Monday, April 24, 2023

AVENGERS #363

"A GATHERING OF HATE"
A tale of the mighty Avengers brought to you by...
Writer: Bob Harras | Penciler: Steve Epting
Inker/Colorist: Tom Palmer | Letterer: Bill Oakley
Editor: Ralph Macchio | Editor-in-Chief: Tom DeFalco

The Plot: Somewhere in a snowy mountain range, The Avengers -- Black Knight, Black Widow, Crystal, Hercules, and Captain America, along with their prisoner, the false Vision -- arrive at the citadel of the Gatherers. Inside, Cassandra is torturing Vision -- but at the very moment she pauses her operation, the Avengers burst into the building and attack. Soon, Proctor appears. He announces that his Vision betrayed him by leading the Avengers to his citadel, and then kills the synthezoid. When Black Knight attacks Proctor, the villain hurls him away. Captain America chides the Knight for attacking impetuously, and the Knight turns on Cap. Black Widow stuns the Knight, who apologizes for his actions, stating that Proctor controlled him.

Proctor then reveals "He-Who-Dreams", the being who has guided him in his Gatherings -- it is Ute, Watcher from a destroyed universe. Just then, Uatu the Watcher apperas. Proctor tries to get him to join the Gatherers, but the Watcher is silent. When Hercules mentions that the alternate Vision killed Swordsman, Magdalene turns on Proctor and attacks him. Proctor activates the citadel's self-destruct, so the Avegers grab him and make a break for it. But Proctor again controls the Black Knight, forcing the Avenger to stab Proctor. Proctor vanishes while the Avengers and Gatherers flee the exploding citadel.

Continuity Notes: You may have noticed that this is the second foil cover in the span of four months. Ostensibly, this is due to the ongoing celebration of the Avengers' thirtieth anniversary -- and the foil covers aren't finished! Issues 366 and 369 will also have them. That's one foil cover per quarter in 1993.

Throughout the issue, the Avengers wear special headgear created by the Black Knight to protect them from Cassandra's mental powers. All except Captain America also wear special armor, presumably for extra protection against the power of the Gatherers. I believe that, while the rest will soon discard this armor, Hercules will continue to wear his as his new costume, while the Black Night will keep the big clunky boots with his usual costume and jacket. At any rate, the whole thing makes them look very "Image-y", if you know what I mean. Especially when you notice that Black Widow is also carrying a humongous Liefeld-esque blaster weapon (and isn't afraid to use it)!
At Avengers Mansion, we see Hank "Giant-Man" Pym and Bill "Giant-Man" Foster working to stabilize the Swordsman following Vision's attack. We learn that Hank is also present to psychoanalyze Sersi (though why they want a biochemist for that purpose goes unremarked upon -- but Hank does mention his own mental issues as a bridge to helping Sersi). In the same scene, Sersi greets two NYPD detectives at the Avengers's front door -- and then on the issue's last page, tells Pym and Foster that it was "nothing" at the door, as we are shown both men, changed to stone, at the bottom of the East River.

At the Shi'ar "Starharbor", Lilandra assigns a mystery figure to journey to Earth and warn the Avengers that some Kree fanatics have alredy arrived there to avenge the Supreme Intelligence. Lilandra is accompanied in this scene by a man who bears a striking resemblance to Araki, but who she identifies as Aroké.
Proctor recognizes Black Knight as Sersi's gann josin, and also reveals that he is aware of the deaths of the Supreme Intelligence and Anskar of Polemachus.
The "616" universe is again referred to, this time by Proctor, as the "prime reality" and also by narration as the "core reality". Further, Proctor says that if life ends in the prime reality, it can exist in no other.
The issue ends with several pinups, one of which spotlight's a new character named Bloodwraith from this year's AVENGERS ANNUAL. The annual had already been released at this point, but official Marvel continuity places it after this multi-chapter Gatherers story. Even though it's not written by Bob Harras, I do intend to examine it since it features a development for the Black Knight. So we'll check that out two weeks from now.

Assemble: Yes. At long, long last, we have an "Avengers Assemble!" from the series' regular writer. Though I do again sort of wonder whether Bob Harras just finds the battlecry corny, because Black Knight -- who I have begun to view as Harras's "mouthpiece" character in these issues -- says as much right after shouting it. But nonetheless: "Avengers Assemble!" count: 5 in 30 issues to date. (That's a .167 average.)
My Thoughts: I always consider a compliment to a creative team when I read an extra-length story that doesn't feel extra-long. This is a double-sized issue, and while yes, there are several pinups at the end, the story is thirty pages long -- more than the typical month's AVENGERS story by about eight pages. But everything moves along at a very brisk pace, to the point that by the time you finish it, it doesn't feel like you've read anything longer than a typical story. And that's not due to "cheating" via huge panels and double-page spreads, either (though there are a few). This is just as densely-packed a story as in any other AVENGERS issue.

And it's a good story, too, bringing to a climax the latest chapter in the saga of the Gatherers. Proctor is at last revealed to the Avengers, while his treachery is revealed to Magdalene. He's seemingly dead as the issue ends, though his last words to the Black Knight -- "this is all far, far from over!" -- would suggest he's planning to get better. And of course the Gatherers are still here, now forced by circumstances to hang out with the Avengers, at least for a little while.

(Again, I see shades of something that would happen to the X-Men a couple years later during Harras's editorial tenure. There, Cyclops and the Acolytes escaped the descrution of the space station Avalon, and were forced to work together to survive in the harsh Australian outback. Here, the Avengers and at least some of the Gatherers have survived the destruction of Proctor's citadel and will seemingly be forced to work together to survive in the harsh arctic wasteland -- but I guess we'll find out for certain next month.)

The cover to this one could be perhaps considered false advertising, and not for the reason that Captain America and the Black Knight are wearing their normal costumes there, rather than the Black Knight's jury-rigged headsets and armor inside. But for the fact that the cover's test suggests "dissension", as if the Knight and Cap have come to blows for philosophical reasons -- something the reader is indeed conditioned to expect early in the issue, when Black Knight tells Cap that "things have changed" while he was away from the Avengers. But it turns out the Knight is controlled by Proctor, or perhaps warped by his mindlink with Sersi, and he immediately regrets what he's done after the brief skirmish.

I confess I was a little disappointed there; I feel like this storyline is moving toward some kind of falling out between Cap and the "new guard" Avengers -- or at least, I feel like it should be heading there. Time will tell whether it actually does.

7 comments:

  1. This was the very first issue of Avengers I ever read, discovering it in my local branch of John Menzies (a British books, stationery, magazines, newspapers, entertainment products and confectionery retailer, then the main rival to WH Smith) one day in August 1993 (what US comics made it to British newstands then were often months behind but, mind you, our town's latest specialist comic shop was also about a month or more behind on releases). Real world events got in the way so I only picked up a few more special issues of the series over the next year before things eased and I plunged into the book full time, lasting for a whole decade. This issue clearly worked well at the "every issue is someone's first" rule, quickly conveying the key points leading to this and giving a sense that something even bigger was coming as well as some good solid, well drawn action.

    And yes, this is the issue that called it the "Prime Reality" and the term clearly stuck with me.

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    1. Tim, I don't know if this was the first AVENGERS issue I read, but it's certainly one of the earliest I remember, from perusing it at a friend's house. I never did start reading the series regularly, though -- my money mainly went to the X-Men, Spider-Man, and the 2099 books around this time (plus DC's BATMAN ADVENTURES). I didn't start reading AVENGERS regularly until (ulp) "Heroes Reborn" -- and I didn't start enjoying it regularly until "Heroes Return"!

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  2. I do wish they'd released a "regular" edition as it looks like a pretty fantastic cover* hidden under the silver nonsense

    *although somewhat misleading story-wise as you point out

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    1. Yes, it seems as if the original artwork for this cover must be long lost, and Marvel apparently doesn't have any scans/stats of it from back in the day -- because they only ever reprint a scan of the actual foil version (unlike some of the other gimmick covers from the 90s, where they will often reprint the original non-enhanced artwork as a bonus feature in the collected editions).

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  3. A note in the lettercol is almost obnoxiously unapologetic about the jacked-up price for the package.

    The recap text refers to the main universe as “Earth Prime” as well. (It also redundantly calls Proctor a “mysterious enigma”…) The “616” designation has never inherently bothered me, but it’s also nice to have it acknowledged as the core or central reality.

    Harras really did giveth and taketh away with Black Knight’s sotto voce remark after the “Avengers Assemble!”

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    1. To borrow one of your favorite lines, Blam -- "Mysterious Enigma" is my new band name.

      As noted above, I do kind of think Harras finds "Avengers assemble" corny -- but it's hard to say. He will continue to use it very rarely, but in upcoming issues, it is said totally earnestly by other characters like Captain America. Though that could just be Harras knowing Cap wouldn't find anything "ironic" about the battlecry in the way his POV character, Black Knight, might.

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    2. The lack of “Avengers Assemble” moments is disappointing for sure. I really wish I’d started keeping track of its usage at the start of my read-through of the series, but while I’ve grabbed several images to share on social media come the 60th anniversary they’re limited to panels with essentially just the battle cry and no other dialogue.

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