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Heh, Ms.Marvel's crack about Richard Rider's fanbase being rabid was a cute shot at us fans who kind of pissed all over Sam Alexander. And hey, maybe it was deserved. I'm a Richard Rider fan who like many was proud to see Richard come into his own during the Annihilation storyline which is briefly touched upon in this issue. Dan Abnett and Andy Lanning who were the pair of writers responsible for revitalizing Nova and Guardians of the Galaxy gave Richard's role a galactic Lone Ranger was one of the highlights for me as a comic reader in the early 2000s. Then came Sam and the natural accept/reject response occurred when it comes to every new character came about and I fell firmly into the "Reject" category. It wasn't so much the character of Sam but the overall tone shift of the Nova series from a pretty serious title to a somewhat kid-friendly version.
At the time, I got it. This was Marvel's attempt at roping in younger readers. This was Jeph Loeb's dedication to his son who passed away. This iteration of Nova...was not for me. And I gave it a fair shake but decided to take it off my pull list. It did not help that Marvel's editorial at the time was on full defense and did not take kindly to criticism, and to be fair not all of the critics were civil.
Now...for the issue itself.I liked it for a number of reasons. The artstyle is unique, almost Indie-comic style and somehow it works for a title which probably is going to be focused on crazy space adventures.
The dialogue I can tell is more slanted to Sam's youthful exuberance. But Jeff Loveness tries to balance out the young talk with Richie's more mature, somewhat cynical dialogue. He just needs to remember to drop a "Blue Blazes!" here and there otherwise, this Richie is definitely being mind-controlled.
Lastly....Death's Head!Yes. Cool to see a classic character from the Marvel UK days. The redesign is a little too streamlined but hey, Marvel UK represent!
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