Writer: Brian K. Vaughan
Artist: Eduardo Risso
Colorist: Dean White
Letterer: VC's Joe Caramagna
Also seen at Major Spoilers.com.
So often the Wolverine one-shots are a desperate attempt to
continue the never ending information drop of Wolverine’s shady past. How did
he become Weapon-X, did he have a relationship with Marilyn Munroe, did he date
your mother? Rarely does any writer simply stop, and decide to tell a decent
unimportant Wolverine story.
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Thankfully in this world, we have Brian K. Vaughan.
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From the start, I’ll tell you, I have a massive fanboy-crush
on Brian, and pretty much everything he puts his hands on (except anything to
do with Lost). But, it isn’t as if I’m the only one. The man’s a freakin’
genius, and he could tell a story about a rubber ducks desire to be more loved!
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Within a few pages, Logan opening issue surrenders to every writer’s
favorite cliché, the flashback. I won’t begrudge Vaughan this, considering how
effortlessly he manages it. Logan – the Canadian soldier in the First Parachute
Battalion – finds himself locked up in a Japanese POW cell with an American
soldier.
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Naturally, this is not a state of affairs that lasts for
long, and within no time, we’ve got the pair on the outside trudging through
snowy landscapes, decked out in Japanese
uniforms that surely wouldn’t fool anyone for the time it would take to ask “Hey,
who are you!?�
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Logan seems to be somewhat shy at the outset; hiding his
abilities from his new comrade in arms. One would almost imagine him being
ashamed of being a mutant, if not for the brash and somewhat homicidal
Wolverine that most of us are used too. But I think that this is Vaughan’s
plan, to take us back to a point in Wolverine’s life where the decades of death
and mayhem hadn’t completely robbed his soul of humanity.
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The pair soon encounters a young Japanese woman who is at
first scared of those she meets, threatened with death by the American, who is
then chased away by Logan who apparently doesn’t want to harm her. Â
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It isn’t long before Mysterious-Japanese-Girl-Number-345 is
towing Logan back to her shelter for some home cooked food, to be followed by
some home cooked lovin’.
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It is, in and of itself, not entirely unreasonable, thanks
mainly due to the way that Vaughan has depicted his young female seductress. At
a time of war where all the men have gone, fighting is rampant, and her own father
was KIA as a Kamikaze, demanding the company of a man is not the stupidest
thing to foresee happening.
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So it’s all good and well, right? Here’s where I spoil it
for you, so if you actually don’t want to know, hit your back button now! But
for those of you who come here to save you buying the comics take one guess
where Logan has ended up!
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Oh you better believe it, Logan, aka, Wolverine has once
again been placed in to a landmark historical location; Hiroshima.
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I’m pretty much a fan of Logan no matter how he is drawn,
and this is no exception. However his American compatriot – who is pretty much
the third and only character in this book, not including a few hapless Japanese
guards who may as well have been wearing red shirts – seems to have been drawn
with intention of looking deranged.
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Apart from that, I was really happy with this book. As I
said, I’m a bit of a Wolverine fan and it is good to see him in a book where
the fate of the world or his sanity isn’t on the table. Another 4 out of 5 for
me, which seems to be a trend, I know, but I don’t like reading crap, so I
don’t!
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Finally, and as nothing more than a blatant authors note, I
want to hear from all of you. I review at several locations, but here is the
only place where I can get picked on by you, the reader. So let me have it! And
for the grammar and spelling Nazis, leave me alone; I’m tired!
Story: 5 - Excellent
Art: 4 - Very Good