Ex Machina #2: Tag by Brian K. Vaughan, Tony Harris (WildStorm, 2005) The second volume of Brian K. Vaughan's excellent superhero/politican series Ex Machina continues with an excess of fine storytelling in Tag.
Mitchell Hundred is the mayor of New York City. A former engineer and superhero known as the Great Machine, he gained his power (he can talk to and command machines) from a mysterious explosion a few years back. After a brief career as a costumed hero -- a job at which he wasn't all that good, really -- he determined to help people through a more legal means; of course, the fact that in this world Hundred prevented the second tower from being destroyed on 9/11 has given him a great deal of support at the polls. Hundred vowed then to do whatever he could for the surviving first-responders who put their lives on the line at Ground Zero. So, when one of those heroic firefighters asks the mayor to perform a wedding ceremony, Hundred quickly agrees -- hesitating only briefly when he is told it will be a same-sex marriage. It would be all too easy to let this become a parody of itself, a spoof of an ongoing legal issue throughout the United States. But Vaughan is too canny a writer for that, and he addresses it with a well-balanced blend of seriousness, humor and social debate. For, while Hundred might lack a great deal of political savvy, he does have convictions and will stand by them no matter how great the backlash. I'm not sure, but I don't think Vaughan has written a bad book yet. Let's hope his winning streak continues. ![]() |
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