Random Retrospective #2 – DC/Marvel: All Access #4

Hey, remember the days back in the mid to late 90s when DC and Marvel were still friends and willing to do some cross-company crossovers? There was the Silver Surfer/Green Lantern one-shot and I think another around the same time before the big event of DC VS MARVEL . . . or MARVEL VS DC, whichever way round you want to put it . . . which appeared in 1995.

That was successful enough that, inevitably, there was a sequel, DC/MARVEL: ALL ACCESS and it’s the fourth and final issue of that series that crops up in my Random Retrospective this week.

Access has been trying to find out which of the heroes or villains from the respective DC and Marvel universes have been trying to bring back the Amalgam Universe, the interim state that DC VS MARVEL created temporarily. All evidence points to Dr Strange (who insists he’s innocent) and when Access takes the JLA to tackle Strange, he’s protected by the X-Men . . . which of course leads to a big fight.

A nice touch is Wonder Woman and Storm remembering their previous encounter in DC VS MARVEL amidst all the other battles going on that take up a good portion of the book until it’s revealed that, though he was unaware of it, Dr Strange was hiding the series villain all along:

The magician who tried to make the Amalgam universe permanent is up to his old tricks once more, trying to return what for him is the real world. He recreates Amazon from Wonder Woman and Storm but as none of the original pairings are are around, he makes the best of what he has:

Dr Strange still exists within Strangefate and whisks Access to safety, bringing him to some astral plane where Access is able to rescue him and allow him to return and confront Strangefate. The amalgamations are undone and Dr Strangefate is dealt with in a humane manner:

The globe is given to Access to look after, the heroes shakes hands and return to their respective universes and promptly forget about each other.

It was good fun on the whole, with Access appearing once more in UNLIMITED ACCESS before disappearing into the gap between the two publishers lawyers, I guess. I’m not aware of any other collaboration between DC and Marvel following this with the exception of JLA/Avengers that was something of a long time dream project for all involved. Access cropped up as a cameo in an issue of GREEN LANTERN that was being written by Ron Marz (the co-writer on DC VS MARVEL and sole writer of DC/MARVEL: ALL ACCESS) but apart from that, he has disappeared.

Random Retrospective #1 – Reborn #4

Totally ripping off the idea from regular commenter Calvin Pitt over at Reporting on Marvels and Legends, I aim to have a weekly look back at a randomly selected issue/trade/whatever in my collection and REBORN #4 kicks things off.

I’ve never been a massive fan of Mark Millar but think I saw a preview for this series in, appropriately enough, PREVIEWS and the premise (everyone who dies goes to a magical/pseudo fantasy world where many of the people have powers) plus the art by Greg Capullo enticed me.

By issue 4 of the 6 issue mini-series, Bonnie is on a quest to find her husband and she and her father have been captured by Il Mago, a lieutenant of the series’ big bad guy, Golgotha. Despite the sword and sorcery overtones, there are still guns and, this being Millar, her escape attempt is full of bullets and blood:

The attempt doesn’t work and Bonnie and her father end up waiting to be sacrificed on Black Wish Mountain where a human sacrifice grants a wish, the only condition being that you can only wish for something bad.

Before Il Mago and his troops kill both Bonnie and her father, he and all his troops are turned to ice by the newly arrived General Frosty who isn’t rescuing Bonnie, but rather wants to kill her himself because of what she had done to him in the real world:

If this version of an afterlife is real, I’m screwed as I’ve had all my cats neutered.

Before he can kill her, Bonnie turns the tables and makes a bad wish, wishing that Frosty and his troops were all dead. I can only hope that Bonnie made some sort of sacrifice in a previous issue because otherwise Millar is bending his own rules here as without that sacrifice, Bonnie’s wish shouldn’t have worked.

With Frost and his troops dead, she and her father continue on their quest to find her husband and overthrow Golgotha at the same time.

My memories of REBORN are mostly positive and I’m sure there was talk of a sequel series but, as far as I know, nothing ever came of that. It was collected, and if you find yourself with some spare cash, you could do worse than picking this up.