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Absolute Martian Manunter #10, in a lot of ways, feels like a DC version of the last few issues of The Ultimates, Camp’s other alternate reality comic that went in directions no one expected (to the left). This issue is both the most action-packed of the series so far, but also one with unplumbed depths. Camp and Rodriguez gives readers a scathing indictment of the realities of American power, surrounded by the best action scenes you’ve ever witnessed.
Rating: 5 out of 5
| Pros | Cons |
| Camp serves readers a story about the “power” of the United States, indicting a system of violence and oppression | |
| Rodriguez’s art is everything you can want from an issue like this, giving readers the actions and the metaphor | |
| Camp and Rodriguez don’t beat readers over the head with the metaphor, but it’s also impossible to miss |
Camp Gives Readers Everything You Could Want From a Comic
Absolute Martian Manhunter has been amazing, so Camp dropping an issue like this on readers isn’t surprising. The writer has been using bestselling mainstream superhero books to talk about the realities of the United States for a couple of years now. The Ultimates has been obviously leftist since it began, but this one hasn’t. Sure, it follows an FBI agent, but the first story arc was more about the effect of his work on his family than the crimes of the Federal Bureau of Investigations; it was much more superhero-y. The current story arc, all about the Martian being captured and John Jones trying to find him and fight Despair-the-Zero, the Absolute Despero, was always going to go in his direction and it’s fantastic.
The issue kicks off with Rainbow of the Agency attacking John with psychedelic Vietnam flashbacks, a war known for its brutality and senselessness. It’s such a great way to do an action scene in a book like this, and it’s just the beginning. The Martian’s continuting interrogation talks about borders and what they mean, which is something that is heavily in the news lately. Camp’s message here is rather simple โ the United States is an imperial power that enforces its desires with violence โ and yet if you don’t get that from it (which would be hard, but not impossible; I guess if you don’t know the news and history, you wouldn’t get the subtext), you’re still going to get an amazing, action-packed yarn, with some darkness presaged for the book’s last two issues.









