Andromeda Stories

Andromeda Stories 1

By Keiko Takemiya, story by Ryu Mitsuse (Vertical)
Book 1 ISBN: 978-1-932234-84-8, Book 2 ISBN: 978-1-932234-85-5, Book 3 ISBN: 978-1-934287-04-0

Keiko Takemiya is one of the most revered women working in Japanese comics. Her Kaze to Ki No Uta (an adaptation of Gilbert Cocteau’s The Poem of the Wind and the Trees) which appeared in 1976 is considered the first ever Shounen-ai (young men’s love strip) and the progenitor of that entire genre. Born in 1950, she sold her first work in 1968, working in not just romance and girl’s stories but also science fiction in a grand and epic manner.

This brief series from 1980-1982 has some overtones of Fred Saberhagen’s Berserker novels, and tells the epic generational tale of humanity’s struggle against encroaching and relentless mechanisation by sentient machines programmed to domesticate and protect Man from all threats – especially himself.

Andromeda Stories 2

On the idyllic and spiritual world of Astria, Cosmoralian Prince Ithaca is preparing to marry Princess Lilia when an irresistible mechanical invasion force arrives, programmed to overwhelm and eradicate organic life.

Despite heroic opposition The Enemy inexorably assimilates the human population, and Lilia is forced to flee with her newborn son Prince Jimsa to the desert wastes. There he grows to young manhood surviving ravening wild beasts, bandits and grim adversity, sharpening the immense powers he has developed as the culminating point of three extremely special bloodlines.

And somewhere a twin sister he knows nothing about also matures…

Andromeda Stories 3

The third volume begins with the siblings eventual meeting, carries through to the final fate of Astria and goes on to encompass the intergalactic destiny of the entire human race.

Staggering in scope, this fantasy thriller has classical overtones (and a chilling metaphorical message picked up in James Cameron’s Terminator movie a few years later) delivered in an engagingly florid and poetic style. Working with prose science fiction legend Ryu Mitsuse, Takemiya blazed a trail with this tale and it’s a pleasure to finally see it in an accessible English edition.

© 2008 Keiko Takemiya. Translation © 2008 Magnolia Steele and Vertical, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Superman: The Man of Steel, Volume 6

Superman: The Man of Steel, Volume 6

By various (DC Comics)
ISBN: 978-1-84576-440-1

At long last the latest volume in this excellent series chronologically reprinting the post-Crisis on Infinite Earths Superman has been released, and reaches the landmark first anniversary of that brave renovation.

Featuring the creative efforts of John Byrne, Ron Frenz, Jim Starlin, Dan Jurgens, Art Adams, Dick Giordano, Brett Breeding, Steve Montano, Keith Williams, Roy Richardson and Karl Kesel, the book includes all three of the Annuals for 1987, Action Comics #595-595, Superman #12 and as a necessary bonus issue #23 of Booster Gold volume 1 – the concluding part of a cross over between the rival champions of Metropolis.

The magic kicks off with ‘Skeeter’, a vampire shocker guest-starring Batman written by Byrne and illustrated by Art Adams and Dick Giordano originally published in Action Comics Annual #1. Next is a poignant updating of a Silver Age classic. ‘Tears for Titano’ by Byrne, Frenz and Breeding first saw print in Superman Annual #1 and puts a modern spin on the tale of the giant chimp that menaced Metropolis.

The Adventures of Superman Annual #1 was the original home of ‘The Union’ by Jim Starlin, Jurgens and Steve Montano, wherein Superman is asked by Ronald Reagan and super-Fed Sarge Steel to find out what happened in the instant ghost-town of Trudeau, South Dakota. This edgy sci-fi shocker showed audiences that the new Man of Steel wasn’t the guaranteed winner he used to be, and set the scene for a momentous future confrontation with the monstrous Hfuhruhurr the Word-bringer.

‘All that Glisters’ (Byrne and Keith Williams) comes from Action Comics #594, a big battle team-up with Booster Gold that concluded in issue #23 of that hero’s own title. ‘Blind Obsession’, with art and story by Jurgens and Roy Richardson, is followed by the magical retelling of another classic Wayne Boring Superman tale.

‘Lost Love’ from Superman #12, by Byrne and Karl Kesel, recounts the tragic tale of Clark Kent’s brief affair with the mysterious Lori Lemaris, a unique girl he twice – that’s right – loved and lost, and the volume concludes with Action Comics #595. ‘The Ghost of Superman’ introduced the eerie Silver Banshee in a mystery team-up that I’m not going to spoil for you.

Against all current expectation the refitted Man of Tomorrow was a critical and commercial success. As one of the penitent curmudgeons who was proved wrong at the time, I can earnestly urge you not to make the same mistake. These are magically gripping and memorable comic gems that can be enjoyed over and over again. So the sooner you get these books the sooner you can start the thrill ride…

© 1987 DC Comics. All Rights Reserved.

Superman: Camelot Falls, Book 2 — The Weight of the World

Superman Camelot Falls

By Kurt Busiek, Carlos Pacheco & Jesus Merino (DC Comics)
ISBN: 978-1-84576-651-1

The concluding volume of the serial epic that ran intermittently in the monthly Superman comic is finally available, and although it is very impressive eye-candy I still question the fairness of two little books when the whole story could quite easily have fitted into one. In volume 1 (ISBN: 1-84576-434-X) the ancient Atlantean sorcerer Arion showed the Man of Steel a vision of the future where the hero’s continued defence of the planet inevitably lead to its destruction, and asked him to retire before that vision became horrendous reality.

In this volume (collecting Superman #662-664, 667 and Superman Annual #13) the Mage decides to force Superman’s decision.

Chockfull of guest-stars and featuring pertinent asides with the tragic Superman-analogue Subjekt 17, plus a pack of very young New Genesis truants and even old foe the Prankster, this is a very pretty adventure. But even although the final confrontation is visually spectacular, story-wise there’s nothing we haven’t seen before.

Shiny and simplistic, this is a pallid disappointment for fans with precious little to recommend it to the casual or new reader.

© 2007 DC Comics. All Rights Reserved.

Silver Surfer: Judgement Day

A MARVEL GRAPHIC NOVEL

Silver Surfer: Judgement Day

By Stan Lee & John Buscema, with Tom DeFalco (Marvel)
ISBN: 0- 87135-427-6

Here’s a fine example of an all-too common problem in graphic novel production, in the form of a high class product that I can half-heartedly recommend – and no, I didn’t mistype that.

The Silver Surfer was always a pristine and iconic character when handled well – and sparingly – yet once he gained and sustained a regular comic book presence he became somewhat diminished; less… special. After a strong start his adventures became formulaic and even dull. In reworking the character for the modern market, a huge amount of the mystique that made the critically beloved but commercially disastrous Christ allegory from the Stars a 1960’s cause celebré was lost.

On paper a reuniting of Stan Lee and John Buscema on their most revered character collaboration must have seemed a win-win proposition, and the production values of a hardcover album with the most up to date repro and colouring techniques promised delights to warm even the most jaded fan’s heart. The artistic bravery of making each of the 62 pages one full panel of Buscema artwork was a fan-boy’s dream.

So why am I less than whole-heartedly enthusiastic?

Comics are a synthesis of art and story. When both are at their peak no other creative medium in the world can match them for imagination, delight and wonderment. John Buscema rose to the challenge, producing some of the best superhero drawing of his long and impressive career, ably assisted by the colouring of Max Scheele.

And the story sucked.

Even though plotted by Tom DeFalco and scripted by Stan Lee, the tale of the satanic tempter Mephisto’s seduction of Nova, the comely herald of the world-devouring Galactus, the self-sacrifice of the Surfer and the battle between the mystical Lord of Hell and Galactus, the ultimate Force of Science, should have been a high-point of sequential fiction.

But it isn’t. The dialogue is rushed, overblown, occasionally moronic and often downright embarrassing. But it is so very, very lovely to look at…

There’s the painful paradox. Every fan should have this book, but it might be best to find a copy translated into a language you can’t read…

A softcover edition (ISBN13: 978-0-87135-663-5) is also available.

© 1988 Marvel Entertainment Group/Marvel Characters, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Penelope

Penelope

By Thelwell (Eyre Methuen)
ISBN: 978-0-41329-340-4

Norman Thelwell is one of our most beloved cartoonists – even though he sadly passed away in 2004. I was going to astound you with my knowledge here but frankly his work has always been its own best advocate, and if you want to know more about this brilliant creator – and see more of his work – you should crank up your search-engine of choice. I specifically recommend the official website (www.thelwell.org.uk/biography/biography.html) as well as Steve Holland’s excellent Bear Alley .

Thelwell’s superbly gentle cartooning combined Bigfoot abstractions with a keen and accurate eye for background detail, not just on the riding and countryside themes that made him a household name, but on all the myriad subjects he turned his canny eye and subtle brushstrokes to. His pictures are an immaculate condensation of everything warm yet charged and resonant about being Post-War, Baby-Booming British, without ever being parochial or provincial. His work has international implications and scope, neatly achieving that by presenting us to the world. There are 32 books of his work and any aficionado of humour could do much worse than own them all.

From 1950 when his gag-panel Chicko first began in the Eagle, and especially two years later with his first sale to Punch, he built a solid body of irresistible, seductive and always funny work. He appeared in innumerable magazines, comics and papers ranging from Men Only to Everybody’s Weekly. In 1957 Angels on Horseback, his first collection of published cartoons was released, and in 1961 he made the rare reverse trip by releasing a book of all-new cartoons that was subsequently serialised in the Sunday Express.

A Leg at Each Corner was a huge success and other books followed. Eventually this led to the strip collected in the book reviewed here. Thelwell’s short obnoxious muses originated in the field next door to his home, where roamed two shaggy ponies…

“Small and round and fat and of very uncertain temper” – apparently owned by “Two little girls about three feet high who could have done with losing a few ounces themselves….”

“As the children got near, the ponies would swing round and present their ample hindquarters and give a few lightning kicks which the children would side-step calmly as if they were avoiding the kitchen table, and they had the head-collars on those animals before they knew what was happening. I was astonished at how meekly they were led away; but they were planning vengeance – you could tell by their eyes.”

Penelope and her formidable steed Kipper ran – or at least reluctantly trotted – (sorry, I have no will-power or shame) through the pages of the Sunday Express where Thelwell toiled from 1962 to 1971. This wonderful book is readily available, as is the sequel Penelope Rides Again, and I trust that anyone with an ounce of decency and taste will treat themselves to the work of this master as soon as humanly possible.

© 1972 Norman Thelwell and Beaverbrook Newspapers Ltd.

Lobo: Portrait of a Bastich

Lobo: Portratit of a Bastich

By Keith Giffen, Alan Grant & Simon Bisley (DC Comics)
ISBN: 978-1-84576-889-8

The intergalactic bounty hunter was first seen in Omega Men #3 in 1982, and cropped up all over the DC universe, even becoming a mainstay of the popular L.E.G.I.O.N. series. He had his own monthly title for a few years as well as many miniseries and specials, and was a popular candidate for inter- and cross-company team-ups.

Lobo roughly translates as “he who devours your entrails and enjoys it”. This unstoppable, anarchic force-of-nature exploded in popularity in the decade that followed his premiere, despite being petty much a one trick pony and increasingly an exercise in outrageous graphic excess. He was exactly what a lot of fans wanted.

This new trade paperback collection reprints his the two breakthrough miniseries from 1990, the first of which details an unwelcome mission whilst indentured to the service of L.E.G.I.O.N., an intergalactic commercial police force run by Vril Dox, “son” of the villainous super-villain Brainiac.

Lobo always prided himself on being final survivor of his planet, but in ‘The Last Czarnian’ to his horror he finds that he missed someone when he slaughtered his entire race, that she’s his old grade-school teacher, and that moreover she’s written an unauthorized biography of the Main Man. Forbidden by his own honour-code from killing her, he must escort her to L.E.G.I.O.N. headquarters as all the nut-jobs in the universe pursue them, hell-bent on killing one or other of them.

“Lobo’s Back” from 1992 details his return to the private sector and how he dies trying to bring in the infamous Loo, the most dangerous being in the universe. What follows is an outrageous, darkly hilarious, blood-soaked spin on a venerable old tale (you’ve probably seen the Bugs Bunny cartoon classic) as Lobo makes himself persona non grata in the afterlife.

When both Heaven and Hell discover that the Main Man is too much to handle there’s only once place he go and that’s back here, but nobody said it had to be in his original body…

Brutally, blackly comedic, ironic, sardonic and manic, these tales for older readers aren’t to everybody’s taste, but Giffen and Grant’s sharp, wicked scripts gave Simon Bisley (assisted by Christian Alamy) scope for a multitude of breathtaking and memorable art sequences and sometimes just going wild can be as rewarding as the most intricately balanced craftwork and plot-building.

Pay yer money and take yer choice, ya feeb!.

© 1990, 1992, 2008 DC Comics. All Rights Reserved.

Marvel Masterworks: Iron Man 1963-1964

Marvel Masterworks: Iron Man

By Stan Lee, Don Heck, Jack Kirby, Steve Ditko & various (Marvel/Panini UK)
ISBN: 978-1-905239-86-3

There are a number of ways to interpret the creation and early years of Iron Man and his alter-ego Tony Stark, celebrity millionaire industrialist and inventor – but as that cinema release looms ever nearer (and since I’ve scrupulously avoided learning anything about it) we’ll be concentrating solely on the original comics material rather than any refits since. At least this lovely, economical full-colour trade paperback presents the first two years in a highly accessible package that will hopefully answer a demand from movie-goers with some of Marvel’s very best tales.

Created in the aftermath of the Cuban Missile Crisis and at a time when “Red-baiting” and “Commie-bashing” were national obsessions in the U.S., the emergence of a brilliant new Thomas Edison, using Yankee ingenuity and invention to safeguard the World, was an inevitable proposition. Combining the cherished belief that Yankee technology could solve every problem with universal imagery of noble knights battling evil and the proposition became certainty. Of course kids thought it great fun and very, very cool…

This compendium of the Golden Avenger’s natal years reprints all his solo adventures, plus some feature pages and pin-ups, from Tales of Suspense #39 (cover-dated March 1962) to #60 (December 1964); the dawn of the company’s rebirth to the beginning of their commercial expansion, a period which saw them challenge DC’s position of dominance, but still prior to Marvel becoming the darlings of the student counter-culture. In these tales Tony Stark is still very much the patriotic armaments manufacturer, and not the enlightened capitalist dissenter he would become.

TOS #39, scripted by Larry Lieber (over brother Stan Lee’s plot) and illustrated by the criminally unappreciated Don Heck, featured ‘Iron Man is Born’, wherein electronics wizard Tony Stark is field testing his latest invention in Viet Nam when he is wounded by a landmine. Captured by the Viet Cong commander Wong-Chu, he is given a grim ultimatum. Create weapons for the Reds and a doctor will remove shrapnel from his chest that will kill him within seven days. If not…

Knowing Commies can’t be trusted, Stark and aged Professor Yinsen – another captive scientist – build a mobile iron lung (remember this was years before heart transplants and pace-makers) to keep his heart beating, and they equip it with all the weapons that their ingenuity and resources can secretly build. Naturally they succeed, defeating Wong-Chu, but not without tragic sacrifice.

From the next issue Iron Man’s superhero career is taken as a given, and he has already achieved fame for largely off-camera exploits. Lee continues to plot but Robert Bernstein replaces Lieber as scripter for issues #40-46 and Jack Kirby shares the pencilling chores with Heck. ‘Iron Man versus Gargantus’ follows the new Marvel pattern by pitting the hero against aliens – albeit via their robotic giant caveman intermediary, in a delightfully simplistic romp pencilled by Kirby and inked by Heck.

‘The Stronghold of Doctor Strange’ (art by Kirby and Dick Ayers) is a gripping battle with a wizard of Science (and not the Lee/Ditko Master of the Mystic Arts), whilst Heck returns to full art for the spy thriller ‘Trapped by the Red Barbarian’.

Kirby and Heck team again for the science-fantasy ‘Kala, Queen of the Netherworld!’, then Heck goes it alone when Iron Man time-travels to ancient Egypt to help Cleopatra against ‘The Mad Pharaoh!’, withstands ‘The Icy Fingers of Jack Frost!’ and faces his Soviet counterpart ‘The Crimson Dynamo!’.

Tales of Suspense #47 presaged big changes. Stan Lee wrote ‘Iron Man Battles the Melter!‘, and Heck inked the unique pencils of Steve Ditko, but the major event came with the next issue. In ‘The Mysterious Mr. Doll’ Lee, Ditko and Ayers scrapped the old cool-yet-clunky boiler-plate suit for a sleek, form-fitting, red-and-gold upgrade that would (with minor variations) become the character’s trademark for decades.

Paul Reinman inked Ditko on Lee’s crossover/sales pitch for the new X-Men comic in ‘Iron Man Meets the Angel’, but the series only really took hold with Tales of Suspense #50. Don Heck returned as regular penciller and occasional inker, and Lee introduced the hero’s first major menace in ‘The Hands of the Mandarin’, a modern Fu Manchu who terrified the Red Chinese so much they tricked him into attacking America in the hope that one threat would destroy the other. The Mandarin would become arguably Iron Man’s greatest foe.

Our hero made short work of criminal contortionist ‘The Sinister Scarecrow’, and the Red spy who stole that Russian armour-suit when ‘The Crimson Dynamo Strikes Again’ (#52) – scripted, as was the next issue, by the mysterious “N. Korok”- but it introduced a much greater threat in the slinky shape of the Soviet Femme Fatale the Black Widow. With TOS #53, she returned when ‘The Black Widow Strikes Again!’

‘The Mandarin’s Revenge!’ followed; a two-part tale that concluded with #55’s ‘No One Escapes the Mandarin!’, but ‘The Uncanny Unicorn!’ promptly attacked after Iron Man did, only to fare no better in the end. The Black Widow resurfaced to beguile budding superhero ‘Hawkeye, the Markman!’ into attacking the Golden Avenger in #57, before another landmark occurred in the next issue.

Iron Man had monopolised Tales of Suspense, but ‘In Mortal Combat with Captain America’ (inked by Dick Ayers) featured an all-out scrap between the two heroes resulting from a clever impersonation by the evil Chameleon. It was a taster for the next issue when Cap began his own solo adventures, splitting the monthly comic into an anthology featuring Marvel’s top patriotic heroes.

Iron Man’s outing in TOS #59 was against the technological paladin ‘The Black Knight!’, and as a result Stark was unable to remove the armour without triggering a heart attack, a situation that hadn’t occurred since the initial injury. Until this time he had led a relatively normal life by simply wearing the life-sustaining breast-plate under his clothes. The introduction of soap-opera sub-plots were a necessity of the shorter page counts, as were continued stories, but this seeming disadvantage actually worked to improve both the writing and the sales.

With Stark’s “disappearance,” Iron Man was ‘Suspected of Murder’, a tale that featured the return of Hawkeye and the Black Widow, and which closed the (publishing) year and this book on something of a cliff-hanger, albeit a partial one. The following issues – and if the film’s a success, the next volume – should conclude the drama with ‘The Death of Tony Stark!’ and ‘The Origin of the Mandarin!’, so keep your fingers crossed.

Iron Man developed amidst the growing political awareness of the Viet Nam Generation who were the comic’s maturing readership. Wedded as it was to the American Industrial-Military Complex, with a hero – originally the government’s wide-eyed golden boy – gradually becoming attuned to his country’s growing divisions, it was, as much as Spider-Man, a bellwether of the times. That it remains such a thrilling uncomplicated romp of classic super-hero fun is a lasting tribute to the talents of all those superb creators that worked it. And it’s a salute to the character’s corporate-capitalist ethos that it took a big-budget blockbuster to catapult these great stories out into a mainstream marketplace.

So why not exploit the chance to get this fabulous, economical tome and relive some classic moments in history – especially if it’s for the very first time?

© 1963, 1964, 2007 Marvel Characters, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

The Lobo Collection

The Lobo Collection

By Keith Giffen, Alan Grant, Simon Bisley and various (DC Comics)
ISBN: 1-56389-049-6

Lobo roughly translates as “he who devours your entrails and enjoys it”, and is an incredibly powerful bounty-hunting, drunken thug. This unstoppable, anarchic force-of-nature exploded in popularity in the decade that followed his premiere, despite being petty much a one trick pony and increasingly an exercise in outrageous graphic excess. All that being said, however, if you’re in the right mood, his kind of gratuitous mayhem can be wonderfully entertaining.

At the height of his popularity the Main Man of Mayhem was a publisher’s dream. There was an actual baying from fans and speculators for more product and a largely new and receptive audience that hadn’t seen the plethora of previous appearances in a hugely diverse range of titles.

So the powers that be sanctioned this odd item in 1990. The Collection is a boxed set of three graphic novels and includes a set of eight original postcards by a stellar cast of artists.

The intergalactic bounty hunter debuted in Omega Men #3 in 1982, and popped up throughout the DC universe, even becoming a regular cast-member in the popular L.E.G.I.O.N. series for years before starring in his own breakthrough miniseries.

Lobo: The Last Czarnian

The first of these is Lobo: the Last Czarnian (ISBN: 0-930289-99-4; just in case you fancy pick ‘n’ mixing rather than hunting for the entire package) which collects the first Giffen, Grant and Bisley miniseries (which I’ve reviewed elsewhere as part of the new Lobo: Portrait of a Bastich trade paperback – ISBN: 978-1-84576-889-8), although this older version does have a Robert Sheckley introduction and six pages of extra art and sketches that aren’t included in the latest version.

Next is a very intriguing variation of an old TV standby: the “Cheesy Clip Show”, but given an original spin. Lobo’s Greatest Hits (ISBN: 0-56389-013-5) takes excerpts from many of the aforementioned guest appearances and assembles them with an ingenious framing sequence into a role-playing book. When Lobo is trapped in a black-hole time-warp he has to relive many previous experiences before he can escape. By following the instructions at the bottom of some pages the reader can direct the way the story unfolds.

Lobo Greatest Hits

The reprinted material is taken from Omega Men #3, 10 and 20, Justice League International #18-19 and 21, L.E.G.I.O.N. #3-4, 7-10, 13 and 16-18, Superman #41 and Adventures of Superman #464, which all appeared between 1983 and 1990.

The creator list includes (skip ahead if you’re daunted, bored or need to catch the last bus home) Simon Bisley, Norm Breyfogle, Mark Bright, Robert Campanella, John Costanza, Paris Cullins, Gene D’Angelo, Albert Deguzman, Mike DeCarlo, J.M. DeMatteis, Keiron Dwyer, Jim Fern, Robert Loren Fleming, Keith Giffen, Dick Giordano, Al Gordon, Alan Grant, Matt Hollingsworth, Nansi Hoolahan, Dennis Janke, Dan Jurgens, Lovern Kindzierski, Barry Kitson, Bob Lappan, Erik Larsen, Kevin Maguire, Rick Magyar, Jose Marzan Jr., Tom Mc Craw, Mark McKenna, Doug Moench, Kevin O’Neill, Jerry Ordway, Bruce D. Patterson, Mark Pennington, Joe Phillips, Adrienne Roy, Joe Rubinstein, Gaspar Saladino, Javiar Saltares, Bart Sears, Val Semeiks, Roger Slifer, Tod Smith, Chris Sprouse, Ty Templeton, Art Thibert, Anthony Tollin, Tim Truman, Matt Wagner, Len Wein and Glenn Whitmore.

The Wisdom of Lobo

The third book The Wisdom of Lobo has no ISBN and is one big, old joke. I’ll say no more…

The eight original postcards are by Garry Leach, Sergio Aragones, Mike Mignola, Kevin Maguire, Mark McKone & Jan Harps, Walt Simonson, P. Craig Russell and Keith Giffen.

Manic, blackly comedic, ironic, and excessively graphic, this won’t appeal to everybody, but has a lot to recommend it if vicious, sardonic slapstick pushes your buttons. Comics excess at its finest.

© 1990, 1992, 2008 DC Comics. All Rights Reserved.

Justice League International

Justice League International

By Keith Giffen, J.M. DeMatteis, Kevin Maguire, Al Gordon & Terry Austin (DC Comics)
ISBN: 978-1-84576-787-7

When the continuity-altering bombast of Crisis on Infinite Earths resulted in such spectacular commercial success, DC must have felt more than justified in revamping a number of their hoariest icons for their next fifty years of publishing. As well as Superman, Flash, and Wonder Woman, the moribund and unhappy Justice League of America was earmarked for a radical revision. Editor Andy Helfer assembled plotter Keith Giffen, scripter J.M. DeMatteis and untried penciller Kevin Maguire to produce an utterly new approach to the superhero monolith: they played them for laughs.

A few months ago I reviewed the 1990s collection (reprinted in entirety in this impressive hardcover) with my usual bleating that such great material deserved a high-profile re-release and I’m delighted to see that DC were already thinking the same thing. These wild and woolly tales are a perfect panacea to all the doom and gloom that infests so much of today’s comics content. I’m also happy to say that this time the editors found room to include the great Maguire JLI poster from 1987 and the Who’s Who entry and artwork this time around.

Leading directly on from the DC crossover-event Legends, the new team debuted in May 1987, combining a roster of second-stringers Black Canary, Blue Beetle, Captain Marvel, Dr. Fate, Guy Gardner/Green Lantern, and Mr. Miracle with heavyweights Batman and Martian Manhunter – as nominal straight-men – later supplemented by Captain Atom, Booster Gold, Dr. Light, and Rocket Red. According to Keith Giffen’s new introduction the initial roster was mandated from on high but there’s certainly no stiffness or character favouritism apparent in these early tales.

Introducing the charismatic manipulator Maxwell Lord, who used wealth and influence to recreate the super-team, the creators crafted a mystery that took an entire year to play out – so let’s hope a second volume is due soon. The team passed the time fighting terrorist bombers (#1; ‘Born Again’ inked by Terry Austin), displaced alien heroes determined to abolish nuclear weapons (#2-3; ‘Make War No More’ and ‘Meltdown’) and saw off old-fashioned super-creeps like the Royal Flush Gang (#4; ‘Winning Hand’).

‘Gray Life, Gray Dreams’ and ‘Massacre in Gray,’ guest-starring the Creeper, was a memorable supernatural threat in issues #5-6, and Lord’s scheme bore fruit in #7’s ‘Justice League… International’ as the team achieved the status of a UN agency, with rights, privileges and embassies in every corner of the World.

These wonderful yarns are full of sharp lines and genuinely gleeful situations, perfect for the Ghostbusters generation and still as appealing today. That the art is still great is no surprise and the action still engrossing is welcome, but to find that the jokes are still funny is a glorious relief. Indulge yourself and join that secret comics brotherhood who greet each other with the fateful mantra “Bwah-Hah- Hah!”

© 1987, 2008 DC Comics. All Rights Reserved.

Gothic and Lolita Bible, Vol 1

Gothic and Lolita Bible

By various (TokyoPop)
ISBN: 978-1-42780-347-1

I’m always happy to see new ways to cross the divide between comics – of any nationality – and the broader world so this odd but interesting (to wizened codger me, at least) new art book from those fine people at TokyoPop gets my nod.

For those of you who have no idea what “Gothic” and “Lolita” means in this context, allow me to enlighten you.

Young people–and especially Japanese folk–like to dress up. They call it “Cos Play”. That’s a recreational choice. This book is devoted to a stylisation that probably grew out of that but more directly devolves from music fans copying the way their favourite Visual Kei bands dressed. Visual Kei is a music genre where performers all play in a themed uniform or costume – like the Beatles in 1964 or the Hives last week. This mimicry has become an actual fashion movement in its own right.

The Gothic part is much like what you’re used to, a subculture concerned with alienation, which borrows equal parts from Elizabethan and Victorian/Edwardian clothing styles and vampire imagery ranging from the German Expressionists to Hammer films. There’s lots of black and some red and/or white. Many outsiders assume Goths are obsessed with death and nihilism, and just like when I was a punk in the late 1970’s (don’t visualise, just move on) assume the clothes are a uniform rather than a lifestyle choice. By most accounts Goths are concerned with issues of change, transformation, free expression, conscious eroticism and austere or “cold” beauty.

Lolita in this context means wearing outfits that have visual roots in Victorian and Edwardian children’s clothing or Rococo period fashion and accessories. In Japan Roriita Fasshon is a thriving subculture with many competing companies producing apparel and millions of young people designing their own personal outfits.

The basic kit includes knee length socks or stockings, flounced skirts and dresses, ornate headdresses, blouses and petticoats plus insanely high heel/platform shoes or boots… and very specific make-up. The emphasis is on innocence and idyllic childhood, so there’s often a teddy bear or toy in attendance.

Lolita subdivides into a number of branch styles such as Gothic, Elegant Gothic, Sweet (or amaloli: based on Rococo art styles and heavily influenced by Alice in Wonderland and shojo manga – I said there was a comic connection, didn’t I?), Country (more Dorothy in Oz than Alice in Looking Glass Land), Classic (which is intricate and Baroque influenced) and even Punk.

This oversized tome is filled with translated articles produced between 2004 to 2006 culled from Japanese magazines on the subject as well as original American contributions, hundreds of photos, poetry, fan art and designs, and a rather good complete original manga tale: Till Dawn is by Asumiko Nakamura and details the surreal yet poignant meeting of a Goth boy and a Lolita girl. This edition also includes a set of patterns for the home hobbyist to make their own Loli-Goth accessories.

Not, I suspect, everybody’s cup of tea but an intriguing project that might pull in a few fashion-conscious fans to our weird graphic playground. And all you comic he-men shouldn’t worry; I read the entire thing and felt absolutely no desire to put on a petticoat (what did I say about not visualising…?!)

© 2007 TokyoPop, by arrangement with Index Communications. All Rights Reserved.