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Spider-Man Vs. Deadpool #38: The Savage Land? Oh Yeeeeeeeeah!

8.4/10

Spider-Man Vs. Deadpool #38

Artist(s): Jim Towe

Colorist(s): Brian Reber

Letterer: Joe Sabino

Publisher: Marvel

Genre: Action, Comedy, Drama, Superhero

Published Date: 09/05/2018

Recap

We join our small and broken family in the Savage Land. Peter tells Matrix about the android killing dagger which Mockingbird gave him. It turns out Matrix already knew about it. Peter gives the weapon to Matrix. A musical interlude is interrupted by a group of talking dinosaurs (obviously.)

They tell the trio that the wrecking crew are enslaving dinosaurs and lead them to their facility. Spider-Man is still concerned about Matrix and tells him to stay behind. Deadpool disagrees but is ignored. Now that he is alone, Matrix breaks the dagger in half (oh snap - literally.) The Wrecking Crew arrive in the Savage Land and “water the plants.” Our “heroes” attack the facility but are soon ensnared by huge vines.

Review

This issue started a bit slower, I had to wait until the second page for the first laugh, which was swiftly followed by two more. This is how you make a comic – comic (you know what I mean.)

Deadpool is clearly the star of the book and he is thoroughly himself, deranged, infuriating but also somehow sweet. Spider-Man is appropriately tired of his antics. Matrix is played for laughs in this issue, which is much more effective.

The plot ties in nicely with the conceit that Deadpool is surprisingly liberal for an amoral, homicidal maniac. There are misunderstood talking dinosaurs who do not conform to stereotypes and references to trigger warnings and Spider-Mansplaining.

The book is surprisingly deep with recurring themes including trust/lies and parenting/coming of age. It’s interesting that each of these themes is looked at from both sides of the coin. The dagger plot-line also continues to be an interesting ethical problem pitting trust against security and responsibility. The book does a good job of giving no clear right and wrong answers at this stage.

Let’s be clear though, this issue isn’t a philosophical essay, the main takeaway is the humor, I counted eight full laughs, three on one page, and some chuckles as well. The British film critic Mark Kermode states that a film must pass the six laugh test to qualify as a genuine comedy. That test is for feature-length films, so for a standard length comic book to have eight laughs is very impressive.

Final Thoughts

Hilarious and surprisingly deep, I cannot recommend this book highly enough.

Spider-Man Vs. Deadpool #38: The Savage Land? Oh Yeeeeeeeeah!
  • Writing - 9/10
    9/10
  • Storyline - 8.5/10
    8.5/10
  • Art - 8.5/10
    8.5/10
  • Color - 8/10
    8/10
  • Cover Art - 8/10
    8/10
8.4/10
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