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Underrated: Inhumans Vs X-Men (or: Why the X-Men had every right to freak out)

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The graphic novel edition of Inhumans Vs X-Men came out recently—and is currently only $5.99 on Amazon, so grab it while it’s cheap. While the series got pretty bad reviews in single issues, the graphic novel reads much better. In fact, this might be the best X-Men story since Bendis took over after Avengers Vs X-Men.

Before reading IvX, it helps to binge read Inhuman and Uncanny Inhumans (Charles Soule), All-New X-Men: Inevitable (Dennis Hopeless), Uncanny X-Men: Superior (Cullen Bunn), All-New Inhumans (James Asmus), and Extraordinary X-Men (Jeff Lemire). Aside from a few story arcs here and there, they’re enjoyable. In fact, Uncanny Inhumans #15 gave one of the best panels of the last year:

Too much emotion. Call back later.

This creates a good emotional buildup going into IvX, especially on the X-Men side. They’ve suffered before, but this was brutal. How much more metaphorical can Lemire get than putting their “X-Haven” in the hellish landscape of Limbo? It worked, though. The Terrigen cloud can’t be predicted, it’s unforgiving, and it kills mutants. They’re in constant panic mode. If the mutants are meant to represent civil rights movement (which of course, they are), the M-Pox era highlighted this part of the struggle of being an Other in America perfectly.

The Inhumans, on the other hand, were the well-intentioned but ignorant “privileged” Americans. Medusa gives Beast access to the Inhumans’ lab, but aside from Beast saving their asses in Uncanny Inhumans Vol 1: Time Quake, he’s absent from the rest of the series. Even worse, Medusa complains that he is keeping Medusa’s favorite NuHuman, Iso, too busy trying to make sure that Mutants don’t go extinct because of Black Bolt’s Terrigen cloud. But Medusa isn’t vindictive—she just doesn’t get it.

Which brings us to IvX. Beast discovers that the Terrigen Cloud is mixing into the atmosphere, and in a matter of days, the planet will be uninhabitable for mutants. They need to leave Earth, but he knows that won’t happen. He knows it isn’t an option, but he doesn’t want a war with the Inhumans, so he tries. Of course, it doesn’t work, and the X-Men panic and attack New Attilan while Forge and Old Man Logan go after the Terrigen cloud.

Epic battle ensues! Leinil Frances Yu delivers six issues of intense battles that would make even a crappy story worth it. This book looks like an event, something missing many of the blockbusters from Marvel and DC for the last 17 years. It would be easy to post a bunch of shots like this:

When the blimps show up, you know it’s about to go off.

But the best panel from the graphic novel is this one, because…

Holy Awesome Teleporting Dog, Karnak!

IT’S KARNAK RIDING LOCKJAW INTO BATTLE! ALL OF THE EPICNESS JUST DIALED UP TO 11!

Okay, back on track, and here we get into some SPOILERS, so read with caution.

A group of NuHumans, including Ms. Marvel and Moon Girl, learn what’s happening and immediately start helping Forge build a machine to deal with the cloud. After they succeed, Moon Girl brings the trigger of the device to destroy the cloud. Tense moment, right? If Medusa presses the button, that’s it for new Inhumans. There are no more Terrigen crystals (maybe—Maximus knows how to make more but is keeping it close to the vest for now). Without the cloud, they have nothing to trigger Terrigenesis

Does Medusa hesitate? Nope. She knows it’s not just the right choice—it’s the only option. But she says something right before that reveals just how ignorant the Inhumans have been towards what mutants were experiencing:

Is there a facepalm emoji yet? There needs to be.

Eight months of the Terrigen cloud killing mutants and Medusa still doesn’t get it. She does what’s needed, but still doesn’t understand the X-Men. But Iso, one of the young NuHumans, does get it. The X-Men weren’t sure if Medusa would go with it. Why not? Medusa’s a hero, surely they could trust her. But what makes them so apprehensive?

Religion. Not the X-Men’s—the Inhumans. Terrigenisis isn’t just a cool process to get mysterious powers; it’s a religious ritual. That’s why the cloud still existed in the first place and why Beast was trying to keep the peace by finding a cure for mutants instead of a way to destroy the cloud from the beginning. The X-Men were essentially afraid of the Inhumans using the “religious liberty” argument while the X-Men are screaming “We’re dying!”

It’s a civil rights battle perfect for 2017. Well-intentioned but kind of ignorant—even goodpeople who just don’t get how their values might impede on the rights of others. That’s the Inhumans during the Age of M-Pox. They’re not bad people—just clueless. And the X-Men have decades of experience of good people completely ignoring their struggle, why should they think the Inhumans would be any different?

But it has a happy ending. Once Medusa realizes just how much the mutants are struggling, she destroys the cloud. And then a bunch of other stuff happens that reminds the world that maybe mutants should be feared. The last ten pages aren’t as great as the six issues before. Especially the epilogue. This was an X-Men story, but it ends with Medusa narrating. She pats herself on the back for saving the mutants, ignoring her eight months of negligence. But isn’t that an American tradition too? When the majority does the right thing for the minority, they hijack the story to make themselves look like the hero? It’s what Medusa does. She thinks she’s the hero just because she decided extinction wasn’t right.

That’s why IvX is an underrated X-Men story. While so many readers complained about the treatment of the X-Men franchise post-Secret Wars, Marvel gave us—maybe accidentally—an X-Men Civil Rights story perfect for our time. And they didn’t need to use Hydra to do it.

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SDCC ‘Inhumans’ IMAX Trailer – Looks Pretty, But Will It Be Good?

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Disney and Marvel released an IMAX trailer Thursday afternoon for its latest television series ‘Marvel’s Inhumans’ at San Diego Comic-Con International.

The ‘Inhumans’ will get a two-week engagement with IMAX on September 1 to screen the first two episodes. Then the first two episodes will air Friday, September 29 at 8 p.m. EDT on ABC to launch the series.

‘Marvel’s Inhumans’ explores the never-before-told epic adventure of the royal family including Black Bolt, the enigmatic, commanding King of the Inhumans, with a voice so powerful that the slightest whisper can destroy a city. After the Royal Family of Inhumans is splintered by a military coup, they barely escape to Hawaii where they are greeted with surprising interactions with the lush world and humanity around them. Now they must find a way to reunite with each other and return to their home before their way of life is destroyed forever.

‘Marvel’s Inhumans’ stars Anson Mount as Black Bolt, Iwan Rheon as Maximus, Serinda Swan as Medusa, Eme Ikwuakor as Gorgon, Isabelle Cornish as Crystal, Ken Leung as Karnak, Ellen Woglom as an undisclosed character, Sonya Balmores as Auran and Mike Moh as Triton.

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SDCC: New ‘Krypton’ Teaser From SYFY

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SYFY released a new teaser for ‘Krypton’ at San Diego Comic-Con International Thursday afternoon.

It’s time to discover the secrets of this lineage. The House of El will be redeemed.

The series is set two generations before the destruction of the legendary Man of Steel’s home planet, Krypton follows Superman’s grandfather whose House of El was ostracized and shamed — as he fights to redeem his family’s honor and save his beloved world from chaos.

Cameron Cuffe stars in the show, produced by David S. Goyer with showrunner Damian Kindler. ‘Krypton’ premieres in 2018 on SYFY.


When the trailer leaked in April we had this to say:
The teaser gives us a first look at the series, and it certainly appears like the show will tie into the DC Extended Universe and Henry Cavill’s interpretation of Superman. The symbol of the House of El is the same as the symbol seen in Man of Steel and Batman v Superman. Krypton is also visually similar to what we saw in Zack Snyder‘s Man of Steel. It is of course, entirely possible that instead of being directly connected to the DCEU, the show is simply taking visual inspiration from the movies.


What do you think? Are you excited for a weekly series set on Krypton?

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SDCC: ‘Doctor Doom’ Film in Development From ‘Legion’ Creator

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20th Century Fox isn’t done with Fantastic Four quite yet. During the San Diego Comic-Con on Thursday, Noah Hawley, the writer and creator of FX’s Fargo and Legion, announced that he was developing a Doctor Doom film.

Doctor Doom is the Fantastic Four’s longtime arch-nemesis, and considered one of their greatest villains. He was portrayed by Toby Kebbell in Fantastic Four (2015), and Julian McMahon before that in Fantastic Four (2005).

Hawley said he would be writing the script himself, possibly to also direct.

20th Century Fox has had a tumultuous past with the Fantastic Four franchise. All three films were received poorly. The most recent film, directed by Josh Trank in 2015, failed so badly, 20th Century Fox scrapped sequel plans.

Monkeys Fighting Robots will provide updates as they come.

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SDCC 2017: Geoff Johns Proclaims “The End Is Here”

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Hey there comic fans, we got some hot new DC Comics news coming straight from Comic Con!

Writer and Cheif Creative Officer Geoff Johns joined DC Publisher Dan DiDio at SDCC and revealed new details about his highly anticipated Doomsday Clock series. During the hour-long Spotlight conversation, Johns debuted six interior panels (which you can see below!), beautifully illustrated by Gary Frank with colors by Brad Anderson, including confirmation of Dr. Manhattan’s involvement in DOOMSDAY CLOCK.

Doomsday Clock is a story for our time that brings the greatest heroes and villains from the DC Universe together with the mysterious forces from the Watchmen Universe. As Johns discussed the sophistication of the story and its real-world influence, his words paired beautifully with the panels, which are highly detailed and evoke layers of emotion.

During the panel, Johns announced that the series would be Superman centric and it will start one year in the future from current DC continuity. The timelines will link up at the conclusion of the series where readers will see characters that have been affected by the events in Doomsday Clock.

The first issue will hit shelves on Wednesday, November 22, just prior to the Thanksgiving 2017 holiday, a time of year that has a special meaning in Johns’ life. Each year, he would return home from school with the latest comic books to read and discuss with his friends. The monthly series will run 12 issues with planned breaks in March and August.

What do you guys think? Are you excited for Doomsday Clock? Comment and discuss below!

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A New Threat Arrives In Season 3 Of ‘Voltron: Legendary Defender’

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At the San Diego Comic-Con, crowds of Voltron fans finally got to hear what they have to look forward to in the upcoming season of Voltron: Legendary Defender on Netflix. The panel started with the announcement the team will be facing off with a new threat in Prince Lotor who will be played by AJ Locasio (Dawn of The Croods). The crowd also got a free signed poster and the new book from Simon & Schuster, “The Rise of Voltron.”

Details about the third season make it sound as if peace isn’t going to come easy for the Paladins of Voltron. With Shiro’s mysterious disappearance, the team is without a pilot for the Black Lion, which means they have lost the ability to form Voltron. With Prince Lotor hot on their heals and seeking revenge for his father Zarkon, Pidge, Hunk, Lance, and Keith will have to pull out all the stop and use everything at their disposal if they have any chance of surviving. Who will be able to pilot the Black Lion? If you are a fan of the original series than you have a pretty good idea of who is perfect for the role.

The third season is set to debut on August 4th. Unfortunately, it will only have seven episodes in it. Luckily, season 4 will not be far behind. It will arrive in October with six additional episodes. It was expressed at the panel this is intended so fans won’t have to wait as long for new episodes to come out. The teaser trailer for season 3 can be found below:

[embedyt] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OY3hpm_m1eY[/embedyt]


Are you excited for the third season of Voltron: Legendary Defender? Leave a comment below and let us know. Also, stay glued to Monkeys Fighting Robots for all the San Diego Comic-Con coverage you can handle.

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Nickelodeon Debuts First Footage From ‘Rocko’s Modern Life’ Revival

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“The twenty-first century is a very dangerous century.”

Fans who attended Nickelodeon’s Rocko’s Modern Life panel at San Diego Comic Con today received a special treat when the network unveiled the first footage from the show’s highly anticipated revival: Rocko’s Modern Life: Static Cling.

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Scott Snyder’s Batman Legacy: How He Hopes To Leave His Run

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Monkeys Fighting Robots got the chance to talk with all-star comic book scribe and Batman veteran Scott Snyder, among discussions about what the future holds for the character in Rebirth, Metal, and beyond, Snyder was asked about what kind of legacy he would like to be known for leaving on the character. Snyder, always gracious and generous with responses had a lot to say.

On his proudest moment

“I guess the thing that I’m proudest of…and it really sort of evolved during the second or third year we were on the book…the thing that I really think made him my version of him at least is that he’s so much more about sort of inspiring good people to come out of the shadows than he is about scaring bad guys back into them. He’s not really a figure of intimidation so much as he is this broad almost international figure of bravery. And he says I’m going to fight these incredibly abstract huge monstrous things in the form of my villains so that you will go out and face the things that seem insurmountable to you,” said Snyder.

Like a lot of us, Snyder finds inspiration in comic book characters. And taking a usually “grim” one like Batman and turning into a symbol of hope is definitely something to have pride on.

Final Thoughts

“We’re trying to lead into stories that have to do with things that seem overwhelmingly scary, you know.  When it comes to plague or cyber warfare or cataclysm solipsism or all these different things that are much bigger than any of us could handle, Batman says ‘I’m going to show you.’  To fight this monster is the extension of those things so that you can take the real world baby steps towards approaching those problems without fear. So I hope that came through. Especially in Zero Year and afterward. Above all, honestly, you know, I hope people walk away seeing that we gave it our all. I gave it my all and every issue and you know that I tried to make it personal and fun at the same time. So I don’t know. It’s hard because I’m still in it. You know in my own way I still have some stories left, even if I’m not on the main books.  So it’s hard to kind of reflect when I’m still pushing through it,” said Snyder.

Without a doubt, no matter what his future with the character holds, Snyder has joined the pantheon of great Caped Crusader scribes. He can easily sit alongside Frank Miller, Dennis O’Neil, Grant Morrison, Chuck Dixon, Paul Dini and all the other great writers who have put pen to paper (finger to keyboard) to create some of the best superhero comics the world has known.

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My Five Favorite Films from the Year I was Born: 1984

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1984 might seem like a great year for movies. There’s a lot of classics. Terminator, Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom. Freakin’ Ghostbusters! But other than some big heavy hitters, it was actually a boring year with a handful of gems scattered throughout. Even though an Entertainment Weekly writer called 1984 the best year in movie history, he had something crucial to enjoying the sea of boring from that year: nostalgia. Considering I was only alive in 1984 for a total of one week (yes, if you’re doing the math, I was born on Christmas), I don’t have any emotional attachments to that year. And besides, 2008 is the best year in cinematic history.

But that doesn’t mean I hate the movies of 1984. As I said, there were some gems. So, here are my five favorite films from the year I was born. And before we begin—no, Ghostbusters and Indiana Jones are not among them. I eagerly await internet crucifixion.

5. The Terminator

Most of Terminator’s famous lines might come from T2, but the first Terminator is better. Arnold is a great villain in this, and even though there are 4 (5?) films now with him playing Hero-nator, I could never buy it because he’s so damn menacing in The Terminator. And where T2 is this polished film, Terminator is rough. There’s grit here, maybe literally. It’s a tense, packed 108 minutes of a killer robot. Making Terminator protect a brown-haired Daenerys was a mistake. Bring back the 1984 Terminator. Bring back the hurt.

4. Gremlins

I didn’t see Gremlins until I was 30. To this day, I don’t exactly get the appeal for the movie, or what the movie is. Like, why is there a college age kid living at home and acting like he’s twelve? Why is no one working at the movie theater during one of the busiest seasons of the year? Why does Gizmo remind me of an ex-girlfriend? Sure, that has nothing to do with this bizarre and brilliant movie, but it’s still a question. That’s what I love about Gremlins. There is no “getting it”—it just exists. It’s weird and strange, with hardly any logic, but it’s also a hell of a fun movie.

3. This Is Spinal Tap

What happens when you mark inches instead of feet.

A smart movie about dumb people. Rock stars, in particular. Spinal Tap is Rob Reiner’s most interesting film. It’s a mockumentary that was so well done, people claimed they were Spinal Tap fans before the movie came out. Yep—hipsters existed in 1984 too. The jokes range from subtle to ridiculous to this brilliant bit:

2. Repo Man

One of the best cult classics ever made. The production looks like they had a budget of $10—and this just makes the movie better. Repo Man is an 80’s Punk Sci-Fi dystopia satire. The food is labeled as “food,” the beer is “beer.” There are films about American excess now, but Repo Man was talking about it 32 years ago. And it has the embodiment of all 80’s actors, Emilio Estevez. If you haven’t felt your mind properly eroding yet, you need to watch this movie.

1. Ghostbusters

Just kidding.

1. Blood Simple

The film that started the Coen Brothers’ careers, and still one of their best. It’s a 90-minute neo-noir masterpiece. The movie also launched Frances McDormand, and she’s brilliant in it. The pacing is perfect; the cinematography is beautiful. And there’s an unnerving intensity throughout the movie. It’s not just one of the best films of 1984, it’s one of the best movies of all time.


And there are movies from 1984 I still need to see, such as Dreamscape, The Never-Ending Story, and Amadeus. And yes, I do like Indiana Jones and Ghostbusters. I’m not a monster. But since 1984, well, movies became one of the most important aspects of my life. I see 2-3 a week in theaters now. So maybe there was something magical going in cinema that year because I was born addicted to movies.

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Six of Batman’s Greatest Deductions In Comic Books

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Batman is (arguably) DC Comics’ world’s greatest detective and there’s proof of that aplenty in the comics and animated series. The movies, not-so-much. With a 70+ year sequential art history, how do you boil down the Dark Knight’s slickest moments as a sleuth? It’s simple. Read a lot of Batman, pick six, and write about them. It’ll never be the greatest six picks because Bats is a badass when it comes to investigating and has a lot of spectacular sleuthing moments. No doubt that Bats deserves his title as the world’s greatest detective.

Six Times Batman Showed Off His Deductive Badassery

Detective Comics Annual #2

In “Blood Secrets,” writers Mark Waid and Bryan Augustyn crafted a low-key, grim, noir-ish story of a young Bruce Wayne assisting seasoned detective Harvey Harris on a case. Bruce is learning the ropes of how to be an investigator, but his sharp mind is put on display several times. No spoilers, but in one key moment, Bruce deduces information before it’s revealed to Harris, surprising the veteran detective.

Superman Batman Annual #1

Writer Joe Kelly took Batman and Superman’s first encounter (from Superman #76) and “spiced” things up. The book beautifully parallels the differences between the characters but also why they work so well together. It’s all framed with a running gag of sorts about each hero trying to figure out the identity of the other. Batman lines his cowl with lead, making Superman’s X-Ray vision useless. However, Supers, aka Clark Kent, can’t hide old yearbook photos or his chin. Batman deduces that Kent and Superman are the same person by the precise similarity of their jaws.

Batman: Black & White “Perpetual Morning”

A short, simple story (and free on Comixology!)is rich with Batman being a detective. The Dark Knight spends the entire story examining a body, figuring out clues, discovering who the victim is and what happened to her. It’s Batman doing detective work in its simplest form, like a short episode of a forensic science show.

Batman Eternal #46

Batman Eternal, a series from several writers who pit the Dark Knight against Ras al Gul. In part, it’s all literally a test by Gul to best the world’s greatest detective. However, even while under the influence of hallucinogenic gas and frequencies disrupting even his bat computers, Batman is able to figure out he’s dealing with illusions. The Caped Crusader navigates his way through the hallucinations to find the who’s behind it all.

JLA #61

The Earth is under assault from mythic forces. As the JLA assembles, the quest to figure out what’s going on, the threat grows even greater. Writer Joe Kelly reaches our list again by making Batman the one to figure out a pattern in the sea and sky. Batman’s brain saves the day once again when the real villain is revealed.

Detective Comics #790

A terrible drug is reaching across the city like tendrils of death. Batman is on the case and not being gentle about it. Writer Andersen Gabrych makes this a sort of buddy-cop movie with Bats and Batgirl working together. At one point, Batman knows Batgirl is following him and uses it to his advantage.

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