I will cut you

9th October 2014

Question reblogged from HIGHWAY 62 REVISITED with 42 notes

Anonymous asked: I'm kind of confused as to why Steve was angry at Tony in Avengers #34 and now he's apparently on good terms with Tony as of Captain America #25 and Axis #1, which take place later on. Will this be explained eventually?

highway62:

graemem:

brevoortformspring:

People seem to be very confused about the overall chronology, so I thought I should maybe lay some stuff out here, because there is one gaffe within it all that seems to be causing a lot of the problems. And that gaffe is Thor’s hammer.

So yes, going back, RAGNAROK NOW/AVENGE THE EARTH happens in UNCANNY AVENGERS. Thereafter. some time later, ORIGINAL SIN happens, during which Steve Rogers regains his knowledge of the Illuminati and what they’ve been doing.

The bit that people seem to be having difficulty with is the fact that Steve doesn’t act on this information immediately. But he does not—he doesn’t make a move until some point within the eight month period we’re now in, leading up to the TIME RUNS OUT issues of AVENGERS/NEW AVENGERS.

Part of that is that he’s dealing with other problems, primarily the loss of his youth and vigor, which happens in CAPTAIN AMERICA. This is where the Thor problem comes in, as because we were working on all of this stuff so far ahead of time, Thor appears in the immediate follow-up storyline in CAP, THE TOMORROW SOLDIER, with his hammer.

Given that Thor doesn’t do anything particularly important with his hammer in that storyline, just assume that that’s a “chronicler’s error”, and that he was actually wielding his axe, Jarnbjorn.

This all takes us into AXIS, where not only has Sam Wilson succeeded Steve as Captain America, but Wolverine has also died, in DEATH OF WOLVERINE. And Thor is again carrying Jarnbjorn.

And at some point over the next few months, we’ll get to the point where things begin to lay out as we see them in AVENGERS #35 and NEW AVENGERS #24 and thereafter. But we’re not quite there yet.

Also, as I mentioned earlier today, Thor having both arms in AXIS #1 isn’t a mistake. You’ll have to keep reading both AXIS and THOR to see what I mean—or you can not, and either simply take my word for it, or decide that I’m crazy and not buy any of it. Totally up to you. But Thor having both arms was an important bit of coordination between the AXIS crew and the THOR crew.

Simple enough, yes?

(And here come the questions…)

Comics, everybody!

I thought old continuity was tortured, but I had no idea.

Do have to wonder who all this is actually written for.

  1. vitruvian23 reblogged this from brevoortformspring
  2. rael-rider reblogged this from brevoortformspring
  3. ellidfics reblogged this from subtextsays and added:
    Not to mention that quite clearly NONE of this is going to stick for more than, oh, a year or two. If nothing else,...
  4. subtextsays reblogged this from ylixia and added:
    Oh come now, we’ve long suspected that fans pay much closer attention to continuity than marvel’s writers and editors.
  5. ylixia reblogged this from brevoortformspring
  6. stefanoperullo reblogged this from brevoortformspring
  7. phoning-it-in reblogged this from highway62
  8. kagezuno reblogged this from graemem
  9. highway62 reblogged this from graemem and added:
    I thought old continuity was tortured, but I had no idea. Do have to wonder who all this is actually written for.
  10. graemem reblogged this from brevoortformspring
  11. jay-h-bomb reblogged this from brevoortformspring
  12. rjbailey reblogged this from brevoortformspring
  13. brevoortformspring posted this