TARGET: FURY!
The plot thickens as Frank Castle drops into Hanoi on his mission to assassinate Nick Fury. Nick Fury is making his OWN journey to Hanoi at gunpoint and what they find along the way is truly horrifying.
Explicit Content
Corruption, compromises, and diversity in the military fuel a penetrating meditation on the costs of war in Get Fury #2. Read Full Review
Get Fury continues to be the edgiest and most mature comic Marvel has published in years. The key to its success is the nuance in character work, and in this second issue, the reveal that maybe Punisher isn't on a kill mission at all. Read Full Review
Get Fury #1 introduced the miniseries' premise, but Get Fury #2 introduces the story as the background behind these events is revealed in a true-to-life FUBAR scenario that could only be brought to comics by writer Garth Ennis. Read Full Review
Get Fury #2 drops Frank Castle behind enemy lines to complete his mission, but the higher-ups involved have a secret agenda that spells trouble for Castle and Fury. Ennis gives you an authentic, unsettling war drama, and the art team's presentation will shock you with scenes of death, but Ennis's conspiracy revelation, which reframes the point of the plot, fails to come together into a complete picture. Read Full Review
Plot
Frank Castle arrives in Hanoi on his secret mission to eliminate Nick Fury, but his size and build are difficult to miss.
On the other hand, Frank and Nick's superiors discover that Nick Fury actually allowed himself to be trapped to discover a C.I.A. drug sales network in Vietnam, so sending to eliminate him is a serious mistake because it contradicts a mission.
This comic does not spare any attention to showing explicit bloody sequences with a lot of viscera.
This miniseries mixes the war genre with the superhero genre at a key moment in Contemporary History, where Garth Ennis demonstrates his love for war stories and manages to create this hyperviolent atmosphere in the Marvel universe.
more
I'll be honest I was sort of confused by what the whole conversation meant in the office. Art was good and there were cool moments. I just was distracted by not fully getting it.