Review: ‘Secret Invasion Saga’
A few years back, DC released the super-thick, super-cheap Countdown to Infinite Crisis to lead into the company’s massive Infinite Crisis event. In addition to recapping the years’ worth of hints that led to Crisis, the issue also contained some crucially important events, including the death of Ted Kord (Blue Beetle).
Marvel now has pulled that page out of the summer-event book, releasing Secret Invasion Saga last week as a free lead-in to the looming Secret Invasion of the Skrulls. While I can’t argue about the price, the content was more than a little underwhelming. In fact, I fell asleep while reading it. Twice.
Instead of actually telling a story, this issue is essentially a whole bunch of material culled from the Marvel Encyclopedia (look under "Skrull"). In one of the world’s longest internal monologues, Iron Man thinks over all the events that have led to this point (the reveal of Elektra as a Skrull, etc.). He covers the latest interstellar goings on from Annihilation and Skrull history as well.
While it’s nice to get a primer on things, the issue is extremely high on text and completely bereft of any new developments. If Marvel was planning on hooking new readers to the event, there’s no big eye-grabber here. They may have made some fans among insomniacs.
Between this, the grammar-unfriendly "Who do you trust?" marketing blitz and that bizarre Blair Witch-like video, Marvel’s off to a bit of a rough start to the Skrull invasion. Of course, they could probably shoot themselves in the foot and it would still sell like hot cakes with golden frosting.
I think that, as a primer, Secret Invasion Saga can be a valuable tool for those who don't know the backstory or need a refresher course. If they charged going rate for it, I'd probably agree with you. as long as they didn't sell it as an actual "story." But it was free — well, your friendly neighborhood retailer had to pay shipping, but it was free to the reader.I agree that the Secret Invasion hardly smacks of one of those mind-numbing all-encompassing events like Crisis on infinite Secret Crises III, but geez, those things aren't events anymore anyway — they're the norm. That's what Marvel and DC give us instead of stories.
dude we're we reading the same book? "completely bereft of any new developments" ? Seriously? must be a DC fan. . . jokes lol