Infinity volume 2


By Jonathan Hickman, Jim Cheung, Jerome Opeña, Dustin Weaver, Leinil Francis Yu, Mike Deodato Jr., Mark Morales, John Livesay, David Meikis, Gerry Alanguilan & various (Marvel/Panini UK)
ISBN: 978-1-84653-587-1

My reviews are always far too long (and long-winded) so go re-read the one for Infinity volume 1 before starting here…

Infinity volume 2, written throughout by Jonathan Hickman, collects the final three issues of the eponymous 6-part miniseries and the attendant interlocking appearances of the World’s Mightiest Super-Heroes from The Avengers (volume 5 #21-23) and New Avengers (#11-12) which first saw print between December 2013 and January 2014.

Big long story short: Whilst most of the Avengers are off-planet, fighting beside former alien enemies against a massive armada of primal ancient entities determined to wipe out every Earth in the multiverse, the death-loving Titan Thanos has invaded their homeworld, destructively seeking his lost son…

The chronicle of cosmic calamity recommences here – after a copious cast-list and succinct recap – with Infinity #4 (illustrated by Jerome Opeña and Dustin Weaver), as ‘The Last Lesson’ sees Captain America and Shi’ar emperor Gladiator begin their desperate ploy to liberate the Kree warriors whose guiding Supreme Intelligence has capitulated to the seemingly unbeatable Builders.

On Earth, ‘Thane’, son of Thanos, obliviously toils as a healer in the hidden Inhumans colony of Orollan, whilst in New York the struggle between Black Bolt and Thanos has caused the Inhumans’ floating city Attilan to crash onto the metropolis below. But even though the Titan is ultimately victorious ‘The Change’ provoked by the explosion of the meta-empowering Terrigen Bomb has shifted the balance of power in favour of nigh-conquered humanity. It has also transformed benevolent Thane into the very antithesis of his former self…

And on conquered Hala, Thor savagely delivers the embattled alliance’s response to the Builders’ demands: recruiting the defeated Kree back into the fold with ‘A Prayer’…

‘Emancipation’ begins in Avengers #21 (with art by Leinil Francis Yu & Gerry Alanguilan) as ‘The Promise of the Universe’ finds the newest Avenger Ex Nihilo in attendance of the still comatose Captain Universe as ‘The Second Wave’ sees a host of subdued worlds throw off the Builders’ yoke.

It is not enough and the apparently infinite resources and materiel of the invaders soon regains them the upper hand. With no other choice, the flagging allies reluctantly turn to Negative Zone overlord Annihilus who unleashes a horde of monster bugs in a voracious Annihilation Wave. It is still not enough…

In ‘The Promise Fulfilled’, when Captain Universe at last revives, the “Mother of Creation” goes directly to the Builder leaders, demanding an explanation and cessation, but her ancient children are determined to end all iterations of Earths and disavow her. As she reluctantly kills them, the last one orders all the incomprehensible trillions in their fleet to carry on and “destroy everything”…

New Avengers #11(‘Builders’ with art by Mike Deodato Jr.) finds Wakanda wavering under intensified assaults from Thanos’ Cull Obsidian, whilst Black Panther T’Challa is whisked off-planet with the rest of the clandestine Illuminati cabal by a Builder Aleph unit to observe at first hand the destruction of ‘All These Worlds’. The trip actually takes them to a different reality…

The proposed lesson in futility fails, but by appealing to the sublime rationality of their “guests” the abductors expose Dr. Strange‘s hidden parasitic controller before revealing that Earth is the axis point causing the entire multiverse to spiral towards utter extinction. Surely rational beings can accept the necessity of surgically excising a threat to all life…

Meanwhile on their Earth, Black Panther Princess Regent Shuri has been forced to retreat, leaving an arsenal of world-destroying bombs in Thanos’ hands…

Infinity #5 exposes the ‘Left Hand of Death’ (Jerome Opeña & Weaver art) as ‘Of Suns and Storms’ follows the resurgent Avengers liberating conquered worlds until word arrives that Earth has fallen to Thanos, after which ‘This Ebony Now’ switches focus to Orollan where Thane has become an uncontrollable death ray generator.

Horrified, the former healer is easily swayed by treacherous Ebony Maw who offers containment and control in return for future favours…

When Thanos is informed that his son has been located he rushes off to personally dispatch the last humiliating stain on his record, commanding his Black Order to ready the bombs to obliterate Earth even as in space the gratefully victorious Alien Alliance offers their remaining ships to the Avengers to liberate their own world ‘In the Shadows of The Giants’…

‘To the Earth…’ (Avengers #22, by Yu & Alanguilan) presages that ‘Homecoming’ as the rescue fleet attacks Thanos’ home on Titan, after which ‘Plans and Intentions’ lead to an attack on the orbital station The Peak before moving homeward with ‘A Greater Purpose’…

Avengers #23 takes up the tale ‘…To the Very End’ (Yu & Alanguilan) as, after ‘A Word from the Heavens’ with Captain America, Iron Man spearheads a mission in Wakanda to shut down the doomsday bombs, whilst the battle for The Peak goes badly until unconventional assistance arrives in ‘Homecoming’, after which Infinity #6 (Opeña & Weaver) draws the conflict to a stunning close as the scattered Terran heroes link up to confront the ‘Tyrant’ and forcibly take back the world.

However Thanos’ final fall is engineered by his most hated enemy before the ‘Epilogue’ details how the bloody, battered and unbowed Avengers with the aid of their grateful alien Allies begin a period of reconstruction and preparation for whatever comes next.

New Avengers #12 (Deodato Jr.) brings the epic to close as ‘Endgame’ concentrates on the futures of the individual Illuminati and the planet they arrogantly shepherd.

As their extra-dimensional captive oracle Black Swan is swift to point out, since the smartest minds on Earth were all but useless in predicting, forestalling or coping with mere Builders, what happens when the being and forces they fear come looking for humanity?

A bombastic, big budget blockbuster meant to shock and awe (even if not always make sense), this is comics as sheer spectacle and works exceedingly well as such, but might intimidate or confuse those with a less than passionate affinity for costumes and carnage.

This closing chronicle also offers a gallery of 28 stunning covers-and-variants by Adam Kubert, Deodato Jr., Laura Martin, Yu, In-Hyuk Lee, Ryan Stegman, Skottie Young, Opeña, Sara Pichelli, Terry & Rachel Dodson, Leonel Castellani, and Daniel Acuña plus more digitally added-content (trailers, character bios, creator video commentaries, behind-the-scenes features etc.) for consumers able to access the embedded AR icons’ with the Marvel Comics app for iPhone®, iPad®, iPad Touch® & Android devices.
™ & © 2013 and 2014 Marvel & Subs. Licensed by Marvel Characters B.V. through Panini S.p.A. All rights reserved. A British Edition published by Panini Publishing, a division of Panini UK, Ltd.