Astonishing X-Men Vol 2: Dangerous

Astonishing X-Men Vol 2: Dangerous

By Joss Whedon & John Cassaday (Marvel)
ISBN 0-7851-1677-X

The high-quality tension continues unabated in the second collection of Joss Whedon and John Cassaday’s exemplary take on the world’s most popular team of misunderstood mutant super-heroes, reprinting Astonishing X-Men issues #7-12.

Rejoined by a team-member they’d believed long dead, the team take stock in the wake of the discovery of some dangerous intelligence. Not only is their campaign for public approval stalled due to the fact of an apparent cure for mutants, but also they realise that the Federal organisation S.H.I.E.L.D., through its subsidiary S.W.O.R.D., has possibly entered into an alliance with an alien civilisation to exterminate Earth’s mutant population. To make matters worse it seems one of the new team is either a traitor or an impostor…

Spectacular action and unforgettable dialogue are the standard for this series, and Whedon and Cassaday are playing at the top of their game. If only all X-Men stories could be this good…

© 2004, 2005 Marvel Characters, Inc. All Rights Reserved

The Lonely One

The Lonely One 

By Joe Gill & Steve Ditko
No ISBN

Steve Ditko is one of our industry’s greatest talents and probably America’s least lauded. His fervent desire to just get on with his job and to tell his stories the best way he can, whilst the noblest of aspirations, will always be of least consideration to the commercial interests that control production. So it’s a sheer delight to be able to look at his work from a happier time and a more innocent perspective.

In this slim volume, collecting four adventures of the giant ape Konga (‘The Land of Frozen Giants’– #8, ‘Monster Hunter’ – #11, ‘The Lonely One’ – #12 and ‘The Peacemaker’ – #13), plus the sci-fi short ‘Why He Survived’ (also from Konga #8), we see a confident artist nearing the peak of his powers making a frankly daft and cheesy “King Kong” knock-off look great and read well. Ditko’s uncanny ability to marry the intensely dramatic with the subversively “cartoony” is used to superb effect in the adventures of a misunderstood giant gorilla wandering the world, unknowingly fighting evil with innocence. Credit should also be given to the prolific, under-rated and much-missed Joe Gill, whose tight, economical and sly scripting on literally every subject and genre make so many Charlton titles into lost gems.

(N.B. Konga was originally a movie-tie in/licensed comic for a 1950s B-Movie. It survived its origins to become a relatively long-running title – at least by Charlton Comics’ standards.)

Also included in this high-quality black and white book – so appropriate considering the artist’s philosophical and creative fascinations – is a checklist of Ditko’s comic work, and a couple of ‘Flora the Explorer’ comedy shorts from Henry Boltinoff – another underappreciated mainstay of those more innocent and uncontroversial days.

© 1989 Robyn Snyder. All Rights Reserved.

Tom Strong Book 2

Tom Strong Book 2

By various (America’s Best Comics)
ISBN 1-84023-228-5

Alan Moore continues his loving re-examination of the comic experience in this second collected volume of the adventures of the perfect hero. Reprinted from the pages of issues #8-14 of the Tom Strong monthly comic-book, this selection kicks off with ‘Riders of Lost Mesa’ as Strong and his talking Gorilla assistant Solomon encounter a town of cowboys that have returned to Earth after an absence of 150 years. Western aficionado Alan Weiss provides the art for this striking and portentous vignette, whilst co-creator Chris Sprouse draws ‘The Old Skool’, an exploit of the hero’s eccentric fan-club, The Strongmen of America. He also handles ‘Sparks’, a solo outing for Tom’s daughter Tesla, who meets new friends in an active volcano.

I suspect these short adventures were intended as a way of introducing characters and concepts for later use in extended storylines, but that doesn’t make them any less delightful, and I welcome the return of the much neglected graphic short story – which has almost become a lost art in these days of braided multi-part epics. Paul Chadwick illustrates the ‘Terror Temple of Tayasal!’, Chris Sprouse draws and Al Gordon inks both ‘Volcano Dreams’ – a surreal solo story starring Dahlua, Tom Strong’s wife – and daughter Tesla’s individual adventure, ‘Flip Attitude!’.

Gary Gianni illustrates the eerie ‘Tom Strong and his Phantom Autogyro’, and Sprouse and Gordon continue the mindbending as the hero crosses into the dimension of cartoon counterparts in ‘Funnyland!’ Tesla Strong almost reclaims the dignity of the book before herself succumbing to multi-dimensional madcappery in ‘Too Many Teslas?’ but order is eventually restored in time for the next issue.

‘Strange Reunion’ is the first of a two-part epic that calls Tom Strong to the far end of the Universe and allies he had made at the end of the 1960s. Along with the second chapter ‘Terror on Terra Obscura!’, it forms a loving and dramatic homage to the JLA/JSA team-ups that so inspired the budding fan-boy generation. With his analogue Tom Strange they rescue the inhabitants and captive superheroes from an intergalactic invader. Old timers might recognise the heroes of Terra Obscura as the publishing stable of the 1940’s and 1950’s outfit Nedor/Better/Standard Publications (and whose flagship title was America’s Best Comics).

The next tale was an all-out tribute and pastiche of Fawcett’s Captain Marvel Family as Tom, Tesla, Tom’s young self and even the cartoon rabbit counterpart from ‘Funnyland!’ unite to save time and space in ‘The Tower at Time’s End!’ with Sprouse and Gordon joined by Kyle Baker, Russ Heath and Pete Poplaski on individual art chapters.

The final homage of the book is to those legendary EC Science-Fiction anthology comics. With all stories of the nigh immortal family set in the 1950s, ‘Space Family Strong’ delves into their space-faring past, and is illustrated by Hilary Barta, whilst Sprouse and Gordon illustrate both ‘The Land of Hearts Desire!’ and a team-up with that era’s Johnny Future in ‘Baubles of the Brain Bazaar!’

Whilst I’m unsure just how these tales would sit with that portion of Alan Moore’s audience that his other work has brought to comics, and who therefore have little or none of the background to fully appreciate the gags, in-jokes and references, let alone the artistic variations these pastiches utilise, I do know that they are written in a clear and straightforward manner and are enchantingly realised by the many talented artists involved.

So if a kid of five could pick up enough to become hooked all those decades ago, surely inquisitive adults can be just as open to the wonderment today. I certainly hope so…

© 1999, 2000 America’s Best Comics, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

Tom Strong Book 1

Tom Strong Book 1

By Alan Moore & various (America’s Best Comics)
ISBN 1-84023-228-5

In 1900 a boy was born to the renowned scientist Sinclair Strong and his wife. At the time they were shipwrecked on the lost island of Attabar Teru, from where they had planned to raise a child free from society according to purely scientific principles. Although Susan Strong was less than happy with her husband’s vision she acquiesced and young Tom was isolated in an atmospheric chamber where he spent the first eight years of his life growing under the weight of five gravities, and learning systematically everything the couple wished him to learn.

In 1908 a huge earthquake shattered the chamber, freeing the incredibly powerful boy, but tragically killing his parents. From then on he became a ward of the benevolently Arcadian Ozu people, learning their ways and becoming habituated to the mind-expanding longevity prolonging drug distilled from Goloka root. In 1921, he left this fabulous paradise to find the world his parents had escaped. In 1999 Tom Strong is the World’s greatest hero and has been for nearly eighty years.

Alan Moore has distilled the myriad elements of fantasy’s most popular heroes and injected them into an utterly pure comic-book world to examine the nature of this most modern myth, the super hero. All these varied elements enable him and his collaborators, primarily the superbly talented Chris Sprouse, to pay homage to their favourite fads, trends and memories whilst telling old fashioned stories in new-fangled ways.

This premiere volume introduces Tom Strong, his Ozu wife Dahlua and daughter Tesla, and the super-cool city and world they protect together. Millennium City, on the East Coast of America, is a blending of every superhero’s home town, fantastic and futuristic but still in desperate daily need of a champion. After the endearing, obligatory origin issue (this book collects the first seven issues of the monthly comic book series), the second chapter deals with the return of an old foe, the Modular Man, who menaced the world in decades past, and now threatens to overwhelm and consume the city, if not the planet.

Next is a cross-dimensional adventure as the Aztech Empire, conquerors of uncounted parallel universes, attempts to make Tom’s reality their latest acquisition. Issue #4 begins an extended epic, which tells a tale of two eras as a contemporary attack by the ‘Swastika Girls’ on Tom’s home – “The Stronghold” – leads to a flashback yarn of the hero’s lost exploits in World War II. Illustrated by Arthur Adams, this story-within-a-story is a funnybook fetishist’s dream as leather-clad Nazi superwoman Ingrid Weiss defeats Strong in the bombed out ruins of Berlin, only to return in 1999 and trap him in the distant past, when all the land mass of Earth was one huge super-continent, Pangaea.

The second part (from issue #5) again features Chris Sprouse on the main art, with another “Lost Tale of Tom Strong”, this one drawn by Jerry Ordway in a tribute to the classic EC fantasy tales of Wally Wood and Frank Frazetta.

Issue #6 continues the saga as Tom returns to the present for possibly the final confrontation with arch-enemy and mad-scientist extraordinaire Paul Saveen, the hidden brain behind the Swastika Girls. Dave Gibbons provides the untold tale of the first battle between these giants of science, and the main plot culminates with the revelation that Ingrid Weiss didn’t merely beat the hero in the ruins of Berlin…

The book concludes with a classic super-hero free-for-all as Tom’s wife and daughter join the fray, and Gary Frank and Cam Smith contribute a tale of 2050AD as this family saga spectacularly climaxes.

By synthesising the past Moore and Co brought back the whimsicality too seldom seen in modern comics, and by attempting the tone rather than the trappings managed to – mostly – escape the perils of parody and pastiche to create something worth reading on its own terms. Good fun for all.

© 1999, 2000 America’s Best Comics, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

The Rescue in Wild Boar Forest

The Rescue in Wild Boar Forest 

Adapted by Zhao Ji’nan, Li Dafa & Zhu Jinshan, illustrated by Dai Hongqian & Dai Dunbang (Zhaohua Publishing House, Beijing)
No ISBN

This is the second chapter in the epic saga of wronged man Lin Chong, who survived wrongful accusation and the treachery of his superiors to become one of the legendary 108 heroes of Mount Liangshan. The Imperial Arms Instructor who would eventually overthrow the corrupt and decadent ruling class of Imperial China, has escaped execution but is banished to the remote prison at Cangzhou.

This slightly abridged version sees the devastated nobleman forced-marched across the wilderness in the charge of two guards who have been bribed to murder him at the first opportunity, and after many tortures and tricks they attempt this in the eponymous forest only to be thwarted by the terrifying Buddhist priest Sagacious Lu who defeats them and makes them carry the prisoner all the way to his destination, safely delivering him to the Warden and Head Keeper.

But the reach of his enemies is long and these men are also eventually bribed to destroy Lin Chong. Allowing him to attain a profitable post outside the prison confines, they attempt to murder him in a snow storm but the hero turns the tables and kills his assailants, before making his escape into the snowy wastes, now a full outlaw and fugitive…

These beautiful adaptations are based on the classic novel “Outlaws of the Marsh” by Shi Nai’an of the Ming Dynasty. First published in China in the mid fourteenth century, the story is actually set in the early twelfth century, in the Northern Song area.

The illustrators for this edition are Dai Hongqian and Dai Dunbang, and their highly stylised black and white paintings have a much more abstract quality than Yan Meihua who produced the previous volume. Also, it’s perhaps jarring to western eyes to see the lead character absolutely unrecognisable. The details are simply not as important as the overall texture in this graphic culture, so once he’s identified as the hero, nobody cares that he doesn’t match his previous appearance. Best to just accept and be swept along in the wake of this superb heroic drama, which formed the basis for the cult TV series The Water Margin.

© 1982 Shanghai People’s Fine Arts Publishing House.

Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic, Vol 2: Flashpoint

Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic, Vol 2: Flashpoint 

By John Jackson Miller, Brian Ching & Travel Foreman (Dark Horse Books)
ISBN 1-84576-524-9

Framed for the murder of his fellow student Jedis by his own teachers, Zayne Carrick is on the run with a motley crew of criminals and reprobates. It’s hard enough just staying alive without the added pressure of knowing that his renegade masters are endangering the entire galaxy with their hidden agenda.

The fugitives’ flight takes them to the border of civilised space where the Republic is warring with the super-aggressive Mandalorians just in time to discover a hidden prison lab where captured Jedi Knights are being dissected for the genetic secrets of their powers.

After that there’s a flashback interlude that provides motive and insight into the actions of the Jedi splinter group that framed Carrick and the volume concludes as the renegade gang return to Republic Space only to fall into a trap that exploits the outlaw Padawan’s family.

Fast-paced, frenetic and fun, these romps recapture the swashbuckling dash of the original film, with young heroes and dissolute rogues running full-tilt from overwhelming odds. A great read for fans of the franchise and adventure lovers everywhere.

© 2007 Lucasfilm Ltd. & ™. All Rights Reserved.

Sword’s Edge

Sword's Edge 

By Sanho Kim (Iron Horse Publishing Co.)

Jumble sales are wonderful things. When I was a kid I got as many comics and books from inside church halls as I ever did from market stalls or newsagents. I still shamble around them occasionally but the pickings are pretty slim for print-freaks these days.

One thing I did pick up a few years ago was this fascinating precursor to today’s graphic novels.

Charlton Comics was always a minor player in the comics leagues, paying less, selling less, and generally caring less about cultivating a fan base than the major players. But they managed to find more big names in the 1960s than either Marvel or DC, and create a pantheon of memorable characters and concepts than any other.

Dick Giordano, Roy Thomas, Denny O’Neil, Joe Gill, Steve Skeates, Steve Ditko, Jim Aparo, Pat Boyette, Don Newton, Joe Staton, John Byrne, Mike Zeck, Sanho Kim – the list is endless.

But wait, what was that last one?

Sanho Kim started drawing for the company in 1968, a Korean professional of ten years standing who decided to try his luck in the home of the comic book. Drawing westerns, war stories and mysteries – which is code for horror and supernatural stories in the days before the Comics Code Authority relaxed its stranglehold on publishers creativity – he brought an eerie elegance and exoticism to funny-books that had never been seen before. Bizarre and compelling, I had never seen anything like it before.

I can’t find that much about him or by him these days, but this digest, landscape format book, which he apparently self-published in 1973 is a phenomenal piece of work that needs reviving and a saga that needs completing.

Set in Korea, it tells the tale of an uncouth and itinerant young swordsman who has a sexual dalliance with a beautiful maiden by a deserted stream. He then discovers that she is the Emperor’s fourth wife, desperate to get pregnant before her imperial husband removes her in same way he removed her three “barren” predecessors. Now that he has performed his function, the besotted young warrior finds himself a target for assassins, an unwelcome piece of evidence and perpetrator of a capital offence.

Combining, frenetic martial arts action with philosophy, earthy cynical humour with old world romance and presaging the road movie/buddy stories of a decade later this stunning blend of line art and grey wash tone paintings is a thing of beauty, and I fervently hope you have a chance to see it yourself one day.

© 1973 Iron Horse Publishing Co., Inc. All Rights Reserved

Star Wars Clone Wars, Vol 1: The Defense of Kamino

Star Wars Clone Wars, Vol 1: The Defense of Kamino 

By Various (Dark Horse Books)
ISBN 1-84023-646-9

The initial outing for the sub-franchise based on the events of the new Star Wars movies – in this specific case Attack of the Clones – reprints issues #49 and 50 of the monthly comic Star Wars: Republic, plus the one-shot Star Wars Jedi: Mace Windu.

Veteran collaborators John Ostrander and Jan Duursema create a tense and gritty slice of space opera in ‘Sacrifice’, as undercover Jedi Quinlan Vos finds himself drawing further and further from the path of Force to protect his imposture as a renegade and disciple of the Separatist leader Count Dooku. The plot concerns the retrieval of some plans that could threaten both sides of the conflict, but is there another agenda? One that would benefit simply by prolonging the war?

Dark and foreboding, this tense thriller serves as an excellent appetiser for the three short tales that follow. ‘Brothers in Arms’ is a rip-roaring war story as Master Ben Kenobi and Anakin lead a spirited rear-guard action that is actually a cunning feint to destroy the forces threatening the strategic world of Kamino. Of course nothing ever really goes to plan in combat, as ably demonstrated by Ostrander and Duursema, assisted by Dan Parsons on inks.

‘Jango’s Legacy’ by writer Haden Blackman and Stephen Thompson and Ray Kryssing is another combat tale as the separatist forces storm the citadel where the Republic’s clone warriors are grown. All hope depends on the untested special batch of clones designated ARC Troopers. Will they live up to expectations or will the undisciplined streak that couldn’t be eradicated from the Jango gene template bring disaster upon them all?

The final short, ‘No End in Sight’, is by Scott Allie, Tomás Giorello and Kryssing; a monumental space battle seen from the side of the Mon Calimari attackers attempting to take Kamino for Count Dooku, which demonstrates that heroism and self-sacrifice are never the exclusive preserve of one side in a war. And all the time the shadowy manipulations of the soon-to-be Emperor Palpatine progress just beyond the notice of the desperately worried Jedi Masters…

The book concludes with Mace Windu on a mission to the planet Lianna to prevent the assassination of an old friend and Jedi Sabre Master, Sora Bulq. En route he rendezvous with Quinlan Vos and among the intelligences shared is the revelation that many Jedi are losing focus, their spirituality increasingly clashing with their new role as soldiers. Brooding and introspective, this drama from Ostrander, Duursema and Parsons is not short on spectacular action even if some of the plot twists aren’t that surprising.

Space Opera buffs and franchise fans alike should be encouraged by the consistent high quality of these comic adventures. These read well with the minimum need for back-story and that’s always a good start for an entertaining time.

© 2003 Lucasfilm Ltd. & ™. All Rights Reserved.

Loveless, Vol 1: A Kin of Homecoming

Loveless, Vol 1: A Kin of Homecoming

By Brian Azzarello & Marcelo Frusin (Vertigo)
ISBN 1-84576-337-8

The dark eyes of Brian Azzarello and Marcelo Frusin, which did so much to revive the crime comic genre with 100 Bullets and returned a hard edge to horror in Hellblazer, take a good hard look at the Western in this series from Vertigo, the first five issues of which are collected here.

Blackwater was a nasty little town even before the Civil War. Now occupied by victorious Union soldiers it is rapidly becoming a cesspool and an open sore, with hate and resentment bubbling everywhere. And then Wes Cutter rides back into town.

A Confederate soldier, outlaw and very dangerous man, he quickly sets about making all-new enemies to complement those he’s always had in his home town. Is it a coincidence that his arrival coincides with a wave of murder and destruction? And just what did happen to the wife he left behind?

Black, violent and moody, with a large cast of broken and intriguing characters, this very adult tale of revenge is reminiscent of Clint Eastwood’s films High Plains Drifter and Unforgiven, but this story has many more shades and crannies than either, and the overwhelming mystery of Wes Cutter and his equally deadly companion is as engrossing as the violence is compelling. Here is a very modern Western which will enthral readers whether they like cowboys or not.

© 2005, 2006 Brian Brian Azzarello & Marcelo Frusin. All Rights Reserved.

The Road of Courage

The Road to Courage 

By Frank Hampson with Marcus Morris (Dragon’s Dream)
ISBN: 90-6332-801-X

The treatment of writers and artists in our business has historically been pretty appalling. That’s why the Comics Creators Guild exists (www.comicscreatorsguild.co.uk) under whose auspices you’re reading this page. This isn’t the place to discuss the situation that lead to Frank Hampson leaving the industry at the height of his powers, nor the shabby way he was dealt with. This is about the last work he produced for the magazine he will always be revered for.

Succinctly then: by creating Dan Dare Hampson revolutionised British comics. By the end of the 1950s he was a national treasure and hot property, leading to a highly seductive offer to leave Eagle and begin a new comic, Bulldog, for a rival company. Eagle founder Marcus Morris brokered a deal that kept Hampson with Eagle, allowing the publisher Edward Hulton to sell up to Odhams Press. Although promptly reneging on much of the deal, the new owners did allow Hampson to drop Dan Dare – a venture that was crippling the artist through overwork – to work on a proposed single page per week serial.

That strip was the lavish and beautiful ‘The Road of Courage – The Story of Jesus of Nazareth’. It was an obvious labour of love, scripted by fellow publishing pioneer Marcus Morris, the clergyman who had first come up with the concept of a high-quality, uplifting boy’s comics. Their swan song was to prove a magnificent, if troublesome, masterpiece of graphic narrative.

Designed to run for approximately one year and conclude in the Easter 1961 edition of the Eagle, the strip ran fifty-six instalments. From the announcement of a Census in Judaea to the evening of the first Easter Sunday when Jesus reappears to his disciples and sets them on their mission, readers marvelled at the brilliant depiction of battles and miracles. Although uplifting was the goal, neither creator forgot that boys want action and adventure in their comics. It highlighted events from the life of the Messiah in captivating colour and detail, although from a strongly traditional English perspective, so a little latitude might be necessary when reading with twenty-first century eyes. This slim large album is a vibrant testament to the dedication, power, and sheer artistry of Frank Hampson.

I can only assume that the religious content has held it back in contemporary artistic re-evaluations, because in terms of staging, drama and graphic-realism, only Don Lawrence’s Trigan Empire (and perhaps Storm) come anywhere near it for pictorial and narrative quality.

Meanwhile, over that turbulent year, Odhams became Longacre and by March 1961 had been bought by the Mirror Group to become I.P.C., and with each change came more indignity, chicanery and abuse. Hampson, a dedicated, hard-working professional, had completed his work in plenty of time and as the take-over knives were flashing, he took a two month vacation with his accumulated leave time. When he returned it was to blatant hostility and a legal action as the Mirror Group sued him for breach of contract and his next seven strip ideas. His hard-fought contract was terminated a full year early. (If you wish to know more about the story behind the story, look up The Lost Characters of Frank Hampson on your favourite search engine).

Most of the players in the drama are gone now, but the work remains, and I believe that the ultimate victory always belongs to the talented people who produce such memorable classics. So the sooner this glorious tale is back in print the better.

© I.P.C. Magazines Ltd 1981. All Rights Reserved.