CAPTAIN AMERICA #420-421 and NOMAD #18-19 (1993): The Faustus Affair; Nomad kills Faustus

First, Cap invades a hostile camp of suspected Red Skull employees, with Quasar and Nick Fury helping.

Then, Cap takes on Blazing Skull, a villain from his Invaders days after Nick Fury tells Cap that B.S. is working with Red Skull (who is on the lam), but it turns out that Fury’s information on B.S. is B.S.  Blazing Skull is actually kind of a good guy now.  So, together, Cap and the Blazing Skull take on Night Shift.

But in the end there’s another bizarre, age-old continuity twist in the trademarked Mark Gruenwald style: Blazing Skull is actually Skull the Slayer, who got all radioactive recently.

And of course Red Skull is not where he was supposed to be.

Then, at the very end of #420, we get the set-up for next issue: Cap is tipped off that Dr. Faustus has kidnapped Nomad.  So, we ride right into Cap vs. (brainwashed) Nomad, who appears to have been “sold” to Slug by Faustus.  After some fighting, Nomad is un-brainwashed (how many times can this happen to a guy?), and then he rides straight into Nomad #19 to get revenge on Faustus.

Cap knows Nomad is tracking down Faustus, and convinces Nomad not to kill Faustus.

In the final scene, though, after Faustus is caught and in custody, Nomad shoots him in the head.

And honestly, Faustus kinda deserved that.

But don’t worry. Of COURSE Faustus will return.

Gruenwald can be a fun writer, but the constantly rapid pace in these stories is just impossible to accept.  It’s all plot, no character work, and the characters he uses feel like they’re just fitting into the story–they don’t behave as they should.

None of this is terrible, but it’s terribly sub-par. Someone thought it might be interesting enough to promote it in a house ad.

And here’s a very odd panel that makes it look like Cap is meditating on a bed of nails:

3 thoughts on “CAPTAIN AMERICA #420-421 and NOMAD #18-19 (1993): The Faustus Affair; Nomad kills Faustus”

  1. How DID Faustus survive that? Was that ever explained? I loved the Brubaker run, but I can’t remember him ever explaining that. Or did he come back before then? I love your reviews. Have you ever read the Karl Kesel Daredevil ?

    Reply

Leave a Reply to Matthew Cancel reply