X-Men: Season One by Dennis
Hopeless, released in March 2012, is part of a series of books under the “Season
One” tagline. These reads are designed to be a modern expansion of the origins
of various heroes. Instead of totally rewriting the origins of the characters,
the goal here is to add to the original origin story.
In this case,
readers begin with the first team of X-Men gathered by Professor X. This story
is told mostly through the perspective of Jean Grey, the first female X-Men, as
she learns to accept her gifts and learns to become part of a team. The team
consists of Angel (rich pretty boy with wings), Iceman (team jokester with ice
powers), Cyclops (closed off team leader who skills is launching concussive
blasts from out of his eyes), and Beast (genius with superhuman physical
abilities). Jean, Cyclops, and Angel have a teen love triangle because that is
what high school age teens do when not doing superhero stuff. The usual teen
love triangle drama ensues as they face off against Magneto, Unus the
Untouchable, and others.
The art is
pretty cool and displays the action well. It also does a good job of
illustrating the character moments well too. There is drama, action, and
character exploration as the team struggles to find themselves as individuals
as well as work together as a team. This is a good story for people who want to
explore the early days of the first X-Men team in the comics.
Overall, I
highly enjoyed this read.
Amazon Associate
Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/4djltxL
My reading copy
came from the North Oak Cliff Branch of the Dallas Public Library System.
Scott A. Tipple ©2024
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