Out of the Vault – Scout


So last week, I talked about Airboy, the 80’s revival, published by Eclipse, of the 40’s Hillman character. Two things about Airboy that bear repeating in reference to this week’s title.

Number one, as mentioned last week, Airboy was an odd mix of gun-heavy action-adventure and lefty politics. Airboy’s foes included anti-communist fighters in South America, the American military-industrial complex that profited from them, and evil non-environmentally aware corporations. His allies were communist guerillas and eco-terrorists fighting in the name of social justice.

But then, Eclipse was bar none the most blatantly political of comics publishers in the mid-80’s, putting out not only a number of very political books, but also publishing several series of anti-Republican trading cards, like Iran-Contra trading cards, Drug Wars trading cards, Friendly Dictators trading cards, and the “Bush League.”

And number two, co-“creator” of the Airboy revival was fan favorite Tim Truman, who had first come to prominence with his artwork on Grimjack, a science-fiction adventure written by John Ostrander and published by First Comics. Truman left Grimjack and came to Eclipse in 1985 to write and draw his own book, a sort-of post-apocalyptic adventure titled Scout. And as it turned out, Scout was even more political than Airboy.

Scout was the story of Emmanuel Santana, an Apache who had deserted the United States Army Rangers to wander the American Southwest desert before being called upon by a spirit guide to a great quest to kill four monsters and their master, “Slayer of Enemies.” Santana is a badass.

The four monsters are figures from Apache legend, who are disguised as prominent members of human society. For instance, the first monster he faces is Al, an obese pornographer whom only Scout can recognize for what he truly is: that classic foe from Dungeons and Dragons, the owlbear.

The other monsters include an ex-stand-up comedian turned Secretary of Agriculture and a robot controlled by the Vice-President (an ex-TV preacher),  before Santana kills the monsters’ leader, Slayer of Enemies, who is, of course, the President himself, an ex-showbiz personality turned politician.

And see, I thought there was some interesting stuff that could be done with that idea, that Scout is killing these monsters that only he can see. So is he actually saving the world or just, you know, tripping on mushrooms or something? You could have some fun exploring that. But Truman barely touched the surface of it. Instead, he played it more as a political satire.

Because if you know anything about the politics of the 80’s, you know that this was a thinly-veiled shot at Reagan and his supporters on the Christian Right, like Jerry Falwell’s Moral Majority. Which means that the liberal practice of fantasizing about assassinating a President with whom they disagree while at the same time complaining that it’s conservatives who are the ones spouting all the hateful rhetoric wasn’t limited to Bush’s term in office.

So like Airboy, Scout was a weird experience for me. Because while all the politics left me a little cold, I liked the action and the artwork. Truman’s figures were always a little stiff, and always looked pissed-off, but in Scout, he went to great pains to depict the surroundings as well. A lot of care went into detailing the deserts and mountains and cornfields. Would that so much care had been put into detailing the basic premise behind the world, which was your everyday leftist fantasyland.

Scout‘s America (in the far-flung exotic future year of 1999) was a faded, dying place, isolated from the rest of the world due to Soviet control of Africa and South America. Even Japan had fallen under the Soviets’ influence, with only the Middle East standing firm, due to Israel’s aggressive expansion into Iran and Iraq. Meanwhile, the east coast was uninhabitable due to toxic spills and nuclear accidents, and the rest of the country was starving.

Got that? It’s not stated outright, because it’s buried in the fundamental assumptions that underlie the world, but the premise is that the U.S. was doomed because of its reliance on the chaotic free market, allowing the worst excesses of bad corporate actors to pollute the land, while poor land management (due a lack of central control) caused overfarming and a loss of fertile soil and water supplies (exacerbated by catastrophic climate change, or as it was called back then, “the greenhouse effect”). Meanwhile, the Soviet Union, with its rational control of markets and strong land management policies, would thrive and prosper, bringing most of the rest of the world under its umbrella. The triumph of Communism was inevitable, with or without nuclear weapons, because Communism was just plain superior.

And yeah, you could say that I’m reading too much into it, except that in one of the early letter columns, Truman said that Scout was based on extensive research, and that the future he was predicting was all too plausible. But history showed that fears of imminent environmental catastrophe and Communist domination were simple paranoid fantasies, in the same vein as the new ice age hysteria of the 70’s or the population bomb fantasies of the 60’s.

I actually stuck with Scout for its full run, 24 issues, plus 5 issues of a sequel series titled Scout: War Shaman. But the further the series ran, the more depressing it got, until even the characters I liked started getting on my nerves. So I let it drop.

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Death Wave Final Preview

So I decided to give you one more small preview of Death Wave, just because the early chapters I previewed still feel somewhat light, and I want you to understand that the book gets much darker later. So here’s a bit of a scene from about 2/3 of the way through the book. I won’t set it up too extensively, because that would give away a lot of what has gone before, but you should be able to get the gist.

Follow the link, and for only $2.99, you can be reading the whole thing in minutes.

*****

Nate came to slowly, which was fine as far as I was concerned. Preparing for this moment had been hard work, and I hadn’t had enough time to really catch my breath and come to grips with it. If he decided he wasn’t ready to wake up just yet, it would be okay by me, although in some sense, it would be better to just get this over with. Continue reading

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Super Movie Extra – Live-Action Superdickery

So I’ve often pointed you to this site which uses mainly comics covers to show that Superman is a dick. But we have a really good example in live-action in Superman IV: The Quest for Peace.

Superman has already gratuitously frightened Lois Lane once by tossing her off the balcony of Clark Kent’s high-rise apartment before revealing himself to be Superman. Now he’s flying her around the  world, and it’s oh, so romantic, until he decides to screw with her.

What the hell is he planning to do? I mean, he wouldn’t really drop her, would he?

Oh yeah.

Wow, sucks for her.


And yeah, he catches her a second later, making it just a cheap callback to the first film, where the same thing basically happened. Except in the first film, he accidentally lost his grip on her hand, whereas in this film, he not only obviously does it on purpose, but laughs about it as she is plunging, terrified, toward her death and soiling her fancy dress.

Dick.

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Super Movie Monday – Superman IV, Part 1


So last week, it was mentioned that Supergirl was the last gasp of the Salkinds’ interest in Superman as a property (at least in theaters; they did come back to produce a syndicated Superboy series in later years). But four years after Superman III, a movie did come out titled Superman IV: The Quest for Peace. So what happened in between? Continue reading

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Out of the Vault – Airboy


This one gets a little complicated. In the 40’s, a company called Hillman Periodicals put out a comic called Air Fighters Comics, featuring their most popular character, Airboy, along with a host of back-up characters. And then in 1986, Eclipse Comics revived pretty much much the entire Hillman stable in the pages of Airboy.

Yeah, I know, you’re doing a double-take looking at that cover, right? But your eyes are not deceiving you. It was, in fact, a biweekly comic that cost only fifty cents! But that was because you were getting only one half-length chapter every two weeks. The book was thin (I actually have those issues saved two-to-a-bag).

Airboy was about David Nelson III, son of David Nelson II (the original Airboy), the head of Nelson Aviation. When the monastery where they live is attacked by the soldiers of a South American thugocracy, killing Davy’s father, Davy takes on the mantle of Airboy and joins forces with his father’s former comrades to battle one of Airboy’s greatest foes, Misery the necromancer who keeps the souls of dead aviators trapped in his flying Airtomb. With the help of Hirota, Skywolf and the Heap (the first swamp creature hero in comics, far predating either Swamp Thing or Man Thing), Davy conquered Misery and freed the love of his father’s life, the beautiful Valkyrie (shown on the left in the iconic Dave Stevens cover from issue 5).
For the record, the fifty cent price didn’t last long. They made it 8 issues before adding a back-up feature to bulk up the book and more than doubling the price to $1.25. They managed to maintain the biweekly schedule for over a year, though, putting out 32 issues before switching to a normal monthly schedule with issue 33.

The series was written by Chuck Dixon, who co-created the concept with then-hot fan favorite Tim Truman, who was also writing and drawing the dystopian future action-adventure Scout (which I think I’ll talk about next week). The short story length dictated by the biweekly schedule meant the action was fast and furious with lots of cliffhangers, which was good. But the schedule also necessitated some inconsistency on the art, with frequent fill-ins and switching of art teams. Truman did layouts finished by Tom Yeates on the first two issues, which led to a bit of controversy when the following panel appeared.

Some readers saw the inclusion of an autographed picture of Ronald Reagan to his pal, the South American strongman who was that issue’s secondary villain, as a cheap shot at the President, which it was. Even cheaper was when they printed a letter from one reader complaining about it, after which they printed responses from Dixon and Truman and Yeates and editor-in-chief Cat Yronwode, all telling the guy how wrong he was.

So the book ended up being this weirdly uncomfortable mix of shoot-em-up action and lefty politics with really good art. Stan Woch pencilled more issues than anyone else; he had previously worked on Swamp Thing, and his work showed influences from both Steve Bissette and Berni Wrightson, but he was also really good with airplanes and other vehicles (which you may imagine would be important in a book titled Airboy) and also showed a flair for furious fighting action (like this sequence from issue #5, inked by Willie Blyberg).

The book became popular enough with readers that it sparked spin-offs like a couple of Valkyrie mini-series, a few one-shots and reprints of some old Hillman stories. But I got a little bored with it after a couple of years. The book lasted until issue 50, but I quit after issue 41.

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Noir Tuesday – Death Wave, Part 2

Here is the second and final part of the free preview of Death Wave. Follow the link to download the rest instantly to your Kindle or other mobile device for only $2.99!

The story so far: During the Great Depression, mobster Jerry Goldman approaches his former best friend Forty Dollar to offer him a job. Goldman wants Forty to build him something “like a radio, but different.” Working with Forty on the job are Albert Einstein and a mysterious someone named Lisa.

CHAPTER 4

The next morning, I went to the address Jerry gave me. It was a storefront with boarded-up windows. Looked deserted, but the door was unlocked. When I entered, Jerry and Rebecca were already there, talking in low voices. Standing side-by-side the way they were, the difference in their ages was apparent. Rebecca was young, not yet twenty, while Jerry had just turned thirty-one. Anyone who didn’t know their history might wonder how they’d gotten together, what she saw in him. Pretty young girl with a prosperous older man, they might assume she was just using him for his money. It was more than that. It wasn’t love, but it was more than just money. Continue reading

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Super Movie Monday – Supergirl, Part 2



Concluding our look back at the Salkinds’ final contribution to theatrical super-films, the 1984 spin-off Supergirl.

To recap: Kara came to Earth as Supergirl in seach of OH! (the Omegahedron), an otherworldly power source needed for the survival of her extradimensional home, Argo City. Unfortunately, the OH! is being used by mad witch Selena (Faye Dunaway) to conquer the Earth, that is, just as soon as she gets gardener Ethan (Hart Bochner) to fall in love with her. The fly in the ointment is that Selena’s magic hit just a little off-target and caused him to fall in love with Kara (in her Earthly guise of Linda Lee) instead. Oops. Continue reading

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Out of the Vault – Raika


Got a little tired of the Ultraverse after a month, so I’m going to move around a while. Raika was a ninja manga that published a 20 issue run in 1992. It was published by Sun Comics, and and was unusual in that it published weekly.

Sun Comics was a company run by Steve Schanes, one of the Schanes brothers who had helped revolutionize the direct comics market and introduce creator-owned comics through Pacific Comics in the early 80’s. The Rocketeer made his first appearances in Pacific Comics titles.

After Pacific folded, Schanes co-founded Blackthorne Publishing, which was mainly known for publishing licensed strips, 3-D comics and TMNT parodies. Blackthorne folded in 1990, and in 1992 came Sun Comics, featuring reprints of manga like Raika and High School Agent.

Raika is a pretty standard ninja manga, mainly notable for the fact that the word “ninja” never appears in it. The time period in which the book takes place is pre-ninja, before the Japanese archipelago had united under one ruler. The country of Yamatai is ruled by Empress Himiko, an aged prophetess in ill health.

Well, it’s pretty obvious which way that’s going. Chosei is a Chinese adviser to the Empress who plans to kill her, then put her young assistant Iyo on the throne as his puppet. Speaking of Iyo…

Yes, because this story takes place before there were any such things as ninja, they use an even more esoteric proto-ninjutsu known as shinsenjutsu. The guy with the spiky hair is Raika, a hotheaded young not-ninja who will soon be prophesied to destroy Yamatai and unite the kingdoms into one Japan.

And though in the beginning, the ninja techniques seem more akin to an old-school ninja strip like Kamui, in later issues, the techniques get wilder, pointing the way to future insanityfests like Naruto. This scene, for instance…

in which one of Raika’s enemies performs a strange “martial arts” technique that summons a gigantic frog for him to ride.

Apparently, Raika was supposed to develop into an epic Arthurian-style romance in which Raika would become the ruler who would unite the Japanese kingdoms, but it ended up folding in less than a year. It may have been the weekly schedule which did the title in, since that meant you would be spending $10 a month on that title alone, so you’d better really love it.

Still I liked Raika and I wish I could see more of it.

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Noir Tuesday: Death Wave, Part 1

(ETA: It’s live now. Click the pic on the right sidebar or go here) So I’ve been hinting for a while about super-cool secret projects in the works. This is the first one. Death Wave, a noir thriller, is going to be available on the Kindle any second now. It’s a novel of 30’s mobsters, adultery, betrayal, and murder. Oh, and a death ray. It’s short, so it’ll be priced at a low, low $2.99. And best of all, you don’t need a Kindle to read it! It’s in mobi format, which means you should also be able to read it on other mobile devices, such as the Palm, as well as your PC.

I’ll have a link up on the right hand side as soon as I can, and also in next week’s post when I preview a little more. One thing to keep in mind as you read these opening chapters: the book doesn’t stay this light. It gets darker. A lot darker.

Chapter 1

The day I baked Hyman Mankiewicz was the day I let Jerry in on the truth. Continue reading

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Super Movie Monday – Supergirl, Part 1



I really wanted to cover this in one week, but I’m too long-winded, so it looks like it will stretch to two.

If you bothered to read the synopsis of Ilya Salkind’s abandoned Superman III idea, you know that it revolved around Brainiac and Supergirl. Brainiac kinda-sorta made it through to Superman III in the form of an autonomous super-computer that almost kills Superman. Supergirl did not.

Because the Salkinds decided to give her her own film. The hope, obviously, was that this would launch a new franchise, now that Superman looked to be petering out. Continue reading

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