I read this entire series all at once so I'm just going to do a general review for the whole thing rather than trying to sort out what belonged in which book. Cable and Deadpool, two of the best mercenaries out there, find themselves stuck together after an incident. They start an odd friendship a...
I'm going to miss this series like crazy! I never thought I'd get so sucked into Jonah Hex, but there you have it. Hex is back from the future with his companion Gina, and they end up in a proverbial hornet's nest. Things don't go to well for either of them. Along the way, Hex meets up with a boon c...
So, y'know, kinda realistic given their relationship. Basically, Cable screws Wade, they get divorced, then Cable screws with Wade's head. I'm... not liking Cable much right now. And they both actually call it a divorce: And: It's really kind of sad, and it gets a bit introspe...
This is a pretty big book: the last 15 issues Cable & Deadpool, plus a Deadpool/Great Lakes Initiative crossover. Of those 15 C&D issues, Cable appears in only 40-42, and he dies in issue 42. That's not much of a spoiler, since it seems that Cable's major role in the Marvel Universe is to periodical...
Oh dear, it's basically a Civil War tie-in. Sigh. I'm on record as hating the Civil War stuff, so I wasn't thrilled to see that this was involved. It was blatantly obvious that Deadpool was only pro-Registration because the editors needed to maintain their artificial 50/50 split and there was no way...
Deadpool! I had less than zero expectations for Deadpool, but he turned out to be a breath of fresh air in the overwrought Civil War saga. His first-person narration—which is broken, so he's actually just mumbling to himself the entire time—is pointed, metafictional and very, very funny. I don't thi...
Calling this collection "War Crimes" is really a misnomer. The actual bulk of the collection is made up of the Underworld miniseries, which is only barely related to Civil War at all. This may be why it's one of the best things I've read in the Civil War line. It's about a guy named Jackie Dio, fres...
Well-written, good story.
A lot better than volume five :)