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Wolverine: Bloody Choices

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Wolverine: Bloody Choices
Second edition cover byMichael Avon Oeming andJoe Jusko (1993)
DateJune 1991[1]
Main charactersWolverine andNick Fury
SeriesMarvel Graphic Novel
Page count64 pages
PublisherMarvel Comics
Creative team
WritersTom DeFalco
ArtistsJohn Buscema
PencillersJohn Buscema
InkersJohn Buscema
LetterersJanice Chiang
ColouristsGregory A. Wright
EditorsChris DeFelippo
Dawn Geiger
Pat Garrahy
Ralph Macchio[a]
ISBN978-0871359803
Chronology
Preceded byWolverine/Nick Fury: The Scorpio Connection
Followed byWolverine/Nick Fury: Scorpio Rising

Wolverine: Bloody Choices is a graphic novel published in 1991 by American companyMarvel Comics, the second part of theWolverine/Nick Fury trilogy. The story involvesWolverine taking an oath to protect a boy from an international criminal[3] named Bullfinch, despite a plea deal withNick Fury granting him (Bullfinch) immunity in exchange for crucial testimony.[2]

Publication history

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The book was republished in November 1993[2] and collected in Marvel Comic Exklusiv nr 17 in 1992 and again inWolverine & Nick Fury: Scorpio in 2012.[4]

Synopsis

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During a vacation in Hawaii, Wolverine intervenes when a young boy tries to kill a man named Mr. Bullfinch, a local crime lord, but is attacked by Bullfinch's bodyguard, Shiv, who is implied to possibly be Wolverine's brother.[5] Wolverine takes the boy to a doctor he knows, and learns he has been sexually abused by Bullfinch, who still has the boy's brother imprisoned. Wolverine tries to track down Bullfinch but finds Shiv waiting for him, and after escaping, is joined byNick Fury, who is in town to take down Bullfinch. Together, they attack Bullfinch's mansion, and Wolverine battles Shiv once again. Bullfinch ultimately escapes, but Wolverine's continuous pursuit convinces him to make a deal with S.H.I.E.L.D. This upsets Wolverine, who wants Bullfinch to pay for his crimes, particularly the ones involving children, with his death, but Fury insists they can save more lives by letting Bullfinch live and give them information. After finding the S.H.I.E.L.D. safehouse where Bullfinch is being held, Wolverine and Fury comes to blows, with Fury fighting his best to keep his promise to protect Bullfinch but Wolverine ultimately prevailing, after which he chases down Bullfinch and kills him.[6][7]

Reception

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SuperMegaMonkey ofComics Chronology stated that the implied storyline with the character of Shiv felt cheap, and that DeFalco's treatment of Wolverine felt like an exaggeration of the character's tropes to the point of parody, one which ignored the character arc with whichUncanny X-Men writerChris Claremont had done in establishing Wolverine's struggle to contain his berserker rages. He did conclude however that the book "isn't terrible", with Buscema's art serving as a saving grace.[5] Andrew Young ofGeek Hard stated that the book features one of the absolutely greatest fight scenes in all of comics and that the scene should also be counted among the greatest Nick Fury moments of all time.[8]

Collected editions

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The entire trilogy was originally collected in the following trade paperback.

TitleMaterial collectedPublication dateISBN
Wolverine & Nick Fury: ScorpioWolverine/Nick Fury: The Scorpio Connection
Wolverine: Bloody Choices
Wolverine/Nick Fury: Scorpio Rising
April 4, 2012[9]978-0785153481

The overall trilogy was also reprinted in theMarvel Epic Collection of Wolverine.

TitleVol.Vol. titleMaterial collectedPublication dateISBN
Wolverine Epic Collection2Back to BasicsWolverine (vol. 2) #17–30;Wolverine/Nick Fury: The Scorpio Connection;Wolverine: The Jungle AdventureMarch 2019978-1302916091
3Blood and ClawsWolverine (vol. 2) #31–44 (1988), Wolverine: Bloodlust (1990) 1, Wolverine: Bloody Choices (1991) 1July 2021978-1302930899

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^Macchio also wrote the foreword.[2]

References

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  1. ^"Wolverine: Bloody Choices (1991) - Comic Book DB".comicbookdb.com.[permanent dead link]
  2. ^abc"Wolverine: Bloody Choices (1991) OGN SC - Comic Book DB".comicbookdb.com. Archived fromthe original on 2017-02-16. Retrieved2017-01-07.
  3. ^http://www.nickfuryagentofshield.com/shieldyears3/bc.htm[dead link]
  4. ^"Wolverine: Bloody Choices (1991) OGN SC - Comic Book DB".comicbookdb.com. Archived fromthe original on 2017-02-15. Retrieved2017-01-07.
  5. ^ab"Wolverine: Bloody Choices : SuperMegaMonkey : chronocomic".www.supermegamonkey.net.
  6. ^"X-amining Wolverine: Bloody Choices".www.therealgentlemenofleisure.com.
  7. ^Weiner, Robert G. (15 February 2008).Marvel Graphic Novels and Related Publications: An Annotated Guide to Comics, Prose Novels, Children's Books, Articles, Criticism and Reference Works, 1965–2005. McFarland.ISBN 9780786451159 – via Google Books.
  8. ^Young, Andrew (26 June 2013)."The greatest Nick Fury stories".Comics. geekhardshow.com.
  9. ^Wolverine & Nick Fury: Scorpio Paperback. Amazon. 4 April 2012.ISBN 978-0785153481.

External links

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