| VENGEANCE UNBOUND |
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DEADPOOL # 26 SYNOPSIS The Penance Stare causes Deadpool to relive the "highlight reel" of his life, including when he first became a mercenary, when he was diagnosed with cancer, and when he signed up for the Weapon X project. He wakes up screaming and immediately punches Blaze in the face. Blaze tells him that they're 80 miles away from Las Vegas, and that he'll need time to fix his motorcycle. After he finishes, Deadpool asks Blaze if he came after him to kill him. Johnny explains that it wasn't him that came after him, it was the Ghost Rider that wanted him to see something important; if he'd wanted Deadpool dead, he'd be dead. Deadpool asks Blaze if he thinks he deserves to die. Johnny answers "yes", to which Deadpool replies "Thanks, man". ANNOTATIONS Ghost Rider appears next in Shadowland # 2. REVIEW As you may remember, I recently reviewed an issue of Deadpool Team-Up that ranked as one of the worst comics I'd ever read. That comic failed because it wanted to be a comedy without actually being funny, which just further illustrated to me why Deadpool is a character I really could care less about. It was with severe trepidation that I picked up this issue for another Ghost Rider appearance, but I was pleasantly surprised. Daniel Way, who wrote his fair share of bad Ghost Rider stories a few years ago, actually turned in a pretty good comic here. The secret...? He actually took the characters seriously. Deadpool is a character that I suppose can work as strictly comedy, but the approach to the character in this issue is one that I find infinitely more interesting. Way treats him as an actual character instead of a walking cartoon. The interaction between Deadpool and Ghost Rider is really good, too. I wasn't much of a fan of Way's run on the Ghost Rider series, but I never really had a problem with how he wrote Blaze himself. He had a fair handle on the character, and here he makes a good contrast to Deadpool. The most interesting part of the story, though, is the Penance Stare sequence that shows how Deadpool became the man he is today. The gives a very downbeat ending to what I assume is usually a fairly light-hearted series. The artwork is by Carlo Barberi, who has a style that's very reminiscent of Humberto Ramos without so much exaggeration. He does a good Ghost Rider, but his action sequences a little hard to follow (see the sequence with the bike wreck, which took me a few looks to understand what was supposed to be happening). So, my opinion on Deadpool has improved somewhat since that Team-Up issue. I won't be buying any more of his comics, but at least I didn't regret buying this one. Perfectly decent comic. Grade: B-
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Deadpool
# 26 Title: "Sinner-Sinner, Chicken Dinner"
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