Jay & Miles X-Plain the X-Men

Rachel and Miles Review the X-Men, Episode 6

Weeks of September 10 and September 17, 2014

 

In which we play catch-up and review a record nine issues!

Reviewed:

  • From the week of September 10:
    • Magneto #9*
    • Death of Wolverine #2
    • Nightcrawler #6
    • X-Force #9
  • From the week of September 17:
    • Wolverine and the X-Men #9
    • All-New X-Men #32*
    • Uncanny Avengers #24
    • All-New X-Factor #14
    • Uncanny X-Men #26

*Picks of their respective weeks

Video reviews are made possible by the support of our Patreon subscribers. If you want to help support the podcast–and unlock more cool stuff–you can do that right here!

Rachel wrote more about Uncanny X-Men #26 over here.

9 comments

  1. Welcome back! It was only a passing mention Rachel’s part, but I think Maggot is a good character too. You’ve also made similar remarks about Cipher (I don’t understand why understanding and expressing all forms of body language weren’t part of skill set — that would have covered fighting ability) Which mutant hero or villain do you think is the most unfairly maligned character?

  2. I need some advice from my fellow X-fans. I’ve read the Morrison run on New X-Men, the Whedon run on Astonishing, and all of the flagship titles since Manifest Destiny. I’m reading House of M right now, which is hit and miss, but worth reading I think. Are there any other post-Claremont X-Men arcs you guys would recommend?

    1. I’d recomend trying some of the other x books coming out while morrison was writing new xmen. Peter Milligan’s xstatic is fantastic, Joe Casey did a short run on uncanny that holds up well and Brian K Vaughn did a great Chamber mini series.

      1. Thanks. I’ll check those out. I’ve been thinking about reading some of the major arcs of the Blue/Gold era, but I don’t know if I can stomach the 90s art.

  3. I really enjoy Peter David in joke-telling sitcom mode. I just knocked off his short run on Wolverine (V2, #11-16) and it’s amazing how many laugh-out-loud moments he can pack into a book when he’s on a roll. Sort of makes me wish that he’d fully commit to a “funny” series and not worry so much about big arcs and world-shaking consequences and blah blah blah. He clearly loves to do social commentary, and humor is often a much better approach for that stuff than straight-ahead dramatics.

    You guys glossed over a moment I really enjoyed in Uncanny Avengers: a short convo that may end up being Wolverine’s last moment with Rogue before his death. “You climbed this mountain before, you’ll climb it again.” Awww.

Leave a Reply to Sam Williams Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *