
Carol Danvers won't play ball? No problem, bring in an alternate Ms Marvel. Wolverine, Spider-Man and Hawkeye too moral to join the team? Have bad guys take their roles. Throw in Ares (will fight for food) and Sentry (as dumb as his haircut), alternate universe Kree warrior Marvel Boy (promoted to Captain Marvel) and the all-new, all-cynical Iron Patriot and you have a group ready for their close-up.
Our first sight of them comes with this issue's cover, a homage to New Avengers 1, and what a rubbish idea that is. We get it, these are the Dark Avengers, Marvel, how about you just show us them? There is a nice shot of the team early on in the book, as Norman - inside the Iron Patriot armour - introduces his Avengers (with an annoying three exclamation points) to the world, and it's typical of Mike Deodato's artwork here - striking and dramatic with impressive use of shadow. He's perfect for a book that is basically a continuation of his work with Warren Ellis on New Thunderbolts. There's intrigue on every page and Deodato captures the atmosphere superbly, aided by colour artist Rain Beredo. And when we get extra splash pages, Deodato ensures the moment is worth it.
I was going to have a moan about the ridiculous lack of material on Carol Danvers' costume, but given how tightly Deodato draws Marvel Boy's costume over his crotch, you can't say he isn't an equal ops cheesecake artist.


The only off-note is the terribly specific effect of a pill Osborn gives Venom, but the scene helps move the story along and isn't too jarring in a big splashy comic book. The major plus of Dark Avengers is that I can relax and enjoy Bendis' strengths rather than fretting over the fact that he's not writing the Avengers as the shining team they should be - no one is pretending this bunch are role models. Like Maria Hill, I look forward to watching Osborn 'crash and burn'. The difference is that I'm likely to live to see it.
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