My goal: read DC Comics' output from January 1980 (cover date) to Crisis! This week, I'm looking at the comics at newsstands around May 13, 1982.
Batman #350: My brother had this issue, but I don't think we bought it off the stands when it came up. After the bite last issue, Robin is starting to not show up so well in mirrors. He heads home to the Batcave and invites Bruce and Alfred to a party at Dala's house. Bruce and Vicki go to the party at Dala's place, and Bruce notices that Dick is acting even more strange after last night. He follows Dick and Dala, trying to figure out what's going on. He loses track of them, but finds blood on the floor. Looking out the window of the room, Bruce spots Dala taking Dick downwards to the back of the house. Bruce keeps following, this time as Batman. He finds Dick's clothes on the ground and hears laughter, then the Monk lunges at him and bites his neck. Batman fights back, but it's already too late.
In the Catwoman backup by Jones and DeZuniga, Selina wakes up next to a dead woman after her kidnapping in the previous installment. Selina impersonates the woman to find out why she was killed, leading her to have have to go on stage as a stripper in a club. When she sees one of the murders, she gives chase, following him onto the rooftops. When she doesn't quite make a jump, she's left vulnerable to the crooks attack.
Flash #312: Bates and Infantino have Flash investigating a series of crime that have the hallmarks of his enemy, Heat Wave. What's odd about that is that Heat Wave has apparently reformed and gotten a straight job. The Flash doesn't believe his old foe has really changed at first, but Heat Wave ultimately helps him stop the imposter.
In the Dr. Fate backup by Gerber/Pasko and Giffen, Fate manages to escape the Nihil-verse thanks to his link with Inza but in the process discovers her indiscretion with Copeland. Back in the Tower, Inza is angry that Kent won't share things with her. Kent claims not to remember a lot--but does remember seeing her with another man. The argument ends with Kent sleeping on the couch and waking up in the morning to find Inza gone. Worse yet, outside the Tower he finds the red gem from before the size of the sun and covering much of the sky. Vandaemon is back, and this is all thanks to the farmer from the first part, who is actually Ynar, a renegade Lord of Order.
G.I. Combat #243: In the first Haunted Tank tale, Kanigher and Glanzman kill off Slim, who at least in the last few years of his 21 years in this magazine, had always been the naysayer and complainer. Most of the issue is introducing his replacement Bill Craig, a 30-year veteran and cavalryman from WWI. He, of course, saves the crew here. Except for Slim. The second Haunted Tank tale finds Rick still dealing with Slim's death and blaming Bill. After Bill saves them again--riding a horse, no less--Rick accepts the new crewman.
Kashdan and Amongo give us a story told from the point of view of a bayonet used by a G.I. in the Pacific against the Japanese. There's an uncredited story about a heroic meterologist dying (but still succeeding) in an attempt to seed clouds the thwart the Germans with rain shortly after D-Day. Finally, the Mercenaries are back and in Sierra Verde fighting a Colonel Furioza and his bandits on behalf of some poor villagers. Again, they achieve the mission, but don't get paid.
Jonah Hex #63: Fleisher really likes to pour the hardship on Hex! The offer of passage back to the States turns out to be ploy to shanghai Jonah. After a beating and some threats to Mei Ling, he goes to work. Then there's a cholera outbreak on the ship, and he gets sick and in delirium, hallucinates traumatic memories of his alcoholic and abusive father, He survives cholera (though the rest of the crew don't) and saves Me Ling from the cruel captain, but rashly throws him overboard, leaving only nonexperienced sailors on the ship. They drift for weeks until a storm wrecks the ship. Jonah and Mei Ling escape in a lifeboat but only after sharks kill the ship's doctor and Jonah get's bitten. His wound becomes infected, but they are rescued by a ship bound for San Francisco. Jonah recovers, but Mei Ling decides to leave him again when they reach port.
Legion of Super-Heroes Annual #1: DC had an ad in last weeks comics saying annuals were returning, and here's the first one. Levtiz and Giffen/Patterson have Brainiac 5 trying to cure young Danielle Foccart of her intractable neurologic disorder. Unfortunately, it instead results in her being possessed by Computo who is out for revenge against the Legion. Most of the team is defeated and captured, but Danielle's brother, Jacques, becomes the new Invisible Kid and saves the day. Between this issue and the Dr. Fate backup in Flash, Giffen's art is really starting to take on his (earliest) distinctive style.
Saga of the Swamp Thing #4: Pasko's story in this issue is a wrongheaded to me in a couple of ways. First off, it's clearly inspired by the Atlanta Child Murders of 1979-81 (and if the story alone didn't make you think of that, its last caption references them) so it's perhaps a little too soon to make flippant popular fiction about and a horrific event on the first anniversary of its ending. Second, the suggestion that somehow kids of the era were easy targets for murder due to being made too trusting by television promoting kindness and friendliness (presumably Mr. Rogers is his target here) somehow makes it even worse as it indicts positivity and sort of victim blames. Beyond that, the story about a demonically possessed children's tv host is pretty much par for the course for early 80s horror fare.
The Phantom Stranger backup by Barr and DeZuniga has the Stranger intervening to save a woman who has been turned into a mental zombie by a mystic incantation that saved her life, and finding himself in the clutches of his nemesis, Tannarak.
New Teen Titans #22: Wolfman and Perez have most of the Titans in a dire situation. Captives of Brother Blood, Wonder Girl, Kid Flash, and Raven are thrown in a pit inhabited by a monstrous spider-like creature, as is Robin, but only after he's tortured by Brother Blood's Confessor for information. The remaining Titans attack the Church to rescue their teammates, but Brother Blood outplays them with the aid of Bethany Snow, a newscaster who is secretly a member of his cult, by making it appear that their attack is unprovoked and smearing them in the public's eyes. Cyborg causes tBlood's escaping airship to crash, but that was yet more manipulation and Blood is still very much alive, but the Titans are accused of trying to murder him.
Superman #373: Bates and Swan/Adkins continue the Vartox story. Vartox and Lana Lang continue their wedding plans, but Vartox's old flame, Syreena, mind controls Vartox into thinking Superman is trying to steal Lana away from him. Vartox heads off looking to kill his Kryptonian friend. We get Syreena's origin in this issue. It turns out she was a criminal who tried to seduce Vartox to manipulate him, but wound up falling for him. When he discovered the truth, he let her face justice, and he assumed she died later when their planet was destroyed.
The Rozakis/Schaffenberger "In-Between Years" story is even more pointless that usual. An ancient Inca crown is stolen from Prof. Lewis Lang, and Pete Ross (visiting Clark at college) and Superboy get it back for him. That synopsis makes the story sound like it could be more interesting than it is, but really it hinges on Pete knowing Clark is Superboy, but Superboy not knowing Pete knows for it's "drama."
8 comments:
Pretty lackluster lot this week, although some of that's personal bias. Brother Blood is by far my least favorite "big" Titans villain, and taking that book out of the mix leaves the rest looking pretty feeble. Not long to go now before Crisis, and it's issues like these that show why DC was getting desperate enough to try something so (at the time) radical in pursuit of better sales.
Don't think I had a sub to anything from DC besides Titans at this point. Arak and JLA and Warlord were off the rack picks, and I Firestorm was still getting bought pretty regularly, but everything else was down to impulse purchases.
Well, this is certainly not the best week, but I think you're being a bit overly harsh. Looking at Marvel's offerings this same week, I'm not sure DC doesn't come out ahead. The Legion Annual, though not earthshattering may be the best of the week, and NNT, Batman, Night Force, and Swamp Thing, I feel like are likely as good as anything Marvel gave us except maybe Uncanny X-Men.
I'm going to say no to that. Looking it up, there were pretty darn good issues of Power Man & Iron Fist, Rom: Spaceknight, and Uncanny X-Men (all of which I can remember just from the covers) and Buscema cranked out two different Conan books (which are at least on par with Arak FWIW, although Warlord usually topped them even after Grell left). The rest is pretty bad, although I remember reading Avengers and thinking the (basically slice of life) story was goofy enough to be kind of cute - it had Wasp and She-Hulk in their peak stereotype modes and Hawkeye was doing a fine job of being an insufferable ass.
Perhaps the most noteworthy thing in comparing the Big Two that week is that DC is still very heavily into back-up stories, where Marvel barely uses them at all. Different ideas of what was selling books, but Marvel's approach to full-issue stories gave the creatives more space to develop a story. OTOH, if your story isn't good enough to fill an issue (cough, Avengers, cough) it just feels like it's overstaying its welcome. Back-up features make a thin main story less noticeable, but they're often so short they feel rushed themselves and they do ask readers to be interested in (usually) a whole different character, which may well not be the case.
Well, I haven't read the Marvel issues admittedly--but you haven't read the DC ones. You're comparing you misty memories of the Marvel issues with my brief descriptions of the DC ones.
I had heard about that Legion story, but never seen it. I just looked it up on an "archive" site and Wow, did I miss out. That is a great story. Thanks for posting about it.
Actually, I dug up scans of some of the DC ones out of curiosity. Flash was better than anticipated (Heat Wave's never been my favorite Rogue - that'd probably be Mirror Master) although the Fate story was so-so, the partial scan of LoSH was much good enough to make me wonder what the rest of it was like, but man, that Superman book was disappointing, particularly the back-up.
So not bad from what I saw, but my doubts about the back-up stories remain. Going by your past reviews they seem to flop an awful lot of the time, and I really wonder how much that format was hurting DC in this era. How many books were still running them regularly post-Crisis?
A little late to the party but I respect the weariness that a line like "Bates and Swan/Adkins continue the Vartox story" can express sometimes.
That Batman story is a 3-parter. It jumps to Detective Comics then back to Batman #351. VAMPIRI!
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