Wednesday, December 10, 2025

Wednesday Comics: DC, March 1985 (week 2)

I'm reading DC Comics' output from January 1980 (cover date) to Crisis! This week, I read the comics released the week of December 13, 1985. 


Amethyst #3: Mishkin/Cohn and Estrada/Tanghal pick up where last issue left off. Aquamarine returns to his islands to find the revolution fomented by Fire Jade in full swing. His imperious attitude gets him killed by a rebel with a magic sword provided by Jade. Amethyst travels to the isles and first fights in a rage but then slows down and discovers that the rebels kind of have a point about their treatment under Aquamarine and are only being duped by Fire Jade. The rebel leader teams with her to take Fire Jade down, which happens surprisingly easily, so I don't think we are truly done with her.

Fire Jade's defeat is real enough, however, so that Prince Topaz ensorcelled by her to romance then kill  Lady Turquoise, is freed from the spell, finding he is truly in love with Turquoise.


Arak Son of Thunder #42: Arak follows in the footsteps of Gilgamesh in a quest into the Underworld to get Satyricus and Valda back. Angelica says she will restore them to the land of living if Arak will retrieve the herb of immortality

Arak has to battle Scoropion People guardians and resist the charms of Siduri, only to find the river has dried up and the herb is gone. Blind Utnapishtim overs him the last seed of the plant. Arak refuses to take the seed as he doesn't want Angelica to have eternal life. It was a test, and Arak passed, so the old man opens a portal to Kur where his friends are.


Batman #381: Moench and Hoberg/Alcala bring this phase of the Night-Slayer/Nocturna arc to a close. Night-Slayer is still dressed as Batman and committing crimes. Robin and Nocturna are swinging through the city at night looking for him or Bruce but can't find either. Mayor Hill has convinced himself that Batman really as committing the crimes to taunt him regarding his attempt to frame the cape crusader. When Bruce finally makes his appearance, he's set a plan in motion that traps the Night-Slayer, revealing him for an imposter, and as reveals Hill's misdeeds. Night-Slayer escapes, but Hill is on his way to jail. As a bonus, he also makes the socialworker think Natalia Knight is still working with the Night-Slayer, so Bruce gets custody back, even though they are now friendly with Nocturna. As a coda, Bruce visits the blind woman with the crush on Batman who tried to reveal Anton Knight's imposture, and the implication is that he spends the night with her!


Flash #343: Finally, Bates and Infantino/McLaughlin reveal just what made Cecile Horton dislike the Flash so. It turns out her father was a cop killed by Goldface back in the two-parter in 1982. Flash tries to convince her that Goldface lied about giving Flash a warning to get out of town before he killed, but for some reason Cecile doesn't believe him. Probably because we wouldn't have enough plot for the issue if she did. She goes to Goldface in prison, and he lies, of course, and she believes him, but then he kidnaps her in a jailbreak. The Flash comes to the rescue, but not before a gloating Goldface reveals that he did lie. Cecile feels awful for wrongly blaming the hero than has saved her life twice now.


G.I. Combat #275: The Monitor makes another appearance (or at least his satellite does) in the Haunted Tank story, apparently surveilling the ghost of J.E.B. Stuart in the void. Most of the story is about Stuart's Raiders on a mission to escort of defecting German tank commander to the Allied lines, but it turns out to be a trick, and the crew must battle the enemy inside their own tank.

There are three nonseries stories set in World War II, two of them by written by Kashdan. In one, the lone survivor of a mission in the Pacific Theater merely to distract enemy from the real objective, refuses a medal in disillusionment and anger. In another, a German commander betrays his side and frees U.S. prisoners of war in the name of stopping the destruction of a Belgian church he considers a work of art. In the sole story penned by Wessler, a U.S. squad sweeping for mines, tricks the German who set them into getting blown up by his own handiwork.

In the Bravos of Vietnam feature by Kanigher and Trinidad, Bravo 7-3 disguises themselves as peasants working the rice paddies to lure the Viet Cong into a trap.


Jemm, Son of Saturn #7: The Red Saturnian Jogarr must have been convinced by his talk with Superman last issue, because he arrives on Earth just in time to help Jemm defeat Grayol, a Koolar with a sort of cybernetic control over the ship the Prince and his friends stole from the White Saturnians. Meanwhile, Synn becomes aware of the existence of Jogarr's people and prepares to destroy them, while Tull is still out to get Jemm.


Omega Men #24: The primary draw of this fill-in story is the art of O'Neill, which certainly brings a different feel to the book. The script by Wolfman about the leaders of the Omega Men being tested to the limit in an underground city of Okaara is perfunctory. There's a backup too, a reprint by Wolfman/Gold and Morrow from Witching Hour #13 (1971), which the editorial here suggests the first appearance of the proto-Psions. 


Star Trek #11: Barr and Sutton/Villagran continue their Mirror Universe saga. Before Enterprise self-destructs at the orders of Mirror-Kirk, Scotty and Saavik manage to separate the saucer section from the warp drive. Meanwhile, Spock is revived and wins a psychic duel with his Mirror counterpart. With some hand-wavey rejiggering of the Tantalus field, Kirk disables Excelsior and captures his doppelganger. Scotty and Saavik repair Excelsior and modify the transwarp engines to travel into Mirror Space. Kirk plans to stop the Empire's invasion, disobeying Starfleet's orders. 


Superman #404: The first story is a silly tale by Boldman and Saviuk/Kesel. Superman is fighting criminals in Metropolis wearing the cape and cowl of Batman. Exposure to an accidental blast from a magical syrinx makes Superman grow small horns that he has to disguise as he searches for now stolen syrinx.

The second story by Rozakis and Schaffenberger is sort of holiday themed, as Perry White enlists Superman at Christmastime to prove to a doubting Canadian boy that the hero does exist, but Superman keeps getting delayed by emergencies.


Tales of the Teen Titans #51: Wolfman and Buckler/Smith again have Titans dealing with the fallout of Terra's betrayal. Aided by Lilith, the group thwarts a gang of gun-runners in the service of President Marlo, the leader of an unnamed Middle Eastern country. Jericho's mother stole military secrets on the strength of the neighboring nation of Kyran, and Marlo hires Cheshire to get Adeline Wilson and the information he has so he can plan an invasion. In the re-introduction of Chesire, we get a lot of reference to the mysterious "he" who is the father of her child and former Titan. Meanwhile, the Pentagon and Interpol tell Nightwing they want the Wilsons for questioning. When Nightwing tells Changeling, who's already suspicious of Jericho thanks to his parentage, attacks him and tries to arrest him. Jericho, anxious to pursue his mother's kidnapper, defeats Gar and escapes. Meanwhile, S.T.A.R. scientists discover an alien spaceship and its pilot frozen in the Alaskan ice.

2 comments:

Dale Houston said...

Just Titans out of this bunch for me. Without Perez I don't think I lasted long on either the newstand or the baxter version of the book. I think the Baxter version at least gets a couple of issues drawn by JLGL but then switches to lesser artists.

Dick McGee said...

Amethyst #3: Reading the synopsis here in 2025 keeps reminding me of how many characters share names with ones from Steven Universe. It's actually kind of confusing.

Arak Son of Thunder #42: This was the only DC book I was still subscribed to. Followed right to the (quite satisfactory) end, which is only 8 issues off now. Kind of glad Arak's been largely left in peace since his book ended, he really never needed to be dragged into the broader DC continuity and stands out as a rather unusual take on a sword & sorcery series. Makes me wonder what novel adaptations/continuations using the characters might have been like.

Flash #343: "Trail of the Flash" storyline or no, it amazes me that there was ever a time when an editor thought that "The Secrets of Flash's Lawyer Revealed!" was a cover blurb that would help sales. What's next, "The Mystery of Bruce Wayne's Dry Cleaner!"