Astonishing X-Men: Xenogenesis
Children of the Atom, or something else? A small African town has been hit with a series of bizarre occurrences, as children are born possessing strange and powerful abilities. With the mutant race dwindling, the X-Men are the fi rst on the scene to investigate the phenomenon. When they arrive,...
show more
Children of the Atom, or something else? A small African town has been hit with a series of bizarre occurrences, as children are born possessing strange and powerful abilities. With the mutant race dwindling, the X-Men are the fi rst on the scene to investigate the phenomenon. When they arrive, their hopes are raised by what looks to be a concentration of mutant births. But soon they find themselves confronted by the country's ruthless leader, who has his own ideas of what the children truly are and how to deal with them. Have the X-Men stumbled across a series of new mutant births, or are they dealing with something far more dangerous?
show less
Format: paperback
ISBN:
9780785140337 (0785140336)
Publish date: October 5th 2011
Publisher: Marvel
Pages no: 160
Edition language: English
Series: Astonishing X-Men
The X-Men travel to Africa to investigate the anomalous births of what seem to be infants with mutant abilities that are active at birth.It’s been a long time since I was a regular reader of Marvel Comics, so it took a little while to get oriented in the convoluted history of their mutants, but once...
The story wasn't bad, interdimensional travel, radiation, solving issues, but the artwork made me extremely irritated and uncomfortable. It reeked of gratituous boob shots.
Collecting issues #1-5 of The Astonishing X-Men, the X-Men go to Africa to investigate what might possibly be a rash of mutant births, but it turns out to be something else entirely. What that was I didn't quite get and it seemed to me that the book ended with an abrupt and dissatisfying conclusion....
The story wasn't bad, interdimensional travel, radiation, solving issues, but the artwork made me extremely irritated and uncomfortable. It reeked of gratituous boob shots.
This was actually pretty awful. I saw promise for Ellis writing the X-Men in The Ghost Box, but I saw none of that here. There's a decent plot in there, but it's hampered by uninteresting dialog, a general dumbing down of all of the characters, and a generally clumsy handling of Africa, Africans, an...