Ratings5
Average rating3
"Fifty years from now, Logan - the man who no longer calls himself Wolverine - will have endured many atrocities: The Marvel Universe's villains will have banded together and rid the world of its heroes. Logan's closest friend, Hawkeye, will have been murdered in cold blood right before his eyes. And driven mad by the same radiation that gave him his superhuman strength, Bruce Banner will have fathered a family of hillbilly Hulks...that eventually went on to slaughter Logan's wife and two children. But now, in the present, Old Man Logan wakes up to discover himself in a world before these atrocities, before the Wasteland. And he's going to seize this opportunity and change history to ensure that his future never comes to pass..."--pg.4 of cover.
Series
5 primary books7 released booksOld Man Logan (Collected Editions) is a 14-book series with 4 primary works first released in 2008 with contributions by Mark Millar, Steve McNiven, and 3 others.
Series
5 primary booksOld Man Logan (2016) (Single Issues) is a 1-book series first released in 2015 with contributions by Jeff Lemire and Mukesh Singh.
Reviews with the most likes.
The writing and art was pretty cool, and the premise seemed really promising: a post-apocalyptic hellscape, where supervillains have taken control and Logan is just trying to live a normal life. That proves impossible of course, but then the story takes a sudden and unexpected turn. Logan finds himself back in the present day, but in an alternate history to his own, packed with slightly altered versions of classic Avengers.
This is what drives me crazy about Marvel. Why the constant need to integrate the staple Marvel characters into every series? Why the need to recycle stories and characters in “alternate universes”? And why does it take a smart guy like Logan sooo long to figure out that he is obviously in a different universe? Instead of staying in a unique world with unique characters, the story falls back on a revenge plot packed with psuedo-Avengers. The epilogue though goes back to the post-apocalyptic story, and like the intro, it is visceral, dark and gripping. I also really like the epilogue's artist.
So basically, half the story was great, but the other half was a little too generic, and sadly it seems like the generic half is the main story, so I'm not going to stick with the series. For those who like the classic Marvel characters and storylines, this might be a fun mix of classic avengers and dark originality, but the classic Marvel stuff just made me groan, personally.
Normally I am not a Marvel comic reader. I prefer DC simply because of my childhood exposure and have not ventured out of that space. If there are two characters that would make me want to they would be Hulk and Wolverine. And so here I am thoroughly satisfied with my first Wolverine comic. And this is as raw as a wolverine book as I could have hoped to sample. Logan has only one agenda and that's to restore the world to what it was and though he may be old he is no wiser. Onwards!