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Empyre Fallout – Fantastic Four #1: From Old Battles, New Growth (SPOILERS!)

9.1/10

Can two galactic civilizations find peace and happiness after hundreds of thousands of years of war? Can the Cotati find happiness on a garden planet in unknown space? And...what about The Unseen? Only @DanSlott & @SeanIzaakse know for sure in Empyre Fallout - Fantastic Four #1!

Empyre Fallout = Fantastic Four #1

Artist(s): Sean Izaakse

Colorist(s): Marcio Menyz

Letterer: Joe Caramagna

Publisher: Marvel

Genre: Sports

Published Date: 09/09/2020

Recap

Is it really the end of the Kree-Skrull War?  Really, this time for good and all?  We’ve seen that conflict that has raged across the Marvel Universe for hundreds of millennia come to an “end” before.  So is this only the latest “end” or the real end? 

The Fantastic Four, Avengers, and friends are all gathering on the Moon for the final reckoning after the events of Empyre #6.  Spider-Man for some reason is acting as if he’s never been to space before.  Jo-Venn and N’Kalla are excited to be actually in the prehistoric Kree city whose construction was part of what started the battle that the little Kree and Skrull kids were bred to continue indefinitely as pay-per-view entertainment for the known universe.  They’re in awe when Hulkling, now the Emperor of all the united Skrulls and Kree, arrives.  And watching everything from afar—and detected by Wolverine’s animal senses—is the character known as The Unseen, whose fate is to stand and watch events of cosmic significance as a penance for the death of our Watcher. 

Sequoia, “the Celestial Messiah” and master of the Cotati, is a bound prisoner.  One of the last remaining questions about the conflict we’ve been watching all summer is the origin of the weapons the Cotati were using.  To try to clear that up, Mr. Fantastic—still clad in the Fantastic Four armor created by Iron Man, which Franklin asks Reed if they can keep—has called in a most unexpected consultant:  The Profiteer, who was using Jo-Venn and N-Kalla and their reenactments of Kree-Skrull battles as fighting dogs for intergalactic wagering.  While The Profiteer examines the Cotati weapons, Thor has another last bit of business to wrap up.

With The Invisible Woman and Franklin as backup, the Thunder God takes Sequoia to a distant planetoid in uncharted space, where he releases Quoi and the Cotati to begin their new lives.  When Sequoia protests being left in so barren a place, Thor unfetters the full power given him by Gaea (“Mother Earth”), his mother, and changes the planetoid into a vast, Eden-like garden where the Cotati will now live, separate and apart from Earth, the Kree, the Skrulls, and everything else they’ve known.  As the Cotati settle in to their new home where there is no animal life and they will no longer be a source of strife, Franklin asks Thor why he would sacrifice all the power that Gaea gave him for a thing like this.  (Remember, Franklin’s own limitless powers are in an unexplained state of attrition, which has been disturbing him and making him feel insecure; the Richards lad is naturally curious about anyone willingly giving up such vast power.)  Thor explains: 

“Power doesn’t make one godlike, child.  Why, I would sacrifice all my might a thousand times over if it were spent in the service of a worthy cause.  For what makes us true gods, heroes, and good men is not the greatness of our power, but the goodness of our hearts.”

Which only goes to show you that in spite of all the recent story controversies about how “worthy” the Son of Odin is, there are very few heroes anywhere near as noble—OR as powerful—as the mighty Thor.  So be it, mortals. 

After Mr. Fantastic and Captain Marvel lay to rest the ashes of the Kree and Skrull warriors Bel-Dann and Raksor (whom we first met in Uncanny X-Men #137 and who are among those who laid down their lives to make the peace possible), and after The Human Torch and Spider-Man have a heart-to-heart talk about their respective romantic lives (remember the Webhead’s reaction to Johnny and the alien Sky being “soulmates” in Fantastic Four #22?), The Profiteer has some announcements to make.  The Cotati weapons are of an origin older than even she as an Elder of the Universe can identify.  She is claiming their power source as part of her payment for examining them—and she is also reinstating her claim on N’Kalla and Jo-Venn.  This latter meets with unanimous opposition from The FF, The Avengers, and company. 

The Profiteer says her claim on the kids is a part of her legally binding deal with the Kree and the Skrulls, who will wipe out all of our heroes if they don’t hand over the children.  The only problem with that, says Hulkling, is that there are no more Kree and Skrull Empires as The Profiteer knew them.  There is now only the united Kree-Skrull Alliance, under his rule, and he snatches the contract from The Profiteer and shatters it, rendering it null and void and sending the cosmic capitalist away empty-handed!  In the end, by royal fiat, Hulkling gives custody of N’Kalla and Jo-Venn to The Fantastic Four, to be raised not by Reed and Sue Richards, but by The Thing and Alicia! 

 

 

With all said and done, The Unseen continues to ponder the origin of the weapons of the Cotati and, with his cosmic senses, gleans the truth that their technology is older than anything else in the whole universe, including the Celestials.  (But, to be sure, not Galactus.)  No sooner has he discovered this than his cosmic eye takes on a life of its own and leaps from his head, growing and regenerating into the living body of… nah, that would be telling!

Review

Will you look at Reed on the cover, already?  He looks as if he’s ready to pose for a box of cough drops.  On the inside, he looks like an over-the-hill member of a 1970s rock band.  When will we ever see the leader of The Fantastic Four looking like himself again?  Well, there’s the next regular issue of The FF, but as far as I can tell, that’s a flashback. 

This one-off issue is a quick, neat, and pleasing wrap-up of the Empyre saga that has taken up our summer.  It brings all the key points of the storyline to a satisfying conclusion and offers us some really nice moments.  Franklin’s scene with Thor takes me back to some of the moments that Stan Lee and Jack Kirby did with Thor back in Marvel’s first decade, when they showed that the God of Thunder, for all his vast strength, world-shaking power, and terrifying fearsomeness in battle, learned well the lessons taught him when Odin turned him into Dr. Don Blake (as seen in The Mighty Thor #159 (1968).  Thor is as kind and gentle as he is mighty, and his bit with Franklin was a good teaching moment that Reed would have appreciated.  (But what’s this I see at the end with Thor and the Hulked-out She-Hulk now being a couple?  Really?  What happened to the stunning Sif?  Did she finally get fed up with Goldilocks’s failure to commit?  And this is just my own opinion, but She-Hulk in her Roger Stern/John Byrne form, the way she was when she was with The FF, would be a much more suitable match for the noble Thunder God.  By now she should still be as she was then, and married to Wyatt Wingfoot anyway. 

The Torch’s heart-to-heart with Spider-Man is also a welcome character touch.  If you’re one of Stan Lee’s kids who can remember back when these two heroes were “frenemies,” it’s gratifying to see how they’ve grown up to like and care for each other.  Being friends with Johnny and The FF has given Peter Parker the kind of “family” that he never had, growing up with only Aunt May to care for him.  And it’s only right that The FF and Spider-Man, the original “tentpoles” of Marvel Comics, should prove to be so close in the long run. 

As for The Profiteer…I can see her, like The Griever, becoming a menace for whom our Fantastic Four should watch their backs in the future.  Nothing hurts a capitalist worse than being done out of a source of huge profits, and I can imagine her not taking kindly to her deal with the Skrulls and Kree being voided.  It remains to be seen what reprisal she’s going to take at some time in the future for what happened in this story. 

All in all, Empyre, a very entertaining miniseries, comes to a satisfying end.

Final Thoughts

Well, if you want to talk about characters growing and changing, it looks as if The Thing and Alicia becoming foster parents will set the stage for exactly that.  With Jo-Venn and N’Kalla going from being mortal enemies to sworn friends and now living under the roof of The Fantastic Four (and the still-unexplained connection between N’Kalla and Alicia), things are bound to be interesting for our Fantastic family going forward.  Are Jo-Venn and N’Kalla ready for Yancy Street?  Is Yancy Street ready for them?

Empyre Fallout Fantastic Four #1: From Old Battles, New Growth (SPOILERS!)
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  • Cover Art - 8.5/10
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9.1/10
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