A new sensation in the Misogynist Marvel Manner!
Dan Slott wrote:
One of the messed up things about Hank is that he's going to be spending a lot of time with Jocasta. Most people forget that Jocasta's robot brain is based on Janet Van Dyne's brain patterns. And... let me creep you out... could this lead to a new relationship? Think about it. Jocasta's a cyber-reflection of Jan, a version of Hank's dead ex-wife, a version he could never hurt physically or emotionally. There's something very disturbing about that.
This is great. Now Hank can slap his girlfriend around and treat her like garbage without fear of damaging her.
How come every robot in the Marvel Universe has the brain patterns of a dead human character? Are all of their scientists complete failures when it comes to artificial intelligence? The FF's receptionist is going to be revealed as having Gwen Stacy's memory engrams.
Quote:
In a new eight-page story by Dan Slott and Khoi Pham that accompanied reprints of two classic Marvel stories – Tales To Astonish #44 and Avengers #213 – Secret Invasion: Requiem shows that not only did Hank Pym adopt the name Wasp, but he also attempted to replicate her powers for himself. In a story that had him interacting with Jocasta, Hank made the change as he reviewed his relationship with Janet, deciding to do something that is rare in comic books – becoming a male character who takes on the legacy of a deceased female character.
I guess this is supposed to be some kind of PC victory. One problem -- victory was achieved by killing off the female character in order to set up this grand moment. It's all very interesting as a storyline but they have nothing here to be patting themselves on the back for.
Taking on the legacy of Janet makes no sense anyway, since Hank is taking on things that he himself invented. He's not honouring her, he's just being an egomaniac again.
Slott wrote:
But it's always, on some level, been for the sake of ego. "I'm Giant Man, I'm Goliath, I am Yellow Jacket." For the first time, he has a legacy to live up to.
A legacy he created himself. Hank is honouring Hank. The Wasp was his own concept to begin with. A concept, one must assume from the way this is being written, that he's not going to allow to die just because the "assistant" he gave it to has died. If Hank actually wanted to honour Janet then he'd soup up Ant-Man and try to make
that concept a frontline superhero.