Cain Marko Snorts The Crystal Gem Of Cyttorak Like He’s Snowflame Or Something In Juggernaut #4

Cain Marko stands as his own man in Juggernaut #4, the penultimate issue of his latest solo miniseries. Written by Fabian Nicieza, drawn by Ron Garney, colored by Matt Milla, and lettered by Joe Sabino, Juggernaut #4 finds Cain and his new superhuman ward D-Cel facing down the infamous Armin Zola, known robot and despised Nazi. We open on a facist-slapping already in progressā€¦

Justin Partridge: Weā€™ve done it Jugga-Buddies. We have reached just about the finish line. And, I gotta say, it has stayed REALLY solid from the jump! This fourth issue included! But I am getting ahead of myself. Welcome back to Break Stuff, the XFā€™s exploration into Juggernaut from the Fabes.

Iā€™m Justin ā€œWatoombā€ Partridge. With me as always is Tony ā€œValtorrā€ Thornley and Zachary ā€œBalthakkā€ Jenkins on the dials upstairs. [Ed. note: I do the beeps and boops]

Tony Thornley: That nickname is a bit of a leap (heh heh). But what an issue and what a series of events weā€™ve run into. This series had definitely gotten better by the issue. After this, Iā€™m excited to see whatā€™s next!

JP: Theyā€™re ever so good.

Who He Is And How He Came To Beā€¦ Again

JP: So starting with the BIGGEST ticket item for this fourth issue, the full reveal of how Juggernaut got his powers again/his reconnection with Cyttorak. Once again cutting between past action and present action, Fabian Nicieza drops us back into the thick of the action and exposition once again.

Damage Control, D-Cel, and Cain are hot on the trail of whoever was controlling Quicksand last issue, and their search has brought them to the big sky country of North Dakota. But Cainā€™s search for regained power back in the day led him to knock over a O.N.E. Facility, the last housing of the shards of Cyttorak [Ed. note: destroyed during the Rosenberg Era of Uncanny X-Men]. We cut back and forth a few times again, much like the previous issues, as the mission carries out and we finally see Cain and Cyttorakā€™s first meeting after Cainā€™s resurrection.

I have to say, Fabianā€™s reliance on this device has grown a little stale (and definitely would more so if the series was to go on longer), BUT even with the staling, I am still having a lot of fun hanging out with Cain and D-Cel for the most part. What about you, Tony?

TT: I definitely have been, and Iā€™m really glad that you started our discussion with the flashbacks. Because these have been a mixed bag so far. However, if this issueā€™s flashbacks are the last that Fabes uses this narrative device, then I think Iā€™ll be happy. And whyā€™s that?

Because Cain Marko reabsorbs the Crimson Gem of Cyttorak in this issue. Eagle-eyes and photographic memories will recall though, the last week saw the actual physical gem of Cyttorak it was shattered as it was yanked out of Cainā€™s personage. So how did he physically bond with a box of ruby dust?

He jams his face into it and snorts like heā€™s Tony Montana. [Ed. note: or like Snowflame for you obscure DC Comics nerds]

No lie, no exaggeration. Cain Marko snorts his power source in this issue. Itā€™s so ridiculous and silly, but itā€™s amazing. The Juggernaut is literally snorting magic gem dust.

But hey, it works because it magically puts him in front of his patron demon once again. What a confrontation that is too.

JP: Itā€™s some real golden Scumbag s-word and I LOVED IT. I will also say I truly love the decision for Cain to stand up for himself and choose not to be an instrument of destruction.

Not only is it a wonderful expression of the titleā€™s main thesis around Cain, but it fully, explicitly states his face turn and sets him up to be left in a very interesting place the next time he gets drafted onto an X-team or maybe primed to pop up in another characterā€™s title later on. Not only that, but it’s a wonderful bit of growth from what outsiders and casual readers might think is a one-note character. So very often a lot of these ā€œbig manā€ characters donā€™t get the kind of attention to characterization that others might and itā€™s nice to see Juggernaut working against that stereotype (even if itā€™s just for five issues).

Not A Mutant: Second Movement

TT: Meanwhile in the present, Cain is dropped on a mountain as Juggernaut, D-Cel and Damage Control hunt down Zola. First of all, I love that Cain just turns himself into a missle here. They make it clear they intend that heā€™s just going to bust through to the subbasement, with his head, and he totally does it.

I love all the deep cuts Nicieza fits into this portion of the story. The base is an old Factor 3 base. Zolaā€™s test subjects are leftovers from various crossovers, particularly War of Realms. Even Zolaā€™s minion- Primus- is a real deep cut. He makes it flow naturally though. It feels like color to the world, not just winking references.

But Zola makes it clear that he didnā€™t send Quicksand after Cain. He sent her for D-Cel. Because he wants to dissect a mutant.

JP: The OTHER big moment of this fourth issue is, once again, we are seeing pushback from D-Cel about her mutantdom. 

You see, Zola is after mutants again because, of course he is, that rotten, mechanoid Nazi bastard. AND heā€™s got his screenwide eyes set on D-Cel. But once again, when faced with the moniker and a series of tests that could definitely PROVE she is a mutant, she reacts badly and smashes up the joint alongside Cain.

TT: To be fair, Zola makes it very clear that definitively proving sheā€™s a mutant will require dissection. But Iā€™m not sure how much of that is true and how much is Zola just wanting to slice and dice a Homo superior test subject. However, yes, Zola is certain that D-Cel is a mutant.

JP: It is a VERY interesting turn and one that keeps adding more and more texture to what the landscape of the 616 looks and operates like now, post-Krakoa. Better still, itā€™s adding another neat layer onto D-Cel! Whom I’ve been told is NOT a Millennial, but instead a Generation Z kid which doesnā€™t jibe with Niciezaā€™s dialogue at all now. But my woolgathering aside, it is a neat feint for the character and one that puts a rare shroud of mystery around the character and I am anxious to try and parse through.

What did you think of this stuff, Tony?

TT: I continue to really not like D-Cel at allā€¦ but I mean that in a good way. Sheā€™s meant to be unsympathetic and annoying, and I like that it comes across quite a bit. Itā€™s a good little wink at how a boomer would react to Gen Z influencer culture without being cute about it.

However, this mutant plot thread with her? This is very interesting. I really hope the flashbacks next issue (if there are any) are all about D-Cel rather than Cain. I want to know more about her, especially about why sheā€™s so resistant to being considered a mutant.

But holy cow, does Garney and Milla ever cut loose on the art here?! Wow.

Where Do We Go From Here?

JP: Though for all the good stuff this comic has provided thus far, I canā€™t help but wonder where we really go for a finale issue. 

This series really hasnā€™t been the heaviest plot-wise, and could arguably be called a ā€œhangout comicā€ wherein Cain and D-Cel just kind of move from story to story, hoisting it slightly with their dynamic. But I canā€™t really think of what exactly we are gonna get next time. I know it is sort of lame to speculate in a recap/review of the issue CURRENTLY out, but itā€™s been a weird year and I gotta get my kicks where I can, yā€™all.

That said, I am very much enjoying that the ā€œsuper-private-prison systemā€ plot from the opening is getting brought back up here. That kinda crunchy, lore-esque detail about the 616 is something I always like to see explored and it has a fun ā€œripped from the headlinesā€ vibe that I will always appreciate in superhero comics (when done well).

I dunno, Tony, what does Juggernaut #5 look like for you? Or what do you HOPE it looks like, rather?

TT: So it threw me this issue that this was just a brawl in a lab. I thought last issue said that Zola OWNED the private prison. Which is a thorny issue on its own, but you consider a Nazi owned a private prison? Thatā€™s some messed up stuff that really could have been interesting. Now Iā€™m wondering what the hook is for this prison.

However, weā€™re an issue from the conclusion, and Iā€™m starting to wonder what the point of this story is. Was it reforming Juggernaut into more of a pure anti-hero? Is it introducing D-Cel? Is it exploring this new post-Krakoa world from the perspective of someone intrinsically linked to the island but will forever be an outsider?

X-Traneous Thoughts

  • Still no Black Tom. Majorly bummed.
  • Not really feeling the Garney Zola redesign. First big art misstep in this series.
  • Black Tom probably doesnā€™t even know Cain is ALIVE right now. That sounds like a story, Iā€™m just saying.
  • While Cain jumping out of the chopper is cool, it doesnā€™t measure up to the other opening spreads of the series so far.
  • Also it wouldnā€™t have been HARD to just give Black Tom a cameo, Fabes. Like itā€™s one panel, cā€™mon.
  • Not enough emphasis on the fact that Arnim Zola is A FREAKING NAZI in the issue.
  • Juggernaut/D-Cel Team-Up Name Pitch: Slow Juggs. 
  • Actually, never mind I hate that.
  • Oh yeah, and in case you didnā€™t notice- Black Tom Sightings: Still 0
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Tony Thornley is a geek dad, blogger, Spider-Man and Superman aficionado, X-Men guru, autism daddy, amateur novelist, and all around awesome guy. Heā€™s also very humble.