Magneto Was Right (But He’s Still An Asshole): A Reflection on Cullen Bunn’s Tenure With The Master Of Magnetism
If Cullen Bunn designed the recently-wrapped Magneto series as an allegory, he might have subtitled it “intentions don’t matter.” If he meant it as a character study, the takeaway isn’t that Magneto is a misunderstood anti-hero or a charismatic villain within the realm of possible redemption; he’s a narcissist obsessed with his own bloated sense of self-importance.
Chris Claremont penned a weepy, guilt-ridden rendering of Magneto, while Grant Morrison wrote an unhinged Jean Grey-slaying antichrist take on the character, but Bunn hit upon a grounded, cozy midpoint between those two polars. Bunn’s Magneto is a plain ol’ pompous dick. A dick with badass magnetic powers, a clutch cape and helmet—but a simple pompous dick nonetheless.
In that sense, the Max Eisenhardt/Erik Lehnsherr we’ve been following for the past 21 months recalls Breaking Bad’s schlubby high school teacher-turned meth kingpin Walter White. Both espouse lofty rationalizations to justify whatever they want, regardless of potential consequences. Mags says he protects the mutant race from bigoted humanity. White says he’s keeping his family out of the poor house. But at their cores, Magneto just wants to kill all humans and White wants to make truckloads of profitable crystal meth.
Even though Magneto ’14 obviously can’t touch the quality of Breaking Bad in any regard—few things can—both offer non-hero protagonists we, the asshole consumers, can easily identify with. Such is not unheard of in modern cable shows, but it’s pretty rare for a Marvel comic.
As launched in the spring of 2014, Magneto ends the most recent of his series of half-assed, self-serving tenures as an X-Man, and with a flair of cringe-inducing sadism. Despite his ongoing pontification-obsessed internal monologue, Erik doesn’t second guess the value of doing things like ripping road signs from the pavement with his mind and later using said road sign to impale a defenseless ex-Friends of Humanity employee through the mouth and neck. This happens in front of a Starbucks in broad daylight, and it’s awesome—but it paints Mags more as a revenge fantasy wish fulfillment proxy than a militant civil rights crusader.
Magneto Interior Art by Paul Davidson
That’s been Magneto’s defining irony for decades. In the name of keeping mutantkind safe from a genocide similar to the Nazi concentration camps he experienced, he becomes a mass murderer. After countless X-Men comics, two cartoon shows and five movies, that’s a pretty old song by now.