When the Krakoan era began, and Marvel’s mutants found a way to conquer death, Magneto (AKA Max Eisenhardt) had already lived a long life of struggle, heartbreak, and sacrifice. So, it’s not surprising that he gave up the Krakoan resurrection protocols to fit in with the culture of his new home on the planet formerly known as Mars, Arakko. He perished shortly after, and the citizens of Krakoa soon found themselves in a desperate war for existence against the anti-mutant organization known as Orchis. That war has gone badly, and now the mutants need their Master of Magnetism to get back into the fight.Storm sets out to do that and free her friend from torment in Resurrection of Magneto, a four-issue miniseries by writer Al Ewing and artist Luciano Vecchio that kicks off on January 24th. Her journey will become a magical and cosmic quest fraught with dangerous confrontations with several infamous and powerful foes. CBR spoke with Ewing about the nature of Storm’s quest, planning for the series, where Magneto ended up after he died, and saying goodbye to the Krakoan era of the X-Men, which wraps up in the first half of 2024.Al Ewing: The decision to kill Magneto came hand in hand with the decision to bring him back, and I knew his resurrection was going to come in the form of a quest undertaken by Storm at roughly the end of my time with her, assuming I got more than a year to tell the story. And we’ve pretty much stuck with that, though a couple of the fine details have evolved as we’ve told other stories in the meantime. But his death was always going to be the first act of the story.
When the Krakoan era began, and Marvel’s mutants found a way to conquer death, Magneto (AKA Max Eisenhardt) had already lived a long life of struggle, heartbreak, and sacrifice. So, it’s not surprising that he gave up the Krakoan resurrection protocols to fit in with the culture of his new home on the planet formerly known as Mars, Arakko. He perished shortly after, and the citizens of Krakoa soon found themselves in a desperate war for existence against the anti-mutant organization known as Orchis. That war has gone badly, and now the mutants need their Master of Magnetism to get back into the fight.
Storm sets out to do that and free her friend from torment in Resurrection of Magneto, a four-issue miniseries by writer Al Ewing and artist Luciano Vecchio that kicks off on January 24th. Her journey will become a magical and cosmic quest fraught with dangerous confrontations with several infamous and powerful foes. CBR spoke with Ewing about the nature of Storm’s quest, planning for the series, where Magneto ended up after he died, and saying goodbye to the Krakoan era of the X-Men, which wraps up in the first half of 2024.
Al Ewing: The decision to kill Magneto came hand in hand with the decision to bring him back, and I knew his resurrection was going to come in the form of a quest undertaken by Storm at roughly the end of my time with her, assuming I got more than a year to tell the story. And we’ve pretty much stuck with that, though a couple of the fine details have evolved as we’ve told other stories in the meantime. But his death was always going to be the first act of the story.
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