Monday, July 24, 2023

AVENGERS #375

"THE LAST GATHERING"
Writer: Bob Harras | Penciler: Steve Epting | Inker: Tom Palmer
Colorist: John Kalisz | Letterer: Bill Oakley
Editor: Ralph Macchio | Editor-in-Chief: Tom DeFalco

The Plot: The Avengers head out into Manhattan to face Proctor and the Gatherers, who have appeared in the city with the imprisoned Sersi and Ute, the near-dead Watchter. The Avengers attack, working to protect civilians and take out the Gatherers, while Proctor severs the barriers between dimensions, causing various buildings in the city to be replaced with alternate versions of themselves. While his teammates battle the Gatherers, Black Knight engages Proctor one-on-one. Proctor reveals that he carries the Ebony Blade of his dimenson, and the duel continues.

Thena and Sprite arrive to help the Avengers, while Proctor gains the upper hand on the Black Knight and then begins to "gather" him, which would merge them together. But Quicksilver intervenes, , knocking the pair apart. Thunderstrike and Crystal take Proctor down with a lightning bolt, which also knocks out the Gatherers. Sersi and Ute break free of their imprisonment, and Sersi picks up the Ebony Blade, which she uses to kill Proctor. Then, as Ute dies, he expends the last of his power restoring New York to normal. He also opens a portal to a pocket dimension, where Sersi can go to be free of the madness consuming her. As she prepares to go, the Black Knight declares that he will join her. As the Avengers watch, the pair vanishes together into the portal.

Continuity Notes: Though he is the Dane Whitman of his dimension, Proctor possesses abilities the Black Knight does not -- eyebeams, apparently transmutation powers, and so forth. He explains this is due to the gann josin bond gradually changing him over the years.

Quicksilver joins the battle in costume alongside his teammates despite the fact that he's still suffering from his "Bloodties" injuries, and gets knocked out of the fight immediately after saving the Black Knight from Proctor.

As described above, the Gatherers all go down when Proctor is taken out. Black Widow wonders why, but no answer is given in this issue.

When Ute restores Manhattan, he replaces the destroyed Avengers Mansion with its original counterpart -- though a reader might be forgiven for not realizng this, as the house is drawn rather off-model by Steve Epting and Tom Palmer.
Black Knight and Sersi leave the Avengers, and indeed the entire Marvel Universe, in this issue's final pages. They would next appear in the "Ultraverse", a continuity acquired by Marvel when they purchased Malibu Comics within a year or so of this issue's release. My recollection is that Marvel shunted a handful of random characters off to the Ultraverse for a while. Juggernaut spent some time there, for example. And, I suppose since they were already off the board and said to be residing in a pocket universe at this point, Black Knight and Sersi joined the fun as well (though I don't think Sersi became a regular in the Ultraverse, as did Black Knight). They will return to the Marvel Universe proper in another few years, via the BLACK KNIGHT: EXODUS one-shot in 1996.
Assemble: As anticipated, yes -- Captain America shouts the battlecry as the Avengers join the fray against the Gatherers. ("Avengers Assemble!" count: 10 in 42 issues to date.)
My Thoughts: AVENGERS #375 seems to be considered the best end point in Bob Harras's run writing the title. At least, whenever you see anyone discussing this run online, most people tend to agree that the best material is the stuff from issues 343 through 375 -- the stuff penciled by Steve Epting and covering the full "Gatherers" storyline. I don't know that anyone particulary dislikes what is yet to come (aside from the universally reviled "The Crossing" storyline which unfortunately closes out Harras's run) -- it's just never mentioned in the same breath as the saga of the Gatherers.

And a saga it is, make no mistake. This storyline spans more than thirty issues (though there are some fill-ins along the way), and it occupies more page-time than anything else in the Harras/Epting run. Again I think of the comparison I made a while back -- in a strange way, this run feels like a season of "peak/prestige" television. Especially if you excise the fill-ins, you're left with a run of around twenty-five issues, of which the majority are fully dedicated to the Gatherers, while the villains are never far from our heroes' thoughts even when they aren't front and center. It really has the same sort of storytelling feel as a season-long arc in a cable TV show.
I'm kind of happy, by the way, that Proctor turns out just as petty as last issue suggested. All this death, all this destruction -- all brought about because the Sersi of his universe broke up with him one day. Mind you, it's noted here by the Black Knight that the Avengers learned sometime back, during the Coal Tiger story, that the Gatherers go insane if they fail to quickly bond with their counterpart in the prime reality, basically coming right out and telling us that Proctor is stark raving mad -- but still. It's kind of funny to me that all this came about due to his broken heart.

Though I must say, much as I liked this one, it's nonetheless slightly unsatisfying as a finale. I love seeing the Black Knight and Proctor go at it, seeing Quicksilver do the right thing and help his romantic rival, and seeing Sersi finally finish Proctor -- but there are some players missing here, too. You may recall that two issues ago, Vision flew away with Deathcry, Swordsman, and Magdalene to investigate a damaged Avengers relay station in Scotland. We will actually see this mission, though it's still two issues away due to a couple fill-ins coming up -- but wouldn't you expect Swordsman and Magdalene, the two characters who kicked off this Gatherers saga way back in issue 343, to have some role in its resolution? It's extremely odd that they're absent here, and it leaves the story feeling... unfinished somehow.

But perhaps it is! Proctor is dead, but the other Gatherers remain, presumably now prisoners of the Avengers. Perhaps Swordsman and Magdalane will have some role in their fates? I guess time will tell...

Lastly, let's say goodbye to Steve Epting as of this issue. Despite several fill-ins during his tenure -- entirely, I'm sure, the fault of having to draw so many extra-sized issues over the thirtieth anniversary year -- he and Tom Palmer provided artistic consistency and excellence all the way through the Gatherers saga. I'm running long already on this post and there's a bit more to get to, so I'll leave it at that for now. But I'm planning a "afterword" to this entire retrospective, where I will have more to say about Epting's contributions.

Issue 375 also features a ten-page Giant-Man tale:

"A BIGGER MAN THAN I..."
Big Ideas: Benjamin Raab | Big Pictures: Yancey Labat | Big Highlights: Maria Beccari
Big Words: Ken Lopez | Big Colors: Michael Marts
Big Bopper: Ralph Macchio | Big Wig: Tom DeFalco

In this one, Hank Pym tests an "encephalo-helmet" he's created for psychoanalytics. The test finds Pym confronted by a bunch of ants who put him on trial for various things he's done over the years. It's... a backup story. I'm not really into psychobabble and therefore I don't have much to say about it. The story is written by Ben Raab, who would go on to do several writing jobs at Marvel in the later nineties -- both scripting over other writers' plots, as well as writing his own stories in various limited series, one-shots, and an ongoing run on EXALIBUR. He would also write the BLACK KNIGHT/EXODUS one-shot mentioned above. And while I liked a lot of Raab's later Marvel material -- mainly the handful of mini-series -- this story doesn't really do much for me.

7 comments:

  1. This issue came with two covers, one of them enhanced with a bit of silver ink on the logo and frame to push the cost up a bit. It also doesn't scan well hence the use of the regular one.

    The Gatherers saga has been quite a ride and I think it works especially well because it's fundamentally about the Avengers as characters and couldn't have been used for any other team. It's also been part of a broader questioning of just what it means to be an Avenger amidst the general darkening of the 1990s and doesn't give easy answers. It's certainly been a triumph to get this far.

    Regarding Sersi for the next few years, she and Dane both arrived in the Ultraverse but in different places and there was a storyline searching for her which built up to the Avengers/Ultraforce crossover that doubled as what appeared to be a semi-reboot of the Ultraverse. Sersi's status got *very* confusing as the end of that showed her returned to the Marvel Universe and standing amongst the other Avengers in the mansion but she made no appearances in the regular Avengers titles and the letterspage eventually had to come up with an explanation to handwave the scene away whilst IIRC Dane was still in the Ultraverse in the relaunched Ultraforce until Marvel shut the whole thing down. By the time of the Black Knight one-shot the Ultraverse was dead (and IIRC it seems the contract makes it uneconomical to revive) and seemingly unmentioned, adding to Dane's long history that can't always be referenced.

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    1. You're right, Tim -- when the Black Knight returns to the main Marvel Universe, the Ultraverse is only brought up in the most oblique ways, with no specifics and certainly never mentioning it by name.

      It's kind of amusing in retrospect how much time the Knight spends in weird limbo situations. On Otherworld with Captain Britain, turned into a stone statue in the present while living in his ancestor's body in the Middle Ages, and then shunted off to the Ultraverse, which is subsequently never mentioned again.

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  2. Captain America shouts the battlecry ass

    !!!

    A bit too much of the “shiny surface” deal going on for my tastes but the cover colors are yet again pretty darn nice.

    I could buy this ridiculous outfit on Hercules — almost more ’80s than ’90s; everything above those armored knee-high boots says he’s ready to Jazzercise™ — if he’d been shown trying to get into normal civilian life on Earth. (That lady he met helping out kids is supposed to figure into a storyline at some point, although we’ve hardly seen her.)

    Yeah, I’m not sure why I don’t have more to say on the meat of the finale, but I can’t disagree with anything you write. The main issue for me is that as solid as this saga may be I still have a general, pervasive feeling of alienation from the Marvel Universe around this period; as mentioned in past comments, that would begin to turn around with some titles in the main continuity during Heroes Reborn and more significantly with/after Heroes Return.

    I’ve read very little from Marvel in the past couple of decades beyond fairly isolated runs, however, and I can’t help wondering if the fact that Proctor and his Gatherers killed so many Avengers on so many other Earths is acknowledged in multiverse stuff like the newer Secret Wars.

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    1. I’m pretty sure Proctor and the Gatherers were never mentioned again. I did think about Jonathan Hickman’s “incursions” plotline leading to “Secret Wars” while reading about this story-arc. I’m not sure if he read Harras’ Avengers or was influenced in any way by this story. I think he was trying to do a Marvel Universe version of DC’s Crisis on Infinite Earths.

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    2. Thanks on the typo, Blam! I can't believe I missed it; I proofread this thing about three times.

      It's a little sad the Gatherers are pretty much forgotten at this point. Or at least, that Proctor is. The Omnibus collecting these issues has a bunch of contemporaneous supplemental material, among them an interview with Ralph Macchio where he talks about how the Avengers have never really had a Doctor Doom or Magneto type of villain, but that Proctor is sure to become that character for them. Which I'm sure was partly Macchio just trying to build up hype for the new character, but nonetheless -- I do think he could've been more.

      (Setting aside, of course, that the Avengers already have their Doctor Doom and Magneto types in the likes of Kang and Ultron.)

      The only other thing I know of that references the Gatherers outside of this Harras/Epting run is, of all things, JLA/AVENGERS -- during a double-page spread montage of big moments from both teams' pasts, there's a shot inspired by this very issue, showing Sersi battling Proctor (the same spread also shows Exodus holding Luna in "Bloodties", so there's some nice representation of this era going on in general).

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    3. When was the interview? IIRC one problem with Kang has been that he's been deemed a Fantastic Four villain (as he originally appear as Rama-Tut there and his first Avengers appearance explicitly built on the existing character, as opposed to the much later retcon with Immortus) and so outside the comics he hasn't always been available for Avengers adaptations, especially with some of the messy contracts signed in this era. Though whether that was a concern for Macchio is unclear...

      I suspect the Gatherers have become forgotten because of circumstances. Bob Harras left the Avengers, and indeed almost all comic writing, a year and a half later whilst I'm struggling to remember if/when the Black Knight and Sersi ever returned to the team. As a result other writers may have decided against revisiting what seemed a fairly closed story. That said Proctor's Ebony Blade does reappear in the final (?) issue of Avengers Unplugged.

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  3. A thoroughly enjoyable end to a great run. Thanks for these reviews making me take a trip down memory lane.

    Sadly the wheels came off my Marvel reading at this stage - I think almost every issue felt like a fill-in from here on, even when Harras was writing. Epting was sorely missed, but he went on to great things. I shall still be checking in here though!

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