The Sentry: Worst Character in Comics?
- Posted by David Harper on Tuesday, July 28, 2009
The Golden Guardian of Suck
Everyone who reads comics has their favorite characters. My favorite characters are all versions of the Flash, Kyle Rayner, Jesse Custer, Bigby Wolf, Deadpool...and really the list goes on and on. Quite often though, you're going to have your least favorite character as well. In my case, the character I dislike I have enough disdain for to honestly believe that he is irrefutably the single worst character in comics and in this post I will make my case for it. After my five points I believe you'll even agree with me.
So who is the character?
The Sentry.
1. He’s so over-powered he has to be written out of every event
While the Sentry is seemingly a constant early on in every mega-event that Marvel puts on, he never seems to appear very much in the middle and end of events. There is a pretty good reason why that is, and that's because he's so freaking overpowered that there isn't a lot any writer can do with him.
I mean come on, his first real appearance in a regular continuity Marvel book was in the first arc of New Avengers, in which his first big action scene was flying Carnage up to space and then tearing him in half. Yes...as in Carnage from Spider-Man comics. As in the one that tortured Spidey endlessly and was a legitimate heavy in Marvel comics. The Sentry dealt with him as I would deal with a fly, or as Spider-Man would deal with Paste Pot Pete (minus the killing on the last part).For an example of the Sentry being completely useless when it comes to events, may I guide you to Secret Invasion or Silent War. In Secret Invasion, Bendis (who is seemingly the only person at Marvel who likes to use the guy) effectively writes him out of the book, sending him deep into space after a Skrull transforms into his alter-ego/nemesis the Void. Poor widdle Sentry, getting scared of the big bad shape shifting alien. No less, the Sentry lasts exactly two issues into Marvel's biggest event before getting completely written out. Nice.
2. If he isn’t, he’s effectively a mobile deus ex machine
Let's say you do want to use the guy in the event. What are you going to do to make him not end it immediately? I mean the guy has the power of one million exploding suns...that sounds pretty powerful. Kind of sounds like someone who can come out of nowhere and pretty much wrap up a story in a snap.
Well, according to Greg Pak's World War Hulk, you use the Sentry's agoraphobia (seriously...more on that later) and his fear of his own power as an excuse for the first four issues, and then you send him in when you paint yourself into a corner, pretty much make him seem crazy and Earth-threatening, and then have the Hulk defeat him to turn him into the hero of the story.
So essentially the only event he was used in, he was saved until the very end so he could reverse the fortune of the primary character and wrap up the story nice and tidy like. Sounds like deus ex machina personified to me.
3. His main personality traits are crazy and…crazier
Back to the agoraphobia thing. So let me get this straight...the Sentry is the most powerful character in Marvel Comics right? From what I understand, it's not even close. But because they want to make sure he isn't a walking game-changer (like he was in WWH), they saddle him with intense agoraphobia and schizophrenia, and not just any schizophrenia, but the type where it manifests itself in the form of your own arch-nemesis.
So the Sentry is the world's greatest superhero but also is afraid of public places and is quite literally his own worst enemy.
Priceless. Completely priceless.
4. The only characters he has a good relationship with are Norman Osborn and Black Bolt
If you were an overpowered superhero with severe mental problems, who would you likely associate yourself with? Unless your answer is the mute ruler of the Inhumans and the sociopathic leader of America's military forces who occasionally wears a goblin mask to get his kicks, then you are mistaken.
Seriously, could you imagine these three hanging out for football Sunday? Sitting around the TV watching the Vikings/Packers, with one of them never speaking, one of them acting very sullen because he's worried he may switch to his other identity and murder the other two, and the other one contemplating how he can most easily murder the other two. Let's just say if there was a draft of Marvel characters that you would want to hang out with, these three would be part of the last five picks, along with the Watcher and Fin Fang Foom.
Not only that, but as a sub-point, the Sentry is ridiculously easy to manipulate. Because the Sentry is overpowered and because Norman Osborn is power hungry and bat shit crazy, ol' Normie moves the Sentry around his chess board like the good little pawn he is. "It's no big deal if you murder a bunch of Atlanteans Robert! They would die without water anyways." Oh Normie...you're such a hoot.5. I've met Superman, and you sir are no Superman
Last but not least, we have Gil's favorite point. I'm pretty sure I've read this character before. His name was Superman. The only differences between the Sentry and Superman is that Supes doesn't look like a hippie, is not insane, and actually can participate in events without having to be used as a complete deus ex machina. It's crazy! Well, not Sentry crazy, but crazy no less.
My point is this: Marvel is a universe of characters we can relate to and ones that can seemingly be defeated. The Sentry is neither of those. Join me in sharing with Marvel that we've had enough of the Sentry, and that next time he flies off into space in the midst of a world crisis/event comic, he can stay there.











25 comments:
VJJJWOMMMVVVVVVB
I agree with all of this. 1,000,000 exploding thumbs up. But do you think that Marvel's newest addition Marvelman might have the same problems?
How exactly are they going to even work Marvelman into contiunity? They totally would. Maybe they'll make Marvelman's world a different universe, sort of like Supreme Power or the Ultimate books.
Marvelman=Red Hulk
Mother of God...
Sorry, spoiler!
I would have added "has the personality and likability of cardboard" to the list, but other than that I agree pretty much completely.
That's another good point. Really explains why his "friends" are so horrendous as well. It really makes you wonder how exactly we're supposed to believe the fact that he's married in the comics.
He's agoraphobic, schizophrenic, and boring as all hell. That is a very loving woman.
i totally understand what you're saying about him being too powerful and a bit bland but i'm loyal to him because of how much i loved Paul Jenkins and Jae Lee's orginal mini series, not the shitty one that shitty jrjr drew
Jenkins and Lee did a great job in creating the character and setting him up to be something more than he is now. I think the facts are that he has ended up being nothing like that character Jenkins originally created.
Thanks for stopping by though, keep checking out our blog if you enjoy it!
Don't forget that the serum he drank would have worked on anyone. So technically he only got his powers because he wanted to get high.
To be fair, when this article was written, that wasn't part of the mythos of the Sentry. But, in retrospect, it doesn't help his case at all.
true, I still love how powerful he is though. I mean the guy ripped ares, the god of war, in half. That's badass in my book
Agreed, he is the most inconsistent character Marvel has. I hate how he disrupts the flow of every story he's involved in, as everything else grinds to a halt for yet another few pages of, "stop the presses, Bob is freaking out again." And what's with all the ripping people in half over and over again? He's got the power of a million suns and all he does now is rip people in half? (Carnage, Morgan LaFey, Ares) It might have been amusing the first time, but now it's getting old.
This character is a complete douche. I mean lets be really honest. He was created simply because Marvel has no "Superman" and that's one of the things that make Marvel comics great! See in Marvel comics they don't rely on powers so much as depth of character. Unfortunately Sentry is about as deep as a puddle in my driveway. He shows up does something stupid like destroy a significant player like the GOD of WAR, and he's gone. Does he really have any other point than Marvel being able to say that they have a character like Superman? Which by the way I personally don't like Superman comics .. Why you ask? Because he's tooo freaking powerful and anytime you really want do do anything with that stupid character you have to introduce a new flavor of kryptonite "this issue Superman finds out what happens when he comes into contact with puce Kryptonite!" I love Marvel comics and they have far cooler powerful characters, Silver Surfer, Thor, or any one of a number of powerful cosmic beings. Would someone please find Sentry's kryptonite, cut off his head, stick a clove of garlic in his mouth, stuff him in a black box and ship this stupid character back over to Superman 4 (remember Lex Luthor's Solarman?) where he belongs and let the DC universe deal with this waste of yellow ink.
Sincerely,
Your Frodaddy
Mr. Frodaddy, you clearly don't understand the DC Universe if you think that way. You also clearly haven't bothered to even look up what's going on in the Superman continuity for the past, oh...5, 6 years? A lot has been done with the character.
But you wouldn't know that.
I bet he loves Batman because Batman is "just a guy" though.
My reply to you both, is this. Though I do not collect DC I still read their work. I really like Superman, (yes) Batman, the Flash, Wonder Woman, etc. In fact I am a rather huge fan of Green Lantern and the Green Lantern Corps. This complaint was about Sentry and no one else I'm sorry if it came across the wrong way. DC knows how to deal with the heavy hitters that they have created. DC knew what they were getting into when they created a character that has been around since comics started practically. DC built a weakness into a character that has INCREDIBLE POWER! My comment about sending him over to DC was that I think Superman could really deal with him, or Batman (who by the way has the inside line on how to take care on any and all overpowerd beings). Man didn't any of you catch the Superman 4 comment? Dude tell me Sentry is not Nuclear Man! Long blond hair and powers stolen from Superman. DC comics are classic I've read my fair share and have a vague idea of what i'm talking about.
sincerely,
Your Frodaddy
Oh BTW Matt. If you think that Batman is "just a guy" you really don't understand that character at all.
Frodaddy
Your last comment made me laugh pretty hard, Frodaddy.
I don't think Batman is just a guy, though. No worries. I think he's a one-note character with a lack of any depth and is essentially a walking deus ex machina, and I'm glad he died.
Don't worry - I wrote a WHOLE article explaining why.
Let's quote him here
"Which by the way I personally don't like Superman comics .. Why you ask? Because he's tooo freaking powerful and anytime you really want do do anything with that stupid character you have to introduce a new flavor of kryptonite 'this issue Superman finds out what happens when he comes into contact with puce Kryptonite!'"
Now, this is interesting. If you like Superman, then why did you say you didn't? If you had any knowledge of the character, you'd see that he's surrounded by villains who are at his own power level (or stronger) that from which he has to protect the world. Now, there's Darkseid, Doomsday, Bizarro Superman, General Zod, any number of corrupted Kryptonians on New Krypton, Mongul, and Brainiac, just to name a few. I didn't even include the magically inclined individuals (Magic is also a weakness Superman has) like Banshee, or even heroes like Captain Marvel! And even these various kinds of Kryptonite are usually unearthed in plots by Lex Luthor, who, despite being a "mere" human, is one of the smartest and most cunning men on the planet, and he has devoted his LIFE to destroying Superman. This guy can cure cancer by thinking about it, but instead tries to kill Kal-El. That's devotion.
As for character depth, why does he save the world, when if he's "tooo freaking powerful" he can just take it over? If there's no depth, then what about his relationship to Lois as Clark, before and after he revealed his dual-identity. What about his relationship with his cousin Kara or his friendship with Batman?
There is depth there, you're just wading in the shallow end, but are too prejudice to understand that.
Hey gentlemen... a little off the subject. The comment was about Sentry. I'm sorry to offend your delicate sensibilities on the subject of underwear over tights. In fact I apologized.
Lets quote
"Let's quote him here
"Which by the way I personally don't like Superman COMICS"
As i stated earlier, the argument is about the Marve Universe. Supes is cool in his way, and yeah Batman can be whiny and brooding.
I just don't feel that Marvel Comics needs Superman ... oh I mean the Sentry. I just happened to pick up Siege (yeah I know i'm a bit behind so sue me!) So i get to where Sentry rips Ares in half like a rag doll and was a little annoyed. I just happened to come across this forum and wanted to vent about what a douche Sentry was and how I feel that he is wrecking some potentially good story lines. I was just comparing his power level to that of Superman. I also mentioned that DC knows how to handle a character of that caliber.
My quote
DC knows how to deal with the heavy hitters that they have created. DC knew what they were getting into when they created a character that has been around since comics started practically. DC built a weakness into a character that has INCREDIBLE POWER! My comment about sending him over to DC was that I think Superman could really deal with him
I just really do not like Sentry. I think there's only enough room in our world for one Superman. Oh and BTW you fine gentlemen mentioned that Superman has all of these great limits (and I AGREE) what are Sentry's (who BTW the entire discussion was about to begin with.)
Frodaddy
Marvel having issues with characterisation is increasingly becoming clear.
Not to mention artistically, he appears to be the long lost twin of Wildstorm's Apollo ...
http://www.pinkkryptonite.com/images/pinkkryptonite/Apollo.jpg
The Sentry works as a great postmodern character: doesn't understand how to use power, is literally his own arch nemesis, prone to fits of self loathing that turn world-threatening. But he is not well written. As conceived Sentry is brilliant, and the scene where it's revealed that the secret prison where the Void is kept is actually a mirror is classic. There was also a scene where Sentry's computer clicks off human death tolls around the world and figures out where he should best spend his morning between saving people from accidents between sipping coffee and reading the paper. Also classic. But trying to fit him into Marvel "events", LAME. Sentry should stay medicated in a prison until they really need him.
I bet you felt like a real idiot after you read Siege, huh? Considering the event pretty much surrounds him and culminates with having to deal with his near limitless power. In my experience two rules apply to Marvel's current line of comics: 1) don't count any chicken before they hatch; just because something seems senseless early on doesn't mean they don't have big plans for it in the future, and 2) trust Brian Michael Bendis ;)