Seven Kings Battle to Rule the Seas! War has engulfed the undersea realms, from the ruins of Old Atlantis to the sunken forests of the Seaweed Men. While in the mysterious depths of the Secret Seas, Namor's vicious past comes back to haunt him.
Rated T+
It's a brilliant character study and a fantastic exploration of the Marvel Universe beneath the surface. Read Full Review
we love a good quint quote in our books don't we folks
This was fun. Marvel underwater is pretty cool.
The art is good and Namor is very interesting, but the overall plot isn't so much. Kailani is an extremely cookie-cutter character who isn't sympathetic and is really just boring. She seems like she would have been a great supporting character/rival for Namor but the childhood friendship/budding romance was rushed and her dialog and motivations as an adult are stale and boring. Aside from that part of the story, I've enjoyed this book so far. Seeing the different parts of Namor's life has been interesting and I hope that something can be done to salvage Kailani because she has so much potential.
I love stories about Atlantis, but I'm not sure this is Namor. An entire army rolls up to a child Namor and retreats? It was almost laughable. I'm not a fan of the Kailani. The longer she remains a character, the more dislikable she becomes. I don't feel that there are any stakes to any of this. This is a mediocre book at best and Namor deserves better.
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Plot
KAILANI kidnaps Namor, who tries to make her understand that she must end this war, she follows her plan to be the leader of the entire sea and having Namor is like a prize that makes her create fear in the other leaders.
Namor has four days left to stop this war before the surface governments send ships to counteract this chaos.
This comic continues to highlight with flashbacks the opportunities Namor had to stop wars, of course, using extreme violence, but the plot does not advance much.
Namor goes to the depths in the stomach of a whale to see someone he knows.
Jason Aaron's narrative always amazes and his vision of power is realistic with existential twists.
Art
It is more
Offensively bad. Who was this written for? It was definitely not for those who like the character.