Fantastic Four - Antithesis is the final published work of the late great Neal Adams. I am proud to be able to have and hold so much great work by an outstanding and important artist in my collection. The story was written by Mark Waid.
MASSIVE SPOILERS AHEAD SO TREAD WITH CARE.
The creative team of Waid and Adams are joined by inker Mark Farmer who does a remarkable job taming the pencils and giving them a nifty polish. The story begins with the Fab 4 battling Annihilus yet again. Once they've mopped him up and sent him scuttling back into the Negative Zone, one of Reed's many machines issues a warning about an object entering Earth's atmosphere and posing a threat, so the team combine their powers ingeniously and deflect it. Turns out it was the Silver Surfer all along. (Not like the cover wasn't a tip-off.)
A wounded Surfer is in need of fixing and warns that Galactus is no more, having been defeated by a powerful enemy called Antithesis who emerged from the Negative Zone and absorbed the might of Galactus making him merely Galan, the mortal man he once was, again before tossing him into the Negative Zone. The FF race to save him, and of course have to battle Annihilus yet again and end up on the mighty ship of Galactus.
Galen arranges to give the Fantastic Four the Power Cosmic which they use to confront the forces of Antithesis and the monster himself. They succeed in defeating him and send him packing into the Negative Zone, hopefully returning the power to Galen so he can become Galactus once again. But it turns out Reed ends up the power cosmic (didn't see that coming) and world eating has a whole new name.
Mister Fantastic / Galactus plans to starve himself and end the threat for all time. But Sue ain't having it and she and the team along with the Surfer and Galen go to Whisper Hill to enlist the aid of Agatha Harkness. They lure the Reed/Galactus hybrid to them and then reminds him of his children. This proves to be the right move and he surrenders the power back to Galen, and the Surfer and the new improved Galactus head back into the cosmos. The improvement is a bit of compassion for the people of the worlds he encounters.
SPOILERS HAVE COMPLETED.
Once again, the Fab 4 have saved the day with a combination of bravery, smarts, and the proper application of superpowers. It's just what you want in a Fantastic Four yarn. The artwork is lush, and the storytelling works almost all the time. This final published comic story produced by Neal Adams is a worthy contribution to his legacy.
We are also treated to the first issue of the Fantastic Four by Waid and artists Mike Wieringo and Karl Kesel. This was the last time I paid regular attention to the team, and I enjoyed the late Wieringo's work very much.
All in a dandy little package and a great way to enjoy the work of a master. Look out for more than a few more Neal Adams posts as the year rumbles along.
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I think I'll track down that collected edition, RJ. Looks good.
ReplyDeleteJust bought it via eBay, as well as FF Omnibus Vol 4.
ReplyDeleteGlad to be of service. That's a stunning cover on that FF Omnibus volume. Art Adams I think?
DeleteNot sure, RJ, but I guess it is if you say so. Normally I'd have gone for the Kirby cover variant, but my Volume 3 was also a Ross cover as that was the only one I could find. That means that my first and second volumes have Kirby covers and my third and fourth have Ross covers, so that's a nice balance. My Doctor Strange Omnibus has a Ross cover as I preferred it to the Ditko illustrated one.
DeleteOmnibus arrived today, RJ, and the cover is by Arthur Adams, not Alex Ross. Still a great cover though, and I got it for an absolute beezer of a price. Pristine condition too. Still waiting for the Adams' FF book, maybe that'll arrive tomorrow.
DeleteThat was a great piece of art. Enjoy.
DeleteReceived my Antithesis book on Thursday and thought the story was okay, but nothing brilliant. What struck me was just how distorted/contorted Adam's facial expressions of the characters often seem to be, as though everyone's angry and shouting at one another, or trying to project their voice to the back of a theatre. Grimacing, frowning, glowering, gurning, etc., it all gets a bit much from panel-to-panel. I think I'd have preferred to see John Buscema illustrate this, had he been alive. Having said all that, still an entertaining enough story though.
DeleteI was glad that one Adam's last strips was such a good one. Farmers inks certainly added to this.
ReplyDeleteFarmer makes a big difference in his ability to smooth out the art.
DeleteI was not buying comics during this period, but I have to say the Waid/Adams team sounds like a winner.
ReplyDeleteTwo great talents from two different eras.
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