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 Location:  Home » Books » General » Essential Defenders Volume 4 TPB (Essential)  
Essential Defenders Volume 4 TPB (Essential)
Essential Defenders Volume 4 TPB (Essential)
Authors: David Kraft, Ed Hannigan, Jim Shooter, Mary Jo Duffy, Steven Grant, Mark Gruenwald, Bob Lubbers, Sal Buscema, Jim Mooney, Don Perlin, Bruce D. Patterson, Herb Trimpe, Jack Abel, Joe Sinnott, Tex Blaisdell, Pablo Marcos
Publisher: Marvel Comics
Category: Book

List Price: $16.99
Buy New: $9.13
You Save: $7.86 (46%)



New (22) from $9.13

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 2 reviews
Sales Rank: 247123

Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 584
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.5
Dimensions (in): 9.9 x 6.5 x 1.4

ISBN: 0785130616
Dewey Decimal Number: 741
EAN: 9780785130611
ASIN: 0785130616

Publication Date: July 30, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: Brand New! Save 30 - 50% off of retail prices on our wide selection of comic book graphic novels, manga and anime, role playing games, DVDS, Osprey military history books, and more!

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Havok, Nova, Captain Ultra...Shocker, Plantman, Batroc the Leaper - not the Defenders, but two incredible simulations! But the debacle of the dozens of "Defenders for a Day" is just the start for the latest look at Earth's Mightiest Non-Team! Will they be driven mad by Lunatik, or blown away by Foolkiller? International crises and extradimensional warfare abound! The secret of Omega the Unknown! Asgardians, androids, and guys with wings on their heads! Plus: Spider-Man, the Black Panther, and a guest-appearance by Millie the Model! Collects Defenders #61-91.


Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Adventures of the non-team (volume 4)   August 25, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Among the great Marvel superhero teams, I've always had a particular affection for the Defenders. The Fantastic Four were bonded by family, the X-Men were united first as students, then as part of a cause and the Avengers were the all-stars. The Defenders were different, a "non-team" of loners like Dr. Strange, the Sub-Mariner and the Hulk who could barely stand to be together. A few dozen issues into the run, the Defenders would eventually be more of a regular team with the characters who would truly define them: Nighthawk, Valkyrie and Hellcat.

Even then, however, the Defenders had an off-beat quality that the other teams lacked. This is evident from the beginning of Essential Defenders Volume 4, which covers issues 61 to 91. As this volume begins, the Defenders must contend with the crazed Lunatik, and then things get crazy themselves. The Valkyrie's college friend, Dollar Bill, has made a film about the team, defining them as a non-team anyone can join. This results in a bunch of heroes trying to join, including Hercules who believes his Avengers status makes him the automatic leader. What's worse, a band of supervillains has also started calling themselves Defenders, leading to a mess that will take a few issues to clean up.

After that, it's a visit to the Valkyrie's home, Asgard, to contend with a wannabe god, followed by another battle with Lunatik, whose origin is explained and leads to the strange realm called Tunnelworld. While Dr. Strange reunites with original Defenders Hulk and Sub-Mariner to battle an evil wizard, Nighthawk, Hellcat and Valkyrie must deal with, among others, the Mandrill, a mutant who can mind-control any woman. All this and legal troubles for Nighthawk, family problems for Hellcat and the Hulk saves the whales and goes grocery shopping.

Unlike the other Marvel superteams, the Defenders never had much permanence, although they did outdo other teams like the Champions. This volume (along with Volume 3) really shows the comic at its creative peak. If you like old-fashioned, seventies-style superheroics, the Defenders will not disappoint.



4 out of 5 stars Getting better with every volume   August 11, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Volume 4 of this Essentials title definitely goes better places than Volume 3 did. For one thing, Nighthawk fares better as a leader in this book. Rather than being captured in over a dozen issues like he was in Volume 3, he's stepped up as a leader here. He's painted as quite a bit of a jerk, but is still interesting to see in action.

The infamous "Defender for a Day" storyline is here, which pours in every "B" list character Marvel could scrape up at the time. Heroes like Havok, Quasar, Hercules, Paladin, White Tiger, Black Goliath, and others you loved in the 70's show up for 3 issues where everyone gets the chance to be a Defender for a while. To be honest, even though this was only a gimmick story (none of the new recruits stick around), it breathed life into the series for a little while. It was nice to see those background heroes get center stage for a few minutes (White Tiger versus Batroc the Leaper was great).

From there, it slows down considerably during the "Valkyrie in Valhalla" storyline, and even though the Lunatik storyline is finally finished from Volume 3 here, it's not very satisfying. Doctor Strange shows up again, along with Namor and Hulk to recreate the original team of Defenders to stop a colossal threat. Valkyrie finally faces Barbara Norris (the woman whose body she has been inhabiting since the first few issues of the series). All this and Millie the Model returns (yeah, it didn't matter to me either).

There were a lot of positive things in this book that makes it better than Volume 3, but you can tell many of the stories are filler. They are a team, they aren't a team, they are a team again, they break up again...this gets old after a while. I know Marvel was trying to promote them as the "Superteam that isn't a team at all", but it starts to wear thin.

Thirty issues are covered here, so it's definitely worth the money. And this sets the stage for the next volume of 30 issues (hopefully), which has some of the best stories of the Defenders' series. Some of it is good, and some isn't, but taken as a whole it's worth reading.


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