If you haven't been reading Ales Kot and Marco Rudy's Bucky Barnes: The Winter Soldier for fear that it would be a one-dimensional ex-KGB spy thing, then you belong in a gulag. This book is anything but. Picking-up where old school Nick Fury left off in Original Sin, Bucky Barnes is now "The Man on the Wall", protecting Earth from all threats both cosmic and otherworldly.
And this creates the backdrop for one of the more thoughtful books being created right now.
There are three reasons this is such a good read:
1 - The fully painted art of Marco Rudy is beyond breathtaking and sets the cosmic mood and tone that a book that features a drug dealing Loki from the future demands. The eye is guided through each panel, page and splash with a fluidity missing from most mainstream comics. For this issue, Michael Walsh, Kot's accomplice on Secret Avengers, added a 4 page "cameo" to shift the perception of both some characters and all readers.
2 - While I'd read this book for the art alone, it's Ales Kot's scripts that have me coming back each month. There is a mystery here, a story behind the story that he is revealing piecemeal, and a characterization of Bucky that I haven't seen before. This book is taking Bucky beyond his tortured former assassin past and hurling him into new psychological territory, a difficult thing to do with a character that has been around since the 1940's.
3 - Finally, Wikipedia. This is a book that you should read with a browser open so you can cross reference all the names and "inside" jokes. Look at the cover - "Ventolin" and "Xtal" are both songs by Aphex Twin. The planet Bucky is heading toward is "Mer-Z-Bow", named after the Japanese noise musician, and "The Great Reznor" should be pretty obvious. Half the fun of reading this book is looking for clues based on the source material for whatever Kot decides to call the next alien race or MacGuffin.
Bucky Barnes: The Winter Soldier is a fun, beautiful book that banishes clichés to Siberia.
- Aloha -
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