This week Marvel is renaming Thunderbolts to Dark Avengers, presumably to boost sales by disguising the comic as an integral part of the Avengers franchise. I’m not sure it’ll work, but Thunderbolts has always been my favorite comic book so I appreciate the effort. Since I’m concerned that Dark Avengers #175 won’t exactly be a perfect jumping-on point, I’ve decided to help out with a quick introduction to what T-bolts has been about, and why I hope Dark Avengers will continue along the same themes.
Marvel readers probably know Thunderbolts best for its first storyline, about a team of new superheroes that turned out to be supervillains plotting to take over the world.1 Since then T-bolts has widely been regarded as a villain book, but I think that’s an inadequate description. Thunderbolts is less about guys in black hats as what it means to wear the black hat, or to take it off and try on a white one. This is where redemption is usually brought up as a major theme, but I don’t think the book is about becoming good any more or less than it’s about being bad. It’s really about good and people put in a position where they must question their goodness or badness. Thunderbolts is the comic where Baron Zemo found his principles and Henry Peter Gyrich abandoned his; where Hawkeye became received a 20-year prison sentence and Venom became a federal agent. It’s where Radioactive Man developed into a three-dimensional protagonist and Speedball degenerated into a one-dimensional lunatic; where Songbird found a cause worth dedicating her life to and Nighthawk just found a bunch of assholes mooching off his money. In short, saying Thunderbolts is about villains is like saying Legion of Super-Heroes is about teenagers.
That might sound like I’m knocking other well-known “villain books,” most notably Gail Simone’s Secret Six and John Ostrander’s Suicide Squad. Far from it. But what sets Thunderbolts apart is its central theme of hope–hope that bad guys can become better guys and the control of hope to influence the world for better or worse. Ultimately the Suicide Squad is only trying to survive its next job to get a reduced prison sentence, and the Secret Six is only out to take care of themselves, but the Thunderbolts usually have loftier ambitions, even if they sometimes end up tilting at windmills. The book plays upon multiple contradictions–villains as heroes, sociopaths as teammates, the forces of evil as a force for hope–and it tends to feature characters who can find methods in that madness; lateral thinkers looking to accomplish big things with unlikely resources. The T-bolts are the kind of guys who plot to defeat an Elder of the Universe with a handgun and recruit the Man-Thing to be their Batmobile.
For most of the past fifteen years, Thunderbolts has been at the top of my reading pile. It’s at its best when its cast is devious enough to be cunning, but not so professional that they could hack it as A-list heroes or villains. The recently-concluded time-travel story arc (#163-174) is a perfect example: The Thunderbolts stomp around the past with little regard for the damage they might cause, but they prove surprisingly competent in overcoming whatever problems are thrown at them. The appeal of a villainous character, as Jeff Parker recently observed, is that they can fail and make mistakes in ways that heroes won’t. But more to the point, a villain playing hero can also think outside the box and make unexpected choices about both heroism and villainy. Thunderbolts has tended to take flat or underutilized characters and revamp them in this way, giving them choices to ponder and problems to confront that are more stimulating than robbing a bank without being caught by Spider-Man. Baron Zemo, for example, is a pretty decent antagonist, but he’s more interesting when he’s trying to be his own definition of a hero, and far more compelling when you’re not sure if he’s out to save the world, rule the world, or both.
There isn’t room here to relate the entire Thunderbolts backstory, so I’ll only briefly recap the past five years. Originally the T-bolts were independent operators, but when Iron Man nationalized the superhero population in Civil War, the team was reorganized as a federal program for rehabilitating supervillains and putting them to good use doing superhero work. Norman Osborn (of Green Goblin fame) was put in charge, and although he perverted the team’s mandate of redemption, he was eventually promoted to Iron Man’s job. Osborn recreated the Avengers in his image, restaffing the team with several of his Thunderbolts in what is commonly called the “Dark” Avengers. Eventually, the real superheroes put a stop to his psychotic notions of national security, and the Dark Avengers were disbanded.2
In the aftermath, the Thunderbolts program was revived with Luke Cage at the helm. Along with longtime Thunderbolts like Mach-V and Songbird, Cage ran the team like a work release program, recruiting hardened criminals willing to do superhero jobs in exchange for preferential treatment. But this setup was a little to Suicide Squad to work in Thunderbolts, and was doomed to fail–the chain gang found an opportunity to escape and took it. At the same time, Norman Osborn came back with a second phony Avengers team, which was quickly defeated and incarcerated by the real ones. This new Dark Avengers team has been assigned to Cage as replacements for his missing prisoners, and their first mission is to hunt down the Thunderbolts. 3
That brings us to Dark Avengers #175, which starts a storyline written by Jeff Parker and illustrated by Kev Walker and Declan Shalvey. They’ve done a great job with T-bolts for several years, and by now they have my full confidence that they can take a new cast of obscure and unimpressive characters and come up with something fantastic. (I never gave a crap about the Ghost or Boomerang before they joined the Thunderbolts, but under Parker they’ve become two of my favorites.) Parker’s scripts are a perfect blend of the ribald humor we got from Fabian Niceiza and the grim earnestness of Warren Ellis’s classic run, along with his own flair for the bizarre and grotesque. Walker and Shalvey keep up with wherever the stories take them, from Satana’s harem of succubi to the inside the Juggernaut’s soul to the dungeons of Camelot.
Over the years people have wondered why I’m so crazy about Thunderbolts, but the simple fact is that the comic has had an almost uninterrupted streak of good-to-great creative teams, and it’s pretty hard to pick out a bad issue.4 As long as Dark Avengers remembers where it came from, I expect that it’ll continue that streak and be some damn good comics. I highly recommend giving it a try this month.
- They successfully conquered two thirds of the world, for a few hours, and I don’t think they get nearly enough credit for that. That’s more than Lex Luthor ever did. [↩]
- This is a very abbreviated summary of Thunderbolts #103-143, Dark Avengers #1-16, and Siege #1-4. [↩]
- For more details, see Thunderbolts #144-174 and New Avengers vol. 2 #18-23. [↩]
- Hell, even “Fightbolts” wasn’t bad, it just wasn’t a Thunderbolts story. [↩]
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I haven’t read DA#175 yet, so I’m unsure if there’s a new status quo. I’m hoping for no more government sanction – in my experience, T-bolts is best when it’s as unlike Suicide Squad as possible (“Warren Ellis’s classic run” being the only time I actually dropped the book).
Also, Ghost has always been awesome – it’s just that most of his appearances were from when no-one gave a crap about Iron Man. 😛
This is a good pitch. I’d heard of them and I did like the idea, but I’ll have to check it out.
Jim, I love your posts, and I wish you did a lot more of them. I truly do. And I’m going to go and catch me up on thunderbolts solely on the strength of this one.
Having said that… dear God, man. Go back and proofread this thing. Especially the second paragraph.
I totally agree with everything you’ve said here Jim. One of the reasons I have loved Parker’s run so far (and believe that the name change will not affect the story in any significant way) is that he’s managed to take the best parts of previous incarnations of the team and bring them together in one book.
Something that actually bugged me out of all proportion to the actual offence is that Mr Hyde, a dude who was previous to that vaguely eastern european, suddenly sporting a cockney accent.
It’s like when they gave Rhino a thick Brooklyn accent for no reason.
“I never gave a crap about the Ghost or Boomerang before they joined the Thunderbolts, but under Parker they’ve become two of my favorites.”
Huh. Parker’s poor handling of Boomerang compared to Danny Fingeroth in the criminally underrated Deadly Foes of Spider-Man mini series from 20 years ago is about the only negative I’ve got about his run on T-Bolts.
Parker writers Boomerang as a fairly generic guy, which is no way to write someone who decided to give up being a top-flight MLB pitcher to become a super villain. Seriously, the guy could be pulling down $20 million plus a year legally. 20 years ago, salaries weren’t as high and maybe you could see the switch based on personality and being an adrenaline junky. To write the character now and not deal with that background is to basically be ignoring him.
Parker’s still on board, the team concept is still there… just renaming it Dark Avengers is a marketing chimp idea. I’ve loved the book since the start (with the exception of Fight Club bolts), and I’m staying firmly on board. Parker has certainly made Ghost interesting, and Cage tolerable (I’m sick of Bendis making him and his idiot wife the centre of the universe… hell, I’m sick of Bendis), and I think he might be able to do the same with Bendis’ Dark Avengers Redux team.
I flipped through the book today and dropped it. Too much Luke Cage, too much of the continued effort to make Mel the ugliest character in the MU, too much Bendis stink on it.
I know he’s not involved, but Dark Avengers is his idea, and the concept that analogues of the Avengers should have a spider-character irritates me to no end. (Actually so does the Hulk character, considering he was part of the Avengers for less than a half-dozen issues; I am stunned they didn’t stick a Wolverine knockoff on there, though.)
Hopefully TBolts will be back at issue 200 and I’ll pick it up again. (I may also consider getting the time-lost versions, since I did like Troll a lot, but the title change and irritation factor will probably keep me saving my money instead.)
If we’d more often see such concise summaries of comic series, we’d probably not have people clamoring for a reset of the Marvel Universe in the way DC did it with theirs ( ugh to that… ). Well done.
Huh. So they kept making the book after Busiek left? Probably a mistake, but I guess it takes all sorts. 🙂
(Mostly kidding, but DAMN, does everyone else’s run pale in comparison to Busiek’s. The first twenty-five issues of that comic are absolutely some of the best storytelling imaginable, and really do make you feel like you don’t know what’s coming from one issue to the next. The shocks are genuinely shocking, while still coming out of the characterization, and he even rewarded you for picking up the Thunderbolt guest appearances in other books.)
Thunderbolts: If Seavey doesn’t get it, you know it’s gotta be good.
“and Henry Peter Gyrich abandoned his.”
…any instance of Gyrich having principles is an instance of a writer who has no idea who Gyrich is. The man is a paranoid out-of-control menace.
@John Seavy
The first 12 issues of Busiek’s Thunderbolts constitute one of Marvel’s all-time classics. After that though, I’d got with Nicieza’s post-#50 (when Busiek’s plots run out even though he stopped scripting more than a year earlier), as I considered he rehabilitation of Helmu Zemo one of the more remarkable feats in superhero writing.
Update! (Because I know you all care, secretly, deep inside!)
…It’s Suicide Squad featuring too much Luke Cage and a new villan roster that’s 100% uninteresting amoral psychopath. It gets one more chance, then I’m dropping the book for the second time evar.
@Evil Midnight Lurker: No, no he isn’t. He’s an unlikable pompous arrogant jerk, but deep down he love his country and would do anything for it. He’s just the “Regulation” side of the Civil War taken a few steps past Tony. Ok, more than a few.
@Pantsless Pete
There are hundreds of thousands of Russians and Russo-Americans in Brooklyn alone. Brighton Beach is full of former Soviet Bloc citizens, not to stomp on your comment too hard.