"You have all lived enough. If you had a million years, you'd never do enough. You'll always be better tomorrow. But you didn't realize that one day, tomorrows would run out...and that day is today."
I agree with the sentiment that Marvel Comics events have kind of grown tiresome. We get one between 8 to 10 months and they always try to shake the status quo up with some enormous stakes to create big stakes so readers get invested and try to follow for the few months it runs. It can get tedious and even feel like homework, especially if the characters involved in the main conflict are not the ones you usually read.
Judgement Day should be the prime example of a world ending big event that promises the shake the status quo for the 10th time this past decade, just another average event to read the tie-ins of the characters you follow and if you're interested pick up the main event. This was not the case. Judgement Day works, and it's probably my favorite Marvel Comics event since 2015's Secret Wars.
Following on the ending of Gillen's Eternals run, Druig declares war on mutants to gain himself some favors as nee prime Eternal, only for chaos to quickly escalate, resulting in the creation of the Progenitor, a celestial who gives the world 24 hours to justify itself if it's worthy to keep on living. Some pass, more fail, so humanity fails.
"Matt Murdock dresses as a devil and tries to stop the streets from becoming hell. He is a man with a firm moral code, which he has violated time and time over. I appear with a crown of thorns and a downturned thumb. Beneath the mask, he weeps, says I know, yet carries on. Miles Morales turns and sees me as Peter Parker. I give him a thumbs-up, he gives me one back."
If Gillen subtly questions the institutions of those in power over all of us in his Eternals run, in Judgment Day he bluntly questions us all. Much of the main event is narrated by the Progenitor itself, and it's here that we are shown much of the highs and lows of ordinary humans, superheroes, mutants and eternals. Several individuals who reflect the best and worst of all of us, with the obvious conclusion being that maybe we have failed. The first judgment against Captain America hits hard, especially in times like these; but as always, it's the unrelenting fight for survival (with the help of sacrifice and some technicalities) that prevails. For some it might be preachy, but I appreciate how unapologetically honest Gillen is with his views. It's a call to reflect on ourselves, our values and priorities, to try to be better. And at the end of the day, that's what the best superhero stories are supposed to do.
The tie-in are also pretty great! Some of the X-Men ones felt a bit too disconnected but still entertained me. The Spider-Man one lived up to the expectations I got from people, but X-Men: Red is probably the best one. Aside from everything written by Gillen, that's just top-tier stuff.
"We cannot judge a species in a single day. Judgment is ongoing. Your mistakes are cumulative. You should remember that every day when you wake up in the morning, perhaps today is the day the species goes too far, and the Earth is doomed. Act accordingly. Every day is Judgment Day."