• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Comic Book Herald

A Comic Book Reading Order Guide For Beginners & Fans

  • Reading Orders
    • Marvel
    • My Marvelous Year
    • DC Comics
    • All Comic Book Publishers
    • Most Recent
  • Beginner Guides
    • Beginner’s Guide To Comics In 2025
    • Marvel 2025: Where to Start?
    • DC 2025: Where to Start?
    • Best of Lists
    • Tablets for Comics
    • Guides for Digital Readers
  • Reviews
    • Marvel Comics
    • DC Comics
    • Comic Book Movies
    • Comic Book TV
    • Video Games
  • Podcasts & Video
    • My Marvelous Year
    • Best Comics Ever (CBH)
    • CBH on Youtube!
  • About Me
    • My Favorite Comics of All Time
    • Columns
    • CBH Email Newsletter
  • Support Comic Book Herald
    • Ways to support
You are here: Home / Featured / A-FORCE #1 Review: “Public Service Friends!”

A-FORCE #1 Review: “Public Service Friends!”

May 22, 2015 by Matt Lehn 4 Comments

 

Remember the cartoon “Super-Friends”? If not, the Saturday Morning staple of the 1970s and 80s saw DC Comics’ heavyweights imposingly handing down life lessons on an episodic basis. While considerably more nuanced, the debut issue of Marvel’s loosely-based all-ladies Avengers squad also succumbs to being a quasi-amorphous mass of capes doling out a public service announcement. Of course, it is in the name of God Emperor Doctor Doom, so take that for what it’s worth.

"Welcome to community service. Hope you survive the experience..."
“Welcome to community service. Hope you survive the experience…”

The story is solid enough but much of its detriment owes to paralleling many beats from last week’s Secret Wars #2. For anyone familiar with the core series, it is evident that if one breaks any of Doom’s laws, one goes to the Wall-like Shield to defend Battleworld from the zombies, killer robots and giant space bugs beyond. This cautionary tale is expertly re-explained (different crime) but eats up a bulk of pages all the same. Granted, there is far more pathos than career crazy Jamie Braddock could ever muster but the mechanics are transparently similar. So, keeping score: Conspiracy and treason gets you The Shield. Accidental property damage and littering in a forbidden domain gets you The Shield. Man, it’s like that town from the first Shrek movie!

Arcadia makes for nice postcards!
Arcadia makes for nice postcards!

Furthering comparisons, there’s also many instances of one-upping the Hickman/Ribic centerpiece. Running with the “already in progress” backdrop, writers G. Willow Wilson and Marguerite Bennett take the cold, cursory status quo addressing of Secret Wars and flip the frown upside down, introducing a super-immersive idyllic paradise. The opening three-page framing sequence sets the mood like a symphonic overture, warmly capturing attention if not imagination.

"Meanwhile..."
“Meanwhile…”

Casting She-Hulk as the leader/ “hub” character is in an interesting choice. A stalwart of the Avengers and Fantastic Four since the early 1980s, She-Hulk is as iconic as she is a renowned team player. However, her career is not exactly screaming the stuff of Captain America. More than anything, her tenures with Earth’s Mightiest are earmarked by her being continually mind-controlled into an “enemy within” rage weapon and quitting out of guilt and embarrassment (a la cousin Bruce). This and her proven record of enforcing unpopular legislature (Civil War) may be the reasons why Doom hands her the keys to the island of Arcadia.

Still going with that, huh?
Still going with that, huh?

The heroes coming together as “Shulkie’s Angels” is maybe the only conceivable in-story “sell” as to why an army of female supers (written by two women, no less) would ever refer to themselves as something as clunky and brutish as A-Force. In terms of group monikers, emphasis seems to be heavy on the gamma-dumb-smash connotations and less on empowering razor-sharp lawyer smarts. Sigh, “franchise letter plus” is a formula that lives on in Battleworld. So, look out former West Coasters, when Doom repurposes y’all as A-Factor…

 

Support For Comic Book Herald:

Comic Book Herald is reader-supported. When you buy through links on our site, we may earn a qualifying affiliate commission.

Comic Book Herald’s reading orders and guides are also made possible by My Marvelous Year club support on Patreon, and generous reader donations.

Any size contribution will help keep CBH alive and full of new comics guides and content. Support CBH’s My Marvelous Year on Patreon for exclusive rewards, or Donate here! Thank you for reading!

Classic pomp.
Classic pomp.

Many old school fans complain about the lack of pageantry in the Avengers for the last decade. Not only is there the implied nod to Roy Thomas’s 1970 “Lady Liberators” story (Avengers #83) but an equally-subtle callback to Kurt Busiek’s Morgana LeFay re-imagining. The visual team of penciler/co-inker Jorge Molina, inker Craig Yeung, color artists Laura Martin and Matt Milla and letterer Cory Pettit possess credits of varying repute but have never before functioned as an ensemble. To their collective ability, there is much promise for future issues.

One of many "Official Handbook" parades!
One of many “Official Handbook” parades!

However, cramming a whole lotta cast in Pacheco/Perez-style sometimes cuts two ways. Some characters just stand around as retro-dressed easter eggs, saying nothing yet contributing to the looming homogenous “hero-blob” overmind by virtue of presence. This “Every Marvel Lady Ever is now an Avenger” produces some surprise left-field friendships and an astonishingly nurturing Loki but where things really excel is in the quieter solo outro of Nico Minoru.

"Uh... like, something got thrown into our yard? Ironic, right?"
“Uh… like, something got thrown into our yard? Ironic, right?”

Sadly, just as it starts getting good- it ends, more in abrupt anticlimax than cliffhanger. Overall, the issue would benefit from additional pages, different pacing and/or less teaching lessons. Although Wilson and Bennett paint fantastic broad strokes but linger overlong on the wrong details, it’s an impressive debut effort with loads of potential. Developments will be interesting but think of this as the “Zero Volume” demo- the real deal will be making these Avengers a force post-Secret Wars.

Filed Under: Featured, Marvel Reviews, Reviews Tagged With: Secret Wars

Heroically Support Comic Book Herald!

If you like Comic Book Herald, and are able to donate, any small contribution will help keep CBH alive and full of new comics guides and content. Donate here! Or, support CBH on Patreon for exclusive rewards! Thank you for reading!

Become a Patron!

CBH Newsletter!

About Matt Lehn

Musician and freelance web denizen Matt Lehn has been living and breathing the Marvel Universe since 1985. Always a die-hard New Yorker at heart, he now lives with his wife, three boys and two cats in Portland, Oregon. Check out his Avengers-specific blog at: avengersaccessible.wordpress.com. Follow him on Twitter: @fierykillrock

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. RJA says

    May 28, 2015 at 7:46 pm

    QUOTE: “Better that than a “mixed” group with a token woman who isn’t very effective.”

    Well, I think anything’s better than that. But my favorite teams are ones where the female/male ratio is equal, or very close to it. Peter David’s second X-Factor run is a good example of what I want to see more of.

    Reply
  2. Clarence says

    May 28, 2015 at 5:46 pm

    Isolationism? I don’t see it. I’ve actually read A-Force #1 and I thought it was okay, but as a man, I have NO problems with an all-female superhero group. Better that than a “mixed” group with a token woman who isn’t very effective.

    She-Hulk’s leadership being tested is interesting. Dazzler in her original outfit is a head-scratcher. I wanted to see more of a certain heroine interacting with the A-Force. This issue didn’t wow me, but it has potential for some good pathos-building.

    Reply
  3. RJA says

    May 23, 2015 at 2:00 am

    I have no interest in A-Force, because I don’t like teams that are all one gender, be it female or male. This kind of homogenization and thinly coded isolationism is exactly what the modern comics industry should be working against, in my opinion. There are more “out & proud” fangirls than ever, true, but this is exactly the opposite of what a lot of us are looking for. Bennett and Wilson are talented writers, and I’m sure the product is well crafted, but I cannot in good conscience support it, as I feel it would hold back genuine progress in the world of superhero comic books.

    Reply
    • Kyle says

      May 23, 2015 at 8:46 am

      I agree. Total isolationism. Marvel trying to “shake things up” and become more modern seems too forced. A-forced, that is.

      Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

The My Marvelous Year Podcast!

Apple PodcastsRSS

CBH Newsletter!

My Marvelous Year Podcast and Reading Club 1

Recent Posts

  • Extra Issues – Lucifer Pt. 2 (2000) May 8, 2025
  • 2010 Pt. 9: Thor: The Mighty Avenger, Bucky on Trial, & Invincible Iron Man May 5, 2025
  • My Favorite Graphic Novels of April 2025 May 1, 2025
  • 2010 Variant Cover D: Dave Interviewed Donny Cates & Chris Claremont! And Daredevil: Born Again Review! April 27, 2025
  • 2010 Pt. 8: Daredevil: Shadowland April 21, 2025
  • 2010 Pt. 7: Wolverine, Second Coming, & Uncanny X-Force April 14, 2025
  • Extra Issues – Lucifer Pt. 1 (2000) April 7, 2025
  • 2010 Variant Cover C: Marvel Rivals Resurrects the X-Men’s Krakoa, Trivia & Jiggle Physics! April 7, 2025
  • My Favorite Graphic Novels of March 2025 April 7, 2025
  • 2010 Pt. 6: Hickman’s Fantastic Four: Three March 31, 2025
  • 2010 Pt. 5: Realm of Kings & Thanos Imperative March 24, 2025
  • 2010 Variant Cover B: Daredevil Born Again (Again) TV Series Review! March 17, 2025
  • 2010 Pt. 4: Amazing Spider-Man: Big Time & Dave’s Favorite Black Widow Story March 10, 2025
  • My Favorite Graphic Novels of February 2025 March 4, 2025
  • 2010 Pt. 3: Jonathan Hickman’s S.H.I.E.L.D. & Secret Warriors March 3, 2025

Popular Articles

DC Rebirth Guide

Batman Reading Order

DC New 52 Reading Order

Marvel Ultimate Universe Guide

Civil War Reading Order

Marvel Cosmic Reading Order

The Best Comics of All Time!

Deadpool Reading Order

Justice League Reading Order

Complete Thanos Reading Order

X-Men Reading Guide (Modern Era)

Age of Apocalypse Reading Order

Modern Marvel Universe in 25 Trades

Best Tablet For Digital Comics

Is Marvel Unlimited Worth It?

Footer

New to Comic Book Herald?

Hey there - my name's Dave and this is my comic book blog. It's my way of sharing my borderline obsessive addiction to the comic book medium, and I hope you like some of what's going on here.

Most people that come here are looking for my (WIP) Marvel reading order guide. You can probably also get a sense if CBH is for you by taking a look at some of my columns.

If you like what you see, let's connect on Facebook or Twitter. Or, leave a comment on the blog here, I'm always looking for new awesome people in the comic book community.

More on Comic Book Herald

  • Home
  • About
  • Support CBH
  • My Marvelous Year
  • Join!
Privacy Policy
Terms of Service

Recent Posts

  • Extra Issues – Lucifer Pt. 2 (2000)
  • 2010 Pt. 9: Thor: The Mighty Avenger, Bucky on Trial, & Invincible Iron Man
  • My Favorite Graphic Novels of April 2025
  • 2010 Variant Cover D: Dave Interviewed Donny Cates & Chris Claremont! And Daredevil: Born Again Review!
  • 2010 Pt. 8: Daredevil: Shadowland

Copyright © 2025 · Metro Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in