Here's the original idea:I enjoyed it. The event made me a Cap fan when I was previously always indifferent to him. It also got a few of my then-coworkers back into caring about the comics. Still wish that they would reveal more scenes/ideas that were cut, like Captain America psyching out Sentry and the X-Men choosing a side.
Reprinted in the Civil War Script Book, we see Millars initial concept for a twelve-issue Civil War miniseries. Yes, twelve. Its very different from the story wed eventually get and comes with notes from Joe Quesada and Tom Brevoort (who is the far more critical of the two).
The big tipping point that sets off the demand for registration is when Speedball fights a villain and Happy Hogans son gets killed in the crossfire (as Brevoort is quick to point out, Hogan totally doesnt have a son). This drives Iron Man into championing the cause and heroes have 28 days to unmask.
The broad strokes are mostly the same, though without everything relating to Goliaths death. Instead, theres an even more uncomfortable and very Mark Millar plot about a superhero being blackmailed into suicide to save his kidnapped son. Outside of that, once Cap gives up (quitting instead of turning himself in), the story simply keeps going.
A device is used to depower offending heroes and Speedballs execution is done publicly. Thor shows up, but is disgusted at what superheroism has become. Then things come to a head when the Hulk returns from space with an army of five-foot-tall Hulk Babies because apparently Hulk has been boning THOUSANDS OF ALIENS as part of his scheme to get revenge. Cap comes back to help lead the fight against him and the senator behind the Super Human Registration Act goes full-on villain by trying to depower everyone on Earth.
Cap stops him at the cost of losing his powers and becoming a frail, old man. Then the son of that dead superhero from earlier shows up to give some tearful monologue thats supposed to bring closure, though Millar doesnt exactly say what the closure even is.
Whats interesting in all of this is that Millar is very open that although Rogers is depowered and there will be a new Captain America, that will only last for a year or so before Rogers is repowered in time for his movie. Even though that didnt quite happen in the '00s, here we are after Steve Rogers has spent some time powerless, only to suddenly regain his status prior to a Captain America movie.
A movie about Civil War.
Also funny is Brevoort being 100% against Planet Hulk being derailed for Civil War, claiming that putting Hulk in Civil War would be an act of greed. Yet in the end, the reason he isnt in Civil War is so they can do an entire event based on Hulk coming to Earth to fight the heroes, so... *shrug*
So, how did Mark Millar trick people into paying him to write comics? That reads like very bad fan fiction.
My personal opinion nobody suffered worse than Reed Richards. His character seemed destroyed to me. Complete Asshole.
So, how did Mark Millar trick people into paying him to write comics? That reads like very bad fan fiction.
Frontline especially was a great book. The Death of Captain America stuff that followed was also generally pretty good (from what I'd read), but Civil War itself made a far better movie than a comic.
He teamed up with Grant Morrison in his early career. That would do wonders for anybody.
But Millar is not actually that bad. I don't care for most of his work myself (I'm French, how could I?) but he has written some decent stuff over the years like Superman Red Son. But his comics are very much of their time and they don't age very well. Still, you can't judge a comic writer by their events. Otherwise, Bendis would be a completely talentless hack, but his work on Daredevil proves otherwise.
Well if you believe the rumors Morrison ghost wrote a lot of Red Son.
Not to mention that Captain America losing his powers wouldn't make him old. It's not his powers that make him young, it's the fact that he was frozen in ice for 50 years. Losing the Super Soldier serum wouldn't undo that.
Then they went and did that story again a few years later anyway SMH
Uh, I never heard about that before. Maybe that would explain why I like it so much even though it still feels very much like a Millar story.
Go out and pick up Thor by JMS. Thor shows Iron Man why he's the only founding Avenger who can stand up to someone like Superman.Team Thor
Was pleased/disapointed to hear that Thor wasn't in the event, pleased because he didn't have to be mischaracterized or potentially be on team Iron Man, and disappointed because he's a major marvel character.
"Cap - serum = old man" had apparently been canon since the 90s or so, though, so it wasn't like Millar was pulling it out of his ass.
Go out and pick up Thor by JMS. Thor shows Iron Man why he's the only founding Avenger who can stand up to someone like Superman.
We got Bucky Cap tho
In Ed Brubaker's Cap run, but that wasn't part of Civil War. That was after Cap was already arrested.