Charts – 10 July 2026
Well, this isn’t exactly a surprise.
1. Sam Fender & Olivia Dean – “Rein Me In”
That’s sixteen weeks, and it continues to have a massive lead over the number two single (“Stupid Song” by Olivia Rodrigo). That passes Wet Wet Wet’s “Love Is All Around” and Drake’s “One Dance”, and draws level with Bryan Adams’ “Everything I Do (I Do It For You)”. Adams did it in one go, mind you, and his record for the longest uninterrupted run at number 1 is going nowhere any time soon. Only one record has ever spent more weeks at number 1 – Frankie Laine’s “I Believe” in 1953 – and “Rein Me In” only has to manage another fortnight to match it.
That said, “Rein Me In” could finally go to downweighting next week – it’s fallen by more than the market average for two weeks in a row. There is, however, a physical 7″ single out which registers suspiciously few copies on this week’s chart, so they might be holding back distribution for next week to make sure that that doesn’t happen.
27. Journey – “Don’t Stop Believin'”
Apparently this is being used in the football coverage or something. I wouldn’t know.
The X-Axis – 8 July 2026
UNCANNY X-MEN #31. (Annotations here.) Another nice quiet week, then – just two X-books, at least in the main Marvel Universe line. I’m not complaining about that. Uncanny X-Men is still in the “Mars Needs Mutants” arc, which looks like it’s going to be about a bunch of aliens we can’t communicate with showing up to exterminate a bunch of innocent Brood. I’m still puzzled by the fact that the Brood had the aliens’ guns in the previous issue and not in this one. That reads like some sort of error, but it’s one that confuses the plot, so it matters quite a bit. Still, I like the design for the new aliens, and the basic idea seems solid enough. The Vig is quietly establishing himself as a fun supporting character, and the bits with the Outliers’ school dance work well enough. Mutina’s storyline is working for me too, with the continuing mismatch between what she says and what she actually does. As for the Greymalkin B-plot, it feels a bit detached from everything else, and the whole turning mutants into weapons thing is nothing new, but at least it seems to be finally coming to a head.
WOLVERINE #23. (Annotations here.) Well, Julius Ohta’s art has some memorable moments. I do like his Taskmaster towering over Wolverine, and the way he’s using the sai as a kind of improvised claws. He sells the terrified scientist at the end rather well, too. Beyond that, I really don’t know what Saladin Ahmed is trying to do with the book at this point. I’m just about willing to look past the idea that Cecilia Reyes can knock up an anti-nanite serum in ten minutes, but what’s any of it meant to be about? Maybe it’s meant to be something about Wolverine’s anger being both his strength and his weakness, but that’s hardly new either. I certainly don’t know who was crying out for a new incarnation of Post, a character who was killed off more than 25 years ago and never had much going for him beyond his character design (and then only when drawn by Andy Kubert). There’s nothing especially bad about this on a page-to-page level, but when I stand back I just can’t see anything new here.
Wolverine #23 annotations
WOLVERINE vol 8 #23
“Power Grab”
Writer: Saladin Ahmed
Artist: Julius Ohta
Colour artist: Jesus Aburtov
Letterer: Cory Petit
Editor: Mark Basso
COVER: Taskmaster advances on Wolverine, with adamantium claws extended. This doesn’t actually happen in the story, where Taskmaster only has the copied healing factor.
This is a pretty straightforward issue, but we’ll run through it anyway.
WOLVERINE:
For those just joining us, his healing factor has been switched off by nanites, and his right-hand claws are still broken from the fight with the Adamantine in issue #20. The previous issue established that his adamantium is poisoning him without his healing factor (which has happened before), but was rather inconsistent about how far this was affecting him – at times he seemed to be having trouble standing, but he also seemed able to hold his own against Taskmaster. This issue seems to be saying that his berserker rage is partly responsible for keeping him on his feet, and that his enhanced senses still give him some advantage in anticipating Taskmaster’s moves.
Uncanny X-Men #31 annotations
UNCANNY X-MEN vol 6 #31
“Mars Needs Mutants, part two: The Devil I Know”
Writer: Gail Simone
Artists: Jim Towe & David Baldeón
Colour artist: Matthew Wilson
Letterer: Clayton Cowles
Editor: Tom Brevoort
COVER: One of the Nur holding an unconscious Rogue, with UFOs above. This doesn’t happen in this issue – indeed, Rogue doesn’t appear at all. The slogan “They Came From Beyond!” might just be generic, but there was a film called They Came From Beyond Space in 1967 (based on Joseph Millard’s 1941 novel The Gods Hate Kansas, which seems a bit harsh, but I’ve never been there so I’ll have to take his word for it).
This issue also include part two of “Mind and Matter”, a serialised 5-page back-up strip for Marvel Voices celebrating Disability Pride Month. It’s got nothing to do with the X-Men, so I won’t be covering it. At least in the digital edition, there doesn’t seem to be any indication of where you can read part one – if you were wondering, it’s in Amazing Spider-Man #32.
Housekeeping
Annotations will be up on Thursday night this week.
House to Astonish Episode 219
Tick tock, it’s podcast o’clock, as Paul and I talk about the Midnight line’s rescheduling, Alien v X-Men, the Absolute Batman animated series, the upcoming new volumes of Doom Patrol, Teen Titans and Legion of Super-Heroes, Crimes Against Nature, Bride of Frankenstein, and You’ll Never Leave This Place Alive. We’ve also got reviews of 100 Bullets: US of Anger and Iron Man, and the Official Handbook of the Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe is in need of a revival. All this plus product endorsements by both Jonathan Hickman and Paul O’Brien, She-Hulk v Legally Blonde and issue 16 of My Boss Is My Stallion.
The podcast is here, or available via the embedded player below. Let us know what you think, in the comments, on Bluesky or via email.
Daredevil Villains #81: Ammo
DAREDEVIL #252 (March 1988)
“Ground Zero”
Writer: Ann Nocenti
Penciller: John Romita Jr.
Inker: Al Williamson
Letterer: Joe Rosen
Colourist: Max Scheele
Editor: Ralph Macchio
For some reason, Daredevil #252 is a double sized issue. It’s not an anniversary issue. It’s not a fresh start. It’s not the climax of a long running storyline. It’s not even a turning point. Instead, it’s a tie-in to “Fall of the Mutants”, which was taking place over in Uncanny X-Men, New Mutants and X-Factor.
“Fall of the Mutants” wasn’t even a crossover. It consisted of three separate turning-point storylines that barely interacted with one another. But despite that, there were four tie-in issues. All four of them linked to X-Factor‘s storyline, in which Apocalypse and his Horsemen attack New York. The only connection with Daredevil is that it happens to take place in his city.
This turns out not to be a problem. Ann Nocenti has a story that she wants to tell here, and it’s about how everyone in Hell’s Kitchen reacts when a disaster hits and they fear the world might be ending. To do that story, you need a disaster, but the disaster itself isn’t the point, and so Nocenti doesn’t want to waste time in this book on actually setting it up or resolving it. A crossover provides a wonderful solution to this problem: it means that she doesn’t have to explain the disaster at all, and anyone who really cares can be referred to another book where the details actually matter. She doesn’t even need to recap the plot of the crossover, because it doesn’t matter. If you don’t know what’s happening or why… well, nor do any of the regular characters, and that’s the whole point.
Charts – 3 July 2026
We’re almost at the point where this has stopped being boring and started being interesting again.
1. Sam Fender & Olivia Dean – “Rein Me In”
That’s 15 weeks at number 1, and it remains miles ahead of the number 2 single. Fifteen weeks is enough to tie with Drake’s “One Dance” and Wet Wet Wet’s “Love Is All Around”. There are only two tracks left to beat. Bryan Adams’ “(Everything I Do) I Do It For You” lasted 16 weeks in 1991, and “Rein Me In” only needs one more week to match that. The all-time record is 18 weeks, set by Frankie Laine’s “I Believe” in 1953. That could happen, but “Rein Me In” did drop in streams this week and it could yet get hit by downweighting before making it to 18 weeks.
27. Sombr – “My Body Isn’t Ready”
The X-Axis – 1 July 2026
X-MEN UNITED #5. (Annotations here.) I have no idea how much weight you can really put on Amazon listing this as issue #5 of 10, but I can’t say it would surprise me, because the book isn’t working at all. The art’s decent enough in this issue – probably as good as we’ve had it so far – but the fundamental concept of Graymatter Lane just doesn’t work, and I’m not entirely convinced that even the people making the comic understand it. It’s taken five issues to clarify that this is in fact just a mental projection and that everyone’s body is meant to be asleep at home – but if that’s the case, how does any of this stuff about Rift teleporting people direct to places on Earth work? This isn’t nitpicking, this is really basic, rudimentary stuff that feels like nobody has thought it through properly. And now we’re doing a psychic projection inside a psychic projection? I can live with things like the new characters being given inexplicable seniority over the long-time students – it doesn’t make any logical sense but that’s just the nature of rotating casts, and at least there’s some sort of gesture towards a reason for Axo to have a role here. And sure, we’ve defined Ransom and Melée as potential alpha figures, so let them take control. Fine.
But the premise of this book requires us to either buy into Graymatter Lane as a cool idea, or accept its USP as the team-up book where characters from different parts of the franchise get to interact. Graymatter Lane is a confusing mess, so that leads the interaction angle. That could work, in an era where the X-books are individually siloed, but they aren’t really interacting in a convincing way. The likes of Cyclops feel off, and the whole thing feels very inconsequential. If the basic format of this book really boils down to “a bunch of random characters go on a mission that doesn’t matter” then that’s Secret Defenders and the X-books doesn’t need one of those.
X-Men United #5 annotations
X-MEN UNITED #5
“Shadow Play”
Writer: Eve L Ewing
Artist: Eduardo Pansica
Colour artist: Brian Reber
Letterer: Joe Sabino
Editor: Tom Brevoort
COVER: The Shadow King manipulates Cyclops, Wolverine (Laura), Emma Frost and the Beast. This is a puzzling cover, since neither Wolverine nor Beast is actually in the issue.
There seems to have been some change of plan since this issue was solicited, since although the solicitation copy did describe something recognisable as this story, it also promised more about Lourdes Chantal and someone called Justina LaGuardia, neither of whom appears in this issue at all.
Amazon is billing this series as ending at issue #10.
THE X-MEN:
Five issues into the series, we finally get a clear explanation of whether people physically travel to Graymatter lane, as a discussion among the students about the whereabouts of the missing teachers includes Scout saying that “their bodies are back wherever they left them when they entered the campus”. Except… the very same scene has Rift opening a portal to send people direct from Graymatter Lane to a location in the physical world which isn’t where they came from. That’s happened several times in this series, but… how?
