The Viet Cong have Nick Fury in the infamous "Hanoi Hilton" prison. Even a man with Frank Castle's specific skill set (which gets shown off in a brutal fashion this issue) will not be enough to get in, get Fury and get out. Making matters worse, Castle isn't the only party trying to get Fury...
Explicit Content
Dirty CIA officials quarrel with a US Marine General over Nick Fury and Frank Castle's fate, Fury books into the Hanoi Hotel, and Castle braves squads of North Vietnamese soldiers to meet two women amid The War For Drugs in Get Fury #3. Read Full Review
These men are not supervillains but reflections of very real historical actors, which fills their dialogue with subtext that ought to pull readers back for multiple rereads when Get Fury is complete. Read Full Review
Plot
Frank Castle and Nick Fury were working together to uncover the drug corruption ring in the military in Vietnam, the superiors found out about this and now they need to eliminate the two so that they are not held responsible for the negligence of having a drug ring in the army.
Fury is in the deadliest prison in Vietnam and his captors want to know what he knows about the drug trafficking network.
Castle is unable to hide his identity but is hired by a woman and her daughter who want to be taken to the US. They know a lot about the relationship between Frank and Nick, and are willing to blackmail them.
This miniseries mixes the war genre with the superhero genre at a key moment in Contemporary Hist more
It's solid. I don't really like all the yapping about the little conspiracy as much as the other aspects, but it's still a solid story.