Vision Issue 7 b "The best work of comics in the same period." Taneishi Kotsu (Black Panther) b
Is the vision of Avengers who want to be human be more human than family? The vision in Virginia made an artificial family resembling himself. Can the unusual Android family become ordinary? New events begin! Long ago, there were robots and witches in love. But following the love was pain and death, hope and frustration, abuse and revenge. When the witch and the robot were destroyed, they stood up again in the dust pit. I crossed each other across a field full of blood and bones. This is the story of Scarlets position and vision over 45 years. Before their families, they had love. And there was a war ... .
This is a classic, a summary of the Vision and Scarlet Witch together, from their first time, to the good-bye. The good-bye was set during the Busiek-Perez run, when Vision's body was being restored that Wanda gifted the Vision a copy of her brain patterns, which would become Virginia.
Read as a single issue on the ComiXology app. The collective review for the entire The Vision by Tom King and Gabriel Walta (2015-2016) storyline can be found on my review of The Vision: The Complete Series.
I already reviewed the entire series, but I had to write a review for this issue on its own as well because as a Scarlet Witch and Vision fan, I absolutely LOVED this issue. It was adorable to get a better and modern peak into the start of their relationship, as well as a recap of their love story. I have not seen a writer capture their dynamic better than in this issue. And as with all Scarlet Witch and Vision comics, my heart was aching by the end because THEY'RE SO PERFECT FOR ONE ANOTHER AND WHY DO THEY HAVE GO THROUGH SO MUCH PAIN 😫😭 I know the end signalled a new beginning for Vision, but Scarlet Witch and Vision's relationship are truly my Roman Empire.
This issue broke my heart. We get an extended flashback. More clues as to how we got to the present points. More things are put in context. The layers are adding up. It’s heartbreaking and really grounding. The writer has done a really great job making fictional science fiction characters relatable and understanding to people that actually live through similar hard realities of love. I get it.
Having read the comics as a child, this retelling seems like an insult. Like a flat, ugly and MEAN caricature of something that felt important. Those characters were real to me and I loved them, but seeing them through Tom King’s eyes I hate them.
Reading as part of an obsession with WandaVision at the moment. I read this on a recommended timeline on the marvel comic app, and I was pleasantly surprised.
Oh my heart, this comic really messed with my heart, plus the illustrations are just fabulous. Pick up for WandaVision fans!
It seems like this week is a little weak, talking about comics, of course. Good stories are being published, but they are plagued with plot holes and inconsistent scripts. It’s a shame because Vision was a character almost grey in the movies I’ve seen him in. I’m not really a fan of the character, but I’ll admit there’s some sense of originality in him and what he does being an alien-like creature created by humans. It’s not something that really grabs me, but clearly there are some people who would love it as praise for this series has been high. However, in this issue we don’t have a single story, instead it is much more like an anthology of the best moments between Vision and the Scarlet Witch over the years. They are a strange couple for sure, but very loved by their fans. This issue reads more like a filler, or maybe a one shot. It’s an easy exit to the lack of ideas and wanting easy sales instead of pleasing fans. Still, I cannot deny I learned more about Vison and his past with Wanda, but it is so slow that the reader won’t enjoy it so much. Needless to say that using many ‘Later’s in the different segments is not a wise option. The Vision issue 7 is really only for fans of the series and a terrible jumping on point for new readers like myself. The cover on the other hand was a solid. Obsession, fascination, a deadly attraction, everything is excellently illustrated in that single image. This another instance where the cover would also work well as a poster, seeing how broken inside our main character is because of the love he feels for the Scarlet Witch, hiding it from everyone’s eyes, but unable to do so from his own. It also shows the old “grandpa-school” style we will see on the inside. A visual shock, very violent, raw, and not because the story has any gore content, but for the near uncountable lines that litter the book creating the many shadows and heterogeneous colors. I feel like I’m reading an 80’s comic book, not a contemporary one. Psychology plays a fundamental role in the plot, showing us the various individual changes in Vision and the Witch, as well as those affecting their relationship as a couple, as they go down a path of no return, despite their best wishes. Something I liked was the nine-panels-pages. It’s unusual to see comics nowadays using this style and I must admit it’s enjoyable to have a lot of information crammed in a single segment. That does’t counteract the slow reading pace of the book completely, but manages to give the reader a smile. Speaking about smiles and funny moments, the first and last page have the same effect and are both quite funny, using something so simple as a bad joke. The circular structure, to link beginning and end with a similar scene, is a point in favor of this issue. Mature, interesting, a must for real fans, but perhaps not the best worked issue for newcomers. I’d summarize Vision #7 as a basic teen story portrayed in an adult way. It’s worth keeping an eye on this one to see what happens next.