Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

X-Men: Messiah Complex

 
Wikipedia: X-Men: Messiah Complex
"Messiah CompleX"

Variant cover of X-Men: Messiah Complex 1 (Dec 2007).Art by Marc Silvestri.
Publisher Marvel Comics
Publication date January 2007 – March 2008
Genre Superhero
Crossover
Main character(s) X-Men
X-Factor
X-Force
New X-Men
Marauders
Acolytes
Purifiers
Predator X
Reavers
Cable
Creative team
Writer(s) Ed Brubaker, Mike Carey, Peter David, Craig Kyle and Christopher Yost
Penciller(s) Marc Silvestri, Billy Tan, Scot Eaton, Humberto Ramos and Chris Bachalo
Inker(s) Joe Weems w/Marco Galli, Danny Miki w/Allan Martinez, John Dell, Carlos Cuevas, Tim Townsend w/Victor Olazaba, Jon Sibal, Andrew Hennessy, Dave Meikis and Al Vey
Colorist(s) Frank D'Armata, Edgar Delgado and Brian Reber
Collected editions
Hardcover ISBN 0-7851-2899-9
Softcover ISBN 0-7851-2320-2

"Messiah Complex" (also written "Messiah CompleX") is a comic book crossover about the X-Men which ran from October 2007 to January 2008, published by Marvel Comics.

The story is the climax of events that began with "House of M", which led to the decimation of mutants in the Marvel Universe and the first chapter of a three-part saga, which continued in Messiah War released in 2009 and culminates in The Second Coming, a crossover between all X-Men titles in early 2010.

Contents

Overview

The "Messiah Complex" storyline is the climax of events set into motion in "House of M" and defined the direction of the X-Men franchise for the next several years. The storyline's main plot involves the birth of the first child with the X-gene since Decimation, sparking a race between the X-Men, the Marauders, the Acolytes, the Reavers, the Purifiers, and Predator X to see who will find the child first.[1] Messiah Complex also involves X-Factor and New X-Men, Sentinel Squad O*N*E*, and Cable.

Publication

October 2007

  • Chapter 1: X-Men: Messiah Complex one-shot.

November 2007

December 2007

  • Chapter 6: Uncanny X-Men #493
  • Chapter 7: X-Factor #26
  • Chapter 8: New X-Men #45
  • Chapter 9: X-Men #206

January 2008

  • Chapter 10: Uncanny X-Men #494
  • Chapter 11: X-Factor #27
  • Chapter 12: New X-Men #46
  • Chapter 13: X-Men #207

Additional books

  • X-Men: Messiah Complex - Mutant Files #1

Collected editions

The storyline has been collected into a single volume:

  • X-Men: Messiah Complex (collects "X-Men: Messiah CompleX", Uncanny X-Men #492-494, X-Men #205-207, New X-Men #44-46, X-Factor #25-27, and "X-Men: Messiah CompleX - Mutant Files", 352 pages, Marvel Comics, hardcover, April 2008, ISBN 0-7851-2899-9, softcover, November 2008, ISBN 0-7851-2320-2)

Aftermath and consequences

Divided We Stand: The "Divided We Stand" event followed on from the end of Messiah Complex and encompassed the Uncanny X-Men, X-Factor, X-Force, Young X-Men, X-Men: Legacy, Wolverine, and Cable ongoing series.[2]

Uncanny X-Men: A separate Divided We Stand storyline ran in Uncanny X-Men from #495 to 500 and ended with the X-Men reforming in San Francisco and pursuing "Cyclops’ vision of what the X-Men should do".[2][3]

Cable: At the Baltimore Comic-Con on September 10, 2007, Marvel Comics announced that a new Cable ongoing series (which will replace the Cable & Deadpool series), with Duane Swierczynski as the writer[4] and Ariel Olivetti as the artist, will be launched after the conclusion of Messiah Complex in March 2008.[5] This series follows the attempts of Cable to protect the Messiah child from those who would do her harm.

X-Men (vol. 2): X-Men (vol. 2) was renamed X-Men: Legacy as of issue #208 in February 2008. Mike Carey remained as writer with various artists contributing to the art, including Billy Tan and Scot Eaton, among others, with David Finch as the cover artist.[6] The book will focus on Professor Xavier, Rogue and Gambit, and will also feature important plans regarding Magneto, as well as a female character from the New X-Men title. Iceman will make a cameo appearance as well.[3]

X-Force: A new X-Force series was launched in February 2008 with Craig Kyle and Christopher Yost as the writers and Clayton Crain as the artist. The team will consist of Wolverine, X-23, Warpath, and Wolfsbane.[2]

X-Factor (Vol. 3) saw Layla Miller remain trapped in the future. Additionally, two of Madrox's duplicates were sent into future alternate realities. One duplicate traveled into the future with Miller and found himself in Bishop's future. In an unusual occurrence, the death of the duplicate with Miller causes Jamie Prime to get a tatoo of an M on his face. The other duplicate returned as an X-Factor character with the ability to possess others using techno-organic abilities named Cortex.

New X-Men (formerly New X-Men: Academy X): A new series, titled Young X-Men, debuted in April 2008 with Marc Guggenheim as the writer and Yanick Paquette as the artist and will replace the New X-Men series, which was cancelled with issue #46 in January 2008. The team will consist of Dust, Rockslide,Blindfold, Wolf Cub, and Anole (from the cancelled New X-Men series), as well as new members Ink and Greymalkin.[7]

Messiah War, is a seven-issue crossover between Cable (vol. 3) and X-Force which writer Craig Kyle describes as being the follow up to Messiah Complex and "the middle chapter of what I think will be a major three-part saga, which will continue to define and redefine the X-Universe moving forward".[8]

Notes

References

External links


Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
 
 

 

Copyrights:

Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "X-Men: Messiah Complex" Read more