenix and Jean Grey #1 does exactly what you want with a book starring a telepathic superhero " it gets into her head. Read Full Review
It's great. Bunn's writing has become unassailable and the art will make you wonder where Silva and Beredo have been hiding. Read Full Review
This issue of Generations is truly a spectacle. If you know the X-Men in any capacity, you are familiar with the daunting task of continuity and timeline knowledge, and this issue is no true exception to that. However, even with handling the many, MANY iterations of the Phoenix force and its relationship to Jean, we get to see multiple avenues through which to explore their story and what it means now, particularly once you get to the last panel of the issue. With art befitting a cosmic entity and writing that leaves a bevy of interpretations, Generations: Jean Grey/Phoenix may be a required read for any Phoenix buff or X-Men continuity nerd and, if nothing else, gives us a story that I imagine many may have been waiting for. Read Full Review
GENERATIONS: PHOENIX & JEAN GREY #1 tells a strong story of young Jean Grey meeting her feared future self. Cullen Bunn creates a tense dynamic between two different versions of the same woman. R.B. Silvia's artwork helps create a space opera in the second half. Read Full Review
There's still a sense that teenage Jean didn't do as much as she could've. It could be argued that she didn't do as much as she should've either. However, what she ends up doing is probably the most responsible decision she could've made in that situation. For a teenager constantly looking for ways to avoid the destiny that fate has laid out for her, it speaks volumes to the strength of her character. Even if the circumstances of Marvel Generations are unclear and the overall impact is uncertain, Jean Grey shows why, no matter which era she's in, she's still the heart of the X-men. Read Full Review
I mean, it has a dust up between the Phoenix and Galactus, and him getting clocked out by a teenager! What more do you want? Read Full Review
Its connections to the overall Generations event are negligible, but it is a very big story for Jean Grey, and that includes her younger self as well as the Phoenix. The issue kind of dances around a few continuity details, but it does actually fit into a moment of X-Men history without significantly changing anything. Read Full Review
I think for a Generations title this does everything it needs to. I would give the comic a solid buy. This issue is a great place for someone with a passing interest in the X-Men to really get in touch with what is currently going on in Jean Grey's life while getting the chance to touch on an old favorite version of the character. When you wrap the package up in R.B. Silva and Rachelle Rosenberg line-art and colors I am a happy Marvel fan. Read Full Review
So Generations: Phoenix & Jean Grey #1, the second entry in the Generations series, is the best so far. If the Generations to come are better than this one, the entire series will end up being more than just another cynical Marvel editorial ploy Read Full Review
Bunn, Silva, di Benedetto, and Beredo deliver a perfectly serviceable Jean Grey story, but it falls into the same character misconceptions regarding the Phoenix Force as many before it. Read Full Review
Generations Phoenix and Jean Grey #1 is a fairly enjoyable comic because Cullen Bunn, R.B Silva, and Adriano di Benedetto pull back the curtain and show the women behind the cosmic, destructive force and stage a cool space battle to boot. The ending is kind of anti-climactic although I like its middle finger to messing with the timeline. Read Full Review
This meeting between younger and older Jean Grey takes a while to build up its momentum. Silva's art makes the most of the downtime with plenty of panels and different page layouts that kept me entertained. Ultimately though, this is a $4.99 book so you have to decide if this is something that you really want to read. Is it entertaining? Yes. Is it required reading for X-Men fans or for people who just want to know what's ahead for Marvel? I don't think so. I enjoyed this issue, but so far after two of the Generations one-shots, I'm regretting the choice of pre-ordering them all. I may have been better off finding these in a bargain bin at an upcoming convention, I'm sure they'll be in those bargain bins within the next year. Read Full Review
Really fun art and the germ of an interesting story about a woman dealing with fate, just wish there was a better structure around it. Read Full Review
I would recommend this to any X-Men completist, but for everyone else? You ain't missing much. Read Full Review
Generations: Phoenix & Jean Grey #1 was an impactful one-shot that had a sense of importance to for the future of the current adventures of Jean Grey. For X-Men fans,this is an issue worth purchasing, especially if you are reading X-Men: Blue and the Jean Grey solo series. For others this is a Marvel Generations issue that is passable as it is crafted for hardcore Jean Grey and X-Men fans. Read Full Review
Generations:Jean Gray is another forgettable Marvel cash grab that doesn't provide much ofa story to enjoy but does find success artistically. Grab this 'Generations'Marvel imprint at your own risk and only if you are a completionist ofcharacter collecting. Read Full Review
I am the farthest thing from an X-Man fan that you can find. Inhumans ALL THE WAY! However, I have been picking up Generations just for the read, and this was a fun one-shot of a character I know nothing about. Definitely give this a read
I thought this was overall a good issue. There is some great tie-in to Jean's solo series. There is an interesting look to where the character is going in the future. There is some wonderful art. The thing it lacked is purpose. A lot of that could be because at the time of its release the story is out of context. We have yet to finish Secret Empire. Legacy has not been released and we are only two issues in for Generations. So there is the big question 'why did this encounter happen?' between the two. There is also a bit of an issue with Jean. She seemed all Phoenix and no Jean. I am not sure if this was done purposely or just trying to capture the character at that time. Either way it seemed a little off. It is hard for me to say this is wmore
A time-jaunt that dumps her into the presence of Phoenixed-but-not-evil Jean Grey gives Teen Jean the opportunity to grill her older self on the firebird. Does she take the chance? Does she dare warn older Jean about what comes next? This is a pretty decent read and R.B. Silva's art is a pleasure to see. I'm not sure why Marvel commissioned a painstaking imitation of "Generations: Phoenix by Dennis Hopeless and Stuart Immonen" instead of just hitting up those creators directly, though.
A fun enough one shot
Beautiful artwork, but skippable.
An average Jean Grey story with really good art. But with no serviceable fit in continuity, a lackluster ending, and a $5 price tag, it's forgettable and not something I'd recommend.