Frank Castle begins the suicide mission to rescue Nick Fury. But if you know Frank Castle, he's not usually the one who ends up dead in an impossible situation. The C.I.A., however, don't quite understand Castle's capabilities and employ drastic measures to ensure that Castle and Fury don't leave Hanoi alive.
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While the art occasionally stumbles with repetitive facial designs, it remains effective in supporting the narrative's tone and enhancing the overall experience. As the series approaches its climax, readers are left eagerly anticipating how this violent and suspenseful odyssey will resolve. Read Full Review
Frank Castle enacts the first step of his plan to free Nick Fury from Hanoi in Get Fury #4 and every early step of the rescue mission suggests it will rank with best and bloodiest war plots delivered by Garth Ennis under the Marvel banner. Read Full Review
Get Fury #4 puts readers to sleep with an exposition and dialog-heavy issue that intermixes the fictional history of Nick Fury's former lover with real-life political maneuverings in Vietnam. Garth Ennis's script may be an Easter Egg-riddled dream for hardcore history fiction buffs. Still, typical readers hooked on the first issue will find the series has devolved into a boring over-explanation of useless details and little to show for it. Read Full Review
Plot
Nick Fury's lover and her daughter give Frank Castle key information to get to the prison where Nick Fury is locked up. Fury's ex-lover reveals that she was waiting for help to get out of Vietnam, so she had to sell her body to save herself from the reputation her family had for helping the US and French governments. Nick's blade hates his father and all the men who have hurt his mother.
Frank Castle's plan continues to work perfectly and the killing begins, however they are in the enemy zone and surrounded by many enemies.
On the other hand, the C.I.A already has an elite squad of assassins to eliminate Frank and Nick and thus hide the drug trafficking that the US government has in Vietnam.
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I didn't really like this issue as much. Lots of talking and I'm starting to lose track of what the whole inside job is even about.