Comics 101, May 8, 2013 – Success Suits Him

“Threequels” are a notoriously tricky business. There aren’t many film series where the third installment really comes back so strong that it regains that excitement you felt back when you first saw the original. Shane Black’s IRON MAN 3 comes as close as you can expect. Is it as mind-blowing, as revelatory as the first? No, but I don’t know how it could. But IRON MAN 3 is immensely satisfying, an exceedingly worthy follow-up to Jon Favreau’s original (and much better than IRON MAN 2, which I liked better than most people, but have to admit suffered in comparison) and a fitting closing to Marvel Studios’ IRON MAN series, if indeed this is to be the final solo IM film.

iron-man-3.jpg

Taking place some time after the events of THE AVENGERS, we see Tony Stark struggling with the repercussions of the alien invasion of New York, and channeling his anxiety and near-madness into his work, creating new armored suit after armored suit. Meanwhile, Jim Rhodes’ War Machine has been re-branded into the more image-friendly star-spangled “Iron Patriot,” and has been tasked with tracking down a mysterious terrorist calling himself “The Mandarin,” responsible for a number of terror attacks on American soil. Meanwhile, Pepper Potts, now running Stark Industries, is re-introduced to Aldrich Killian, an old acquaintance who’s now shopping around a “miracle cure” called Extremis. In other words, there’s a lot going on in this movie.

Iron-Man-3-Iron-Legion-Poster-Official-570x845.jpg

It’s no surprise that the heart of this film is Robert Downey Jr as Tony Stark. For the majority of the film, it’s mostly an action film starring Tony Stark, not Iron Man, and Downey’s Stark is so engaging that you don’t really miss the armored suit. Much credit has to go to Black’s screenplay, as Stark is funnier than ever here, even while we see him at his lowest point, often paralyzed by crippling anxiety attacks and longing for the safety of his armored shell.

But everyone else is good here, from returning folks like Gwyneth Paltrow and Jon Favreau to new antagonists Guy Pearce and Ben Kingsley. Kingsley’s Mandarin in particular is excellent, with some surprising choices that make perfect sense in the world of the Marvel Studios Cinematic Universe.

mandarin-iron-man-3.jpg

Don Cheadle is much better as Rhodey this time around, especially in the scenes when he’s out of the armor and shown for the competent military man that he is, and the sequence with Stark and Rhodey on the run and packing pistols has the feel of a kickass ’80s buddy picture.

Black was wise to make this feel like a successor to THE AVENGERS too, if not a direct sequel. By referencing the world-changing events of that film so directly, it actually brings a greater depth to both this film and even AVENGERS retroactively. It’s also refreshing that this film, unlike the last two, doesn’t concern itself primarily with guys in armored suits pounding on each other. A new kind of antagonist was definitely needed for Iron Man here, and it’s executed very well.

As the kickoff to the second batch of Marvel Studios films leading up to AVENGERS 2, as a worthy successor to the original and in its own right, IRON MAN 3 succeeds on all counts. Marvel continues to set the bar for how to do these films right: make a decent long-term plan, trust in your source material, hire very good people and get out of the way. Warner Brothers should be taking notes.

Make sure to stick around not only for the closing credits, which have the zip and panache of your favorite 1970s TV action shows, but for the traditional Marvel Studios post-credit button, which, while it isn’t as specifically universe-building as the previous ones, is worth the wait nonetheless.

Comics 101, May 1, 2013 – Empire Building: Marvel’s Star Wars Comics

Editor’s note: While we struggle with the Dreaded Deadline Doom this week, we thought it the perfect time to re-present this lost 2005 column from the MPS days, now that STAR WARS movies are back in the headlines…

It’s time once more for one of our trips in the Wayback Machine. This time? We’re headed to the summer of 1977, as L’il Scott, like every other kid on the planet at the time, had the formative cinematic experience of his young life upon seeing STAR WARS for the first time. Here’s a reality check for those of you younger readers who might be a little spoiled by your current media-heavy lifestyle. Not only was there no Internet on which to watch clips and trailers, there was no DVD released in a few short months, no home video, and not even any cable TV to watch it on later that year. Nothin’.

So how was L’il Scott supposed to get his Star Wars fix back in the prehistoric seventies? How else? Comics. Yes, in one of the cannier publishing decisions of the era, Marvel hit the ground running with an ongoing STAR WARS comic book in May of 1977, adapting the movie for the first six issues, then telling all-new stories after that.

1.jpg

Let’s take a look at a Marvel-produced vision of STAR WARS, exactly how Marvel adapted the movie, and where they went from there.

As the story goes, when George Lucas was making arrangements with Fox for merchandising his soon-to-be-released science-fiction feature, he came to them with certain specific requests for the kinds of merchandise he wanted to see. Novelization? Check. Soundtrack album? Check. Action figures? Check. (In an amusing sidenote, reportedly when Lucas saw the array of toys and games Kenner had developed for STAR WARS, he looked it over and said “Where are the guns?” The Kenner rep nervously explained that toy guns simply weren’t done any more, that parents wouldn’t buy them in the post-Vietnam atmosphere. Lucas took a beat, then asked again “Where are the guns?” Lucas got his guns, and they sold like hotcakes.

2.jpg

L’il Scott had one, his trusty Han Solo Laser Pistol. I always wanted the Stormtrooper Blaster Rifle, too…) Last on his must-have list was a comic book, and Fox licensing types ran off to Marvel in the hopes of making a comics deal. It’s said that Marvel publisher Stan Lee wasn’t all that interested in putting out a STAR WARS comic, but the company’s then-Editor-in-Chief Roy Thomas, a longtime fan of Saturday-morning adventure serials and old sci-fi comic strips like Flash Gordon and Buck Rogers, liked what he saw of the movie, and went ahead and made the deal.

Sci-fi buff that he was, Thomas wrote the new series himself, with illustrator Howard Chaykin providing the art. Thomas and Chaykin hadn’t seen the movie yet when they did the work, which accounts for some of the more curious coloring choices in the book’s early issues (for example, the green Darth Vader that appears on the cover of the book’s first issue), as well as a few of the scenes that don’t even appear in the movie. In fact, I think the comic book accounts for one of the most frequently heard rumors about STAR WARS, one that I heard all through high school and college: I don’t know how many people I’ve talked to over the years who are convinced they saw the long-lost missing scene between Luke Skywalker and his childhood friend Biggs on Tatooine at the beginning of the film, and that it was cut from later theatrical releases and home video. A mass hallucination? A Lucasfilm-induced conspiracy? Hardly. It’s my contention that what so many adult STAR WARS fans are misremembering from their childhood is actually this sequence from STAR WARS #1 (July 1977), in which Luke’s friend Biggs Darklighter returns from the Academy to inform Luke of his intentions to jump ship at the earliest opportunity and join the Rebel Alliance.

3.jpg

The fact that so many people remembered this scene even though it wasn’t in the movie can be chalked up to the astounding success Marvel enjoyed from the STAR WARS comics, with the first three or four issues seeing multiple print runs, a very unusual circumstance in the comics market of the 1970s. Marvel even had to go to the then-unusual step of marking the comics, usually on the front cover or the opening splash page, so as to protect fans attempting to buy the originals on the at-that-time still-new collector’s market.

Speaking of which, the sharp-eyed among you may have noticed that Marvel’s masthead is absent from the above cover from issue #1, as it will be on any other covers herein reproduced. What’s the scoop? Well, as it turns out, George Lucas’s as-always top-notch attorneys insured that, while Marvel produced the STAR WARS comics, they would remain the property of Lucasfilm. Accordingly, when Dark Horse Comics acquired the Star Wars license for comics in the 1990s, they found themselves in the position of being able to reprint the original 107-issue Marvel run as well, which they’ve done, in 7 well-put-together paperback collections, with what looks to be Marvel’s full cooperation, with the excision of the Marvel masthead on the covers the only apparent change. In fact, Dark Horse has done a truly noteworthy job preserving these books, even retaining all of the quirky miscolorings of the originals, resisting the temptation to go back and fix the mistakes of the past, something that can’t quite be said of Lucasfilm’s own exalted emperor. It’s nice to have these comics on the shelf, not only because they’re a lot of fun, but also because my own STAR WARS comics were read so often and handled so much as a kid that they’re practically in liquid form today, held together mostly by a mylar bag and the sheer will power on my part.

Another fun moment from the comics that didn’t make it into the movie (at least, not for 20 years or so) is Han Solo’s encounter with Jabba the Hutt on Tatooine, just after shooting Greedo in the cantina (and shooting first, I might add). Upon his return to the Falcon, Solo is met by the awaiting Jabba, who resembles neither the sluglike fellow we would become familiar with from RETURN OF THE JEDI, nor the heavyset gent with the Irish accent who was actually filmed on set with Harrison Ford. Instead, the Marvel Comics Jabba is a pale yellowish walrus dude, who looks like he buys his clothes at Bucky Barnes for Men.

4.jpg

Howard Chaykin’s art in the first issue is much more harder-edged and scratchy, with Chaykin providing both pencils and inks. He does a good job of suggesting the likenesses of the actors without being slavish to them, especially considering he’s working only from stills and maybe a few clips, since neither he nor writer Thomas had seen the film when they were producing the comics. As of the second issue, Chaykin was joined by inker Steve Leialoha, who softened up the art considerably, tightening up some of the likenesses and generally providing a tighter, smoother line to the entire endeavor. The difference is made all the more apparent in the third issue, in which the Chaykin/Leialoha art is followed by a Howard Chaykin solo pinup, which is noticeably rougher and more cartoony than the story that preceded it.

5.jpg

As much as I love Steve Leialoha’s work, there’s something to be said for Chaykin’s rough approach as well — his puckish portrayal of a spunky Leia Organa is particularly appealing (although admittedly more buxom than she ever appeared in the movie).

The covers were also good, if occasionally a little bewildering. The first three are pretty straightforward, while the fourth veers into slightly more symbolic territory, with an ominous Darth Vader looming over the figures of Luke, Leia and Ben Kenobi.

6.jpg

This pales next to the unabashed false advertising of the cover to issue #6, which not only promised a lightsaber duel between Luke Skywalker and Darth Vader, but bewilderingly featured Darth Vader wearing what looks for all the world like a television screen over his genitals.

7.jpg

It’s also clear that Chaykin hadn’t quite gotten the chance to absorb any of the soon-to-be-famous special effects shots, as evidenced by these unusually snub-nosed X-Wing fighters:

8.jpg

Similarly, Obi-Wan’s sacrifice on the Death Star looks a lot grislier here than I remembered seeing in the theatre:

9.jpg

As for the writing, Roy Thomas is, well, Roy Thomas. No one’s better at pacing and storytelling, but he also loves the narrator’s voice. I’m as big a Rascally Roy fan as you’ll find, but he’ll never use five words if 15 will do. Just take a look at this page from the climactic explosion of the Death Star, a moment that should probably be able to stand on its own, if anything can. Take it away, Roy:

10.jpg

Like Chaykin, you can tell Thomas hadn’t been able to see the movie, as some familiar moments seem to take on a different tone. For example, take the rather blase scene from early in the film when Uncle Owen asks where Luke and the droids have gotten off to:

11.jpg

Owen’s a lot more fired up about those vapor condensers here, isn’t he?

Roy’s influence on the series isn’t really seen until STAR WARS #7 (January 1978), when Thomas had the daunting task of telling new stories, taking place after the movie’s end. Wisely, Thomas decided to focus the series, at least initially, on Han Solo and Chewbacca, probably figuring that they’d give him the best opportunity for high adventure in space.

12.jpg

In a clever device, Thomas had Solo immediately robbed of the reward he’d gotten from the Rebels to pay off Jabba’s debt, forcing the smuggler to lay low and go underground again, dodging bounty hunters and looking for a way to make some quick cash.

On the run, Solo and Chewbacca find themselves on a backwater planet called Aduba-3, where they accept a job fighting off outlaws for a group of poor farmers. As always, Thomas was unable to resist an homage to another famous work, and gives the reader a riff on THE MAGNIFICENT SEVEN (or THE SEVEN SAMURAI, depending on your frame of reference), with Solo recruiting some extra muscle, in “Eight for Aduba-3″:

13.jpg

So who do Han and Chewie sign up? First to join is Hedji, a caped porcupine dude known as a spiner, who eschews a blaster in favor of the quills he can fire from his body at will. Next up is Amaiza, former den-mother for the Black-Hole Gang, who apparently has a history with Solo. Also looking to join is (I hesitate to even type it) Don-Wan Kihotay, a demented old coot with delusions of having been a Jedi Knight. Next up is Jimm, a Luke Skywalker-type who’s taken to calling himself the Starkiller Kid. Yeesh. Jimm is accompanied by a somewhat uppity treadmill droid called FE-9Q, or “Effie” for short.

14.jpg

Solo’s final recruit is — get this — a seven-foot-tall green carnivore rabbit. Named Jaxxon. Or “Jax for short. Which I ain’t.”

15.jpg

Jax the Rabbit. Ay caramba.

As it turns out, this story would be Roy Thomas’ last storyline on STAR WARS, as he reportedly began to dislike the increasing pressure from Lucasfilm for creative control of the series. (The rumor is that George Lucas was none too happy with the seven-foot-tall green rabbit.)

With Thomas gone, the series fell into the capable hands of writer Archie Goodwin, who had a much better sensibility for the series. Also joining the series with issue #11 was comics great Carmine Infantino, who may have been a little less arduous on the likenesses, but more than made up for it with the style and dynamic storytelling to the book. Picking up where Thomas left off, Goodwin refocused the series on Luke, who had been considered lost by the Rebels while off searching for a new planet for the Rebel base. Luke and the droids find themselves on a waterworld (a couple of decades before Kevin Costner thought of it, mind you), where technology and the ability to repair it is both shunned and jealously protected. While Luke contends with a Captain Bligh-like warlord and duels with water-breathing dragons (it looks like he’s posing for ’80s Asia albums)…

16.jpg

…Han and Chewie have another encounter with Crimson Jack, the pirate who stole all his treasure back in issue #7, and his man-hating lesbian first mate Jolli, who suddenly finds herself eyeing the manly Captain Solo. Jack has captured Princess Leia, who was off looking for Luke, and soon Leia and Han are manipulating the pirate into continuing the search for Luke, while Leia and Jolli settle in for a little girl talk.

17.jpg

The group is reunited when they manage to set the warlord, the dragons and Crimson Jack against each other, and after a final zero-g showdown between Solo and Crimson Jack, they’re on their way once more.

18.jpg

The story closes out with a tender if a little creepy moment between Solo and the recently deceased Jolli, who had been killed taking down her former boss’s ship after Jack left her to die in space.

21.jpg

This is only the tip of the iceberg when it comes to Marvel’s Star Wars comics, folks. While the quality of the series varied greatly, especially after Lucasfilm began setting more and more dictates on the storytelling, the series was consistently fun space opera with some pleasantly familiar characters, and back in the day, you couldn’t ask for much more than that for a measly thirty-five cents. If you’re in a STAR WARS mood while waiting for Disney to start the movie machine up again, why not track down some of these comics, and find out what we old-timers had to do to get our Star Wars fix.

Also particularly good was the Marvel adaptation of THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK, by the way. If you’ve got questions about STAR WARS or just can’t believe Han Solo fought alongside a 7-foot green rabbit, email us, won’t you?

Comics 101, April 17, 2013 – The Comics 101 Bookshelf: DC Hits the Vaults

A couple of strong releases of archival material from DC Comics this week, one notable mostly for historical interest, the other for simply beautiful art.

First up is WONDER WOMAN – THE AMAZON PRINCESS ARCHIVES, a collection of the 1958 and ’59 work of writer Robert Kanigher, penciller Ross Andru and inker Mike Esposito.

photo(110).JPG

After the initial Golden Age run by Wonder Woman’s creators William Moulton Marston and H.G. Peter, the next most notable run of stories for Princess Diana is this one, in which Robert Kanigher took a much more innocent, fairy-tale approach to the series, with lots of simple quests for Wonder Woman to accomplish and mythological monsters to fight, all while constantly (and I mean constantly!) fending off the constant proposals of marriage from her boyfriend Steve Trevor. Continuity was out the window, as Kanigher believed that the constantly rotating readership (based on kids growing older, and new kids discovering comics) meant that it didn’t really matter, so over the course of his run he would often revisit stories as if they’d never been told before. Kanigher went with this approach right from the start of his run, as he retold Diana’s origin in “The Million Dollar Penny!”

photo(111).JPG

Diana’s origin of being made from clay and brought to life by the gods is no longer mentioned, and instead Diana’s mother Queen Hippolyta receives a vision from the gods that the best of the Amazons must be sent Man’s World as a champion.

photo(112).JPG

Diana volunteers, and to prove that she is chosen fairly, all the Amazons wear Diana disguises so that only the most worthy wins:

photo(113).JPG

Of course, Princess Diana is the eventual winner:

photo(114).JPG

Before she can leave for Man’s World, Wonder Woman has to rescue the plummeting-to-Earth Steve Trevor, in the first of countless times, she’ll have to save his worthless ass:

photo(115).JPG

Steve is grateful, sure, but the daily proposals may be overdoing it just a little:

photo(116).JPG photo(117).JPG photo(118).JPG photo(119).JPG photo(120).JPG photo(121).JPG

The stories in WONDER WOMAN: THE AMAZON PRINCESS are simple, sure, but they’re innocent and fun, and the art by Andru and Esposito is clean, lovely and appealing. Fun stuff, and great for kids.

The second release that really caught my eye was ADVENTURES OF SUPERMAN: JOSE LUIS GARCIA-LOPEZ, a handsome hardcover collection of Garcia-Lopez’s work on the Man of Steel in the 1970s and early ’80s, in a variety of different series.

photo(122).JPG

Garcia-Lopez is maybe the most-recognized DC artist that most people have never heard of, thanks to his work in creating DC’s official licensing book in the 1980s, which meant that most merchandise coming out from DC for the better part of a decade or two bore his artwork. This collection, featuring stories written by comics mainstays like Gerry Conway, Len Wein, David Michelinie, Martin Pasko and Elliott S! Maggin, showcases Garcia-Lopez’s beautiful style and draftsmanship, which earned him a reputation over the year’s as “the artist’s artist.”

I always loved the dynamic way Garcia-Lopez rendered Superman in flight:

photo(123).JPG

And his Lex Luthor was always a smug, competent son of a bitch:

photo(124).JPG

This shot of Superman racing Flash through time was always a favorite.

photo(125).JPG

And his Lois Lane was probably the best of his day, attractive but professional:

photo(126).JPG

He also could exhibit a wonderful cartoony flair, such as in this moment where Superman met the Metal Men, including a lovestruck Platinum:

photo(127).JPG

And his Deadman was always creepier than most:

photo(129).JPG

If you’re a fan of Garcia-Lopez, ADVENTURES OF SUPERMAN: JOSE LUIS GARCIA-LOPEZ is a must-have. If you’re not, just take a look through this book, and you soon will be. Highly recommended.

photo(128).JPG

Scott Tipton would have loved a Garcia-Lopez METAL MEN miniseries.

Comics 101, April 10, 2013 – Comics 101 In Focus: The Old Bait and Switch

You don’t see it as much these days as you used to, the maneuver in comics of having a big sensationalistic cover that had almost nothing to do with the story inside, but back when it was a fairly common practice, no one did it more often and more shamelessly than DC Comics, particularly late ’60s/early ’70s DC Comics. And for an absolutely perfect example, let’s take a look at issue #108 of SUPERMAN’S PAL JIMMY OLSEN from March 1968.

photo(97).JPG

That’s a pretty sweet cover, right? Unsigned, but it sure looks like Neal Adams to me. Superman tortured? By Jimmy Olsen? And working with Lex Luthor? Makes you want to turn the page, doesn’t it?

So in the story itself, “Luthor’s Pal, Jimmy Olsen,” (written by Cary Bates and drawn by Pete Costanza), a Lex Luthor of years gone by uses his new “future timescope” for a glimpse into the future hoping to find a way to kill Superman.

photo(99).JPG

Luthor learns that someday Superman will have a teenage friend at the Daily Planet, whom he seems to spend a lot of time saving, and resolves to use that kid as his pawn, before he and Superman ever meet. Accordingly, he travels forward in time in his admittedly slick-looking timeplane to intercept him:

photo(98).JPG

A sidenote: Luthor always has amazing resources for a guy who doesn’t even bother to pick up a change of clothes. I mean, look at the size of that timeplane!

After faking an attempt on young Jimmy’s life and “saving” him from it, Luthor spins a tale of deceit for the naïve Mr. Olsen, blaming all of Luthor’s infamous crimes on his nonexistent twin brother, “Lester Luthor.”

Feeling he owes Luthor a debt, Jimmy agrees to help him clear his name, even securing a job at the Daily Planet at Luthor’s request:

photo(100).JPG

And it seems as though Jimmy has completely fallen for it, even jumping into quicksand to prevent Superman from capturing Luthor:

photo(104).JPG

In an even weirder left turn, Jimmy and Luthor are discovered by Luthor’s sister Lena Thurol, who’s not only a police officer, but also has telepathic powers, a fact that’s delivered as matter-of-factly as if he’d said she was left-handed. It’s kind of hilarious.

photo(102).JPG

Soon enough, Luthor’s plan has come to fruition, as Jimmy is used to deliver deadly Kryptonite gas to Superman.

photo(101).JPG

Of course, it’s all a ruse, and soon Superman and Jimmy are tricking Luthor into confessing:

photo(103).JPG

So how did Jimmy know that he was being used as a patsy to kill Superman? A psychic message from Luthor’s sister. Seriously.

photo(105).JPG

“But wait,” I hear you asking, “what about that cool cover with Jimmy killing Superman himself?”

Oh, that. That was all just a dream.

photo(106).JPG

Man. Shameless.

And the best thing is, that isn’t even the weirdest thing in this issue:

photo(107).JPG

But that may be a story for another time…

Scott Tipton wants to take a test-drive in Luthor’s sweet timeship.

Comics 101, April 3, 2013 – Sometimes the Clothes Make the Woman, Part VI

Previously, in Comics 101: As we continue our Ms. Marvel coverage, last week we saw the return of Carol Danvers from her exile to limbo, ending with her crashing at Xavier’s School for Gifted Youngsters and giving the Avengers a piece of her mind for how spectacularly they let her down. So what was next for her? Read on…

Having redeemed Carol Danvers in AVENGERS ANNUAL #10, writer Chris Claremont took Carol by the hand and ran her over to the pages of his then top-selling book UNCANNY X-MEN, where she was used as a semi-regularly appearing supporting character in Claremont’s ever-growing ensemble cast. At first Danvers was used in ways playing off of her past in espionage (such as in breaking into the Pentagon and stealing the government’s files on the X-Men), a backstory which Claremont immediately began to embellish.

Things went in a new direction for Carol when she was off with the X-Men on one of their occasional adventures in outer space and found herself kidnapped by the sinister alien race known as the Brood, who subjected her to strange scientific experiments that gave her new, even more extraordinary superpowers, granting Carol the ability to channel the power of a star, thanks to something called a “white hole” It’s all the kind of pseudo-science that passes for actual science in the Marvel Universe, but suffice it to say that Carol Danvers was now a cosmic-level badass.

1645996-uncanny_x_men_164_cover.jpg

Going by the name “Binary” now, Carol bid farewell to the X-Men and set off further into deep space as a member of the Starjammers.

What’s that? Who are the Starjammers? Okay, real quick: on an earlier space-opera type of adventure, the X-Men had crossed paths with a band of outlaw space pirates called the Starjammers, a motley bunch of aliens led by the human Corsair, who turned to be Cyclops’ long-lost father.

starjammers.jpg

(Personally, I always thought Cyclops took it remarkably well that, while he spent his early life in an orphanage thinking his parents were dead, his dad was running around outer space like Han Solo and shacking up with the hot skunk girl. But I digress…)

Anyway, Carol spent most of the ’80s and ’90s as Binary, occasionally reappearing with the Starjammers in various guest spots and miniseries, before leaving the Starjammers and returning to Earth after losing much of her power as Binary during 1992′ “OPERATION GALACTIC STORM,” in which Earth and the Avengers are caught in the middle of a war between the Kree and the Shi’ar.

The next time we see Carol Danvers in any significant role comes in AVENGERS #1 (Volume 3) in 1998, when everyone who’s ever been an Avenger is called back into action following the core team’s yearlong stint in an alternate universe (don’t ask). We see Carol with everyone else hanging out in the Mansion, and while she’s still taking on her Binary form, she’s already switched back to her previous Ms. Marvel uniform:

photo(91).JPG

Following the united team’s victory against Morgan le Fey, the Avengers revert back to a more manageable 7-person roster, and now back on earth for good, Carol desperately wants a spot on the team, even though her powers as Binary appear to be gone for good:

photo(92).JPG

Although the old costume has returned, Carol elects to go with a new codename, “Warbird,” and also new, it appears, is a new problem, one Tony Stark detects early on:

photo(94).JPG

Stark tries to derail Carol’s membership, but is outvoted:

photo(95).JPG

And with that, Carol Danvers returns to the Avengers, where she’s pretty much been ever since:

photo(96).JPG

The beginnings of her second stint as an Avenger were a bit rocky, both because of her resistance to reveal that she’d lost her cosmic powers, and her worsening alcoholism, but after a stint in rehab, Carol took her place over the last decade as one of the preeminent Avengers members, in the pages of books like MIGHTY AVENGERS, NEW AVENGERS and her own solo title MS. MARVEL (the “Warbird” name didn’t last too long):

jan072385_hi_mighty_avengers.jpg (1).jpg 250px-Ms.Marvel1.jpg

And most recently, Carol has gotten yet another makeover with the debut of her new series CAPTAIN MARVEL, giving her a new codename, a new uniform and a new haircut:

CM1.jpg

I’m fine with the new name, but here’s hoping Carol goes back to the black suit before too long…

Scott Tipton really liked the Carol Danvers appearances on AVENGERS: EARTH’S MIGHTIEST HEROES, by the way. Check ‘em out!

Comics 101, March 27, 2013 – Sometimes the Clothes Make the Woman, Part V

For Those Who Came In Late: In recent installments of COMICS 101, we’ve been looking at the career of Carol Danvers, a.k.a. Marvel Comics’ premier solo female superhero, Ms. Marvel. Last time, the character was given an ignominious exit from the pages of AVENGERS, relegated to limbo to live a mind-controlled happily ever after with her own rapist. A high point for comics, to be sure…

As I mentioned when we discussed AVENGERS #200, one of the oddest things about the completely horrendous and misogynist way the Ms. Marvel character was written out of continuity was that, by and large, no one much seemed to notice.

One person who did notice was UNCANNY X-MEN writer (and former MS. MARVEL writer) Chris Claremont, who tackled the issue head-on in AVENGERS ANNUAL #10 (1981), in “By Friends — Betrayed!”, featuring art by Michael Golden.

photo(74).JPG

The issue opens with an unconscious Carol Danvers hurtling to her death from the Golden Gate Bridge, only to be saved by new San Francisco resident Spider-Woman:

photo(75).JPG

Carol is taken to the hospital, where she’s identified by her fingerprints only, since her mind has been erased: a complete blank slate.

photo(77).JPG

Spider-Woman decides to call in a specialist, none other than the X-Men’s Professor Charles Xavier, who uses his telepathic powers to try to get to the bottom of Carol’s condition:

photo(76).JPG

Professor Xavier is able to discern a clue in a fleeting image from Carol’s subconscious:

photo(78).JPG

As it turns out, the then-supervillain Rogue (this was long before her seeking redemption as a member of the X-Men) had used her mutant powers to permanently absorb Carol Danvers’ superpowers as well as her memories (with ugly repercussions for the Rogue character that would unfold in the next few years of the X-Men comic, but that’s another story).

photo(79).JPG

Looking for answers, Spider-Woman tracks to Rogue to New York, where she and her teammates in the Brotherhood of Evil Mutants are involved in a jailbreak brouhaha with the Avengers, and things progress to a fairly standard villain punch’em-up. Midway through, though, Spider-Woman gets the Avengers’ side of the story, and we get a recap of Ms. Marvel’s departure from the Avengers, from their perspective:

photo(80).JPG photo(81).JPG photo(88).JPG

After the Brotherhood’s attempted jailbreak of their teammate the Blob is foiled, the story picks up several weeks later, after Carol Danvers has presumably undergone considerable psychic therapy with Professor Xavier. The Avengers stop by Xavier’s School for Gifted Youngsters to visit their former teammate, and the reunion is a chilly one.

photo(82).JPG

After a tense greeting, the Avengers learn that Marcus is dead:

photo(89).JPG

The Avengers, clueless as ever, need it spelled out for them:

photo(83).JPG

Carol explains how she had been mind-controlled into loving Marcus, and how Marcus straight-up told them that, and yet they still let him take her off to Limbo:

photo(84).JPG

To Claremont’s credit, he doesn’t soft-pedal the story one bit, and remains true to Carol’s character, at the Avengers’ expense.

photo(85).JPG

Carol puts it all out on Front Street, how the Avengers let her down at every turn, and the Avengers can do nothing but stand there and take it.

photo(86).JPG

The Avengers leave with an apology, and little more.

photo(87).JPG

And in a nice bit of storytelling, we end on this panel of the dejected Avengers heading back home, stewing in their own guilt.

photo(90).JPG

While this didn’t make up for the horrible way the Ms. Marvel character was dispensed with, it was certainly a vindication for fans of the character, and an acknowledgment that she deserved a lot better. So how could the character ever wind up back on the Avengers after all of this?

Come on back next week and find out.

Scott Tipton always liked the way Michael Golden drew Spider-Woman.

Comics 101, March 20, 2013 – Turn Back the Page, to the Golden Age

The Dreaded Deadline Doom has caught up with me once more this week, so we’ll be bringing you another lost entry from the original COMICS 101 Archives, from way back in October 2004. Enjoy!

The year 1993 was pretty lean times for fans of DC’s Golden Age characters. The lackluster JUSTICE SOCIETY OF AMERICA monthly series was wheezing on its last geriatric legs, and Roy Thomas’ ALL-STAR SQUADRON, which had reveled in its enormous cast of 1940s mystery men, was all but forgotten, having been cancelled six years before. Debuting practically unnoticed that year was a miniseries by James Robinson and Paul Smith that would not only stand on its own right as one of the best graphic novels of the ’90s, but would also serve as just a hint of the excellent stories to come from Robinson in the pages of his Eisner-winning series STARMAN. Let’s take a look at Robinson’s breakthrough work in comics, THE GOLDEN AGE.

As alluded to above, THE GOLDEN AGE wasn’t really a high-profile launch from DC Comics that year. The artist, Paul Smith, was best known for a popular 11-issue run on Marvel’s UNCANNY X-MEN a decade earlier, but his frequent absences from the industry had prevented him from ever really garnering a following. Writer James Robinson’s only real credit of note before THE GOLDEN AGE was a little-seen run on the Malibu Ultraverse comic FIREARM, a hard-boiled P.I. series set amongst a backdrop of superheroes. (FIREARM was by far the best of the Malibu Ultraverse series — keep an eye out for the back issues.) As for the characters themselves, the Justice Society and their fellows were just coming out of a period of serious neglect at DC, so this was not a series that had any kind of promotional dollars behind it; as I recall, it just kind of appeared on the stands.

THE GOLDEN AGE concerns itself with a heretofore unrecorded period in the history of DC’s WW II-era mystery men: the years immediately following the end of the war, from 1946 to 1955. Just as America adjusts to a nation no longer at war, so do America’s costumed homefront heroes adjust to a society that no longer worships them quite so fervently, with so many real-life American heroes returning home from Europe and the Pacific by the boatload, personified by the most honored hero of all: former mystery-man turned soldier and spy Tex Thompson, who went by the names “Mr. America” and the “Americommando” when he was fighting crime from behind a mask on the streets of New York.

tex.jpg

Having parachuted behind enemy lines on orders from President Roosevelt, Thompson is credited with having eliminated the Third Reich’s superhuman soldiers, Parsifal, Nazi Germany’s protection from America’s superheroes, and even Adolf Hitler himself.

Who’s “Parsifal,” you ask? Here’s where the series diverges most from the established DC continuity, and what probably accounts most for THE GOLDEN AGE’s classification as an “Elseworlds” story, DC’s brand for books that “never really happened.” As established by writer Roy Thomas in ALL-STAR SQUADRON, the reason heavyweight super-types like Dr. Fate, the Spectre and Green Lantern didn’t fly into Berlin and mop up the Third Reich in a weekend was the fact the Adolf Hitler held the Spear of Destiny. Believed to be the spear that stabbed the side of Christ, this mystical relic created a spell around all Axis-held territory which, if crossed over by an American superhero, would subject that superhero to Nazi mind control until said hero crossed back over into Allied territory. All things considered, a nifty little piece of creative rationalization. However, Robinson herein discards that story as a bit of U.S. propaganda, to excuse the superheroes’ absence from service for an entirely different reason: Otto Frentz, a.k.a. Parsifal, a Nazi agent whose power negated the superpowers of others. After two superhero missions overseas resulted in the heroes barely escaping with their lives, FDR decreed that no super-hero was to cross the Atlantic, fearing the death of any American mystery-man would be too much of a blow to homefront morale.

Having established the initial premise, the story settles into its primary viewpoint, that of documentary filmmaker Johnny Chambers, who has given up his costumed identity of super-speedster Johnny Quick, following his divorce from fellow All-Star Squadroneer Liberty Belle.

johnny.jpg

Most of the other All-Stars have retreated into the shadows as well, devoting themselves to civilian lives and business pursuits. (In a clever decision by Robinson, since this is at its core a story about human frailty, weakness and mortality, the JSA’s two most powerful members, Dr. Fate and the Spectre, are nowhere to be seen.) Foremost among them is Alan Scott, the ex-Green Lantern, who had given up his superhero career following the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, overwhelmed with the responsibility his power carries. With only a fraction of his power, entire cities were wiped out — unable to face his own potential for that kind of devastation, Alan Scott gives up his ring, devoting himself instead to his employees at Gotham Broadcasting, many of whom are beginning to feel the pinch of the Communist blacklist.

gl.jpg

As for Chambers’ ex-wife Liberty Belle, the now-retired Libby Lawrence has taken up with another former Squadroneer, writer Jonathan Law, a.k.a. the Tarantula, who’s suffering from writer’s block, finding it increasingly difficult to follow the success of his first book.

Tex Thompson, meanwhile, has parlayed his hero’s popularity into a Senate appointment, and begins laying the groundwork for a program to create a government-controlled superhero, claiming it necessary to defend America from the “growing threat the Soviet nation now poses.” In addition, Thompson begins recruiting from his former allies in the All-Star Squadron, including Justice Society members Johnny Thunder and the Atom, as well as All-Star Squadroneer Robotman, who’s losing touch with his humanity, more by the day.

robotman.jpg

As Thompson’s motives begin to appear sinister, more of the All-Stars are shown to be battling their own demons, whether it’s Hourman’s dependence on Miraclo, Ted “Starman” Knight’s guilt-wracked mental breakdown following his assistance on the Manhattan Project, or Paul “Manhunter” Kirk’s frantic flight across country, fleeing assassins and fueled by terrifying nightmares. As the first chapter draws to a close, we meet Thompson’s final recruit: former Squadroneer Daniel “Dan the Dyna-Mite” Dunbar, whose mentor, the superhero “TNT,” was killed in the war, and who has had as much trouble as anyone adjusting to civilian life, finding himself flunking out of Princeton University. When Senator Tex Thompson shows up at his doorstep, Dan readily agrees to join up.

ga2.jpg

The story barrels on from there, cutting between Daniel Dunbar’s atomic rebirth as Dynaman, Thompson’s ready-made all-American hero, Alan Scott’s battle to keep his writers from being branded as Communists, Libby’s estrangement from the deteriorating Jonathan Law, and Paul Kirk’s continuing flight from the mysterious assassins. Kirk finds some good luck when he runs into Bob Daley, another retired mystery-man, who takes him in and tries to restore him to his senses.

bob.jpg

Daley serves as a thematic link between Kirk and Thompson, the story’s antagonist, thanks to their past together: Thompson and Daley once patrolled New York together as Mr. America and (wait for it) Fatman, but after the war, Thompson tells Daley in no uncertain terms that he considers their past together an embarrassment. It’s a credit to Robinson’s writing and Smith’s facility with conveying emotions that probably the most laughable, stupid character in DC’s library comes across here as a figure of sympathy and nobility.

Thompson, meanwhile, enters into a romantic relationship with Joan Dale, the ex-superhero known as Miss America (Of course. Who else would Mr. America be involved with?), which will eventually lead to his undoing. Robinson also re-introduces some of the more obscure characters in the DC archives, like Captain Triumph, a.k.a. Lance Gallant, who only needs to touch a birthmark on his arm to summon the spirit of his dead brother, combining their strength as Captain Triumph.

triumph.jpg

As Robinson points out here, being able to summon your brother’s spirit isn’t all it’s cracked up to be, especially if you’ve retired from the superhero game. At the story’s halfway point, it’s become clear that Dynaman isn’t quite the same insecure kid that Thompson recruited from Princeton.

coke.jpg
By 1949, Thompson and Dynaman have continued their anti-Communist propaganda campaign, calling for all of America’s mystery-men to appear in Washington to take an “oath of loyalty.” When Thompson’s veiled attacks on the disloyalty of America’s superheroes are pointed out as specious by ex-Secretary of Defense James Forrestal, a potential political opponent, the suddenly despondent Forrestal swiftly “takes his own life”:

suicide.jpg

At the same time, events are separately converging against Thompson. Bob Daley takes Paul Kirk to New York to see Carter Hall, a.k.a. Hawkman, in the hopes that Hall, with his knowledge of hypnotism and past lives, can unlock the mysteries of Kirk’s amnesia and nightmares. Under Hall’s trance Kirk remembers his exploits during the war, working behind enemy lines with Thompson. As it turns out, Paul Kirk, not Thompson, was the one who killed the Nazi super-agent Parsifal, as well as eliminating the rest of Germany’s super-beings. Kirk also sees once more the horrifying sight that had led to his nightmares and amnesia. On a mission to assassinate one of Hitler’s scientists, Kirk infiltrates a Bavarian castle, where he discovers that his target is none other than the brain-swapping fiend the Ultra-Humanite, as evidenced by the brainless body of his last host, actress Dolores Winters, lying lifeless on a lab table.

humanite.jpg

Even worse is the realization of where the Ultra-Humanite’s brain was now residing: the body of Tex Thompson. Kirk barely escapes with his life.

At the same time, Joan Dale, disturbed by the increasingly moody and abusive actions of her lover Thompson, makes off with Thompson’s locked journal and heads to her friend Paula Brooks, the reformed costumed thief once known as the Huntress. Paula picks the lock and soon Joan, Paula and Paula’s lover Lance Gallant are made aware of the same ugly fact that Paul Kirk has finally remembered, that Tex Thompson is really the Ultra-Humanite. The journal, however, holds even worse revelations, prompting Paula to call Johnny Chambers, whom the story has characterized as “the one superhero that everyone else came to with their problems.”

diary.jpg

Chambers, realizing this is more than he can handle, in turn tries to contact one of the “big guns,” Alan Scott, who’s still refusing to once more pick up his power ring, and whose battles with the House UnAmerican Activities Committee has him feeling the weight of the world on his shoulders, as keenly realized by Smith:

weight.jpg

In the story’s final chapter, a hasty war council is convened of the few mystery-men who know Thompson’s secret, and a plan is made: during the upcoming ceremony at which all of America’s superheroes are supposed to go to Washington to swear their loyalty, another new recruit will be named to Thompson’s camp, who will then expose the truth about Thompson before the superhero community and the eyes of the world.

council.jpg

However, to withstand the strength Thompson has at his disposal, the whistleblower has to be one of the “big guns,” and Rex “Hourman” Tyler is elected. Nearly every mystery-man and superhero turns out at the nation’s Capitol for the ceremony, and before things can begin, Joan Dale takes to the podium and exposes Thompson herself, but before she can tell the entire truth, Robotman brutally and permanently silences her.

joan.jpg

Hourman intervenes, and forces Dynaman to reveal his true nature (which I’m not going to give away here, by the way). The remainder of the book is a colossal brawl, as it looks like the strength of America’s superheroes combined isn’t enough to slow down the unstoppable Dynaman.

dynaman.jpg

Meanwhile, Paul Kirk reclaims his identity of Manhunter and faces off against the Ultra-Humanite. And elsewhere, Lance Gallant refuses to change to Captain Triumph, taking on the murderous Robotman himself.

lance.jpg

At the same time, dozens of mystery-men are falling before the power of Dynaman, and unlike recent comic-book deaths, these losses have meaning. No gunshots to the back and exploding spaceships here.

deaths.jpg

Finally, the tide begins to turn with the arrival of two more of the All-Stars’ heavyweights, Green Lantern and Starman, although the deciding blow finally comes from a surprising source.

The book ends on a hopeful note, with Johnny Quick, now reconciled with Liberty Belle, recounting the fates of the battle’s survivors, and looking forward to what he can already see as the next generation of heroes, and “a new age, as fresh and clear and bright as sterling silver!”

James Robinson takes Roy Thomas’ All-Star Squadron and imbues them with a humanity and depth they’d always lacked under Thomas’s pedantic style, yet doesn’t invalidate anything that’s come before or betray the heroes’ existing characterizations. As for the story itself, Robinson expertly paces the narrative, slowly adding to what we know about Thompson and keeping track of multiple characters, while building to the series’ two big revelations, all of which set the stage for the titanic clash in Chapter 4, which is really the only action in the entire book.

As for Paul Smith’s art, he’s able to expertly straddle that line between making the characters look all too human, and even a little lost, in their capes and masks, and charging them with the power and legendary standing that’s customarily been their trademark.

bigguy.jpg

Smith also conveys a ferocity and mortal desperation in the battle scenes, as the assembled heroes struggle with the very enemy they’d been denied the opportunity to fight during the war, only now with a power too overwhelming to conceive.

enough.jpg

Smith does an excellent job of differentiating likenesses, as most of the characters spend the majority of the series in their civilian identities, and Smith manages to create distinctive, in-character and instantly recognizable faces for all of the unmasked heroes, most of whom barely had any distinguishable characteristics to their faces in their original inceptions. Paul Kirk looks nothing like Johnny Chambers, who doesn’t resemble Carter Hall, who doesn’t look a thing like Rex Tyler. And their likenesses fit.

likenesses.jpg

Carter Hall has taken on an almost Egyptian aspect, while Johnny Chambers’ face shows the wear of a failed marriage and stalled career, and Rex Tyler has the pugnacious brow and high forehead of a man who lives by his fists.

rex.jpg

Credit should also be given to colorist Richard Ory, who grants the entire book a kind of subdued moodiness, while retaining the bright, colorful costumes so prevalent in the Golden Age heroes.

While the Justice Society and company had been published by DC for decades, James Robinson was really the first to make them human, which is why this book struck a chord with so many readers, and led to the characters finally getting a return to the spotlight through Robinson’s later STARMAN and JSA series. THE GOLDEN AGE is a gem in the DC library, and a currently neglected one at that. If ever a book deserved the deluxe hardcover treatment, it’s this one, and yet it’s currently not even available in softcover. Hopefully someday soon DC will realize its error and put THE GOLDEN AGE where it should be: back on the shelves and constantly in the hands of new readers.

This week’s title courtesy of Bill, Miguel, Max and Steve from Seduction of the Innocent.

Comics 101, March 12, 2013 – The Comics 101 Bookshelf

We’ll be back to our continuing Ms. Marvel coverage next week, not because I have anything more pressing to discuss, but primarily because your humble professor is down with the flu and home sick today, and all my Ms. Marvel reference material is in a tidy stack in my office, which is of very little help to me, as it turns out.

Instead, let’s take a look at three fairly recent hardcover releases that I was very impressed by, starting with STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION: ON BOARD THE USS ENTERPRISE, by Denise and Michael Okuda.

photo(70).JPG

I have to admit: when I first saw the book, my immediate response was, “Why the hell didn’t I write this?”

Seriously, though, as someone who’s done several of these big prose TREK projects, I know exactly how much work and effort goes into them, and if you can get the Okudas to write something like this for you, there’s no one better, as they’re the unrivaled experts on the Enterprise-D, having practically lived aboard the sets of the ship throughout the production of the series and films in their capacities as designers and technical advisors.

photo(71).JPG

This is a beautifully put-together book, focusing on all the significant areas of the Enterprise-D, inside and out, with plenty of photos and lots of explanation as to how things work aboard a Federation starship.

And the icing on the cake here is the included CD-ROM that lets you take 360-degree tours of all the major sets aboard the Enterprise-D, from the Bridge to Sick Bay to the Captain’s Ready Room:

If you’re a NEXT GENERATION fan, this is definitely a must-have.

###

Going in just about as far in the opposite direction as you can, I was also really impressed by THE ART OF BETTY AND VERONICA, edited by Victor Gorelick and Craig Yoe.

This hardcover collection looks at Archie Andrews’ two best gals as they developed over the decades, focusing on all the great ARCHIE artists, from legends like Bob Montana, Harry Lucey and Dan DeCarlo, to today’s artists like Fernando Ruiz and Dan Parent.

It’s less of a history (although there is some) and more of an artbook, and the real treat here is watching how the characters change with the times, whether it’s the bobby-sox look of the late ’40s and ’50s, the psychedelic ’60s or a modern rock look for today.

photo(77).JPG photo(76).JPG photo(75).JPG photo(74).JPG photo(78).JPG

Not to mention seeing Veronica dressed up like Xena, Warrior Princess…

photo(79).JPG

Plus the extra treat of a “visual introduction” by Bruce Timm, whom I don’t recall ever drawing Betty and Veronica before…

photo(73).JPG

It’s a real treat to see Archie take a look back at their history in such a serious and lavish manner. Here’s hoping they do it more often.

###

Finally, I’m just now diving into a book for which I’ve been waiting for months: GENIUS, ILLUSTRATED, the second volume in Dean Mullaney and Bruce Canwell’s THE LIFE AND ART OF ALEX TOTH, a three-volume biography of one of comics’ most talented, and most cantankerous, legends.

photo(80).JPG

Full disclosure: I occasionally serve as copy editor/proofreader on many of these big historical artbooks for IDW, but on the TOTH trilogy, I don’t, and I’m glad, because it allows me to enjoy these mammoth undertakings as a reader first and foremost, and enjoy them I do. Mullaney and Canwell really go the extra mile here, with exhaustively researched text chronicling Toth’s career and personal life, having done extensive interviews with Toth’s family, friends and associates, as well as mining decades’ worth of Toth’s own voluminous writings and correspondence.

And of course, there are pages and pages of Toth’s original art to study and enjoy, from complete stories…

photo(83).JPG

…to animation designs from his years working at Hanna-Barbera…

photo(81).JPG photo(82).JPG

…to relative rarities like this non-fiction feature on how cartoons are created (in which Toth’s legendary lettering takes the spotlight):

photo(84).JPG

GENIUS, ILLUSTRATED more than lives up to the high standard held by the previous volume, GENIUS, ISOLATED, and sets the stage for next year’s GENIUS, ANIMATED, which will focus solely on Toth’s groundbreaking work in animation. I can’t wait.

Scott Tipton wishes he had more time to read…

Comics 101, March 6, 2013 – Sometimes the Clothes Make the Woman, Part IV

Previously, in Comics 101: Last time, we continued our look at Marvel’s premier superheroine Ms. Marvel, covering her inaugural stint as a member of the Avengers. However, Carol Danvers’ stint as one of Earth’s Mightiest Heroes was about to come to a rather ignominious end:

Let’s set the Wayback Machine for November 1980, in the concluding pages of AVENGERS #199, written by David Michelinie and drawn by George Perez. After defeating the colossal robotic menace known as Red Ronin, the Avengers (along with then-inactive member Hawkeye) return to Avengers Mansion, only to be met by a mysterious surprise: a pregnant stranger named Carol Danvers.

photo(58).JPG

Only she’s no stranger after all, as the Scarlet Witch explains. It’s their fellow Avenger Ms. Marvel (who’d not to this point revealed her secret identity to the rest of the team), who has turned up on their doorstep seven months pregnant, practically overnight.

photo(44).JPG

Now, you’d think if one of your teammates shows up pregnant with no explanation and against all laws of biology or physics, they’d be a little suspicious, or at least concerned, right? Nope. They think it’s cute.

photo(45).JPG

Right then should be your first clue that this whole story is going to go off the rails. And trust me, it only gets worse. By the way, Ms. Marvel also insists that there was no father, which seems to me like it should alarm the Avengers more than it does:

photo(51).JPG

The story picks up next month, in AVENGERS #200, which has a much better cover than the pages within deserve:

By the way, this horrible story is credited to no less than four writers, none of whom wants to take credit for it nowadays.

photo(47).JPG

Naturally, the story opens with the Avengers pacing like nervous fathers outside a delivery room, because why pass up on a good cliché, right?

photo(48).JPG

Soon enough, Ms. Marvel delivers the baby, and by the way, considering he doesn’t know “contractions” from “constrictions,” Dr. Don Blake (a.k.a. the alter ego of member Thor), isn’t exactly instilling a lot of confidence in his medical expertise.

photo(49).JPG

The Avengers still don’t seem too concerned about Ms. Marvel’s mysterious virgin birth, instead choosing to spend their time making googly eyes at the baby.

photo(50).JPG

Just to make it clear that the Avengers are a bunch of clueless clods, Wasp runs off to congratulate Ms. Marvel, who still has no idea what the hell happened to her body and who used it against her will.

photo(52).JPG

Things get weirder and weirder, as the child continues to grow at an astonishing accelerated rate:

photo(69).JPG

So this freaky little monster (now calling himself “Marcus”) starts talking and requesting scientific equipment and lab space…

photo(53).JPG

And, geniuses that they are, the Avengers give him whatever he wants.

photo(54).JPG

Although at least Hawkeye still seems to retain an ounce of common sense, though no one listens to him:

photo(55).JPG

Soon, Ms. Marvel is up and around and goes to meet her son, who’s now grown to near adulthood:

photo(56).JPG

First off, can no one get this kid a shirt?

And secondly, let’s zoom in on something:

photo(57).JPG

“Attraction”?!

What?!

That’s her son, right? Eeugh.

Eventually, Marcus makes his move, trying to activate the machine he’s been building, and when Ms. Marvel tries to stop him, he knocks her out with some sort of “magic facetouch.”

photo(59).JPG

Good thing Hawkeye shows up while Marcus is leering over his unconscious mom, and blows his machine all to hell:

photo(66).JPG

The Avengers show up and demand answers, and Marcus fesses up that he’s the son of their longtime enemy Immortus. So get this: Immortus gets lonely, plucks a doomed woman out of history and into the interdimensional world of Limbo, uses his mind-control machines to make the woman fall in love with him, and bears him a child: this Marcus character. When Immortus later disappears and Marcus is left in Limbo alone, he decides the only way to get to Earth is to be reborn there. And since the apple doesn’t fall far from the tree, he does just what his daddy did: kidnap himself a bride: namely, Ms. Marvel.

photo(60).JPG

Once he has her there, he uses the same mind-control machines that his father built to make Ms. Marvel fall in love with him, knocks her up with his “essence,” (whatever that means), and sends her back to Earth.

photo(62).JPG

And it’s not just implied, by the way — they’re very clear about it being mind control:

photo(61).JPG

So let’s recap, shall we? Carol Danvers was kidnapped, held prisoner, raped, and forced to give birth to a child, all against her will. Naturally, it seems to me that the next logical step should be Wonder Man and Iron Man holding this guy down while Thor pounds him into a fine mist with his hammer. Or even better, while Carol does it herself. But is that what happened?

Unbelievably, no.

Instead, since Marcus has to return to Limbo lest permanent damage be done to the timestream, Carol announces that she’ll go with him, because her feelings for him from Limbo “still linger.”

photo(64).JPG

Yes, that’s right, because the effects of the mind control that allowed Marcus to rape her are still hanging on, she’s going to go live happily ever after with her rapist in Limbo.

photo(65).JPG

And here’s what’s worse. The Avengers are fine with it. Thor even gives them a ride home.

photo(67).JPG

The Avengers do seem to have some doubts afterward, but not nearly enough if you ask me.

photo(68).JPG

How the hell did this travesty of a comic ever get published? Misogynist, out-of-character and just plain creepy, I can’t think of a worse Marvel comic ever released. And the way it absolutely eviscerated the Ms. Marvel character was unconscionable.

And even stranger? At the time, barely anyone noticed.

Luckily, someone did. And his name was Chris Claremont. Come back next week to find out what he did about it.

Scott Tipton hates this comic with the white-hot intensity of a thousand suns. Really, it’s not good.

Comics 101, February 27. 2013 – Sometimes the Clothes Make the Woman, Part III

Previously, in COMICS 101: We’ve been looking at Marvel’s premier female solo superhero, Ms. Marvel, starting with her 1977 debut. When we left off, Ms. Marvel had solved her various identity crises and was embarking on a new start, with a new costume, which we’ll refresh your memories about below…

As of the 20th issue of her solo series, Ms. Marvel was getting a fresh start with a new costume (designed by the great Dave Cockrum), one not derived from her male counterpart’s threads:

The new costume immediately helped the series feel more modern, especially with the loss of the Farrah Fawcett haircut as well:

photo(29).JPG

And by issue #22, it was clear that more changes were in the works, as writer Chris Claremont has Carol get her walking papers from her editor’s job at WOMAN MAGAZINE, courtesy of J. Jonah Jameson:

photo(30).JPG

However, the new direction wasn’t enough to save the series, and MS. MARVEL was cancelled in June 1979 after 23 issues. However, the character was in for a much wider exposure, as only a month before saw her induction into the AVENGERS in issue #183, joining the team to replace the Scarlet Witch during a period when the US government (in the form of obnoxious liaison Henry Peter Gyrich) was micro-managing the team and often dictating its membership. Still, Ms. Marvel makes it clear from the get-go that she’s no one’s government stooge, threatening one of Gyrich’s agents before her membership was even made official:

photo(31).JPG

I like the bit where she gives Gyrich some lip:

photo(32).JPG

As is often the case, Ms. Marvel’s first official mission with the team isn’t really a shining moment, as she pretty much gets her ass kicked by the Absorbing Man:

photo(33).JPG

Of course, Ms. Marvel is barely in the Mansion five minutes before Tony Stark is hitting on her, and it’s refreshing to see someone flirt right back with him instead of being flustered or offended. If nothing else, Ms. Marvel’s confidence sets her apart from previous female members right away.

photo(34).JPG photo(35).JPG

She’s also not afraid to make her opinion known and occasionally buck authority:

photo(36).JPG

Note the subtlety there of Cap noticing the radio going dead, and Ms. Marvel suddenly having a torn-out circuit board in her hand. Nice.

You also saw Ms. Marvel taking on the heavy-hitter role often, which was a refreshing change, having a woman in that spot:

photo(37).JPG

We also see her getting to know her teammates better, as in this scene with Captain America:

photo(38).JPG

And I like the portrayal of her as someone so self-assured she can even intimidate Cap:

photo(39).JPG

But writer David Michelinie wasn’t afraid to have Ms. Marvel occasionally make a misstep as well:

photo(40).JPG

All in all, Ms. Marvel’s original 17-issue stint with the Avengers was a very good little run for the character. It was where I first really got to like her, and even though it wasn’t a starring or even really a featured role, she seemed to fit into the cast well.

And then came AVENGERS #200, which is such a horrible trainwreck in just about every way you can imagine, that I think I need an entire column to talk about it. Come on back next week.

Scott Tipton gets angry just thinking about AVENGERS #200…

Come see our L.A. location!
5118 Lankershim Blvd
North Hollywood, CA 91601
(818) 980-BOOK

Connect With Us

Search