Last week, when reviewing Marvel Team-Up #16, I mentioned that the randomness of the team-ups was a strength of the series, allowing us to see disparate heroes work together in stories that could be enjoyed on their own without having to worry about ongoing storylines in their own books.
The 17th issue (January 1974)--part 2 of the story being in issue #16--is actually slightly less random. T The previous issue had ended with Captain Marvel and the super-powerful Omega Gem both vanishing. Spider Man decides to check in with the smartest man in the world for help, which is a logical extention of the ongoing tale.
Spidey does find Reed Richards at home, but Reed is in a bit of a funk. The FF had recently broken up and Sue & Reed are seperated, so its kind of understandable. But Spidey is able to pep-talk him into helping with the Captain Marvel problem. Reed quickly comes up with a way of tracing the power of the Omega Gem, which leads to the two heroes directly to Mole Man's subterranean empire.
Because Rick doesn't have Kree energy to syphon off, the gem shrinks back down to normal size again. In the meantime, Reed has sabotaged the laser, using it to cause nearby pits of magma to erupt. Basilisk is apparently killed. (Though, of course, he's not. He'll show up two years later in Marvel Team-Up #47.) The heroes try to save Mole Man, but he's also apparently killed. (Though, of course, he's not. He'll show up a year or so later in Hulk #189.) Nobody tries to save any of the poor Moloids. The heroes escape to the surface.
It's a fun story and a solid ending for the story begun last issue. Kane's art (especially that splash page) is great. If both issues depend a bit too much on villain monologues to provide exposition--well, that's such an established part of Comic Book Universes that I think we've all come to simply accept it.
Next week, we'll start a three-part journey through DC's 1972 reprint book Wanted: The World's Most Dangerous Villains.
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