
The Avengers #3
Writer: Mark Waid
Artist: Mike del Mundo
Color Artists: Mike del Mundo with Marco D’Alfonso
Letterer: VC’s Cory Petit
Cover: Alex Ross
Review By: Nate Mondschein (@33andMoonshine)
–Spoilers ahead for Avengers #3: Kangs on Kangs on Kangs on Kangs on Kangs–
Among my first missions as a one-time-comic-devotee making my return to the medium after a half-decade long bout of “too-old-for-it” syndrome was a headfirst dive into the modern Avengers continuity. In the span of little under a year, I marathoned my way from Bendis’ If-It-Ain’t-Broke-Fix-It-Anyways Disassembled and New Avengers arcs through Hickman’s Smarter-Than-You-And-He-Knows-It Everything Dies epic, assisted greatly in this pursuit by a part time job and a now apparent, then subconscious desire to irreparably damage my vision. The highs were certainly high. But amidst those narrative peaks were (as always seems to be the case with the most populist super-series) extended lulls, thick with formula and familiar caricature; a pattern that is at once comforting and (especially when consumed in such a highly condensed fashion) predictable to the point of stagnation.
Mark Waid and Mike del Mundo’s take on The Avengers could not stray further from this pattern. Through their first three issues on the title, the creative duo has delivered a stirringly original take on the team without sacrificing an ounce of their familiarity or characteristic heroism.
But we cannot disregard Mark Waid’s essential impact this new run, especially in the ways his narrative plays to del Mundo’s strengths. In The Avengers #3, the author makes the most of Kang’s inherent temporal pardoxy, diving deep into the well of FantaScience to produce a chapter full of layered contradiction that enthralls without overwhelming (at least not to the point of distraction). Waid has long since proven himself a master storyteller, regardless of the medium, and here he offers nothing less than his best: high stakes sans emotional catastrophe; insurmountable odds met with just the right mixture of Spider-wit and gravitas.
Things wrap up about as neatly as can be expected from there, thanks to some quick thinking from Nadia Pym; but the groundwork has been laid for what promises to be an expansive, potentially continuity-altering series of adventures going forwards. So long as Waid and Del Mundo are at the helm, Earth’s Mightiest Heroes look to be in for a wild ride.
Verdict: If you’re not into gorgeous art, well-crafted storytelling, or are one of the six people who still can’t get over the fact that Thor is a woman now, probably best to steer clear. But for the rest of us, this is an absolute Buy.