Download X-Men: The End Trilogy by Chris Claremont & Sean Chen (.CBR)

X-Men: The End Trilogy by Chris Claremont & Sean Chen
Requirements: CBR Reader, 212 MB.
Overview: The story opens with Aliya Bishop daughter of X-man Bishop and shiar renegade princess Deathbird. She reminisces about the time she spent with her mom and how she ahs never met her father. She is then alerted to a kree ship descending on a planet in the shiar star system. We also learn lilandra had gone mad and the empire was in turmoil.

    Reluctantly she descends on the planet to see some slavers, including multiple man and siryn who have been turned into slaves bartering a cocoon for an insane amount of cash with the kree. At the sight of the cocoon Aliya tenses up and decides she cant let the transaction work. She is attacked by an unseen slave, the daughter of Nightcrawler and Scarlet witch, nocturne. The two fight as all hell breaks out around them. Aliya manages to get the cocoon only to get lifted by the kree’s tractor beam. A Warskrull is revealed he causes her to fall back to the planet they battle and we hear that Deathbird fell in battle with a Warskrull. She prepares for death only to have the Warskrull run through by fiery energy. She sees a fiery woman collapse from exhaustion. She grabs her and flies of via hover pack to her ship, the woman then tells her to collect nocturne before departure. After securing her brood erupt all around her, she reveal her ship the starjammer and they flinch since the ship almost caused their destruction sometime in the undocumented past.

    Now with the two women she returns to her ship which is in the planets atmosphere and she tells the ship to go to warp now the ship advises against this but she does it anyway, the planet goes supernovA and they are caught I its gravity. About to die the fiery woman glows absorbs the planets nova energy and saves them all. At that time a phoenix rapture is manifested.

    Galaxies away on earth jeans closest friends sense her return. At the Xavier’s Scott senses Jean and informs his wife Emma who is holding their youngest child, Alex. Meanwhile in Chicago, at a rally for Katherine Pryde’s political campaign, Rachel Grey shouts out her mother’s name. In Hammer Bay, Genosha, Charles Xavier suddenly senses her and worries about his students. In parts unknown, Mr Sinister smiles broadly at the prodigal daughter finally re-emerging. In the Hindu Kush, Jean’s adopted-son Cable, reacts melancholy: not sure to be happy or terrified. In the Kimanu Highlands of East Africa, Storm, in an iron lung, and Wolverine are having dinner when they sense Jean. Logan tells Ororo it has nothing to do with them anymore as his only concern is her.

    Back on the ship the sentient computer identified as Carol Danvers in her binary form and Aliya are awestruck as they realize that “the phoenix” has returned. Hey worry what this means as the ship senses and intruder she put them all at ease as she is the one who teleported the person here as he alone can help her free nocturne mind from the slavers, he is Nightcrawler!

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X-Men: The End Trilogy

    Chris Claremont writer
    Dave Sharpe letterer
    Greg Land, Gene Ha cover
    Ian Hannin letterer, colorist
    Sandu Florea inker
    Sean Chen writer, artist, penciler
    Dan Buckley other
    Tom Brevoort, Joe Quesada editor
    Published by Marvel, 2004-2006.

      X-Men: The End Book 1: Dreamers & Demons

        #1 – The Gathering Storm
        #2 – Omens & Portents
        #3 – Dream A Little Dream
        #4 – Broken Lance
        #5 – Triumph…
        #6 – …And Tragedy

      X-Men: The End Book 2: Heroes and Martyrs

        #1 – Blown Away
        #2 – Code Red
        #3 – Wandering Star
        #4 – Dance With The Devil
        #5 – Secret Origins
        #6 – Godrise

      X-Men: The End Book 3: Men and X-Men

        #1 – The Grand Alliance
        #2 – Closing The Ring
        #3 – Hinge of Fate
        #4 – The Die Is Cast
        #5 – The Final Hour
        #6 – Come The New Dawn

    X-Men: The End is a 2004-2006 trilogy of miniseries detailing the last days of the X-Men and their adventures in a noncanon future, part of their The End series. It is written by Chris Claremont and drawn by Sean Chen, with Greg Land & later Gene Ha doing the cover art.

    The first part of the miniseries is titled Dreamers and Demons, the second Heroes and Martyrs, and the third Men and X-Men. As it was originally conceived, several years before its actual debut, this series would have re-teamed Chris Claremont and John Byrne, with Byrne providing plots and art and Claremont providing dialogue. Yet after a dispute with Marvel following the cancellation of Byrne’s ongoing series X-Men: The Hidden Years, Byrne left the publisher.

    The story of X-Men: The End continues in the 2008 GeNext mini-series, then again in the 2009 mini-series, GeNext: United.

    Revisiting a Favorite: X-Men: The End Reviewed by Roter_Sand on Nov. 22, 2010.

      Alright, let’s get down to business. Because it has been over six years since the release of this issue and the start of X-Men: The End, I feel I can more adequately write a review for its first issue and provide some analysis of a series that I feel is quite often misunderstood and under-appreciated, in some respects. Chris Claremont got a ‘lot of criticism (some deserved, but not all) for his work after returning to Marvel, but it is my honest opinion that none of his work in the past decade has been as good as X-Men: The End. The writing and storyline is classic Claremont, and you’ll just have to read it for yourself to see if you like it!

      As for the guts of the issue itself, I must say, this a very good introduction issue; the dialogue and exposition is witty yet informative, the art solid, and the overall feel very refreshing. I remember how puzzled I was when I read it the first time, though, simply because this issue is a little chaotic. You might get through it the first time and not really understand everything, but once you keep reading the series you will realize how far ahead Claremont set himself up with his exposition.

      What was good?

        What was good? Well, let me first say that all the cover art for this entire series is stellar, and this first issue is no exception–the depiction of Storm is breathtaking! The pencils in the actual panels are very solid as well, and not once was I ever interrupted by the art (and that is a good thing). As for the storyline? Chaotic at first, admittedly, but what else can you expect when you are trying to introduce an entire separate universe’s continuity? I love the direction in this issue, and I love how risky Claremont always is in his spin-off series’. You ‘gotta love that mysterious Logan-Ororo relationship!

      What was bad?

        I really was bothered by the fact that Aliyah and the Starjammer destroyed an entire sun for no good reason. I understand, but still, her escaping saved 4 lives (I’m not counting Carol), yet an entire sun went supernova and indubitably destroyed an entire planet and probably a solar system with it. Come on Claremont, I know they are aliens, but still!

      What was ugly?

        I know Claremont is legendary for his onomatopoeic genius, but I was a little surprised the editors let him throw "CHUNT!" in there where Aliyah and Nocturne were having it out. Enough said, I believe.

      What’s the verdict?

        4/5. If I could give it a 4.25 out of 5 I would. The fact remains, this is an excellent introductory issue, although it is admittedly difficult for any issue such as this to be completely and utterly exciting–we need to get attached first, but don’t worry, that won’t be hard after a few issues!

      Death toll: 2

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