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Fantastic Four has been firing on all cylinders for the last few years, so this book has some really big shows to fill. Anyone who steps up to write the team is going to have to work overtime to make it all work, and luckily, writer Josh Trujillo is up to the challenge. He’s written the team several times in the past, and he gets the characters, which is very important. The Fantastic Four is a family, and Trujillo knows how to put each of them in their place. The issue starts in media res and then fills us in on why the group is on trial with the apes when we open up the book. Johnny Storm steps up to plead their case, and the way the team reacts is perfect, setting the tone for the rest of the issue.
Rating: 3.5 out of 5
| Pros | Cons |
| Trujillo nails the characters of both franchises and gives readers the kind of story these two properties should have | The cover telegraphs the ending of the issue, and that takes away from its impact |
| Di Vito’s art does a lot of heavy lifting; detailed, fluid, great looking panels that tell the story adroitly | You can basically tell every direction this story will go right away |
Planet of the Apes vs Fantastic Four #1 Makes 1 Major Mistake
We get all of our favorite apes from Planet of the Apes, like Zaius, Cornelius, Ursus, and Zira, each of them playing exactly the role they should. Trujillo isn’t trying to break the team or the movie characters out of their molds, because that’s why we’re here. He’s able to make this book feel like both a Fantastic Four story and a Planet of the Apes story, and that’s something that a lot of crossovers like this don’t actually do. Some writers are always trying to reinvent the wheel. This book isn’t, and that’s one of the main reasons why it’s so entertaining.
The issue ends with some cool surprises that will make the story a lot more fun as it goes on. The issue’s ending is sort of telegraphed by the cover, and I honestly think that was a mistake, but it works because this is a Fantastic Four story. If there’s any problem with all of it, it’s that this seems like a rather predictable story; there’s only so many places it can go.









