Shatterstar in X-Factor

Apr 16, 2010 10:49

This is for comic book fans and John Barrowman fans.  Last year Marvel revived a superhero who hadn't been seen in a decade with a new look.  (Which was long overdue, as he'd been a teenager the last time anyone saw him.)  It wasn't long before I and other fans began noticing that as part of his new look he had John Barrowman's onstage body language.  We heard that the writer, Peter David, spoke to JB at a con before bringing Shatterstar back. Later the writer said in an interview that he was using Captain Jack's personality as a template.

The superhero, Shatterstar, had been part of an implied homosexual relationship in the 90s.  At that time Marvel's policy was to lay a lot of groundwork before "outing" a gay character so that no one could claim the character was "just a token gay stereotype", but it also meant that if the title changed writers before the "outing" and the new writer didn't want to  write gays some characters got stuck in the closet for years.  This is what happened to Shatterstar and his boyfriend Rictor. Peter David immediately brought Shatterstar out with an on-panel kiss with his boyfriend.

This called for a picspam!  And a John Barrowman vidspam, which I posted earlier.

BACKGROUND

There's two things you need to understand about Marvel Comics before we get started.

1) Comics are for boys.

2) Boys hate soap operas.

THEREFORE any resemblance you see between the story I'm about to tell and a soap opera is strictly in your head, I don't know where you people get such crazy ideas. ;)

Let's meet our cast, shall we?

First we have Julio Esteban Richter (code name "Rictor" -- spelling is not his strong suit). Born into a family of Mexican gun-runners, "Ric" saw his mutation as his ticket out of a life of crime in the ghetto. He had the ability to generate earthquakes and to feel in touch with the earth itself.



Then there's Shatterstar. A genetically-engineered slave from another dimension, he was bred for the short, violent life of a gladiator to entertain the jaded masses back home. He escaped to Earth and was adopted by that haven for super-powered misfit teens, Xavier's Academy. He's highly agile, moderately super-strong, and a skilled warrior. (The inset pics are of him as a teenager with atrocious fashion sense and an even worse artist. The 90s -- what were peoplel thinking?)



But 'Star isn't the only escaped gladiator-slave Xavier's Academy has taken in. Years before another slave named Longshot made it to Earth and joined the X-men. Genetic testing revealed that Longshot is probably 'Star's sperm-daddy, and there appear to be some human genes in his makeup as well, but all attempts to pin down his ancestry any further have been inconclusive. As for the two former slaves, this news doesn't seem to have effected them at all yet. Both gladiators arrived on Earth completely clueless about any relationship that did not take place in the combat arena and required extensive socialization.



As student-superheroes at Xavier's academy, Ric and 'Star bonded over their love of TV and their mutual social cluelessness. Ric began to "teach" 'Star about American culture, in the manner of the one-eyed man leading the blind. Sometime after that they began a romantic relationship which was heavily subtexted although they didn't discuss it in public. But Ric has a bad habit of not talking about his feelings and walking away when he's not happy. He's walked out on 'Star twice. Both times 'Star fell to pieces, the second time he even went back to his homeworld.  There's a website devoted to their early relationship if you want to subject yourself to the awful 90s artwork.

Now on to the present and X-Factor.  (This has a fair amount of Ric before 'Star shows up because he's been in the book four years longer, but it's worth the wait.)

X-Factor #1 begins with Ric about to jump off a roof and kill himself. He and over 90% of the world's mutants lost their powers in an unexplained (to the public) event called the Decimation, and he feels like his life is over.



Former schoolmate Jamie Madrox (code name "the Mutliple Man") climbs up and offers him a job instead. Jamie used to run an all-mutant government team; but he quit, took his people with him, and formed a private detective agency.



Jamie has the power to create duplicates of himself ("dupes") on impact. Recently Jamie's dupes have begun to manifest repressed aspects of his personality, giving him an unusual form of Mutiple Personality Disorder.



Ric is a good detective, but he's too depressed to notice that fact. He's always sad and lonely and oh so pretty, which is noticed by Pietro



and Jamie



although the latter has yet to come out of the closet even to himself.



Pietro has been a mainstay of various government superhero teams for years, including Jamie's old team. Publicly he's considered to be a great hero. Privately he's considered to be unstable. Some people think he's less trustworthy than his father, which is saying something since his father is one of the two biggest supervillains on Earth. Pietro is feeling bad about having accidently caused the Decimation by playing head games with his immensely powerful and seriously mentally unstable sister. (Remember, this is not a soap opera.)



However, he's not feeling bad enough to actually admit this fact in public, because doing so would probably get him killed by millions of irate ex-mutants.





Unfortunately Pietro's power-restoration scheme goes about as well as all his other schemes (i.e. utter disaster), leaving Ric more depressed than ever. He elicits pity sex from his childhood sweetheart...



...who then runs out on him, leaving Ric more depressed. (Remember, this is not a soap opera.)

Still, Ric is a good investigator, if a trifle undiplomatic.



He's always willing to help the authorities.



Ric's team-mate Guido tries to get Ric to open while they're looking for Jamie, who went MIA after his unstable genes caused the death of his and his girlfriend Terry's infant son.





They don't find Jamie, instead they find Shatterstar, albeit a possessed and homicidal Shatterstar taken over by one of the bad guys who Jamie, unbeknownst to his team, has been hijacked into the future to fight (long story).



Even in the middle of a battle, Ric can't help but admire his former lover.







Guido, who hasn't met Shatterstar, is confused by Ric's protectiveness towards their attacker.



His confusion grows after Shatterstar suddenly collapses.





Poor Guido feels like he fell down the proverbial rabbit hole.

















Back home, they find out that their team is in trouble and Ric finds out that Star is a lot less anti-social than he used to be.



And Star finds the guy who possessed him.



The bad guy gets ganged up on, Jamie the lost time traveler is somehow (nobody's sure how just yet) returned to the present, and our couple enjoy a nice on-cover cuddle.



Back in New York, Shatterstar settles into the life of a detective's muscle, which involves waiting around for cases to show up



and escorting clients, in this case Franklin and Valeria Richards, the children of the Fantastic Four's Reed and Sue Richards. Their mother is missing and their father is uncharacteristically unconcerned. He's acting weird and abrasive, or in the case of Reed Richards, even more weird and abrasive than usual.





It also means distracting the suspects while the detectives snoop, which leads to Guido and Shatterstar tag-teaming the Thing.











But Guido isn't used to having another male muscle around, especially not one who's so skillful. (Although he doesn't have a problem with the team's female muscle.)



Back at the office, Longshot, who also recently joined the team, takes a psychic reading off a clue which points them to Latveria, the home of the Fantastic Four's nemesis, Doctor Doom. Shatterstar offers to be the village bicycle.





But the Thing shows up looking for a rematch.



Thanks to Ben's interference, Guido gets left behind, and Ben and Monet St. Croix tumble through the teleport gate. Monet, the team's female muscle, is basically a black, telepathic Supergirl with an ATTITUDE. She's supposed to be working on a seperate case. She ain't happy about being dragged along; and when Monet ain't happy, ain't nobody happy.





The team's detectives find and rescue the real Reed Richards, and discover that the doppleganger is an alternate-universe Reed possessed by an alternate-universe Doom. (Things like this happen to the Fantastic Four about every other Tuesday.)





It may be inadvisable but it sure is fun,





and not just for the good guys.



Our heroes storm the castle and find



their youngest, strangest, and deadliest team-mate Layla Millar, lost time-traveling into the future almost a year ago, now at least five years older.



Layla's abilities include a limited knowledge of the future. (The colorist messed up here and gave Layla Monet's darker coloring.)



Layla distracts 'Star



just as faux-Reed was trying to come through the portal. It closes and decapitates him, while stranding 'Star and Layla in Latveria long enough for Doom to finish her portrait.



After they return, our crew head over to San Francisco Bay for the Big Mutant Reunion. It's just like your family or class reunion, only with colorful costumes, lost loves, snarky Evil Overlords, bickering couples, chldren playng ball on the lawn, angry giants, and not enough alcohol. Then again, maybe it is just like your reunion.... Jamie drinks beer and argues politics, Guido roughhouses with the kids, Monet and her old girlfriends hook Longshot up with his ex-wife, and Ric and 'Star meet people. (Remember, this is not a soap opera.)









And that's it so far, although the writer has mentioned that Ric and 'Star get a lot of play this year dealing with their relationship going public, figuring out the rules they want for that relationship, the hinted-at return of an old flame, and such day-to-day problems as a plot to kill all the world's mutants and an attempt to use Ric to revive Pietro's mutant power-restoration scheme. The two things the writer promised on http://www.afterelton.com won't happen are Ric or 'Star dying or breaking up. Those are the cheap, easy options which he refuses to take (mainly because everyone expects him to and he refuses to be predictable). The stories with Shatterstar in them have been collected in X-Factor: Time and a Half, X-Factor: Overtime, and X- Factor: The Invisible Woman Has Vanished. The first two volumes are the climax of a four-year story arc involving time travel, mind control, cross-overs, and double crosses; they can get a bit convoluted. The third volume was designed as a starting point for new readers; no previous knowledge is necessary.

Above all, remember THIS IS NOT A SOAP OPERA.

PS: Yesterday JB tweated that he's working with Stan Lee on something for Marvel. Wonder what that's about?

Part 2

pics, comics

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