Reviews for Wanted

Wanted by Mark Millar, J.G. Jones Summary and Reviews

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Book Reviews of Wanted

Book Review: Juvenile and gratuitous
Summary: 2 Stars

Reads like a high schooler's creative writing project - "I can include profanity and sex, isn't that cool! So every other word will be a profanity! Yeah!" Unfortunately, the result is sophomoric, predictable, and lacking any sophistication. The art is ok (a poor man's Brent Anderson), but the focus on gory close-ups and leaking brains makes it clear the intended audience is 16 year olds who need a quick read between Halo games. Very disappointing.

Book Review: Keeps you coming back...
Summary: 4 Stars

Wanted is a great read, but not a likable one. Pretty much every character in it is reprehensible as they come, including the main character. I feel that Millar goes too far on more than a few occassions (mainly the new found rape/murder habits of the main character), but that's sort of the point. Supervillains, unchecked and unopposed, would take every chance to do whatever they pleased, regardless of who they hurt. There are truly some heartbreaking moments and it's a little hard to take at times. I do have gripes with certain details of the story and how they contradict other details in the story. Also, like certain Authority members, the Killers powers are somewhat poorly defined. He's defined as having perfect aim, but displays other abilities that suggest other powers...sort of. It's a constant throughout Millar's other works too. All in all a good read.

Book Review: Keeps your interest - (spoiler alert)
Summary: 4 Stars

I was unsure of this book after reading such mixed reviews on here, but ultimately I decided to see what all the fuss was about. Wanted was an intruging read, and I almost couldn't let myself put it down til I was finished. It is refreshing in that its not your typical superheroes book, and unlike the other "offended" reviewers I couldn't find much that was all that grotesque or out-right blasphemous; it pales in comparison for shock-value to series such as 100 Bullets, Preacher, Punisher, etc. I was put-off by the main characters very distinct resemblence to that of rapper Eminem, it almost took away from the story in that it was very distracting. The story itself moves along swiftly and unlike most people I didn't really guess the big twist towards the end, though once I saw it seemed pretty obvious. I had a lot of questions when I finished, it seems the author didn't quite tidy up and left a few plotholes that could have used better explanation (i.e. how did mister rictus never notice wesley's dad, even though certain villians possessed powers that would easily have allowed them to do so?) and a few other points that slip my mind at the moment. I would recommend to anyone who is open minded and not easily turned off by a little senseless violence and a few derogatory remarks.

Book Review: Lazy, Exploitative, Fanboy Nonsense
Summary: 1 Stars

Life, apparently, is unfair to Wesley Gibson. Oppressed by his wimmenfolk and talked down to by his various minorities, he dresses like a tool and feels sorry for himself. Then, kazam. He turns out to be a supervillain.

Wesley reacts to his new powers by raping and murdering his way to the top of his supervillain game without a single hesitation. I think there may have a moment or two where he stopped and tried to generate some empathy, but I probably blinked and missed them. Fortunately, he's surrounded by a cast of equally vapid monsters, with nary a bit of depth between them.

Wesley is a dweeb as a mundane human, but as a supervillain he's actually one of the most genuinely unlikeable characters in comic history. I imagine that I've missed the post-modern/ironic twist, but I wasn't going to go rooting through it in this pile of nihilistic fanboy trash.

Book Review: Let Me Explain...
Summary: 5 Stars

After watching the film, which was senseless, I decided to read the comic out of curiosity to check the source material. I was also intrigued by the many negative reviews I read here.

How bad could this thing be, was my question.

The vast majority of the surface story was about Super Villains, but that's not what I'm here to talk about. I'm here to make it clear what the story is really about which is summed up in the last few pages of the book.

The theme of the story is Wage Slavery and the use of Escapist Media to avoid thinking about your boring terminal slave status.

Read more about Wage Slavery here:

[...] (This was edited so just type "wage slave" into Wiki, they have a great page on it.)

Explanation:

The idea is that in a Capitalist system (money, for profit, etc.) you have no power if you don't have large amounts of money. This is by design because the rich then get to own slaves. However, the slaves aren't in the same boat as the old African variety, rather they're tricked into thinking they aren't slaves, thus ensuring they don't rebel.

The trick works like this: you're paid a salary, but you have a bunch of expenses such as rent, credit, school loans, mortgage, health expenses, food, and etc. All of this is subtracted from your salary each month. So, a person making say 50K a year may only end up with a couple of hundred in profit each month, if they do nothing but spend on necessities and have no debts. That means that people making much less will be making no profit and may indeed may make a negative income if they have debt (say student loans) or need to use credit cards to cover unexpected situations.

All of that means that on your job, you MAKE no money or maybe just a little. Certainly, almost no one makes enough money to become a Capitalist who can buy a business, own it all, and employ wages slaves to run it while vacationing. Making no money will working hard and for a long time equals slavery.

It is likely that you, who is reading this, either is a wage slave or will become one. The only "out" I can see is to go on welfare and drop out of society or win the lottery. Another option is to be a Paris Hilton who has accidentally been born into de facto royalty. Being born a certain way and the lottery aren't a choice though.

Book:

The purpose is to show you that you're a wage slave and that the world is in fact run by murderers and rapists. Voltaire said that History is the story of mass murderers and the piles of bodies they leave behind. In Iraq the government had a program of raping women to punish families. In the recent Serbian wars rape and sniper squads were sent out to create terror, and this was in a nice part of Europe. So, guys who have the spirit of the main character actually live.

I would assume that they enjoy what they do and enjoying planning how to rape and murder in a better way so that they can get away with it longer. Thus, the main character is the embodiment of a real type of person. On the flip side, I know people just like Superman, so he's real too, but that's another story.

Escapism:

The last few pages blast the reader for turning their head away from the reality that vicious people run the world. While you're a wage slave you pretend you're not because mentally you're a high level wizard on WoW or you spend a lot of time wishing superheroes were real.

He's saying that you're a coward who will deny his message, say he sucks, and go into denial about the message, etc. His message hurts because it's true.

Meanwhile, those who enjoy the main character are also in denial. They're doing something Freud called Identifying With The Enemy. An example would be, getting beaten up then going and learning how to beat someone up better, or getting molested and then becoming a sex offender yourself. There's something about you which denies your victimhood and embraces and wants to be like the enemy. In this case, you can never be like the Capitalist, rather you will be a wage slave who imagines one day they'll be the master, but you won't.

If society is ever to change and if we're ever going beat the idea that money is real and that one person is worth more than another, then a message like this is important. The book is anything but nihilistic or juvenile fantasy, it is in fact very high level thinking.


More Wanted reviews:
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