I really enjoy the MCU. I own and have seen all of the movies, most of them multiple times, but I haven't really gotten into much beyond that. By which I mean, obviously, the comics or graphic novels, and more recently, all of the spin-off shows. I watched a season plus a bit of Jessica Jones, and the first episode of WandaVision, but that was really about it. But then my friend asked if anyone would be willing to buddy up for these Hawkeye graphic novels, and as I really like Hawkeye (as played by the underrated and underutilized Jeremy Renner), I agreed.
OBVIOUSLY this is not going to be THAT Hawkeye, and I knew and was OK with that. I don't actually know what Hawkeye this was... but I liked him.
Mostly. I have one big -HUGE- criticism that comes at the end of this volume, which really bothered me quite a lot... but we'll get there.
First thing's first. This volume was comprised of a handful of smaller stories, and I don't know if it's how they were laid out (I read an e-version) or whether I'm just not really much of a e-graphic novel person, but it took me pretty much the whole thing to figure out the layout. I thought I was good after the first 2 or 3 (slow learner), but then at the end, I thought I was one short, because a cover image/title page appeared at the very end, leading me to think that there should be another story after. I even asked my friend, and he was like "Nah, you're just dumb" (probably) and then I went back to look again, and figured out that it apparently was just additional artwork, and that they had all had it, I just had failed to realize it.
That being said, now I know, and knowing is half the battle. Oh wait, wrong franchise. Anyway, there are three more volumes to read in this set, and now I know what to expect, so it'll likely go much more smoothly and Becky's Brain won't be like "Where more? What happen?" (Probably.)
I really liked the artwork. It wasn't overly stylized or sketchy (though I like that style). I am the type of graphic novel reader who really LOOKS at the artwork, even though I'm no artist, I just live with one. I couldn't tell you anything at all about the technique or skill involved, other than that the artist(s) clearly has and makes good use of both. I enjoyed the use of silhouette and shadow quite a lot, and the different focus/zoom "shots"... or is it panels? I don't know. I just read the things. It was almost always easy to tell what what going on, and added to the narrative story, as I think it should and is meant to. I didn't love the way that women were drawn, all boobs and butt, but you know, that's the world we live in.
I was surprised by how much I liked this more jaded/cynical Hawkeye. I myself am a jaded and cynical beast, but I find myself drawn to characters who are more earnest and vulnerable themselves. Not too much, but just... honestly open in ways that make me, in real life, VERY uncomfortable to show. I like MCU Hawkeye (or I guess Clint Barton) for that quality. He's a family man, and a loyal friend and caring person, and though he is... private? not super accessible? He doesn't hide those things about himself or seem to think that they make him weak, etc. He also doesn't treat those traits as anything other than just... who he is. He doesn't think that makes him some sort of hero or anything. He just has a skill, and uses it to help protect what he values. I really like that about him.
So... THIS Hawkeye was... darker. More sarcastic, jaded, harder. I didn't hate it, but it wasn't really what I was expecting. I did get a chuckle a couple times from his sort of internal monologue sarcasm, and I liked that quite a bit. I find that this is usually a trait of graphic novels that I enjoy, though my experiences with them are pretty limited, given how many are out there. I just usually really like the tone of the narrative. There's something about the shortness of it that just comes across as quippy, and it works for me.
OK, so... what I didn't like. The last two sections of this volume were The Tape parts 1 and 2, wherein a tape with incriminating and very problematic footage of Hawkeye was leaked, which would obviously damage the Avengers' reputation, so it needed to be recovered at all costs. And, I don't want to spoil anything here, but I will just say that what was depicted here was not at all hero behavior, and the entire plan was unnecessary, in that I think the end goal could have been accomplished in a much less deathcount heavy way. I was bothered by the plan, and the fact that it was sure to result in many henchmen deaths, because... I mean, henchmen are people too. Yes, they may work for a criminal, but probably most of them were hired as glorified security or gophers and are just doing a job. We don't know what socioeconomic situation they may have faced to find "Henchman" to be the job for them. Maybe they made mistakes and were arrested and then other avenues of legal work were closed off because of their record. Maybe the local crime boss is the only gig in town. We don't know... and should those people be expendable for a shitty plot to get back a tape that shouldn't exist in the first place?
To me, no. I realize that I am looking up from the bottom of a liberal rabbit hole here, defending the "lives" of badguys who only exist in ink on paper... but normalizing this kind of bodycount carnage for entertainment no longer appeals to me. I can't help but humanize them and wonder whether they signed up for this kind of thing. It's like Finn from Star Wars: The Force Awakens... He was literally raised to be a Stormtrooper. He knew nothing else... But is he not a person with worth and value and agency? He shows he is. These henchmen are no different.
There's a difference between fighting and knowing you'll have to kill for a worthy, unavoidable cause, or self-defense. But, this plan operated on what I would call false pretenses, and because of the unnecessary aspect of it, going through with it and killing anyway is just not OK to me. And then the handwavery explanation of everything was just... accepted without question, and that bothered me too.
So. Here we are. For the most part, I really liked this, but that end story just deflated me on this Hawkeye. My friend says that the next Volume addresses some of my issues, so I will likely continue. It's not like they are a huge investment of time, but I sure hope that someone calls him, and everyone in on this plan, out for their un-hero-like behavior. Don't make me stop this car!