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Bastion

 
Album Review: Bastion

  • Artist: The Fluoride Program
  • Rating: StarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: August 04, 2005
  • Type: Extended Play (EP), Lyrics are included with the album
  • Genre: Rock

Review

Alternately brash and brooding, the Fluoride Program's debut EP bristles with guitar energy and unadulterated emotion. Drawing upon influences like mid-period Smashing Pumpkins and Radiohead (back when they remembered that guitars were meant for playing through huge stacks and not through meandering digital loops), this four-piece's compositions are shoved forward via a combination of Steve Bekkala's propulsive drumming and Justin King's dissonantly beautiful guitar lines, with enigmatic vocalist Dmitri Vada gliding over top of their musical topography with scattered snapshots of his all-encompassing love and others' treacherous jealousy. A uniquely American take on the guitar-driven alienation that Britpop had touched on and then for some reason abandoned, the Fluoride Program never indicates that meeting people is easy. Judging from their music, life is seen through alternately jagged and broken eyeglass lenses, the only respite coming from the few seconds between the punch and the body hitting the ground. The quiet, drifting "Sacred Ground" encapsulates that moment of semi-consciousness, as the head flies back and the imprint of the knuckle is still on the jaw, a perfect clarity is born. A perfect arc toward the pavement and the lulled lapse that is the album's closer, "White Sweat," a nine-minute fever dream with meandering guitar presences and mallet-bruising tempo shifts. Bastion is a whip-smart gut punch, rooted in post-punk's gritty spit and muscle, and juiced with the digital age's inherent unease, the group breaks bones and tears heartstrings, often with the same blow. ~ Zac Johnson, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Wish The Fluoride Program The Fluoride Program (4:34)
Lavender The Fluoride Program The Fluoride Program (4:40)
Hands The Fluoride Program The Fluoride Program (4:22)
Sacred Ground The Fluoride Program The Fluoride Program (3:44)
White Sweat The Fluoride Program The Fluoride Program (8:46)

Credits

Clint Hoagland (Engineer), Clint Hoagland (Mixing), Justin King (Guitar), Justin King (Vocals (Background)), Clint Hoagland (Producer), Steve Bekkala (Drums), Dmitri Vada (Vocals), Steve Bekkala (Bass), Dmitri Vada (Guitar)
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Bastion
Bastion.PNG
Art from the variant cover for X-Force #6, vol. 3 (2008).
Art by Clayton Crain.
Publication information
Publisher Marvel Comics
First appearance X-Men v2, #52 (May 1996)
Created by Scott Lobdell
Pascual Ferry
In-story information
Species Android/Artificial intelligence
Team affiliations Purifiers
Friends of Humanity
Operation: Zero Tolerance
Humanity's Last Stand
Notable aliases Sebastion Gilberti, Nicolas Hunter, Master Mold, Arnold Rodriguez, Template, The Oracle
Abilities A mystical fusion of Master Mold and Nimrod;
  • Immunity to telepathic probes and mutant abilities
  • Ability to turn people into Prime Sentinels
  • Command of other Sentinels
  • Energy projection
  • Superhuman strength and durability
  • Flight

Bastion is a supervillain that appears in the fictional Marvel Universe. The character was created by Scott Lobdell and Pascual Ferry and first made a cameo appearance in X-Men #52 (May 1996). His first full appearance was Uncanny X-Men #333 (June 1996).

Contents

Fictional character biography

Origin

Bastion started life out as two separate beings: the Sentinel Master Mold, and Nimrod, a Sentinel from an alternate future. One day Nimrod came across a piece of Master Mold's body, and Master Mold's programming began to co-opt Nimrod. The two of them became one being after being pushed into the Siege Perilous by Rogue. Now a man of flesh and no memory of his past, Bastion was taken in by a woman named Rose Gilberti. Living with Rose, Bastion began to hear about America's mutant problem. At some point, Bastion fell in with anti-mutant groups, like Graydon Creed's Friends of Humanity.

Operation: Zero Tolerance

In time, Bastion worked his way "up the ladder" in the U.S. Government. Unwittingly, Bastion was able to develop a new type of Sentinel, the Prime Sentinels.

Two events, the fallout of Onslaught and the death of Graydon Creed, were the ammunition needed to initiate Bastion's Operation: Zero Tolerance, which attacked mutants everywhere. The operation succeeded in capturing Jubilee and some members of the X-Men, taking direct control over the Xavier Institute for Higher Learning, and gaining possession of the Xavier Protocols, a list of files containing information on killing the X-Men.

The President was convinced by Senator Robert Kelly and Henry Peter Gyrich to suspend Bastion's operations. Bastion was captured by S.H.I.E.L.D., with help from Iceman. While in government custody, Bastion regained his memories, and he then escaped. He attempted to lead another crusade against mutants, but he was stopped by Machine Man and Cable. He was returned to government custody, only later to be beheaded by a brainwashed Wolverine, who served as Apocalypse's Horseman of Death.

Template

A former S.H.I.E.L.D. agent named Mainspring headed a project called the Gatekeepers, whose goal is to study and destroy Phalanx technology. They found the remains of Bastion and rebuilt him, but they then lost control of him. Bastion, with a new body and new programming, became known as Template and killed Mainspring. Bastion fought against the heroes Warlock and Wolfsbane during these incidents.

Some time later, Carol Danvers contacted the X-Men about the current whereabouts of the remains of Bastion/Template. The X-Men sent Shadowcat, Wolverine, and Gambit to break into the government facility, intending to reclaim their stolen computer files. While there, Template showed the three X-Men false holograms of events and lies about their teammates. The X-Men eventually got their files, but they were left with doubts and fears about their teammates.

X-Force

Following the events of the Messiah Complex event, the fundamentalist Purifiers assaulted a heavily-defended SHIELD installation, breaching the tight security with the aid of several double agents within the organization and recovering Bastion's head. At one of their churches, the Purifiers attached the head to the body of the Nimrod unit recovered from Forge's Aerie, returning Bastion to life. Immediately after his activation, the mutant-hunting robot alerts the Purifiers to the presence of the new X-Force. After accessing Nimrod's database, Bastion concludes that the X-Men are the greatest mutant threat to the Purifiers' objectives in this timeline or any other and that there is no terrestrial force in existence that could guarantee the elimination of the X-Men. However, he reveals that he has found something that could: Magus.[1]

It was later revealed that what Bastion discovered at the bottom of the ocean was not the real Magus, but one of his offspring in a mindless state. Bastion rewrote its programming and infected Donald Pierce and the Leper Queen, the recovered techno-organic remains of Cameron Hodge and Steven Lang, as well as the corpses of Bolivar Trask, Graydon Creed and Reverend William Stryker with the Technarch transmode virus, declaring them to be the future of humanity and the end of mutantkind.[2]

His first move was to capture several mutants and inject on them a strain of the Legacy Virus to cause their powers to go berserk and kill themselves and thousands of humans. Current known mutants to have been injected with the virus are Beautiful Dreamer, Fever Pitch, Boom Boom, Hellion and Surge. This would compel the United Nations to form a Mutant Response Division, which is successful, despite X-Force's efforts.[3]

Bastion also had Pierce act as his mole inside the X-Men's headquarters, all the while building several structures that surround Utopia.[4]

Necrosha

Mysteriously, mutants thought deceased to amazingly coming back to life. Bastion soon realizes that someone had gotten hold of the transmode virus. This spurs him onto accelerating his mysterious plan.[5]

Powers and abilities

Being a robot, Bastion has super strength, speed intelligence and endurance. It can also fly by using jet boots. It is also immune to psychic reading from telepaths and has complete command of all Sentinels.

Other versions

Age of Apocalypse

In the Age of Apocalypse storyline a Bastion existed, as evidenced when the X-Men are discussing Abyss who is the one "rumoured to have replaced Bastion". This Bastion has never been seen in the comic and there is no indication whether or not he is related to the main continuity Bastion.

In other media

Television

  • Though Bastion did not make an appearance in the 1992 X-Men animated series or in X-Men: Evolution, the latter does include a brief reference to him. In its final episode, Professor X had a number of visions, including that of a Sentinel army commanded by a smaller robot that closely resembled Nimrod, but wore Bastion's colors and costume pattern.

Video games

  • Bastion appears as one of the bosses in the video game X-Men Legends II: Rise of Apocalypse voiced by Alastair Duncan. He seems to be a mere anti-mutant activist (though his true nature is mentioned in a trivia minigame), yet his ability to control Sentinels is noted, as the mission in question where he attacks the X-Men involved the X-Men teaming up with Sentinels to save civilians. Bastion then took control of the Sentinels to turn them against the X-Men.

Bibliography

List of titles

  • X-Men vol. 2, #52, 57, 64–69
  • X-Force vol. 1 #54, 68, 82
  • Uncanny X-Men #333–334, 339, 346
  • X-Men Unlimited #11, 16, 27
  • Generation X #20, 23
  • Wolverine vol. 2 #115–118
  • Wolverine Annual '96
  • X-Factor vol. 1 #127, 132
  • X-Man #22, 30
  • Cable #40, 45–47
  • Cable/Machine Man Annual '98
  • Machine Man/Bastion Annual '98
  • Astonishing X-Men vol. 2 #1–2
  • Warlock vol. 4 #6–8
  • X-Men: Declassified
  • Onslaught Epilogue: The Path To Redemption
  • Venom: On Trial Part 1
  • X-Force vol. 3, ongoing

References

  1. ^ X-Force #2
  2. ^ X-Force #3
  3. ^ X-Force vol. 3 #12-13, 17-18
  4. ^ X-Force vol. 3 #19
  5. ^ Necrosha one-shot

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Bastion (comics)" Read more