So Wolverine broke time.
On a large scale. I won’t go into the details in case I don’t want to read the previous crossover event that happened, but at Ultron’s age, I set rules for the Marvel universe to answer the question “Why don’t heroes take the time to fix everything?” Questions answered in DC a while ago similarly by Flashpoint. Essentially, that reality causes repulsion when you try to ruin your time.
DC was destroyed by the reality of a new dystopian, and was eventually reformed with the new 52, but Marvel never went to those extremes at all. At that third major ending.
“Rick Jones, there’s nothing good or bad. There’s just life and death.”
Cataclysm was one or more books or one crossover story. More or less, many modern events structures featured lead-in, main event book, and many tie-in one-shots and mini-series. My main focus here is Joshua Hale Fierkov, Leonard Kirk, Jesus Abrotov and VC’s Koleepch, the Hunger Leader, the series. and the central event book, Cataclysm: The Ultimates’ final stand, Brian Michael Bendis, Mark Bagley, Andrew Hennessy, Jason Keith, and Petit. However, you can see the full credits for all the books below.
The lead-in series hangers spin directly from Ultron’s age and set the stage for a wider conflict with Galactos. Fialkov, Kirk, Aburtov, and Petit offer an epic of the universe in themselves. He shines the spotlight on Rick Jones and the ultimate silver surfer, opposing the background of the Cree/Chitauri war. The first series mainly deals with how to deal with the original ultimate singular method that hinders the flock. It increases the overall danger of the planet. Some gorgeous art from Kirk and Abrotov. There is a really neat sequence for crossing galactus from one universe to the next. Here, the main event book focuses here on letters of stylistic differences in mixed cases between two different universe characters.
I feel it fits me to have a re-team for the main event book where Brian Michael Bendis and Mark Bagley work to end this chapter of the Ultimate Universe. Even if Ultimates himself was originally a production of Mark Miller and Brian Hitch, Bendis and Bagley kicked off the entire universe with the ultimate Spider-Man. We get the destruction of New Jersey, the heroes, cast a reckless abandonment in Galactos. My only real grievance is to avoid many of the previous upheavals from the broader ultimate comic line before this and take a half-approach to redeeming Reed Richards. It will be even weaker to later kinds, perhaps a quarter attempt at the ultimate FF. But I think the difficulty of wanting to stay alive at least justifies the action of this series. And Bagley delivers a wonderfully ominous galactos.
There are also three tie-in minis that deal with other corners of the ultimate universe. Mostly, they tied up the loose ending of the second Nick Fury Reed Ultimate team, the X-Men, setting the stage for all new Ultimate books that spin out of the volume before the Ultimate Comic Spider-Man. They add a bit of flavour to the overall crossover, but it’s not necessarily essential to the main story.
“It’s not a giant man, it’s an entity. It’s an entity made up of cosmic-level energy.”
Like the Ultimate and Ultimate Apocalypse before that, the Crucifixion (along with the honorable people below) did not ultimately end in the Ultimate Universe, but it marked another major turning point. It ended effectively here, which was an infatuation with the films of the MCU and the Avengers, perhaps undoubtedly a cinematic aspect that influenced the film. He abandoned that identity for a while, especially after the ultimate death of Peter Parker and the turbulent influence of Jonathan Hickman.
And it mainly ended the branding. The universe continued, but the three books that followed didn’t have a trade dress separate from the mainline Marvel Universe. The Ultimate FF, Miles Morales: The Ultimate Spider-Man and All New Ultimate looked like other books at the time. I’ve been going on for several more years before the ultimate end…
Classic Comics Big Summary: Cataclysm – The Last Stand of The Ultimates
Cataclysm: The Last Stand of Ultimates
Authors: Brian Michael Bendis and Joshua Hale Fialkoff
Artists: Leonard Kirk, Miko Suyan, Mirco Pierfederisi, Mark Bagley & Andrew Hennessy, David Marquez, Carmine di Giandmenico & Lorenzo Lucie, Alvaro Martinez & John Lucas and Raul Fernandez, Joe Kinonesos
Colorists: Jesus Abrotov, Nolan Woodard, Jason Keith, Justin Ponsor and Paul Mount, Will Quintana and Jim Charalampisiz, Geordy Bellair, Rainia Belled
Letters: VC Cory Petit, Clayton Cowles and Joe Sabino
Publisher: Marvel Comics – The Ultimate Comics
Release date: May 28, 2014
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