Wednesday, August 21, 2024

Wednesday Comics: DC, November 1983 (week 3)

My mission: read DC Comics' output from January 1980 (cover date) to Crisis! This week, I'm looking at the comics on newsstands around August 18, 1983.


Thriller #1: In an unspecified near future New York, Dan Grove is considering suicide, dealing with the trauma of filming his brother's brutal assassination by the terrorist Scabbard in the Middle East. Instead. he's reluctantly recruited into a group of adventurers named the Seven Seconds by a ghostly presence of Angeline Thriller, who wants "Seven Seconds to save the world."

The creation of Fleming and von Eeden, Thriller is (like Ronin) emblematic of the new things DC is trying in this era. I remember reading the Meanwhile column on it as a kid, and it seemed so different from anything I was used to in comics. Today, I would say it perhaps prefigures some of the things the British writers would do that became Vertigo, or perhaps more accurately, it resembles something you might see in the direct sell indies of the era. Unfortunately, the storytelling and presentation is as offbeat as the content, and I don't think that part works quite as well. We'll see if that impression changes with later issues.


Daring New Adventures of Supergirl #13: The indicia title of this issue says the title is still "The Daring New Adventures of Supergirl," though on the cover it's just "Supergirl." Kupperberg and Infantino/Oksner introduce a new costume ditching the short of "70s cocktail waitress/stewardess' vibe she was rocking. There's also the beginning of a new story arc, as Kara learns that her neighbor, Mrs. Berkowitz, has had a swastika painted on her door by a fascist group, the Party for Social Reform.  Linda attends a rally at which the group's imposing leader preaches some dog-whistle anti-Semitism.  When a riot breaks out, incited by the staged beating of one of the party members posing Jewish protestor, Supergirl intervenes and orders their leader to end the rally.  Instead, the woman reveals her name as Blackstarr, and she focuses her cosmic powers on the Maid of Might, knocking her to the ground.


Batman and the Outsiders #4: Another lackluster issue by Barr and Aparo. I think they're still figuring out what to do with the team. A former Batman (and Black Lightning) foe now calling himself Meltdown has broken out of prison and is stealing radioactive materials. The Outsiders pursue and do battle but Batman is suspicious something more is going on here. The one thing I did like about this issue was the twist that the warden of the prison is the real villain, and Meltdown was merely driven to desperation because the establishment was withholding life-saving treatment.


Green Lantern #170: I guess Cohn and Tuska/Sekowsky felt like last issue was great because they repeat the same basic framing sequence of the Guardians telling Lantern Kista X, who questions their treatment of Jordan, another story about a former Green Lantern aimed to convince her "the Guardians always know best." In this one, Green Lantern Monak falls to an invasion of his homeworld by the robotic forces of Z'nang after he had warned the Guardians about a despotic takeover on the Z'nang world and they had declined to allow him to intervene. His son, Meeno, because the next Lantern and makes war on the Z'nang in violation of the Guardians' orders, even directing a comet toward the world. When he's shown that the comet will kill many innocent victims of the dictorial regime, he redirects the comet but is killed by Z'nang soldiers. The ring passes to a Z'nang political prisoner who can now fight to liberate his people.  

Jordan wakes up from the mindgame test the subjected him to, and he is dismissed. He asks for another reply beyond "don't call us, we'll call you," particularly given his current exiled status, but none is forthcoming. Despite this, he tells Krista where he given the option to do it all over, he would still choose to be a Lantern.


Sgt. Rock #382: In the main feature by Kanigher and guest artist Spiegle, Easy takes a town and with it some German prisoners who all happen to be teenagers. The leader is as fanatical as the come, and refuses to go easily, killing some of Easy's "green recruits" with a grenade. This story is a bit unusual; I expected Rock to be able to get through to the kid a bit, but no, he's Nazi through and through.

There are a bunch of shorts on everything from the Ghost Dance and Wounded Knee to the F-111, but the only other story is a "Men of Easy" feature on Little Sure Shot, that's okay, other than the silliness of depicting Native Americans in the reservation (presumably) in what must be the 20s or 30s in stereotypical Hollywood "Plains Indians" regalia.


Legion of Super-Heroes #305: Levitz and Giffen/Schaffenberger have a group of Legionnaires go into action against the Shrinking Violet imposter that's married Colossal Boy. Her name is Yera, and she reveals she is working for a group on Imsk that turn out to be separatists. Colossal Boy naturally doesn't take this well but joins the others in trying to locate the real Violet. What follows is well-done, with Cham infiltrating the group as Yera, then calling in the others for a devastating assault. In the coda, Colossal Boy reveals to Yera that he has decided whatever her true identity, she is the one he has fallen in love with.


Warlord #75: Cool Jurgens cover. I reviewed the main story here. No Barren Earth backup this month.

Monday, August 19, 2024

The Collected Planes


One of these days, I'm going to completely finish (and maybe publish) this series on the Great Wheel, but until then, here's everything I've done.
The Layers of Heaven (part 1) (part 2) (part 3) (part 4)

Friday, August 16, 2024

The Return of Flash Gordon

"Gordon's alive?!" 

That's right, the Flash Gordon comic strip started by Alex Raymond in 1934 has returned in a new incarnation to the (digital) comics page on the website Comics Kingdom. Cartoonist Dan Schkade relaunched the series on October 22, 2023, and has been doing daily and Sunday installments since.

Schkade's continuity starts right after the defeat of Ming (in Raymond's 1941 strip) and tells the story of what happens as the uneasy alliances of the revolution fall apart and the different kingdoms jockey for power. I think it's a novel approach: something fresher than either a complete reboot we've seen so many times or bland "further adventures" in a world without a strong central conflict. 


His design sensibility is strong too. It is broadly "classic," but draws a lot on the 80s film (and I think the New Adventures of Flash Gordon animated series) that many readers will be more familiar with and lightly updates it.

The weekday installments tend to carry the story forward, but the Sunday strips offer a summary of the previous six days from the perspective of a specific character, which serves to both catch you up and give insight into the characters.

Check out the strip here.

Wednesday, August 14, 2024

Wednesday Comics: DC, November 1983 (week 2)

I'm reading DC Comics' output from January 1980 (cover date) to Crisis! Today, I've looking at the comics released the week of August 11, 1983. 


Superman #389: Bates/Kupperberg and Swan/Hunt bring back Cory Renwald, Clark Kent's sort of foster brother, who we last saw in issue 369. This is his final appearance. He's got amnesia and has been framed as a traitor and is on the run from enemy agents. I wonder if Cory has shown up post-Crisis? Looks like no. Meanwhile, Lois and Lana have patched things up, but Perry and his wife Alice still seem headed toward divorce. Also, in the last panel we see Vartox is heading to Earth.


This week also saw the release of DC Graphic Novel #1 "Star Raiders." I won't review it in detail, but I thought it deserved mentioning. It's an Atari tie-in by Elliot S. Maggin and Jose Luis Garcia-Lopez.


Batman #365:  It's been interesting to see how Moench's approach to Batman differed from his approach to Moon Knight, a character most people would consider very similar, I think. This issue feels fairly different from Moench's typical Moon Knight story. Vicki Vale is in Guatemala investigating illegal weapons dealing by Cuba and the USSR but gets captured by the criminal running the operation. Batman into a trap as he comes to Guatemala to rescue Vicki, but that's falling right into the trap the criminals set for him. After confronting indigenous peoples and trained jaguars, Batman comes face to face with the mastermind of this whole thing who is (surprisingly) the Joker!


Omega Men #8: The whole Vega System seems to be celebrating the Omega Men's victory over the Citadel, but there are signs of trouble ahead. First off, the remnant of the Citadel isn't about to give up and their wily, human advisor, Harry Hokum, plans a new offensive. On Euphorix, there are indications the guy Kalista left in charge, Dulak, plans to keep the throne--and maybe seize her with it.


G.I. Combat #259: In the first Haunted Tank story, Stuart's Raiders finally get back from their sojourn in the past, but only after Jeb's warrior woman bride is killed by the Huns, and the ghost of Atilla again does battle with the ghost of a Confederate general. This has been the weirdest detour in the history of this title. The second HT yarn is so mundane, I can't even remember it, other than it involves a kid in Italian mountain town saving our heroes with a 50-gallon drum full of kerosene.

There's an O.S.S. story by Kanigher and Cruz where a French chef struggles with finding the courage to assassinate a German Colonel, but in the end, he doesn't poison the Colonel's wedding cake. Instead, the bride, a French partisan, activates an explosive cake topper. Kashdan and Trinidad have a malfunctioning artillery piece getting loose and rolling down a hill to destroy a bridge and an advancing contingent of Germans.  Finally, Kashdan, this time with Henson, has a small group of Americans holding a desert oasis against a German force, in the end the oasis is revealed to be a ruse to play for time, but the explosives that kill the German actually do reveal a spring.


New Teen Titans #36: Wolfman and Pollard/Tanghal follow-up with Thunder and Lighting, who had been left with S.T.A.R. Labs back in issue 32 with the hope of a cure for their condition. They've had no luck, so Raven has to use her power to find their missing father, whose blood holds the promise of saving them. It turns out he's in the hands of H.I.V.E. who've been using his power--and he's an alien. The Titans and the brothers attack H.I.V.E. but badguys control the duo's father to fight them, ultimately forcing Thunder and Lightning to kill him. Using the deceased extraterrestrial's blood, S.T.A.R. scientists are able to cure Thunder and Lightning, allowing them to control their powers, and they choose to return to Vietnam. I wonder was this whole alien storyline planned when they introduced the two? Seems like the Vietnam bit is extraneous, if so.


Saga of the Swamp Thing #18: Pasko and Bissette/Totleben provide a framing sequence where Swamp Thing, Matt, and Abby are overwhelmed by the monsters from Matt's brain and Arcane tells a captive Kripptman the story of his last encounter with Swamp Thing--which is a reprint of Swamp Thing #10 (1974) by Wein and Wrightson. That story involves the ghosts of mistreated slaves attacking Arcane and his Un-Men.

Monday, August 12, 2024

Eternian Icons for 13th Age

Watching He-man & the Masters of the Universe: Revelations this past week got me thinking about how the MOTU mythos has got some good candidates for 13th Age style icons. Here's a sampling:

Earl Norem
DARK WARLORD
The dread general of the vast, world-conquering armies of the Horde whose dominion spans universes. He is a figure of legend who employs terror to first breaking the collective spirit of a world before employing the powerful magic and technology to subjugate it.


Gerald Parel
SORCERESS
Guardian of the secrets of Castle Grayskull which was once in ancient times the Hall of Wisdom, a repository of incalculable knowledge, but also a conduit of cosmic power. The Sorceress' unrivalled magic protects these secrets from the wider world--and the wider world from the secrets. 


ELDER DRAGON
Second oldest living thing on the planet of Eternia, the Elder Dragon rules over the rest of his kind from forbidden Darksmoke. He takes a dim view of humanity, being well-aware of their failings, but may be moved to employ his magic and knowledge in their cause, if supplicants pass the tests he puts before them.


Alvin Lee
SERPENT KING
Once this world bowed to the many-headed Snake God and was ruled by his chosen people. The Serpent King was both Eternia's ruler and the Snake God's high priest. When mammalian humanity rebelled, he was imprisoned outside the world with his god. Still, his presence can be felt. His followers keep the faith in secret. The Serpent King works tireless to return and again ascend the throne.


FOREST LORD
Though believed by many city-dwellers to be nothing more than a legend, the Forest Lord is in fact the living avatar of the natural world, a green god that moves silently through the great forest. His followers are most aggressive against the forces of destruction who would despoil nature but have no love for the encroachment of civilization, whatever its form.

Friday, August 9, 2024

Far Away Land 2e Kickstarter


The Far Away Land has got a Kickstarter for a second edition just in time for it's 10th anniversary. For those of you who aren't familiar with it, is a gonzo fantasy setting with unique art and a vibe a lot like Adventure Time but a flair all its own. It's creator and artist, Dirk Stanley describes it with the elevator pitch: "Imagine Rifts, Dungeons & Dragons, and Adventure Time had a baby," which I think pretty much covers it. 


I always felt like Far Away Land shared a common spirit with my own Land of Azurth, and I've run some of Stanley's adventures to good effect in my home campaign. They are unfailingly imaginative.

The Kickstarter just started but has already funded. Whether you are already a fan or hearing about it for the first time, you might want to check it out. 

Thursday, August 8, 2024

The Caped Crusader


Over on the Flashback Universe Blog I reviewed the new Amazon Prime Batman animated series, Batman: The Caped Crusader.