Showing posts with label Sam Humphries. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sam Humphries. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 17, 2022

POLL: Your Favorite and Least Favorite Writers are...

FAVORITE WRITERS:


#1. Rick Remender (42%): Remender’s take on Betsy Braddock in his fan-favorite and critically acclaimed run on Uncanny X-Force remains iconic and revered. Uncanny X-Force gave us all: strong characterization, agency, tragedy and a well-rounded arc that pushed Betsy so far out of her comfort zone and into top-tier status, leading to a new renaissance for the character.

#2. Chris Claremont (14%): While Claremont’s third run on Uncanny X-Men was not as well received as his first (and not as bad as his second), there were some qualities to his carefree take on Betsy. Despite some issues with pacing and dialogue, one can’t deny that Claremont knows who Betsy Braddock is at her core. The least said about New Exiles, the better.

#3. Cullen Bunn (11%): An underappreciated gem, Bunn’s portrayal of Betsy Braddock in Uncanny X-Men feels in many ways the spiritual successor to Remender’s. Bunn’s complex and conflicting interpretation revealed a deep respect for the character and one of the few standouts during a hard time for the X-Men publishing line.

LEAST FAVORITE WRITERS:


#1. Tini Howard (48%): Wasted potential is what best defines Tini Howard’s Betsy Braddock. Fans hoped that Betsy adopting the Captain Britain mantle would take the character to the next level. Instead, Betsy was portrayed as a self-doubting, ineffective leader who barely used her powers other than swinging her sword around. Everything we loved about Betsy is gone. Her personality, her charm, her creative use of powers, her attitude, her edginess. All we have left is a shadow of her former self. Betsy is a far cry from what she used to be. And for the worse. The fact that Tini’s Otherworld epic is taking too long to conclude – 3 years and counting – while keeping Betsy irrelevant and isolated from the main Krakoan/X-Men action also left a sour taste in fans’ mouths.

#2. Leah Williams (16%): While Age of X-Man: X-Tremists was pretty much inoffensive and forgettable, Wlliams’ take on Betsy Braddock comes from her utter misunderstanding of the character. Williams views Betsy as a self-loathing woman obsessed with body modification who hated her own body. This was enough for fans to hope she never writes Betsy again.

#3. Sam Humphries (12%): After Remender’s run, the bar was set too high. While Humphries was given a hard task, his take on Betsy failed to impress fans to say the least. An adult woman living through her teen angst phase – with burglary, drinking and polyamorous relationships – was not what fans were expecting.

Wednesday, January 29, 2014

Uncanny X-Force #17 Spoilers


Spoilers: Hope stabs Bishop with the psimitar, to the dismay of Cable and the joy of Stryfe. Spiral teleports all members of both X-Forces aboard an airship to the abandoned bunker. Colossus and Puck attack Stryfe. Peter manages to hit Stryfe once, but is ultimately defeated. Boom Boom and Nemesis are next, but fail to strike a blow. Psylocke tries to control Stryfe’s mind, but it’s useless. Stryfe taints her about her Shurayuki Blade before Colossus comes to Betsy’s rescues and smashes his head. Elsewhere, Spiral teleports the others to where Bishop and Hope are. Hope reveals Bshop’s got a clean cut and will recover; Hope didn't kill him as she didn’t want to disappoint Cable. Stryfe is upset and gets ahold of all X-Force members, but didn’t expect to stab him from behind with his own psimitar. Stryfe forces Hope to mimic his omega-level limitless powers, hoping she won’t bear such power and destroy everything within 10 miles. Styfe flees, leaving the X-Forces for dead. Bishop teaches Hope to master Stryfe’s powers and focus it upwards. Later, the X-Forces regroup. They’re unable to track Stryfe. Hope tells Bishop he earned a pass but makes no promises for the next time they meet as she still hasn’t forgiven him. Cable thanks Bishop for saving Hope. Storm wants Psylocke to go back to the school with her, but Betsy refuses. Cable compliments Psylocke for handling herself well before and tells her the future looks very bright for the first time in years.

Friday, January 24, 2014

Uncanny X-Force #17 Preview

Uncanny X-Force #17
Writer: Sam Humphries
Art by: Harvey Tolibao and Soy Dexter
Cover by: Ramon Perez

The Story: “Vendetta” Part IV
• Classic X-Force villain STRYFE has returned! And he’s eager to exact his revenge on the man who left him broken and adrift in the timestream: CABLE.
• As Stryfe’s plan comes to bear, Hope is brought face-to-face with Bishop, the man who crusaded across centuries in a mission to exterminate her. But this time around, she’s ready to retaliate…and they’ll hold nothing back as they race to destroy one another.
• Don’t miss this no-holds-barred, knockdown, drag-out X-FORCE event! Because when the dust settles, only ONE X-Force team will be left standing...

In Stores: January 29, 2014
 

Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Uncanny X-Force #16 Spoilers


Spoilers: Cable and Psylocke drop their weapons, but aren’t able to reach an agreement on how to handle de Bishop/Hope situation. Cable shoots fire, but Storm knocks him down. Cable’s X-Force comes to his rescue. Elsewhere, Bishop and Hope find themselves locked with power dampeners. Hope blames him for destroying her childhood. Bishop assures her he’s a different person now. In the meantime, Forge demands Psylocke’s X-Force to return Cable while Nemesis tags Cable with a tracker. Psylocke orders Spiral to teleport Cable away, but Domino is right at her heels. Spiral and Domino face each other. Back to Bishop and Hope, Stryfe appears before them and reveals he’s the real deal, the same Stryfe who Bishop left for dead at the hands of Apocalypse. Stryfe tells Hope that it is Cable who’s actually his clone and makes her an offer: to make all her wildest dreams come true. Meanwhile, both X-Forces head to Cable’s whereabouts. Storm summons her winds, but Forge shoots at her accidentally. Psylocke tries to argue with Colossus, but it’s useless. Puck runs a truck over Peter, while Betsy gets ahold of Cable. Boom Boom throws a bomb at her, giving enough time for Nemesis to inject adrenaline into Cable, waking him up. Cable orders Nemesis to shoot at Spiral with a mind-controlling serum. Cable makes Spiral teleport him to Hope’s whereabouts while both X-Forces are left behind. Stryfe welcomes Cable.

Saturday, January 11, 2014

Uncanny X-Force #16 Preview

Uncanny X-Force #16
Writer: Sam Humphries
Art by: Harvey Tolibao
Cover by: Ramon Perez

The Story: “Vendetta” Part II

• Classic X-Force villain STRYFE has returned! And he’s eager to exact his revenge on the man who left him broken and adrift in the timestream: CABLE.

• As Stryfe’s plan comes to bear, Hope is brought face-to-face with Bishop, the man who crusaded across centuries in a mission to exterminate her. But this time around, she’s ready to retaliate…and they’ll hold nothing back as they race to destroy one another.

• Don’t miss this no-holds-barred, knockdown, drag-out X-FORCE event! Because when the dust settles, only ONE X-Force team will be left standing...

In Stores: January 15, 2014


Wednesday, December 18, 2013

Uncanny X-Force #15 Spoilers

Spoilers: At the Underworld, Psylocke creates a psychic bubble to protect Puck and herself from the revenants. Betsy tries to contact the Demon Bear, but it's still under Cassandra's control. The Great Corruptions is almost complete, while revenants are running wild in LA. Outside the Observatory, Spiral teleports Bishop to the rock giang. Bishop hits it with revenant evenom, shattering it into pieces. Storm takes the chance to enter the Observatory, where she strikes the Demon Bear with lightning, breaking Cassandra's hold on it. Psylocke manages to contact the Bear, who comes to her and Puck's rescue. Bishop faces Cassandra, who locks him in his black bug room. Cassandra reminds him of Hope Summers and how Storm erased his memories. Spiral takes the chance to strike Cassandra with evenom, which prompts her to leave Ginny's body. Spiral takes Ginny and teleports out. Cassandra takes over Psylocke's revenant's body. The real Psylocke and Puck return. Spiral teleports back just in time to save Psylocke from Cassandra's attack. Psylocke then stabs Cassandra to death. The Great Corruption has ended. Betsy says she has made it 20 days without killing. The Demon Bear ends up trapped in the Underworld, while X-Force reunite. Bishop is not happy with Storm.

Friday, December 13, 2013

Uncanny X-Force #15 Preview

Uncanny X-Force #15
Writer: Sam Humphries
Art by: Phil Briones
Cover by: Ramon Perez

The Story:
THE GREAT CORRUPTION reaches its conclusion!

• One of the X-Men’s greatest foes is rampaging through Los Angeles in the guise of the Revenant Queen. What sacrifice will one member of Uncanny X-Force make to stop her and her army?


Wednesday, November 27, 2013

Uncanny X-Force #14 Spoilers

Spoilers: Cassandra retrieves Psylocke and Phil’s head to the Griffith Observatory, LA, where her revenants awaits her. She orders the Demon Bear to reduce Psylocke’s psychic powers while the Revenants place Phil’s head inside the ring of corruption. The Revenants focus their energies to block their fortress from teleporters, and so the Great Corruption takes place with a giant being rising from the ground. Elsewhere, X-Force tries to protect the civilians while the Revenants are let loose in LA. Back to the Observatory, Psylocke wakes up and Cassandra offers her an alliance: in exchange for Psylocke’s information on how to defeat Wolverine and Cyclops, Cassandra will give her original body back. Cassandra tells Psylocke she can start her life over, leaving her murderous ways behind if she takes her offer. X-Force realizes they’ll have to sacrifice either Psylocke or Ginny to stop the Great Corruption while they head to the vortex. Puck drives Psylocke’s flying Bentley and breaks into the Observatory. Puck rescues Psylocke, who leaves the place with a sad look on her face as she watches her original body. Cassandra prevents them from escaping, and both Psylocke and Puck fall into the vortex right into the Underworld.

Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Humphries and Hopeless Pursue Their "Vendetta" With "X-Force"

CBR News spoke with writers Sam Humphries and Dennis Hopeless about Vendetta and how they plan to wrap up their respective "X-Force" titles.

Dennis and Sam, let's talk about the origins of"Vendetta." When did you guys first start talking about this crossover and how did it evolve over time?

Dennis Hopeless: Sam and I have been friends for a long time and as soon as we knew we were both going to be writing X-Force series, we started thinking about crossing them over. We just wanted to let the two teams find their footing before smashing them together. Once we both had a few arcs under our belt, we started talking seriously about what a crossover might look like.

Sam Humphries: It started as "X-Cutioner's Song 2: A Dubpunk Odyssey." A bunch of roller-skating ravers saving the future from a dystopian future where Apocalypse and Doop rule the planet. But neither X-Force team was in the story, which is kind of important for an X-Force crossover, so it got shot down.

I would have read that. [Laughs I know one of the great appeals of doing crossovers is the chance to play with another creator's toys. Which characters that you don't normally write are you excited to play with in "Vendetta?" What do you find most interesting about these particular characters?

Humphries: I'm excited to write Forge. He's been a lot of things over the years, but Dennis has been able to make him a clean character again, boil him down to the essence of who he is -- a brilliant guy trying to work his way out of mixed karma with technology.

Hopeless: Spiral and Puck. Sam's DJ Spiral is one of my favorite character ideas ever. The woman has six arms. OF COURSE she's going to rock the turntables. As for Puck, I'm really enjoying his shamelessness. He's a ladies man and isn't afraid to flaunt it. Puck and Boom Boom have been my favorite unexpected duo to script so far.

The conflicts in "Vendetta" are very personal for some characters: we have what Cable & Hope went through at the hands of Bishop in the previous "Cable" series and Cable's long standing animosity toward his arch-enemy Stryfe. How personal is "Vendetta" for some of your other characters? How invested are they in the two big rivalries at the heart of this story? What do these conflicts mean to them?

Humphries: Plenty of these characters have had intense histories together. Storm and Forge, Betsy and Peter, Puck and Domino -- but the centerpiece is definitely Cable/Hope/Bishop. That trio has so much bad blood between them, it's like the elevator scene in "The Shining." They've got a lot of scores to settle, and it's not gonna be easy.

Hopeless: Yeah, character relationships and shared history are what tie the whole story together. Tonally our two books are very different. We wanted to tell a story that made sense for both of these teams. The best way to do that was pretty obviously to mine the relationships. When you have Bishop on one team and Hope and Cable on the other, it's not terribly difficult to find the drama. And then, you know, Stryfe is Cable's evil twin. The worst member of Cable's "family" shows up at the worst possible time and screws everybody.

We've talked about story so let's shift gears to the art side of things. Which artists are drawing "Vendetta?" What do they bring to this crossover?

Hopeless: Angel Unzueta is drawing my issues. The work he's done with Sam on "Uncanny X-Force" has been absolutely phenomenal so I was stoked to hear he'd be our artist. This story requires a lot of emotion from two teams worth of characters along with crossover worthy action. Angel brings the perfect mix of both.

Humphries: I'm working with Harvey Tolibao who brings his experience with Psylocke to the table. Plus his action scenes are dynamic as hell. Perfect for pitting the two teams together on the battlefield.

Wrapping things up, we now know that "Vendetta" is the concluding story in both "Uncanny X-Force" and "Cable & X-Force." How does it feel to bring your runs to a close? Were you able to bring all your plot threads to a satisfying conclusion?

Humphries: I am bummed to leave, but Marvel is keeping me busy elsewhere. I can't talk about any of it yet, but it is all very exciting.

(And yes, I am continuing on "Avengers A.I." without interruption.) Si Spurrier and Rock He-Kim's "X-Force" is launching in February. It is going to be awesome. I will be picking it up and so should you."

Special thanks to all the amazing artists, colorists, and letterers who made the book so thrilling and gorgeous. Thanks to [editors] Nick Lowe and Daniel Ketchum for keeping the book from collapsing on itself.

BUT there's still plenty of fight left in "Uncanny X-Force" We've got three incredible issues to go. The end of the Revenant War, then the "Vendetta" crossover with "Cable & X-Force!"

Hopeless: I had an absolute blast writing these characters. It has been an outstanding experience. I'm proud to have been a part of the X-Force family. I can't wait to read what happens to these characters next. And like Sam said, Marvel is keeping me plenty busy going forward. Fans of my work should read "Avengers Undercover" launching in March and keep their eyes out for new project announcements to come.

The four-part "Vendetta" begins in "Cable and X-Force" #18 on January 8, and continues in "Uncanny X-Force" #16 on January 15.

Sunday, November 24, 2013

'Vendetta': X-Force vs. X-Force Leads to 1 New X-Force

Newsarama: “Vendetta” will take place in January, starting with Cable & X-Force #18 then Uncanny X-Force #16 followed by two more issues of each leading to their finale. And as we count down the days to this double series finale, Newsarama talked with series writers Sam Humphries and Dennis Hopeless to find how out how it all goes down.


Newsarama: Guys, this is like an old school boxing match – so give us the story of each of your team as they come into the “Vendetta” crossover.

Sam Humphries: The Uncanny X-Force team are licking their wounds after the Revenant War with Cassandra Nova, and split in two by a revelation from that story that hits Bishop and Storm the hardest.

Dennis Hopeless: Cable’s X-Force are doing great. They have their cool new underground headquarters up and running, from which they’ve just completed a few missions. Cable has finally accepted Hope as a member of the team and they’re getting along great. Colossus and Domino are a full-fledged item and managing to juggle their work and sexy business. Forge and Nemesis are… Forge and Nemesis. And Boomer is blowing stuff up right and left. This crossover represents the worst thing that could possibly happen to Cable’s X-Force now that things are finally going smoothly.

Nrama: Finally going smoothly, until this “Vendetta” crossover happens. With these two team sharing the same name and featuring some characters that have hunted each other down at one time or another, a showdown was always on the horizon – so what is the catalyst that puts it all into motion?

Humphries: Hope learning that Bishop is alive, and in the present. This is the man who turned her childhood into a war zone. It fills her full of fear...but also bloodlust. If Hope has two fathers, Cable and Bishop, this story will show which father she takes after most.

Hopeless: Yeah, I’d say white-hot rage is the catalyst. First Hope’s when she realizes her own personal boogey man is hanging out in Los Angeles. Then Cable’s when he realizes what Uncanny X-Force allowed to go down by not warning him Bishop was back.

Nrama: Cable, Hope and Bishop have enough venom for one another to be story enough, but you also have Stryfe coming into this. What's Stryfe playing at here?

Hopeless: In case we hadn’t made it perfectly clear, we’ll be dealing with a lot of bad blood in this story. Stryfe versus Cable is just one example.

This is basically Stryfe seeing Cable at his weakest and taking the opportunity to attack. Cable’s power set has changed. He’s no longer the Omega Level telekinetic and telepath he once was and that Stryfe still is. And now that Cable has a daughter for whom he would gladly die, Stryfe can manipulate Cable into all sorts of trouble.

Nrama: Guys, your two books were launched simultaneously, and both shared the team name "X-Force" in their titles – it happen all the time with the X-Men and the Avengers, but for X-Force it seems novel. Can you talk about working on separate books with similar names, then it all falling into place that your two books would now crossover?

Humphries: I dunno, our books were pretty different from the get go, so we were able to just do our own thing and root for each other from the sidelines. It was more difficult to get the teams "in the same room" (metaphorically speaking) for the crossover since they walked such different paths. Fortunately, one team has a member that ruthlessly hunted two members of the other team across a thousand years, so that was our in.

Hopeless: Yeah, the big trick has been finding a story that makes sense for these two very different teams. We were lucky to have the Hope/Cable/Bishop connection. It really helped us find a middle ground without contriving some earth-shattering foe that only these two teams can defeat. I love that our conflict is so personal and character driven.

Nrama: How closely together are you two working to make this crossover mesh?

Humphries: Not at all. I send Dennis' calls to voicemail, ignore his texts, mark his emails as spam, and block him on IM.

Nrama: Ouch.

Humphries: Just kidding. We talked it over a lot and came up with an outline together. Each part follows the other, so yeah, we have to work very close.

Hopeless: Yeah, it was a close collaboration from the start. We wanted to find just the right story and bounced ideas back and forth for quite a while to get there. I think we drove our editor Daniel Ketchum nuts with all the brainstorming and scrapping half-finished ideas to start over from scratch. But we ended up with a story we can both sink teeth into so it was definitely worth all the phone calls and outline drafts.

Nrama: It all starts in December, so before I let you guys get back to it, answer me this: what's your favorite member of each other's team that you looked forward to writing, and why?

Humphries: Forge! I love him from his earliest appearances in the 80s. A brilliant guy with spotty karma and a bunch of hot stuff technology. Dennis has been able to boil him down to a clean character again.

Hopeless: Probably Puck. That wouldn’t have been my guess going in but he’s been surprisingly fun to write. I love his bluster and total shamelessness. Puck and Boom are particularly great together. I could write an ongoing all about Tabby busting Puck’s balls.

Friday, November 22, 2013

Uncanny X-Force #14 Preview

Uncanny X-Force #14
Writer: Sam Humphries
Art by: Phil Briones
Cover by: Kris Anka

The Story:
- The Revenant War kicks into high gear as the Uncanny X-Force must battle their fiercest enemies yet!
- The truth about the revenant Owl Queen is revealed – and she’s even more dangerous than any of our heroes expected!
- Meanwhile, Storm has been keeping her cards close to her chest – but the one she finally plays is out of this world!


Also in stores next week, Uncanny Avengers #14. Rick Remender and Steve McNiven bring Magistrate Braddock back to the fold.

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

'X-Force' Scribes on a 'Vendetta'

USAToday: Dennis Hopeless, who's moving from Avengers Arena to Avengers Undercover in the new year, and Sam Humphries, the Avengers A.I. writer whose creator-owned Sacrifice was just released in hardcover, talk with USA TODAY about what's coming in the crossover and their own history with X-Force, a team that began in a 1991 issue of New Mutants.

Q. Since launching each of your own X-Force titles early this year after Rick Remender's black-ops take on the group, have you kept in touch with each other during the course of your runs?

Hopeless: When we first took over the books, we had very casual conversations about how there were two X-Force books and we should probably cross them over, especially with the Cable/Hope/Bishop connection. But that was all really preliminary while we got the books off the ground.

Humphries: Dennis and I have known each other for a long time, and both of us were really looking forward to collaborating on a story like Vendetta.

Hopeless: The two books don't have that much in common, thematically and just from a basic storytelling standpoint. Mine's more of a '90s action comic and Sam's is more of a weird David Lynch cerebral story that plays with a lot of characters from Rick Remender's run.

It takes the two different kinds of X-Force – the chocolate and the peanut butter – and interweaves them.

Humphries: There's no fan of X-Force who is going to pass up on seeing what happens when you get Cable and Bishop and Hope back together in the same room or on the same battlefield. That's an encounter everybody wants to see.

Q. So, folks can expect a bunch of drama with this trio.

Humphries: There's a lot of pent-up anger and bad blood and bitterness between these three, and previously the only thing separating them were about 5,000 years of time in the future: Bishop was in the 68th century, Hope and Cable had settled back down here in the present, but none of these characters are exactly known for holding off or being subtle or walking away from a fight.

Now having Bishop back in the present gives us an opportunity to really let loose all of those emotions that these characters have had.

Bishop is like this bogeyman figure in Hope's childhood — he ruined it, he turned her childhood into a war zone. And Bishop has come to the point in his life where he has realized that was wrong, and that's something that's almost impossible to atone for. So he's got all these pent-up emotions as well as trying to figure out how to make it right with Cable and Hope, if that's even possible.

Hopeless: Cable and Hope have been pretty preoccupied with their relationship and what's been going on with Cable's X-Force. They've been running all over the globe trying to save the world while also being tracked by Havok and the Uncanny Avengers.

At the end of our previous story arc, they've gotten their stuff together — Hope is now part of Cable's team and they're working together and they finally have this relationship where it makes sense. The worst possible thing that could happen at this moment was for Hope to find out that Bishop's in the present, and this bogeyman from her past is in the here and now and she wants to go deal with that. It's a worst-case scenario.

Humphries: And then we throw Stryfe into the mix. He's basically Cable's clone — Cable with a tortured childhood and years and years of rejection. That's another powder keg of bad blood we're throwing into this bonfire of a story.

Q. Is it explosive from a start, or are you guys building up to a hellacious climax?

Humphries: It pretty much goes to hell right from the beginning. (Laughs)

Hopeless: Not every character is involved in the initial explosions of the thing, but for a couple of them, yeah, it's pretty rough. It just keeps snowballing and getting worse for everyone as it goes along.

Q. What will be the most surprising thing about this story for longtime X-Force readers?

Humphries: The matchups between the members of Uncanny X-Force and Cable and the X-Force and how they're going to shake out on the battlefield.

Q. Will there be alliances and friendships tested?

Hopeless: Definitely. These characters, they're not unfamiliar with one another — there's a lot of history between the two teams and a lot of immediate animosity. Cable is not pleased there was another team of X-Men out there that knew Bishop was in the present and didn't contact him to let him know. Now his daughter is in the mix with this thing out of nowhere.

Humphries: The whole story wouldn't have happened if all these characters got along perfectly and they all trusted each other 100% and they all kept up and talked on the phone every day. Those kind of relationships would have stopped "Vendetta" before it even started.

The whole story comes down to these characters who have known each other for years, have fought together and have gone through some pretty intense grinders in their lives and come out the other side changed and not really knowing what to make of each other.

Psylocke and Colossus have been through a ton in the past few years — Psylocke has had to come to terms with her bad karma coming out of Rick's Uncanny X-Force and Colossus went through a lot during Avengers vs. X-Men. That doesn't even touch on the intense relationship between Storm and Forge.

It does come down to how your characters are going to collide and how their histories impact those collisions.

Hopeless: And the obvious sexual tension that will occur between Puck and Boom-Boom.

Humphries: That's almost more obvious than Bishop, Cable and Hope.

Q. What's your favorite aspect of each other's book?

Humphries: I loved Dennis' high concept right from the get-go: This super team that is unfairly villainized as terrorists and they can never catch a break, they can never relax, they can hardly ever refuel or reload their ammo but they're driven by this higher calling of saving the world from threats that only they can see or perceive.

His lineup is so solid — they all approach that central concept from different directions, but every character has a different relationship with every other character in that book.

Hopeless: Sam's book is just chock full of cool. I love so many little details about it, from Psylocke's crazy flying Bentley to Spiral as a DJ to the fire-breathing demon bear that lives inside Psylocke's head. It's just the coolest X-Force book ever.

I love all those parts, and I love the idea that I get to play with them inappropriately in this crossover.

Q. The X-Men have been around for 50 years, but X-Force has only been around for 22 — it's just out of college compared to the old man. What's different about tackling an X-Force book than other X-comics?

Hopeless: When (Marvel editor in chief) Axel Alonso first talked to me about X-Force, he said one of the cool things is it's a title that always reinvents itself. Every new incarnation of X-Force is a different thing, from Peter Milligan and Michael Allred's X-Statix X-Force to the grim, crazy, dark death squad after that with Craig Kyle and Christoper Yost to Rick's book that took it in a completely different groundbreaking direction.

When we started, they were these two books that had almost nothing in common other than the fact they're awesome and called X-Force. We could change what X-Force means and what X-Force does.

Humphries: The X-Men is a high-profile franchise to say the least. It's great to have the history and the strength of those characters in your books, while also being a little left of center and on the edge of the spotlight. When you're off to the side, you can get away with a lot of stuff you can't get away with in the main books. Like having a psychic bear live in Psylocke's head.

It's intimidating to be in the X-Men universe, but if you have that kind of freedom, you can start to relax and have fun. When you start to have fun, that's when the really cool stories start to come out.

Q. What were your introductions to X-Force?

Humphries: I bought the very first X-Force No. 1 by Fabian Nacieza and Rob Liefeld the day it came out (in 1991).

Hopeless: Sam and I were the perfect age for that stuff when it was coming out. That early stuff had a big effect on me as a kid.

My favorite X-Force run of all time was Rick's. What Rick did in the previous incarnation of the book is some of the best Marvel comics of the past 10 or 15 years.

Humphries: I love Rick's run a lot obviously but I think there's a lot to be said of the Milligan/Allred run because it's completely unlike any other superhero comic, much less any X-Force comic.

Q. Is there anything that you've borrowed from the original '91 team or conceit?

Hopeless: My book is all about shoulder pads and giant guns that are impossible in real life. What I tend to do is jump into the characters' heads and do a lot of relationship drama on top of whatever else I'm doing. With my X-Force, I try to make it as much of a throwback to that old early '90s action movie aesthetic while also doing my fun Colossus/Domino relationship drama and the Hope/Cable father/daughter stuff in there because that's how my mind works.

I leaned into that stuff as hard as I possibly could because if you have a Cable-run X-Force book with Domino and a bunch of other crazy characters in there, it just makes sense.

Humphries: I always loved the misfits aspect of the original X-Force. These are a bunch of characters thrown together by different circumstances and I loved the character dynamics that come out of that.

That's the kind of web I try to weave in Uncanny X-Force. It generates all these interesting conversations and conflicting emotions and sticky motivations, and then you throw them into this crazy world on the bleeding edges of the Marvel Universe and you get a lot of interesting conundrums out of it.

Hopeless: You also got to have your team fight evil versions of themselves, which is what constantly happened in that first one.

Humphries: Yeah, exactly.

Hopeless: It's a little more literal in your book.

Humphries: For fans of classic X-Force stuff, we haven't seen Stryfe in a while and this Stryfe's coming back with a new agenda. We have a lot of callbacks and references to those old classic stories, and fans of those are going to find a lot to love in "Vendetta."

Q. Is this crossover the greatest X-Force story ever told?

Humphries: Absolutely. 100%, of course. (Laughs) There's a lot of great X-Force stories and runs out there, but there's never been X-Force vs. X-Force. That sets this story head and shoulders above any comic book ever published.

Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Uncanny X-Force #13 Spoilers

Spoilers: Psylocke tries to reach other superheroes telepathically, asking for help but it's useless since Cassandra has locked L.A. in a psychic prison. X-Force is on their own. Cassandra's "White Robes" have taken over the Chinese Theater. Cassandra herself is at the center of the stage, ready to perform a ritual. A man called Phillip is fooled by her promises and brought before her. X-Force heads outside the theater, after Psylocke senses a psychic flare-up over there. Bishop explains Cassandra needs to sacrifice a telepath to summon the Great Corruption and open the veil between reality and the underworld. Spiral is getting impatient, which causes an argument between her and Betsy. Inside the theater, Cassandra beheads Phil, who was in fact a new mutant with telepathic powers. The moon starts to bleed. Cassandra summons the Great Corruption while Spiral teleports X-Force inside the theater. Cassandra's Revenant Army attack them, and Cassandra makes Spiral face her black bug room, defeating her. While Bishop, Puck and Storm are busy slaying Revenants, Psylocke tries to assault Cassandra. Cassandra controls the Demon Bear and uses it against Betsy. Cassandra collects Psylocke and Philip and departs. Revenants are unleashed upon L.A. causing chaos and havoc. Bishop explains they have one night to close the Great Corruption before the moon is covered in blood and that only the death of a telepath could achieve such a thing.

Note: Cluster is not in this issue.

Friday, October 25, 2013

Uncanny X-Force #13 Preview


Uncanny X-Force #13
Writer: Sam Humphries
Art by: Phil Briones, Angel Unzueta
Cover by: Kris Anka

The Story:
• Spotlight on Spiral!
• With the rest of the Uncanny X-Force in Madripoor, Spiral has devoted herself to finding new mutant Ginny.
• But is the cult Ginny belongs to more than meets the eye?
• Even six arms might not be enough to juggle all this trouble!

In Stores: October 30, 2013

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

X-Position: Sam Humphries

CBR: In order to shed some more light on "Vendetta" and the future direction of "Uncanny X-Force," Sam Humphries joined X-Position to discuss bringing the two X-Force teams together, the slow reveal of Cassandra Nova as the series' villain, and plans to help showcase the individual members of Psylocke's squad -- including a possible story for Puck.


Tell us a bit about how the first encounter between the X-Forces is going to go.

Sam Humphries: The first encounter between the two teams is going to be bathed in blood. The last time Hope and Cable saw Bishop, he had spent years trying to kill them both. He left Hope's childhood a smoking ruin. He ruthlessly murdered Cable's accomplices, friends and loves. Bishop back in the present is simultaneously their worst nightmare, and their darkest dream come true. They're going to have the opportunity to make Bishop pay for all the bad blood between them. And the ferocious fury of not one but two teams of X-Force may not be enough to stop them!!!

Which interaction have you been most excited to write between Cable's team and your team for "Vendetta?"

Sam Humphries: Forge and Storm. Instead of "Vendetta" I pitched "Lifedeath 3" as a steamy tale of tequila and jacuzzis. I was overruled.

Cassandra Nova has already established herself as a genuine threat -- even before she revealed herself to readers. How do you plan to ramp that up as Uncanny X-Force goes up against her?

Sam Humphries: Cassandra's been working and scheming across centuries to make her biggest wish come true: she's going to successfully trigger a revenant invasion of earth. It's Uncanny X-Force vs. a vicious torrent of billions of these psychic demons. Phil Briones is the artist on this arc -- and if you've seen his work before, get ready to see him level up. There's something about snarling, drooling goblins from the underworld that brings out the beast in him -- currently investigating to see if he is a revenant himself.

The most recent issue had some great background on Spiral with some gorgeous art by Adrian Alphona. You've covered quite a few of the squad in these one-shot issues -- when can readers expect to see a Puck-centric installment?

Sam Humphries: I have a story in mind about Puck from the perspective of his three ex-wives, and an axe. (Not a joke answer.)

I was really excited to see more about Spiral in the most recent issue. Will we find out more about her and her experience on Earth?

Sam Humphries: Hello, C.E. I would love to do an entire arc about Spiral slashing her way through life on earth, protecting lost lambs and destroying scumbags. That said, "Uncanny X-Force" is a team book, and Spiral just had her turn, so... probably not anytime soon. But I'd love to do another Spiral story with Adrian Alphona -- he really made her contradictions come alive in that issue.

You've expressed a deep love for mohawk Storm, and it's so cool to see her sporting that hairstyle again. When will we get to see her and Bishop have that clash everyone's hoping for? They were really good friends once and he clearly betrayed everything they believed in during "Messiah CompleX."

Sam Humphries: For Storm and Bishop, stay tuned for "Vendetta"...

So excited for "Vendetta!" How long have you been planning the clash of the teams with Dennis Hopeless?

Sam Humphries: This has been something that's been on our minds before our books were even announced. To me, the incendiary story has always been about Hope, Cable and Bishop. Hope is the product of two fathers -- Cable and Bishop. One has been a flawed but nurturing dad, and the other has been a flawed boogey man who cast a shadow of terror over her entire childhood. Now they have the opportunity to come face to face -- which father does Hope take after the most? That's the story I really wanted to tell with Dennis.

Wednesday, October 9, 2013

Villainous Return in This Week’s Uncanny X-Force #12

Newsarama: In today’s Uncanny X-Force #12, readers finally learned the true identity of the Revenant Queen that’s been wrecking havoc in the lives of Psylocke’s X-Force team and the larger west coast area. And it is... Cassandra Nova!


Last glimpsed five years ago, the long-lost evil sister of Professor Charles Xavier reared her head and unveiled herself as the person behind Bishop’s recent madness and the team’s problems over the past year. Just how does it all happen? We asked series writer (and the mastermind behind Nova’s return) Sam Humphries.

“Cassandra Nova is ambitious and immortal. Thousands of years in the future, she hijacks Bishop to come back to the present -- right at the moment when her brother is dead, and unable to stop her,” Humphries tells Newsarama. “She's an immensely powerful psychic with a huge axe to grind -- and an army of psychic demons to crush the world.”

Humphries explains that Nova has been hidden in the background of Uncanny X-Force since its first issue last year, although not physically.

“Technically, she appears in issue 1 -- well, Bishop appears in issue 1, and she was possessing Bishop,” says Humphries. “And we saw her jump to Ginny in issue 4. But the seeds were planted back in that first issue.”

This revelation was revealed as part of the larger story of this week’s Uncanny X-Force #12, which in effect was a solo story for the former Mojo pawn Spiral – the first, arguably, since her Ricochet Rita days. Although Psylocke is the centerpiece of the series, Humphries says that Spiral shares similar experiences as Betsy – although more intense.

“We've all got a lot of love for Psylocke -- she's a murderer, yes, but we give her and other characters like Wolverine a pass because of their tortured histories. Psylocke has been kidnapped, mutilated, and body swapped. But everything Betsy has been through, Spiral has been through ten-fold,” Humphries explains. “So I wanted to know, if we can have sympathy for Betsy, can we have sympathy for Spiral too? And Spiral is a cosmic ninja, which is pretty awesome.”

Best known as the multi-armed “cosmic ninja” of the classic X-Men villain Mojo, Spiral was born far different – Rita Wayword, professional stuntman. Created by Art Adams and Ann Nocenti back in 1985’s Longshot #1, Wayword was kidnapped and imprisoned by Mojo for years before being genetically modified – inside and out – to become a minion of Mojo. Humphries revealed in early issues of Uncanny X-Force that Spiral had been exiled to Earth and stripped of her teleportation abilities, resulting in Spiral turning over a new leaf as she looked after a homeless mutant named Ginny.

“Spiral used to be human, but she's had her humanity stripped away from her. I wanted to explore the feelings of someone like that trying to navigate a big city like Los Angeles. Someone powerful and dangerous barely holding it together on the streets,” says the writer. “Ginny was the first person not to treat her like a villain and a monster, and that changed Spiral's perception of herself -- awakened something within her she thought Mojo had killed years ago.”

Out from under Mojo’s thumb and looking for the whereabouts of Ginny, in Uncanny X-Force #12 Spiral follows the trail of the Revenants to try to suss out exactly what they are and who’s behind them. Along the way Spiral ended up torching one of Los Angeles’ famous landmarks if you’re a foodie – Donut Time. When asked about this culinary catastrophe, Humphries assured us Donut Time still exists – but offers up some additional recommendations when you’re out in L.A.

“Donut Time is infamous to residents of the area. And unfortunately, where Spiral goes, destruction follows,” Humphries says. “Nickel Diner and Umamicatessen downtown have some fancy bacon-and-whatnot-style donuts. But I always like SK Donuts on 3rd Street near La Brea for that authentic independent donut experience. The apple fritters are amazing.

Getting into more serious matters, Spiral eventually follows the trail of the Revenants back to their home and reveals the return of Cassandra Nova. After glimpsing Revenant versions of Storm, Psylocke and Puck in the last issue, Nova explains that Revenants is the unbridled dark side inside every one – Nova herself being Professor X’s.

When Cassandra Nova was first introduced by Grant Morrison and Frank Quitely in New X-Men, she was described as a “mummudrai,” a Shi’ar term for what is roughly equivalent to a spiritual evil twin born on the astral plane. Cassandra Nova was Xavier’s, but due to his immense telepathic abilities was able to take physical form. As revealed in this week’s Uncanny X-Force #12, these Revenants are mummudrai that Nova is able to bring to the physical word.

“The legend of the mummudrai -- the Sh'iar word for revenant -- states that everyone has a revenant when they're born,” elaborates Humphries. “That means there's about a hundred billion of these slathering, snarling goblins out there, waiting for an opportunity to experience the good life on this side of the psychic divide. If you open that door between our worlds, you'll never get it closed again.”

This all leads to an upcoming arc teased in the advance solicits for Uncanny X-Force called “Revenant War,” which will see Los Angeles being invaded by Nova’s Revenants.

“Cassandra Nova wants to rip down the barrier that keeps all revenants from our world, and create a revenant invasion,” says the writer. “The revenants have languished too long with the short end of the stick. They're envious, and hungry. Readers can expect a city on fire, a demon invasion, and Uncanny X-Force scrambling to turn the tide against one of the most powerful villains on the planet. And fantastic art by Phil Briones and Angel Unzueta -- they bring hell to Los Angeles.”