Great art! My only complaint is that, in the first image, Betsy's dialogue shows that she is concerned about Marrow and trying to calm her down, but Molina drew her face as if she were just bored or even mocking Marrow. Betsy may be unfriendly to her X-Force teammates, but I don't think she would mock someone for losing their baby.
In fact, this story showed that even though she's annoyed by Marrow's speech, she also cares about Sarah. It also makes most readers care about Marrow, which is great.
Volga is a bastard, but he's the kind of villain that the X-Force (and the X-Men as a whole) were needing: someone who doesn't need to have superpowers to be a threat. As for Cable, I doubt he's dead, but it will be interesting to find out how he will survive.
“For so long, my life has been out of control. Chaos and serendipity, wrapped in insanity. I have suffered, I have lost. Not just my life, but my very soul, my self. But no more. Now I know who I am.” – Elizabeth ‘Betsy’ Braddock, daughter of Otherworld, mutant, telepath, telekinetic, defender of the realm and, above all, X-Man.
1 comment:
Great art! My only complaint is that, in the first image, Betsy's dialogue shows that she is concerned about Marrow and trying to calm her down, but Molina drew her face as if she were just bored or even mocking Marrow. Betsy may be unfriendly to her X-Force teammates, but I don't think she would mock someone for losing their baby.
In fact, this story showed that even though she's annoyed by Marrow's speech, she also cares about Sarah. It also makes most readers care about Marrow, which is great.
Volga is a bastard, but he's the kind of villain that the X-Force (and the X-Men as a whole) were needing: someone who doesn't need to have superpowers to be a threat. As for Cable, I doubt he's dead, but it will be interesting to find out how he will survive.
Post a Comment