By Colin Andersen
March 24, 2011 - 22:49
It’s safe to say that I have never been more nervous for a comic book than I was for FF #1. As I’ve said before, Fantastic Four is and always has been my favorite comic series and when it was a announced that one of the team would be killed and the series cancelled and rebooted as FF, short for Future Foundation now, I had no idea what to expect. Fantastic Four hadn’t been one of Marvel’s more high profile books in years and this reboot had both the chance to revitalize the franchise or ruin it once and for all. Luckily for me, my faith in Jonathan Hickman has not gone unrewarded.
Hickman really nails down what this family is like and what it can be like for someone to break into that family dynamic, even when they are a close friend, after such a loss. This issue makes it clear that all of these characters are more than just individuals, they are truly a family. You can see this from the first time Spider-Man walks through the newly-redecorated Baxter Building as each panel shows different members of the extended family around the house. Easily the best is a quick panel of the Thing and the Richards children that tugs at the heartstrings in a way a comic book hasn’t managed to do in a while. The interactions of characters all feel spot-on and feel more authentically Fantastic Four than they have since Mark Waid was on the title. The inclusion of Nathaniel Richards, Reed’s father, is a smart one that adds more to the series than I would have guessed and the other surprise new cast member on the last page will undoubtedly prove to be interesting. This is definitely the best Fantastic Four I have read in years, even if it is actually the Future Foundation now.
Normally, new number one’s of a series or reboots stumble a little bit. Maybe the characters seem just a little out of character or a new character doesn’t work out as well as the writers thought. Whatever problems normally plague issues like this one are not present in the slightest in FF. Though I never lost interest, I’m more excited about this family than I have been in quite some time. If you haven’t read Fantastic Four recently or ever, then this is absolutely the place to start. I can almost guarantee that you’ll love it. If you really want a bad side too it, I’d say there are waaayyy too many covers to this comic.
Rating: 10 /10