Captain America Man Out of Time


By Mark Waid, Jorge Molina, Karl Kesel, Scott Hanna, Frank D’Armata, Stan Lee & Jack Kirby, George Roussos & various (MARVEL)
ISBN: 978-0-7851-5128-9 (Premiere HC), 978-1-84653-487-4 (TPB) 978-1-3023-7033-6 (Digital edition)

This book includes Discriminatory Content produced in less enlightened times.

One of the pivotal moments in Marvel Comics history occurred when the Mighty Avengers recovered a tattered body floating in a block of ice (issue #4, March 1964) and resurrected the World War II hero Captain America. With this act bridging the presumed-forgotten years back to predecessors Timely and Atlas Comics – begun with the return of the Sub-Mariner in Fantastic Four #4 – Young Marvel confirmed and consolidated a solid, concrete, potential-packed history to create an enticing sense of mythic continuance for the fledgling company. This instantly gave it the same cachet and enduring grandeur of market leader National/DC…

In 2010, after years of increasingly conflicting continuity (and with a movie in the offing) mature Marvel tasked fan-favourite writer Mark Waid with updating those pivotal events and early future-shocked days for their contemporary world. Of course that modern milieu was now the year 2000, not the lifetime ago of 1964…

This captivating re-interpretation and updating (collecting 5 issue miniseries Captain America: Man Out of Time as cover-dated November 2010 – April 2011) opens in the dying days of the war as Steve Rogers & Bucky Barnes are sent from the European frontline to England and an appointment with doom-laden destiny, before seamlessly segueing into the Sentinel of Liberty’s stunned awakening in tomorrow’s world and a meeting with the initial incarnation of The World’s Mightiest Heroes.

Waid, perfectly complimented by artists Jorge Molina, Karl Kesel & Scott Hanna and colourist Frank D’Armata , wisely leaves the classic adventures largely unchanged, to concentrate on those unseen and missing contemplative moments and the unfolding personal crises confronting the uncomprehending Rogers, which means readers completely unaware of the character’s history and exploits might experience a little confusion in places. However, the narrative, although superficially disjointed, is clear-cut enough to counter this and interested newcomers and casual fans can easily fill in gaps by perusing one of the many available reprint collections, covering the entire period featured here which equates to Avengers #4-8.

In chapter 2 the reeling hero meets former Incredible Hulk sidekick Rick Jones (an absurdly identical double for the at this time Officially Departed Bucky), gets a rapid reality check on his new home – from his new allies and even the President of the United States – and finally accepts that there’s no way home for this Old Soldier.

…Although that’s not strictly true…

Among the many technological miracles his new allies introduce him to is the embryonic science of time-travel, and, even while battling such threats as the Lava Men and Masters of Evil, the unhappy warrior can only think of returning to his proper place and saving his best friend from death…

The old adage “be careful what you wish for” never proves more true than when time-ravaging Kang the Conqueror attacks. After utterly overwhelming the 21st century heroes he casually and disdainfully dispatches the Star Spangled Sentinel back to 1945 where he belongs but apparently no longer fits.

His sense of duty, threat to his new allies and all the unpalatable things he had comfortably forgotten blighting his “Good Old Days” prompt Cap into brilliantly escaping his honeyed time-trap with the aid of other friends made in the World of Tomorrow and the hero returns to the place where he is most needed to once more save the day…

Resolved and ready to tackle his Brave New World Captain America is now ready to carve out a whole new legend…

I’m generally less than sanguine about updates and reboots of classic comics material but I will admit that such things are a necessary evil as years go by, so when the deed is done with sensitivity, respect and imagination (not to mention dynamic, bravura flamboyance) I can only applaud and commend the effort.

Thrilling, superbly entertaining, compelling and genuinely moving, Captain America: Man Out of Time is a wonderful – dare I say “Timeless?” – comics confection that will delight old aficionados, impress new readers and should serve to make many fresh fans for the immortal Star-Spangled Avenger. Moreover, if you are one of those dyed-in-the-wool Old Guard curmudgeons who think there’s nothing better than the real thing, this compilation also offers a full reprint of The Avengers #4 (cover-dated March 1964 and on sale from January 3rd as crafted by Stan Lee, Jack Kirby & George Roussos), re-presenting Cap’s original landmark wake-up call that so lastingly informed this modern look back…
© 2010, 2011 Marvel Characters, Inc. All rights reserved.

This propitious day in 1916 Disney animator turned comics writer Don R. Christensen (Magnus, Robot Fighter, Donald Duck, Uncle Scrooge) was born, joined in 1924 by artist/inker Frank Giacoia (every Marvel or DC comic you’ve ever heard of and newspaper strips Flash Gordon, The Incredible Hulk, Johnny Reb and Billy Yank, Sherlock Holmes, Thorne McBride). In 1947 Neil the Horse creator Katherine Collins (formerly Arnold Alexander Saba, Jr.) arrived. In 1950, comics legend John Byrne (Doomsday + 1, Rog-2000, some other stuff) was born, followed by writer Christie Marx (Sisterhood of Steel, Red Sonja, Conan) in 1952 and multitasker Joe Zabel (American Splendor, The Trespassers, Real Stuff) in 1953.

The date signifies the deaths of strip giant Warren Tufts (Casey Ruggles, Lance) in 1982; scripter Nicholas P. Dallis (Apartment 3-G, Rex Morgan, M.D.) in 1991 and in 2017 both Turkish comics creator Galip Tekin (Tuhaf Öyküler, P?’ya Mektuplar) and Argentinean cartoonist, caricaturist and humourist Juan Carlos Colombres AKA Landrú.

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