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The Sentry (New Avengers) Books

In association with Amazon.com


Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - Sentry is not a hoax! He's not a lie!
Rob Reynolds wakes up in the middle of the night sensing the return of the greatest enemy he has ever faced - The Void. It has been quite a while since Rob has donned the blue and gold costume of the Sentry and his recollection of his spandex wearing days are sketchy at best. He even doubts the validity of these memories but when the Void takes over the body of his dog, Rob decides that the Sentry must come out of retirement to thwart the plans of his arch-rival.

The truth of the matter may be that Rob is merely a delusional ex-alcoholic who has receded back into the bottle or, even worse, is simply going mad. And the secret potion that Sentry needs to gain powers could very well be some good old Tennessee whiskey that happens to make Rob "fly". Could Sentry be the imagination of a deranged, middle-aged man? Jenkins keeps you guessing.

Jae Lee once again demonstrates his unique penciling style which made the Inhumans maxiseries a fan favorite. For Sentry, Lee has added some extra moodiness, along with an imitation of the Don Heck Avengers era. I must say I had a good laugh at the "Dark Knight Returns" homage as the professor tries to warn Sentry about the prolonged usage of the serum. As I was reading this book, the premise and feel of the story reminded me very much of the classic Miracleman series by Alan Moore, although Jenkins' script borrows little else from that title.

Sentry may not be groundbreaking but nevertheless, it is a worth while read although many fans still retain a grudge for the hoax surrounding this project. I believe it is one of the best media stunts ever to get people excited about a comic book. Oh well....

Review by Brian Grindrod



Rating: 3 out of 5 stars - How the Sentry Got Started...
Well, now that Marvel Comics is in a mood to shake things up in their cozy li'l universe, it seems that the Avengers as we have known them are...no more! The Scarlet Witch had a bit of a bad day and in the ensuing carnage, several heroes died, and the survivors had no stomach for continuing as a team.

Of course, that lasted about 18 pico-seconds before Captain America and Iron Man started to form a new team, featuring a rather unlikely lineup of A-listers and "Oh, yeah...I remember her!"-types. And it looks like one of the new members will be none other than...the Sentry!

The who? Why, surely you remember Earth's mightiest hero! Stronger than the Hulk! Smarter than Reed Richards! Faster than...uh...Quicksilver! More sorcerousful than...well, no. But the Sentry is the most uber-est hero that ever was, the pioneer for all the lesser lights that would follow, the very first metahuman, an inspiration to the Fantastic Four and every crimefighter that came along after his debut. He's got this huge super-Baxter Building HQ in downtown Manhattan, a pet AI, and a sidekick! Surely you must recall him now?

No? Well, as it turns out, the Sentry was TOO good to be believed, because of course shadows can't exist without light, and since he blazed like a supernova, he created the vastest shadow of all. While that analogy was just no good at all, the point is that his arch-nemesis was necessarily the most vile and unstoppable supervillain ever, a veritable force of nature that was unstoppable. And since his eternal nemesis could not exist without him, the solution was simple: the Sentry had to die. Or at least be forgotten. And so Dr. Strange cast a global "Forget the Sentry" spell to cast him into oblivion, and everyone mentally rewrote history to have all his deeds attributed to others.

This collection, then, is his saga. And...it's pretty hokey. The whole storyline basically seems to have been born from an idea for a publicity stunt--"Let's retcon a new hero into existence and make him the first and the mightiest!" And the details were hung from that skeletal idea, rather than arising organically from the need to tell a compelling and original story that couldn't be expressed any other way. It's more or less the desperate equivalent of stunt casting, where an ailing sitcom bags some mid-range celebrity to appear in a single episode in a bid to shore up ratings. The actual story is irrelevant; all that matters is drawing eyeballs to see the slumming movie star. Sort of the same thing here--look at this weird idea we had! It might not be great, but it's different! And while I'm all for a bold approach, this concept just really doesn't merit more than a one-shot "What If?" issue.

Nevertheless, the Sentry may now be firmly re-embedded in the Marvel Universe, so if you want to get caught up on the original backstory (before it get rebooted into a new configuration in the current Avengers title), this is where you have to go.



Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - Jenkins and Lee rule !!!
This book is second only to their Inhumans. It is about a guy who remembers his past life as a hero and it seems nobody else remembers him.

If you buy books for art, this one has : Jae Lee, Mark Texeira and Bill Sienkiewicz!!!!



Rating: 3 out of 5 stars - Entertaining at times, but ultimately pointless...
Collecting The Sentry's five-issue mini-series, along with the five subsequent one-shots, Sentry: Fantastic Four, Sentry: X-Men, Sentry: Spider-Man, Sentry: Hulk and Sentry vs. The Void, this has to be one of the most overwrought, anti-climactic, and ultimately pointless marketing stunts ever. [Marvel claimed The Sentry was a long-lost Silver Age creation of Stan Lee's that pre-dated the Fantastic Four.] To reinforce that fact, it includes a series of "interviews" between Stan Lee and Marvel EIC, Joe Quesada, that plays along with the hoax; reprints of various Wizard articles that ran in support of it; and a note from Wizard Staff Writer, Chris Lawrence, vainly attempting to rationalize the whole thing: "The goal wasn't to mislead anyone or betray anyone, but to get fans to further suspend their disbelief, to lead them to better appreciate the intricacies of Paul Jenkins' plot, to help them have fun."

Gee, I remember when it was the quality of the work in question that got fans to "suspend their disbelief" and "have fun." Silly me!

The mini-series introduces Bob Reynolds, a potbellied, alcoholic schlub who wakes up one stormy night remembering he was once the greatest superhero the world had ever known, and the realization that his greatest enemy had returned. What follows is a mildly intriguing piece of Rashômon-style meta-fiction that tells the story of a superhero no one remembers and the reasons why.

The whole thing is one big fanboy circle-jerk as writer Paul Jenkins has a good time with this ridiculous - though, at times, clever and entertaining - retcon of the entire Marvel Universe that makes Straczynski's recent "Sins Past" sullying of the sainted Gwen Stacy look timid in comparison. The mini-series and the final one-shot, Sentry vs. The Void tell the meat of the story, from Reynolds' efforts to figure out why no one remembers The Sentry - including the various heroes he fought alongside, many of whom even attended his wedding, not to mention Peter Parker whose photograph of The Sentry won him a Pulizter Prize! - to the final confrontation with his arch-nemesis, The Void. The other one-shots flesh out various characters' memories of The Sentry through some achingly navel-gazing exposition that mostly serves to reinforce just how great a hero The Sentry was.

One could argue that the story's conclusion, with the Sentry once again forgotten, is a dig at Superman himself, taking the stance that for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction, and as such, a being as powerful as Superman (or the Sentry) would necessitate an equally powerful evil that would ultimately doom the world. It's an interesting concept that Jenkins pulls off more in the subtext than on the surface. On the surface, it's similar to most time travel stories where, if you look at them too closely, the "logic" holding them together falls apart.



Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - Sacrifice it all!!!!
Marvel generated a lot of hype about the Sentry when it came out as a mini series. This included fake history pieces about this long lost Marvel character who should have been up there with the big guns like the F.F. and Avengers but then disappeared.

He wanders around similar to the way Mike Moran walked about in Miracleman-a god in human form, suffering like all us mortals but worse as he had a dim memory of the god-like power he had given up.

As the book progresses a storm starts to brew and we discover why the world was made to forget the Sentry ever was.

I found the story dragged at bit when I bought it on the newsstand but you know what??? When I read it in the collected edition it held together a lot better.

This book is for everyone who had to give up a dream to do the right thing (raise a family, serve their nation, take care of a disabled love one) and will really strike a cord with them. For everyone else maybe it will show you how we feel.


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