Wolverine by Claremont & Miller Deluxe Edition & Wolverine by Claremont & Miller


By Chris Claremont & Frank Miller, with Joe Rubenstein, Paul Smith, Bob Wiacek & various (MARVEL)
ISBN: 978-0-7851-8383-9 (HB/Digital edition)

Wolverine is all things to most people and in his long life has worn many hats: Comrade, Ally, Avenger, Teacher, Protector, Punisher. He first saw print in a tantalising teaser-glimpse at the end of The Incredible Hulk #180 (cover-dated October 1974 – So Happy 50th, Eyy?). That devolved into a full-on scrap with the Green Goliath – and accursed cannibal critter Wendigo – in the next issue. Canada’s super-agent was just one more throwaway foe for Marvel’s mightiest monster-star and subsequently vanished until All-New, All Different X-Men launched.

The semi-feral mutant with fearsome claws and killer attitude rode – or perhaps fuelled – the meteoric rise of those rebooted outcast heroes. He inevitably won a miniseries try-out and his own series: two in fact, in fortnightly anthology Marvel Comics Presents and an eponymous monthly book (of which more later and elsewhere).

In guest shots across the MU – plus cartoons and movies – he carved out a unique slice of superstar status and hasn’t looked back since. Over those years many untold tales of the aged agent (eventually revealed to have been born in the 19th century) explored his erased exploits in ever-increasing intensity and detail. Gradually, many secret origins and revelatory disclosures regarding his extended, self-obscured life slowly seeped out. Afflicted with periodic bouts of amnesia, mind-wiped ad nauseum by sinister foes or well-meaning associates, the lost boy clocked up a lot of adventurous living – but didn’t remember much of it. This permanently unploughed field conveniently resulted in a crop of dramatically mysterious, undisclosed back-histories. Over the course of his X-Men outings, many clues to his early years manifested such as an inexplicable familiarity with Japanese culture and history. This was first revealed after The X-Men save the eastern nation from diabolical maniac Moses Magnum and resulted in an on-going but distanced romantic dalliance with a Japanese princess…

Most fans and amateur historians accept the Frank Miller/Klaus Janson Daredevil stories that introduced Elektra and stormed fan consciousness for fuelling the comic world’s obsession with ninjas and the Japanese underworld in the 1980’s & 1990’s. These themes dominated the funnybook landscape of the era – and spawned the seemingly unstoppable Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles phenomenon – but a lot of that initial traction actually came from one of Marvel’s earliest miniseries and subsequent graphic novel collections…

Wolverine by Claremont & Miller is an oft-republished landmark originally comprising just Wolverine #1-4 (cover-dated September – December 1982), but with most later editions also including the conclusion/sequel from Uncanny X-Men #172-173 as released in August and September 1983.

Big on experimental layouts, dramatic imagery and grittily iconic combat scenes revealing artist Miller’s growing fascination with Koike & Kojima’s seinen manga epic Lone Wolf and Cub, the tale is a simple fable of unrequited love and consequences of aspiring above one’s station in life…

Inked by Joe Rubinstein and lettered by Tom Orzechowski, ‘I’m Wolverine’ reveals that Mariko – the princess Logan dares to love and who loves him in return – is daughter of Shingen Harada, lord of Clan Yashida. Missing for years, the long-lost patriarch has returned but is not the honourable father figure Mariko dreams of. Austere, autocratic, ambitious and deeply bigoted, he is also supreme overlord of Japan’s most powerful Yakuza organisation…

Unaware of all this, the hero travels to Japan to win his lady only to find the dutiful daughter has allowed herself to be married off to a crime boss. Descended from an unbroken line including the Imperial family, Mariko is semi-divine, whilst Logan is a base, uncultured gaijin – and arguably not even human. Nevertheless, he makes his move…

When Wolverine invades the Yashida citadel he finds his beloved compliantly abused by both father and new husband, but his righteous response is forestalled by Mariko before he is captured by Shingen’s forces and tricked into a duel rigged to make him appear a wild, cheating, honourless beast…

Utterly outsmarted, shamed and despondent, he is cast aside and goes on a monumental bender ‘Debts and Obligations’, accompanied by mercenary assassin Yukio who literally drags him out of the gutter. She is wild and ferocious but her obvious attraction to the mutant does not get in way of her latest commission, one that further embroils Wolverine in war between crime lords and constant clashes with ninja cult The Hand

Shingen’s complex campaign to prove Logan is nothing but a trained beast with ridiculous pretensions is simply a sidebar to his scheme to become Lord of everything and he uses The Hand and Yukio to kill his rivals and drive a monumental wedge between Logan and Mariko. The mutant’s carefully orchestrated fall from grace is only halted by the killing of his old Japanese Secret Service associate Asano Kimura: another casualty of the clandestine figure seizing control of the underworld. His ‘Loss’ is the catalyst Logan needs to clear his head and soul before finally going after the debased aristocrat at the root of his troubles. Thus – through a far fairer rematch – Logan reclaims his ‘Honor’ as well as his true love’s heart and respect…

Modern editions then follow-up with a sleekly impressive turn from Claremont and illustrators Paul Smith & Bob Wiacek originally seen in Uncanny X-Men #172-173. ‘Scarlet in Glory’ sees Logan still in Japan, preparing for his impending wedding to Mariko. When his teammates jet in for the nuptials they are all poisoned, leaving Logan and new member Rogue – whom he deeply distrusts – to seek an antidote. Meanwhile, staid maternal Storm is transformed from placid nature goddess to grim-&-gritty bad-ass punk wild child by mercenary maniac and obsessive Logan-lover Yukio, even as the last X-Men race a ticking toxic clock to a literal deadline…

The pressure results in sheer carnage as Logan goes berserk. With the desperate-to-please probationer Rogue trailing his bloody wake Wolverine carves a shocking path to Yakuza mercenary Silver Samurai (current challenger to Mariko’s rule of Clan Yashida) and mass-murdering mastermind Viper in ‘To Have and Have Not’

Although the bold champions are eventually triumphant, the victory comes at great cost. Logan returns to America alone and unwed after Mariko inexplicably calls off the nuptials…
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