Review: Avengers Disassembled HC

Collects: Avengers #500-#503, Avengers Finale
Writer: Brian Michael Bendis
Pencillers: David Finch (Avengers #500-#503), Oliver Coipel (Avengers Finale)

STORY
Shit hits the fan at Avengers Mansion: Mysterious attacks decimate the world’s team of super heroes. Tony Stark (USA's current Secretary of Defence) goes nuts in front of the UN. She-Hulk fights her own allies. Somebody obviously messes with our friends. Somebody with the ability to bend reality. Somebody they know…

REVIEW
First of all, let me say this: This isn’t a very good comic. The story seems rushed, the art suffers from David-Finch-syndrome (all characters look exactly the same) and the end is one of this anticlimactic deus-ex-machina-moments. And yet I like it!

"But why", you ask? Because two years ago, when I was searching for an entry point into the Marvel universe, I found it in this comic event. This comic was supposed to be, as I would put it, some kind of "soft reboot". In 2004 many Marvel series were stagnating creatively. So the powers that be decided to infuse them with some fresh blood and provide the readers with a new, easy-to-understand status quo. The series with the greatest need for innovation certainly was "Avengers". For one of Marvel’s flagship titles were put on the back burner for far too long. The team was crowded with C-list characters nobody really cared about. So Bendis did the necessary thing: In just four issues he managed to throw all excess parts of the "Avengers" overboard and to set things up for more exciting stories to come.

But you have to break an egg to make an omelet. And to form a new "Avengers" team you have to disband the former. Naturally some heroes die in the course of this - in one case a fan favorite. Just as naturally, the fans were furious. This is understandable but I had the advantage of not having much of a relationship with most of these characters, so for me these deaths really served their purposes: to set the wheels in motion for the things to come. And boy, the pay-off was great: Many wonderful series and events (like "New Avengers", "Young Avengers" and "House Of M") spun out of this "Avengers Disassembled".

The plot itself was therefore no real issue for me - the execution was. This book is a typical example of the old Bauhaus-principle "form follows function". Bendis obviously knew where he wanted to go with this run, but didn't bother much about how to get there. There isn’t much suspense in this story. It is also very annoying that the Avengers themselves don't have to do much - except for being present. In the end all problems are solved by Dr. Strange - who isn’t even on the cover!
So, in the end this is what the open-minded reader gets: An okay-ish story with some okay-ish character moments, okay-ish action scenes and okay-ish art. But - as I said - it’s the perfect place to hop on the "Avengers" trains. And that’s a ride you don't want to miss.

RATING: C-

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