Mark Millar is the New York Times best-selling writer of Wanted, the Kick-Ass series, The Secret Service, Jupiter’s Legacy, Jupiter’s Circle, Nemesis, Superior, Super Crooks, American Jesus, MPH, Starlight, and Chrononauts. Wanted, Kick-Ass, Kick-Ass 2, and The Secret Service (as Kingsman: The Secret Service) have been adapted into feature films, and Nemesis, Superior, Starlight, War Heroes, Jupiter’s Legacy and Chrononauts are in development at major studios.
His DC Comics work includes the seminal Superman: Red Son, and at Marvel Comics he created The Ultimates – selected by Time magazine as the comic book of the decade, Wolverine: Old Man Logan, and Civil War – the industry’s biggest-selling superhero series in almost two decades.
Mark has been an Executive Producer on all his movie adaptations and is currently creative consultant to Fox Studios on their Marvel slate of movies.
Read for a one shot that bridges the 2nd & 3rd arcs of the Gah Lak Tus saga. Also voluptuous vision?! I’m all about gender swapping, but I’m not sure making Vision a pin up counts…”I change my shape to match the beings of every planet, but I always have a huge rack!”
This issue does a great job conveying the huge and foreboding magnitude of what is coming and how helpless the characters are. The tour of some of the precious, languished civilizations was a nice touch.
There are no details about who first created Vision, but the concept that some civilization created a robot to warn others and try to help them is interesting.
The art was decent but contrasts with the more realistic tone of the other issues in this trilogy. The depiction of the gorgeous female Vision didn't make much sense to me.