Monday, February 15, 2021

UNCANNY X-MEN #201: Duel

Cover of Uncanny X-Men #201


It's winner take all as Storm battles Cyclops for leadership of the X-Men!

Chris Claremont, Writer / Rick Leonardi, Guest Penciller / Whilce Portacio, Guest Inker / Tom Orzechowski, Letterer / Glynis Olvier, Colorist / Ann Nocenti, Editor / Jim Shooter, Editor-In-Chief

Originally Published January 1986

So what's new?

The X-Men all gather around to look at Scott and Madelyne's baby. Scott looks away, however, wearing an expression that can be read as disdain.

That's right, while the X-Men were in Paris watching the trial of the century unfold, Madelyne was here in Westchester, giving birth on a damn kitchen floor, all by herself, without her husband or even any alien robot superdoctor to help her through it. Just the pure grit and determination that helped her walk away from a plane crash unscathed. And she just might need that grit and determination going forward, judging by the downright inconvenienced look on Scott's face at the birth of his first son. 

The X-Men all share their thoughts on the miracle of birth, with Kurt claiming the baby could do worse than taking him for a role model - and some role model he'd be, letting himself getting goaded into a tickle fight with Rachel when she tips the couch over on him.

Rachel uses her telekinetic powers to tip over the couch on which Kurt is sitting, causing him to start tickling her aggressively.
Kurt, you're still technically her supervisor! That's harassment!

Passing the rather TV-sized Newborn (as in, it looks several months old) off to Kitty to hold, Madelyne finds a private spot to confide to Storm that no, she is not okay with the fact that Scott ran off to Asgard, rematerialized in France, did not call and let her give birth alone, scared, on a kitchen floor.

Madelyne to Ororo: "No problem. I coped, always have, always will. But when you all returned -- materializing in France, for heaven's sake -- and Kitty phoned, and you phoned, almost everyone called to see how I was, except my husband. Not a word. Not a peep. He had more important things on his mind. I gave birth to my son on the kitchen floor. I was lucky. Almost before I realized I was in labor, I had the baby in my arms. I reached the hospital. Everything was alright."

Elsewhere, Kitty passes the baby over to Rachel who is moved to tears at the fact that she is holding her baby brother, one she never had in her previous timeline. It really helps underline her resolve that there is hope for the world.

Rachel, crying, holding the baby: "This world, this timeline -- your future, baby boy -- is going to be different. I'll protect you. Whatever it takes, I 'll find a way to save you."

But outside, Scott can't stop thinking of Xavier: wondering where he could be, who he is with, what is he thinking, is he thinking of Scott, and whether he'll return someday.

Cyclops alone, thinking. "I'm a father. I have a son. Why aren't you here, Professor - to share that joy with me? ... Where are you, Professor Xavier?! What happened in Paris between you and Magneto?! Can we trust him?! Is he telling the truth?!"
Oh yeah, I guess I have a baby.

For the answer to that, we go to a distant galaxy, where the Starjammer is on the run, having barely survived an attack by the Shi'ar fleet while they worked to fix Xavier's liver, nerves and blood. 

Xavier aboard the Starjammer: "This is my fault. If you hadn't risked everything to save me..." Ch'od is encouraging, Lilandra says she is the one to blame, and Hepzibah agrees.

This has put them in quite a pickle - the 'Jammer's Ultra-lightspeed drive is totalled, a regular warp journey back to Earth would take centuries and every known Stargate will be heavily guarded - not to mention they are still being hounded by the Shi'ar themselves, putting them in a constant fight for their lives. It looks like they will not be able to take Xavier home.

The Starjammer in space: "Not now... maybe not ever."

The next day, the X-Men indulge in a little softball.

Colossus swings at Kitty's fastball - and misses. Steeee-rike two!


But inside, things aren't quite so carefree as Cyclops and Madelyne use Storm's loft to try to hash things out.

As Madelyne pleads that Cyclops put his superheroic ways behind him and settle down with the family he has already started, Scott insists that that's just not feasible - the X-Men need him as leader now more than ever, with Storm depowered, and the evil Magneto somehow having conned his way into being Headmaster and leader of the New Mutants, possibly even having murdered Xavier himself. 

Cyclops to Maddie: "I have to stay. To lead the team ... because I'm needed. Professor Xavier's gone! And Magneto -- the X-Men's oldest, deadliest foe -- is in charge of the school. He says he's reformed, that he promised the Professor he'd take good care of the New Mutants. I'll just bet he will." (Madelyne: "You don't believe Magneto") Cyclops: "Not for an instant. For all we know... he may have murdered Professor X himself."

I'd chide Scott for believing the worst in people here, but Magneto did once chain him to a chair and forcibly reduce his mental faculties to those of a toddler, so... I can't say I blame him for not instantly doing a 180 on the guy. 

Madelyne, for her part, completely sees through Scott, putting it all on something we've known about him for years and he's never quite moved past: There is no Scott Summers without the X-Men. He needs to lead this team for himself, and no wife and no baby can ever fill that void inside of him the way that commanding this team can.

Madelyne: "Or-- are you afraid... they really can get along without you? Is your life so hollow -- your sense of self-worth so fragile -- that you believe you're nothing without them?! What about me, what about US?! My commitment to you supersedes everything -- are you telling me the same doesn't hold true in reverse?!!"

It's all too real of a problem, and one that I think we'd all hoped was in the past as of that big matrimonial finale in Uncanny X-Men #175.

Storm arrives and determines a decision must be made. One of them is going to lead the X-Men. Storm feels she is still capable. Cyclops believes it is his duty. And literally nobody thinks Nightcrawler should be doing it. They agree to a duel in the Danger Room, shooing the New Mutants out from their training session along with their new mentor and guardian, possible Xavier-murderer Magneto.

Storm and Cyclops square off in a holographic post-apocalyptic setting in the Danger Room
"I should warn you Scott, I'm undefeated in duels."

The match is scheduled for one fall with no time limit. Scott promises to keep his optic blasts on ultra-low, but one has to think that if he tags her, she's out. The rest of the X-Men and New Mutants watch from the control room, where Wolverine places his bet on Storm.

Cyclops gives a burst from his optic blasts. "I'll make this short and sweet, Storm..." "You are welcome to try, my friend..."

Ororo evades the opening ZARK, using her agility, stealth and the environment to her advantage. The two appear evenly matched, but when Scott gets in his feelings about how Xavier was like a father to him and how it would be right to follow in his footsteps, Storm gets the drop on him and snatches his specially-designed ruby-quartz visor.

Ororo leaps from the distance, grabbing the visor off Cyclops' face. "The duel is over."

Knowing that without it, he cannot open his eyes without unleashing the full fury of his uncontrollable optic blasts, Scott yields, and the duel is over. They shake hands, and Scott walks away humbled, wondering if Madelyne will even welcome him back.

Cyclops leaves. "There's no place for me here anymore. I wonder, after all I've said and done... if there's any with Madelyne?"

In an epilogue, Rachel pays a visit to her grandparents' house to repair the destroyed Holempathic Crystal, placing a shard of her own self in there too. Her grandparents may not know who she is, but at least some of her essence will be with them, which will be comforting because she may not exist soon. She's decided to go after... the Beyonder!

Rachel places an image of herself within the Holempathic Crystal. She thinks to herself that she is now going off to figh tTHE BEYONDER!

Oh brother, not that guy!

Further Thoughts:

*deep cleansing breath*

Over the last several issues, we have seen Scott Summer trying - and utterly failing - to balance what he perceives as his duty to the X-Men (to come when Professor X was ill, and to stay when suspicious of Magneto) with his hone life. It would be one thing if the story were just that: Scott, having long identified himself solely as leader of the X-Men, gets a little caught up in his old habits, but is corrected by Madelyne and realizes he's been neglectful. That's not quite this.

Cyclops stands, contemplatively, with his back to Madelyne.

For whatever reason, Scott's actions are being depicted with fair bit more extreme flavour than a simple "getting carried away." Scott was not always tactful but he wasn't this bad. It was one thing to go to Asgard, it was another to be in France and not call his pregnant wife the entire time (when some of the other X-Men were specifically described as doing so!!) This is coupled with a concerted effort to make Scott's deeds worse by having Madelyne give birth alone on a kitchen floor (!!) and Scott looking absolutely lachrymose at the idea of being a father instead of leader of the X-Men. Instead he jumps at the opportunity to resume that position.

Also, at no point does anyone bring up the abandonment issues Scott feels from his father being in space his whole life, which seems pertinent.

There would be a way to do some of this, depicting Scott's struggle with his diverging paths, his love of Madelyne and the X-Men's need of leadership, while still keeping the character of Scott intact. This is not that. Instead every opportunity is taken to depict Scott as just a complete asshole. And these things don't just happen. They did this.

To quote Ann Nocenti, the editor of this very comic, "There are some things that you do not do to heroes, if they are to remain heroes."

Chris Claremont is certainly a mindful enough writer. Ot wasn't that long ago that he penned Avengers Annual #10 specifically to undo the disturbing implications of Carol Danvers' fate in Avengers #200. He knows what he is doing. Through Madelyne's words, he knows how the readers will inevitably - and are likely meant to - interpret Cyclops' character here. To suggest otherwise is fairly absurd. Is this how he waa given marching orders to have Cyclops behave? Or is it a private revolt for story developments he does not agree with? I cannot say.

Storm trips Cyclops with her belt, and blocks his optic blasts with his forearm.

This is not my favourite issue to have read or discuss, and no matter what the mandate was - to put Cyclops in a certain place and reinstate Storm as leader of the X-Men - it was not an enjoyable read, completely separate from that. Not that long ago, Cyclops combatted the entire team of X-Men in the Danger Room with just his guile and physical ability. A short while before that, Storm was fighting for her life in a one-on-one duel of her own. The content of this issue seems to consciously evoke both of those moments - at least to me, your seasoned X-Men reader - and falls far, far short. It's meant to be a battle of wits as much as of raw abilities, but the duel between Cyclops and Storm is rote, uninspired and falls flat; there is no joy to be had in reading it. The conclusion, with Storm snagging Cyclops' visor, seems on paper like a fair resolution to a friendly competition, but it really just makes Scott seem incompetent for not being able to prevent it, not Storm particularly clever or capable (which I believe she is) for pulling it off. But it's a means to an end, in a crass way these X-Men comics rarely deal in, to put this question to bed as quickly and quietly as possible. The deal is done and we all just need to move forward.

On top of everything else, this guy appears.

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