Saturday, November 29, 2008

Tomb of Dracula #10 (1973)

"His Name Is...Blade!"

Before Blade became a box office sensation courtesy of Wesley Snipes, the vampire hunter made his debut in this 1973 issue of the milestone Tomb of Dracula horror comic.  Replete with 70s fashion and hairstyle, Blade made his first appearance sporting a bandoleer of sharpened wooden knives and a motivation for hunting the king of vampires entirely distinct and separate from the Harker/Van Helsing core group of characters.  As the character would grow and evolve over the decades, Blade would be brought into the more mainstream comic titles.  Yet, in 1973, it was this cover, artfully constructed by Gil Kane, that would introduce the world to the alternative vampire slayer:  black, independent, from the streets, and uniquely American, berating Dracula with 1970s slang while trying to end the vampire's reign of terror in the Marvel Universe.

Sunday, November 23, 2008

Crisis on Infinite Earths #12 (1986)



"Final Crisis"

DC Comics' seminal event of the 1980s, "Crisis on Infinite Earths" spanned the entire canonical history of the DC Universe, from the beginning of time to the very near end of all and combined the myriad dimensions, characters, and timelines crafted through DC history into one seamless whole.  At least that was the plan, though the resulting continuity would be revisted several times in the next twenty years.  Nevertheless, the original Crisis storyline was truly epic in scope, a comics milestone, and, most importantly, tremendously entertaining.  The finale of this mini-series was issue #12, chronicling the climactic battle between the nihlistic Anti-Monitor and virtually all the DC Universe's heroes and villains.  Bringing to illustrated life Marv Wolfman's paradigm shift, George Perez, Jerry Ordway, and Tom Ziuko create iconic images, beginning with this memorable cover work.  Befitting the scope of the final chapter of this saga (the issue includes the first appearance of Wally West as the Flash and the deaths of Kole and Earth-2's Robin and Huntress, along with many more superbeings and thousands upon thousands of normal human beings), the cover conveys the enormity of the battle to be fought while showcasing a host of characters, some of which would never be seen again.

Saturday, November 15, 2008

Doom Patrol #89 (1964)


"The Animal-Vegetable-Mineral Menace"

Bruno Premiani illustrates the cover of this memorable Doom Patrol adventure, chronicling the first appearance of the Animal-Vegetable-Mineral Man.  For those unfamiliar with this unique super-villain, please take another look at Premiani's cover art.  AVM is capable of transforming all or portions of his body into elements of animals, vegetables, or minerals.  In this issue alone we see the villain take the form of a paramecium, tarantula, sulphur giant, dandelion, and a horde of gnats.  The group of super-powered adventurers known as the original Doom Patrol were not willing heroes.  In fact, each member payed a terrible price for their individual powers:  Cliff Steele (Robot Man), a race car driver whose body was damaged beyond healing had his brain encased in a super-powered armored form, his existence continuing but his outward humanity lost forever; Larry Trainor (Negative Man), a test pilot whose exposure to suborbital atmospheric radiation destroyed his human frame as well, leaving him a being composed of lethal radioactive waves that could only be contained safely by the specially treated bandages he must always wear to live among other people without endangering them; and Rita Farr (Elasti-Girl) a beautiful actress who accidentally inhaled weird subterranean vapors while filming on location in Africa and found her body growing and shrinking uncontrollably, causing her to be an exile from the Hollywood community even after learning how to control her powers.  These three would be brought together by Niles Caulder (The Chief), a brilliant professor confined to a wheelchair, who convinced the group to use their powers for the greater good.  If you notice some similarity between the makeup of this group of misfits and Marvel's X-Men, you're not alone.  Though the Doom Patrol made their appearance three months before Marvel's mutants in 1963, there has long been a debate as to which publishing house originally had the idea of a group of supranormal outcasts defending a world that would never accept them.  Obviously, Marvel's X-Men would become the more critically acclaimed and profitable title.  However, it is worth remembering that before the X-Men faced Magento, and even before the Legion of Super-Heroes regularly embarked on adventures in the far-off future, a group of non-mutant, self-proclaimed "freaks" were already expanding the dysfunctional anti-hero family model.

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

Shazam! #1 (1973)


Originally published by Fawcett Comics from 1939-1953, Captain Marvel (affectionately known to his enemies and fans alike as the "big red cheese") was acquired as a licensed intellectual propery by DC Comics in 1972.  Interestingly, it was due to a copyright infringement lawsuit, claiming that Captain Marvel was a blatant and illegal infringement of the Superman character, that contributed to the end of the original run of Fawcett's premiere hero.  The first issue of this revival introduced the Fawcett universe as having been in suspended animation for 20 years before finally breaking free.  This explaination, already hackneyed and laughable in the early 1970s, was eventually edited out of continuity as the characters of Captain Marvel, the wizard Shazam, the Marvel family, and their rogues gallery progressed from an alternate universe entirely, to part of DC's multiverse, and then finally to a wholly owned franchise of DC Comics and inclusion within its complex paradigm.  In retrospect, this premiere issue (complete with a tacit endorsement from an ever-smug Superman) begins the Captain's long path back to respectability and relevance with art by C.C. Beck, Nick Cardy, and Murphy Anderson.