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M**L
Great condition
I was worried to buy such an expensive book. One that I had to pay shipping for too. But it was packaged in a protective bag, in a cardboard box with styrofoam peanuts. I wish all my orders were handled with such care. The book is in perfect condition.
T**Y
From New Mutants to a team that follows a diffrent path.
X-Force Under The Gun has the first 15 issues of the team, as well as guest appearances from Kane the second Weapon X, to DeadPool as well as people from Cable's past who hold a grudge against him, my brother is still a fan to the original series, and it does tie in to the X-cutioner's song.
N**R
Excellent!
To relive some of the greatest stories out of the x-men universe! Some awesome characters came out of these stories. Deadpool gets his push. Domino is such a cool character sharing the same abilities as Long Shot. I absolutely loved this book.
T**R
Solid
Gotta love Cable
W**S
Great Rob Leifeld book
Great Rob Leifeld book
B**Y
Five Stars
You want the pure living imbodiment of '90's comics? Saddle up with the Rob & ride with X-Force.
C**Y
Lol, Liefeld
I bought this purely to accompany my other X titles. The plots are weak and the art.... well, it is Rob Liefeld so it is not so great. From his inability to draw wrists, ankles and his ability to draw tiny feet and heads on large people, excessive lines where they don't belong, and bizarre anatomy all around. I don't know how he become such a popular artist in the 90s. Other than that, this book is a humorous curiosity of the 90s. Some would say the decline of the X books after Chris Claremont was ousted as writer can be clearly seen here. Marvel was just trying to sell stuff and didn't care about the quality anymore.
A**R
Great read
Great read
F**S
Arte interessante. Escrita horrorosa.
X-Force de Leinfeld tem o que se espera. A arte é excessiva, muitas vezes mal feita. Mas tem um certo charme nas cores intensas, na formatação criativa dos quadros e algumas páginas duplas. Já o roteiro e os diálogos são atrozes. Parece que foi escrito por um garoto de 12 anos para leitores de 8. Um fiapo de enredo com conversas tipo "Eu sou fortão. Não, sou eu que sou fortão" repetidos até a exaustão. Uma história péssima que dá para curtir focando no visual.
G**O
If you enjoyed these stories and art back when they were released ...
If you enjoyed these stories and art back when they were released then you will not be disappointed. As much flack as Rob gets his energy on the pages is still among the most dynamic in comics ever. He delivers action art for an action comic and those who expected more static art for the sake of anatomical accuracy go read Rex Morgan ;) Still I can't say this book will change the minds of any non fans (haters) of Liefeld. It does make a good archive of that era in comics for completist though.
T**X
A Handsome Collection, But An Acquired Taste
There have been quite a few Epic Collections of nineties material so far, but none that capture the greatest excesses of the decade like this, the first Epic volume of X-Force. Sadly, this also makes it the first Epic where I have really struggled to find much to enjoy. Like previous books in the line, though, it's a thick and nicely complete collection, gathering material from 1991 and 1992 including the first 15 issues of the series, the first annual, and crossover issues of Spider-Man and Wolverine.X-Force was the successor to New Mutants, as gun-toting mystery man Cable replaced that team of teenage mutants with a rough, tough anti-terrorist strike force. In these first stories, they go up against enemies such as the Mutant Liberation Front (led by Cable's archnemesis Stryfe), the newest incarnation of the Brotherhood of Evil Mutants, Juggernaut and Black Tom, crime lord Tolliver and merc with the mouth Deadpool, amongst others.With art and plotting by Rob Liefeld and scripting by Fabian Nicieza, it is certainly energetic stuff, although the length of the collection exposes how repetitive the material is. There are only so many standoffs between weapon-toting superhumans with exaggerated physiques growling at each other between gritted teeth that you can read before it all becomes a bit tiresome. There are longer-running subplots (involving the mystery of Cable's past and a secretive group of immortal mutants), but this one is probably best read in small chunks over a long period of time.While I may be down on the material, the collection itself is, as usual, very well presented. As well as the many actual issues in the book, there is a Marvel Age article on the launch of the series, further related articles from Marvel: 1991 - The Year in Review, trading card art featuring the team (including the five cards that were randomly packed with the first issue), and covers from the various trades that have previously collected some of the stories here. Certainly for existing X-Force fans (and there are many; several of my friends have very fond memories of the series), this is a well-presented trade for the bookshelf; the stories here just weren't for me.
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