Astonishing X-Men (2004) #66
Recap
In the aftermath of Iceman's assault on the world, the X-Men need some time to breathe and reflect, and take stock of their relationships. What will come from this? And will it send one character down a new path away from the X-Men?
Review
Let me open my recap of what I consider one of the most quintessentially X-Men issues with a complaint: Bobby’s absence in this issue, after knowing why he’s not here anymore, hurts like hell. I know the whole point is to show where everyone is after those five issues focused on him, and Wolverine even recognizes the hurt in his absence by the end, but still, the message of “we are a family” that Wolverine himself reinforces at the end gets bittersweet with what happened with Bobby.
The art by Almicar Pinna is more punk than any art on this run, more focused on rough expressions, camaraderie, laughter, showing relationships and interactions in a quirky way, and it really fits this whole “X-Men meets B-series zombies and strangely lonesome alien they can relate to” storyline. It is, overall, a very sweet and very on point – even if also on the nose – issue, and it really rocks in showing marginalization day-to-day through a peculiar light: how you thrive and enjoy life with those you choose, your community who understands you, in the face of difficult things happening to you all the time.
Final Thoughts
Quintessential X-Men masterpiece, even on a rush schedule, on a run so close to cancellation, Liu and Pinna play with community, thriving in the face of marginalization, and the enjoyment of sharing life with those around you brilliantly. What most makes X-Men comics shine as a light to marginalized community gets combined here with a passion for showing and making these characters grow.
Astonishing X-Men (2004) #66: X-Men Means Chosen Family
- Writing - 8.5/108.5/10
- Storyline - 9.5/109.5/10
- Art - 9/109/10
- Color - 9/109/10
- Cover Art - 9.5/109.5/10
9.1/10
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