Fantastic Four: 1234
A Comic Book, Graphic Novels, Marvel book. Archetypal phoned-in Grant Morrisson. One or two big-ticket ideas (not that big by his standards)...
Reed Richards. Sue Richards. Benjamin Grimm. Johnny Storm. They rocketed into outer space aboard an experimental starship, the first humans to attempt interstellar travel. But a freak encounter with cosmic radiation altered their lives forever, granting each amazing abilities.Forty years later, the greatest team of adventurers ever assebled continues to push the bounds of human exploration—discovering parallel dimensions, lost civilizations and hidden nations; initiating contact with alien races; and repelling all manner of threats to mankind, both terrestrial and cosmic.Now, Marvel's first family finds its members divided—their unique powers stretched to the absolute limit, their time-tested resolve pushed to the point of breaking. Each chapter of this quintessential collection focuses on one member of the cosmic quartet, as the team's greatest foes band together in an all-out assault on the FF.Collecting: Fantastic Four: 1234 1-4
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- Filetype: PDF
- Pages: 96 pages
- ISBN: 9780785110408 / 785110402
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More About Fantastic Four: 1234
Only Grant Morrison, the perfect comic writing storm of geek meets psychedelic shaman, could write lines like "That was the night I smashed my way into the dark universe of necro-technology where spirit meets anti-spirit in mutual annihilation" and "...I hope you'll all let me take you with me on an exploratory mission to the Quintasphere:... I think the biggest disappointment about this, besides some really god-ugly art, is that I wanted to like this more than I did.It's Grant Morrison writing the FF, should be a perfect fit, but all the big dramatic beats just left me a bit blah and by the end I was skimming, hoping to get to the finale and discover the payoff was worth... Archetypal phoned-in Grant Morrisson. One or two big-ticket ideas (not that big by his standards) but rather than being thought through and well-established, just slap on a veneer of somewhat edgy, pseudo-realistic dialogue, cool-but-meaningless terminology, a nod to history (to show you're getting to the very essence of the characters),...