Selected Product: | Mighty Avengers Vol. 2: Venom Bomb Hardcover Author: Brian Michael Bendis Artist: Mark Bagley Publisher: Marvel Comics Release Date: 2008-07-30 Reading Level: Young Adult ISBN-10: 0785126414 ISBN-13: 9780785126416 List Price: $19.99 Average Customer Rating: | | X-Men: Messiah Complex ISBN-10: 0785123202 ISBN-13: 9780785123200 List Price:$29.99 The Death of Captain America, Vol. 2 ISBN-10: 0785128506 ISBN-13: 9780785128502 List Price:$19.99 Mighty Avengers Vol. 1: The Ultron Initiative ISBN-10: 0785123687 ISBN-13: 9780785123682 List Price:$14.99 New Avengers Vol. 7: The Trust ISBN-10: 0785125035 ISBN-13: 9780785125037 List Price:$19.99 Avengers: The Initiative Volume 2 - Killed In Action Premiere HC (New Avengers) ISBN-10: 0785128689 ISBN-13: 9780785128687 List Price:$24.99 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Mighty Avengers Vol. 2: Venom Bomb by Brian Michael Bendis (ISBN-10: 0785126414, ISBN-13: 9780785126416). At this time we have not yet written a review for Mighty Avengers Vol. 2: Venom Bomb by Brian Michael Bendis (ISBN-10: 0785126414, ISBN-13: 9780785126416). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com The Ultimate Spider-Man super-team of Bendis and Bagley reunite and just in time for the Avengers' biggest problem ever! A Venom virus hits the city of New York! A Venom virus! The entire city of New York turns symbiote. Plus, Wonder Man gets a much-needed makeover. All this and Tony Stark gets himself a green-skinned present in a body bag. Collects Mighty Avengers #7-11. Not bad, better than the first MA trade anyway | Customer Rating: | MA is a very different book to anything we've seen featuring the Avengers since Avengers Disassembled, it's a bit fun and light-hearted, even to the point of being a bit silly [mostly in a good way]. Purists will bemoan Dr Doom's Bendisy dialogue but they're missing the point.
The retro stipple-coloured section set in the past is proof of this series' less serious approach, and although well done, I didn't enjoy it quite as much as the last time Bendis used that trick in Powers Vol. 6: Sellouts. Having said that, the Ironman/Dr Doom banter in this section is probably my favorite part of this trade: "A lot more people hate you than me".
Mark Bagley turns out some of the best art of his career. Much stronger than his work on Ultimate Spidey and much better suited to a book such as this. He handles both superhero action and empathic eyes with absolute skill.
The annoying thought bubbles are back, but thankfully are slightly less annoying than last time.
This trade is well worth a read, as long as you're not a Bendis hater or someone who likes their Avengers to be serious or angsty. | Fun, beautiful and directionless | Customer Rating: | This second collection of the 'registered' Avengers takes place post-Civil War and pre-Secret Invasion. While the art, by Frank Cho, is unbeatable, the series seems to amble, with no clear direction in mind. General consensus, I think, is that Mr. Cho's slow work pace kept the book behind and unable to keep up with ongoing Marvel Universe continuity. Still, it's beautiful - particularly his women. Writer Bendis' use of word balloons is unique to this title and characterization is spot on.
All in all, two excellent creators still trying to find their way. | Avengers Rock On | Customer Rating: | | Is there a skrull in the house? The post civil war conspiracy continues...Brian Michael Bendis continues his tremendous run on Tony Stark's new assemblage of heroes and is reunited with artist Mark Bagley. The Mighty Avengers are in fact, a pretty old combo of occasional heroes who graced the covers over 20 years ago: Ms Marvel; Black Widow: Wasp; Wonder Man and Spider Woman - joined by relative newbies: the enigmatic Sentry and Ares the God of War . The difference now is that the world around them is a lot deadlier, while the heroes themselves have become a lot spunkier. Throw in Doctor Doom, a Venom Bomb, Morganna Le Fay and we have a really juicy story going. The Avengers are always at their best when they (a) have internal conflicts and (b) have world domination issues to deal with. Both needs are addressed here, as the new (yet old) generation of Avengers become more and more interesting. What will happen next? Highly entertaining. | Doctor Doom, time travel, and symbiotes oh my! | Customer Rating: | | Venom Bomb, the second storyarc of Brian Michael Bendis' Mighty Avengers series, begins with former New Avenger Spider-Woman defecting over to Tony "Iron Man" Stark's pro-registration Avengers team, bringing the body of the Skrull-Elektra in tow. Before Tony can decide what to do about this secret invasion (no pun intended...no, nevermind, there was), a symbiote virus attack is launched on New York City, and Doctor Doom appears to be the culprit. What follows are battles aplenty and some well-handled time travel elements that pay delightful homage to the format of classic Marvel comics, which will coax a grin out of even the most jaded of fanboys. Bendis once again overdoes it with the thought bubbles, but there is something about Venom Bomb that is just plain fun. Bendis' longtime Ultimate Spider-Man partner Mark Bagley provides the artwork here, and does a great job as well. All that, and with more hints to what's coming in Secret Invasion, Venom Bomb is a fun ride that finds Mighty Avengers improving on the ground laid by it's freshman arc, The Ultron Initiative, and wonderfully sets the stage for the cataclysmic events to follow. |
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