Cap's comic has been really good for a while now. Go back and find the whole 
"Winter Soldier" storyline that helped bring this along. The action is good, i 
love the art work, and Bucky, the Skull and others are cool. By making the 
Black Widow front and center they've brought back that Cold War spy novel 
feeling. Even the Falcon's interesting in this book! And Tony Stark--whom some 
may "boo hiss!" because of his role in bringing about the new world of the 
Superhuman Registration Act--is portrayed in an interesting mannger. He keeps 
fighting his guilt over the battle with STeve and Steve's death, but still 
doing what he thinks is right in bringing on this near police-state. Really fun 
stuff.
And in April, all of Marvel gets rocked with "Secret Invasion", wherein we'll 
find out how many Skrulls have been impersonating superheroes, supervillains, 
and people in positions of power, and for how long. From what the Marvel guys 
are saying, it's huge!

-------------- Original message -------------- 
From: "ravenadal" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
>From March 6, 2006 issue of Rolling Stone:

Metaphors for the effects of the Bush Presidency on the American
spirit don't get any harsher than this one: Last year, Captain
America, who had been fighting Nazis, supervillians and sometimes his
own government in the pages of Marvel comic books since 1941, was shot
dead.

And now, in the series' latest sign of the times, a new, more morally
compromised character has taken over the stars-and-stripes uniform:
Cap's former kid sidekick, Bucky, who spent a few years as a
brainwashed Russian assassin and is now a gun-toting killer.

Ed Brubaker, the former indie-comics writer who's been working on
Captain America since 2004, sees his riveting version of the comic as
an "espionage thriller." "It's not meant to be totally reflective of
the American psyche," he says. "But at the same time, I'm part of the
American psyche, so maybe there is something of that seeping out there."

In an even more directly relevant plot line, longtime CAp villain the
Red Skull is now the head of a multinational corporation - and he's
aiming to destroy the country by foreclosing on mortgages and driving
up oil prices. Brubaker has been hoping to do that storyline ever
since the Enron scandal. "How much of our country are we giving away
to these vast corporations that have no one to answer to at all!" he
says. "If there's any politics of my own in the book, it's that part."


 

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