Showing posts with label Dennis O'Neil. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dennis O'Neil. Show all posts

Friday, April 18, 2014

Pretty Bird: GREEN LANTERN #78

Not long after writer Denny O'Neill brought Black Canary to Earth 1 and made her part of the Justice League, he partnered Green Lantern with Green Arrow for a road trip across not just America's terrain but its social consciousness.  Oliver Queen had recently lost his fortune, turning from fat cat capitalist to bleeding heart liberal.  Hal Jordan had recently, um, discovered racism, turning from daredevil of the skies to... lame guy.  Their bromance kicked off in Green Lantern #76, wherein the book was unofficially retitled Green Lantern/Green Arrow.  By this time, O'Neill had also established a flirtatious but hesitant romance between Ollie and Black Canary in the pages of Justice League of America.


Green Lantern #78: "A Kind of Loving, A Way of Death" comes from the legendary team of writer Dennis O'Neill and artist Neal Adams.  It was published in July, 1970, right around the time Charles Manson was going to trial for the murders he and his "family" perpetrated in the '60s.  That's not an irrelevant historical fact, as we'll see in this story.

Other than one or two JLA covers,  Adams hadn't really drawn Black Canary until this issue, but the opening sequence cemented his place as one of the greatest Black Canary artists of all time.  "A Kind of Loving..." begins with Black Canary riding her motorcycle through the Pacific Northwest when she's stopped by a violent biker gang.


One of the bikers demands that Dinah surrender her bike, the custom bike that Superman made just for her.  When she refuses, the biker attacks.  Naturally, puts the guy on his ass.  His gang respond and angrily close in on her whilst calling her a frail, because, y'know, that's how women were referred to back in the day.

The leader, though, makes it clear that they're only going to beat and rob Dinah as a matter of pride.  Because she embarrassed one of them and they have a responsibility to stick together and show unity.  Even though their plan is to rob and possibly rape and murder Black Canary, it's just an unfortunate cost of doing business; this is how they demonstrate that they aren't victims.

Then Adams delivers one of the most recognizable pages in his storied career, as Black Canary systematically takes down the gang.


The first biker she put down, who goes by the name of Snake Eyes (though definitely not that Snake Eyes), crawls over to his motorcycle, enraged that his gang's reputation will be ruined because a woman kicked their butts.


The gang rides off with Canary's bike, leaving her on the side of the road.  As the sun goes down, a stranger comes around and picks up her unconscious body, carrying her away.

Two weeks later, Hal Jordan and Oliver Queen drive their pickup truck through an Indian Reservation near where Black Canary was attacked.  With Hal and Ollie is one of the immortal Guardians of Oa, though he has taken on the guise of an elderly human so that he can learn more about life on Earth.  The heroes stop for food and have talk with a young Native American who uses words like "paleface" and "redskins".  The dialogue is a little cringe-worthy in a modern context and makes it hard to root for Washington, D.C.'s football team without rolling your eyes a little.

Soon after the guys eat their beans, the familiar Demon biker gang barges into the restaurant.  They beat on the proprietor and threaten Hal and Ollie... which is when Hal speaks the Oath of the Green Lantern Corps and he and Ollie change into their costumed alternate identities.

Green Lantern and Green Arrow disarm the gang without breaking a sweat.  One of the bikers makes a run for it and jumps on a motorcycle.  He doesn't get far, though, as Green Arrow fires a net arrow that wraps up the punk and his bike, causing them to crash and roll over.  But as the heroes approach their captive prey, Ollie and Hal recognize the motorcycle the punk was riding.


After another awkward encounter with the Native American, Green Arrow and Green Lantern set out to search the surrounding area for Black Canary.  And conveniently, it seems, they find her right away just wandering around the mountainside.


I'm sure O'Neill and Adams had this dramatic effect in mind when Joshua introduces himself, but bereft of any other context it just seems a little weird.  I think you need to understand or at least be cognizant of the biblical context of the name Joshua to get the full force and effect of this encounter.  Knowing that Jesus Christ's real name translates into English as Joshua, combined with the character's somewhat ambiguous ethnicity, help emphasize the spiritual, almost supernatural power Joshua conveys.

Ollie cares little for Joshua or his followers, except for Dinah.


Black Canary has clearly been brainwashed, but for the moment, there's nothing the emerald-clad heroes can do about it.  Hal leads a reluctant Ollie away, but as they walk off, Dinah's memories begin to come back.


Joshua snaps Dinah out of her daydreams with a special gift.  Opening the present, she sees that Joshua has brought her a gun, which he claims will help them fulfill their mission.  She instinctually resists, not wanting to use a weapon such as this, but Joshua has a great and terrible power over her.  She looks into his amber-colored eyes and becomes transfixed, hypnotized, completely enthralled by Joshua's power.

Elsewhere, Green Arrow and Green Lantern argue about what to do with Black Canary.  Hal elects to leave her be.  She's a free woman; she can make her own life choices.  Ollie doesn't think she's so free, though; he suspects she's being manipulated by Joshua.  When Hal suggests that maybe Dinah simply doesn't share Ollie's feelings, the archer punches his friend and storms off into the woods.

Ollie hasn't gone far when a series of gunshots ring out through the wilderness.  He rushes in the direction of the sound where he finds Black Canary and the rest of Joshua's "enlightened" followers practicing with their firearms.  And then the leader makes his impassioned speech.


It's clear that Denny O'Neill had been following the news coverage of the Manson Family Murders and Charles Manson's trial, because Joshua is a obviously depicted as a cult leader bent on starting a race war.  But where Manson used drugs and other forms of psychological manipulation to control and direct his followers on his bloody agenda, O'Neill gives Joshua a more comic-booky ability to control people's minds.

Green Arrow fires off a signal flare arrow to bring reinforcements in the form of Green Lantern, but the light from the flare gives away Ollie's position and Joshua orders his family to open fire on the intruder.  Green Arrow dashes through the woods, but a bullet grazes his head, knocking him out.

Joshua's followers rush out of the woods to attack the Indian Reservation town nearby, but Green Lantern stand in their way.  Using the awesome power of his ring, he deflects their bullets, removes their guns, and leaves them trapped in a ditch, unable to cause any more damage or harm.  But he didn't capture everybody.  Joshua and Black Canary managed to escape and backtrack through the woods to Green Arrow's position.

Dinah still holds her gun.  Joshua makes her aim the weapon at Green Arrow and orders her to pull the trigger.


In a last, desperate act of resistance, Black Canary drops the gun, unwilling to shoot Green Arrow.  Enraged, Joshua picks up the revolver and takes aim, but Green Arrow smacks him with a projected fist.  Joshua falls to the ground, rolling over and accidentally discharging the gun.  The bullet hits his heart and kills him almost instantly.  For their part, none of the heroes seem to care that much.

A problem I've always had with this sequence is we don't know why Black Canary refuses to shoot.  Is it because she loved Green Arrow and couldn't murder him?  Or is it because she was resisting Joshua's control and she knew that killing an innocent was wrong?  Adams expertly shows the agony and struggle on her face, but O'Neill doesn't let us inside her mind.  What if it were Green Lantern on the other side of the barrel, or some random person from the town, would she still have dropped the gun?

Dinah asks Ollie to help her remember herself, who she was and who she is.


Well, that was a bit of a depressing twist at the end of an already dark story.  I mentioned how Joshua manipulated Black Canary and his other followers through the supernatural means of his crazy eyes, but Ollie robs them of that excuse.  He tells Dinah there must have been some part of her that was weak enough and hateful enough to respond to a psycho like Joshua.  That's nice, Ollie, way to go.  She'll definitely love you now.

"A Kind of Loving, A Way of Death" is from an era when comics publishers like DC and Marvel experimented with telling "important stories", stories about real world problems and events.  Green Lantern/Green Arrow was the primary vehicle for this exploration of hyper-reality in a fantasy medium, which is why it was so successful at the time and continues to be referenced as one of the most influential runs in comic books.

Unfortunately, these types of stories that take a focused look at part of society are instantly dated because society changes.  This type of story couldn't have been told in any other era, so while it is most certainly historic, it fails to be timeless.  But I don't want to dwell anymore on relations between "palefaces" and "redskins" or Charles Manson's cult.  I want to talk about Green Arrow and Black Canary.

The Emerald Archer and the Blonde Bombshell had exchanged long, meaningful glances up to this point, but this was probably the first serious confirmation that they were a couple, or at least that they were going to be.  O'Neill states in Dinah's memory montage that she fell in love with Ollie and took off on her motorcycle to join his road trip.  And given Green Arrow's willingness to deck his best friend for insinuating that Dinah's heart might belong to a creep like Joshua, it's pretty clear that Ollie loves her as much as she loves him.

Black Canary would spend a couple issues recovering from the psychological trauma of this issue, but from here on she was a fairly constant supporting character in Green Lantern/Green Arrow.  Their relationship was more-or-less official within the pages of Justice League of America, but this is where it began.

Between bringing her aboard the Justice League and then making her part of the Hard Travelin' Heroes and pairing her up with Green Arrow, Denny O'Neill is one of the most influential writers on Black Canary's history.  And Neal Adams draws a better looking Black Canary than maybe any other artist in the field.

Friday, March 21, 2014

Pretty Bird: JUSTICE LEAGUE OF AMERICA #75

After Black Canary immigrated from her home dimension to the Earth of the Justice League of America, writer Dennis O'Neill wasted no time partnering the Blonde Bombshell with the Emerald Archer.  Dinah's first adventure as a member of the League co-starred Green Arrow, and within a couple of months, she would start appearing in the pages of Green Lantern/Green Arrow, also written by O'Neill.


Justice League of America #75: "In Each Man There is a Demon!" is written by Dennis O'Neill with pencils by Dick Dillin and inks by Joe Giella.

The story begins with Green Arrow narrating this month's tale, and what jumps out right away is Green Arrow's new look.  Neal Adams had already redesigned Oliver Queen's duds in The Brave and the Bold a couple months earlier, but this is the first time he appears with the Robin Good costume and Van Dyke beard in the pages of Justice League of America.


Oliver Queen is having some troubles in the beginning of the story as a business rival creates fraudulent documents that all-but ruin Ollie's reputation and his company.  He goes for a walk through the streets of Star City to reflect on the fortune he's about to lose... when suddenly, he hears a cry for help.  Quickly donning his Green Arrow clothes, he fires off an "instant sunburn arrow" that blinds and burns two would be muggers.  The almost-victim thanks Green Arrow, calling him the most useful man in Star City.

But Ollie isn't sure about that.  Should the costumed crime fighter be "more useful" than the millionaire businessman?  Ollie's having a bit of an identity crisis now.


Hawkman argues that Black Canary is quite simply underpowered to go up against the threats faced by the Justice League.  Black Canary then begins thinking about the world she left, the world of the Justice Society of America and Earth 2... the world of her recently late husband, Larry Lance.



Green Arrow then describes how he sought help for his identity crisis by finding a Dr. Oyal who developed a kind of machine that could identify the true nature of a person.  When Ollie undergoes the procedure, however, something bizarre and unexpected happens.  A phantom of Green Arrow, a kind of glowing green shade leaves his body like a ghost and attacks Dr. Oyal.  It claims to be the warrior spirit from within Oliver Queen.

Meanwhile, Superman and the Atom run tests on Dinah Lance where they make a shocking retcon discovery about her physiology.


Batman speculates that Black Canary's new sonic powers may be the result of some residual radiation from their battle with Aquarius last issue.  She was close enough to the energy ball that killed Larry that her cells may have been irradiated enough not to harm her but to create a meta-human power that right now she has no control over.

At that point, the shade of Green Arrow busts in on their meeting.  The League tries to capture it, but when they touch the thing, it draws out the aggressive inner nature of all of them.


Well, not all of them.  Superman, it appears, has no dark half.  After the shades trash the League's headquarters and take off to cause more mischief, Superman has to conceive a plot to get the team's confidence and fighting spirit back.


Superman goes to battle against his mysterious shadow self and after a fierce combat, Superman wins, proving to his friends and teammates that they can in fact do battle with themselves...and win.


When they leave, Superman reveals to us that the phantom he fought was just one of his robots painted green.

Each of the League members goes off to face their evil self individually, and each wins.  First Hawkman defeats his phantom, then Batman his, then the Atom his.  Then Black Canary...


She leaps off the bike and tackles her shade, putting the dark Canary down with a sleeper hold.

Then it's Green Arrow's turn to fight his shade, but when the time comes, he chickens out.  His identity crisis has become a full-blown crisis of confidence.  However, as he's walking away, he comes across a kindly old couple that give him a nice pep talk.  So he goes out looking for his shade again, and when he finds him, they draw down.


Ollie is wounded, but when his arrow strikes the shade, all five of the phantom Leaguers are sucked back inside the heroes, ending the problem.


For Black Canary's first story as a Justice Leaguer, this issue does a lot to establish her as a visible and credible addition to the team.  First there is the creation of a new power set: her sonic scream, although at this point she has no control over the power and it doesn't really emanate from her mouth.  It will take some time for Dinah to master this power and direct it as her "Canary Cry".

For now, the power seems almost a burden as much as a gift.  O'Neill is merely seeding this super power in Black Canary in case she'll need it in later adventures when her Judo isn't enough.  But in this story, it is.  She uses her martial arts ability to fight her personal demon and succeeds, a great testimony to her abilities and her value to the Justice League.

Black Canary also gets her own mode of transportation.  The motorcycle may not be as audacious as the Batmobile, but it's as lithe and stylish as herself, and in time it will be her signature vehicle.  And what's more, the motorcycle was custom made for her by Superman.  How cool is that?!!

The third statement made about Black Canary in this issue is her unquestioned connection to Green Arrow.  There's nothing specifically romantic or overly flirtatious about their dialogue in this issue, but Dillin sure draws them to look familiar and comfortable with each other.  It won't be long before he has taken the place of her husband (that he sorta kinda killed).

Oh, the other cool thing about this story--Superman doesn't have an evil counterpart!  There is no bastard version of Superman.  He's that good!  Remember when Superman was good?

Tuesday, January 14, 2014

Adventurous Woman: ADVENTURE COMICS #419

Continuing from yesterday's entry, the second part of "The Canary and the Cat" by Dennis O'Neill and Alex Toth originally published in Adventure Comics #419 in May 1972.


Once again, I haven't read this entire issue.  Black Canary's strip was published in the Black Canary Archives hardcover collection.  As such, I haven't read the Supergirl, Zatanna or other stories in this issue.  Maybe Anj from the Supergirl blog at Comic Box Commentary has read them.

If you didn't read the first part of the story, go back and check it out.  In case you browser is acting up or there's something wrong with your ability to click a link or homepage icon, I'll give you the short rundown.  A restless and unemployed Dinah finds work teaching Judo to the radical Women's Resistance League.  But not long after teaching them how to fight, they ambush her and she realizes their leader has some nefarious plan, the first part of which involves killing the Canary!

Now, the complete second part of O'Neill and Toth's story!









Oh man, even a glimpse of Toth's Catwoman is breathtaking!

Monday, January 13, 2014

Adventurous Woman: ADVENTURE COMICS #418

Throughout the '70s and a good chunk of the '80s, Black Canary appeared in backup stories of her own or with Green Arrow in the pages of World's Finest Comics, Detective Comics, and in a few notable cases, Adventure Comics.


In April 1972, Dinah appeared in Adventure Comics #418 in a story written by Dennis O'Neill and drawn by Alex Toth.  The story is reprinted in the Black Canary Archives hardcover collection.  I don't have the actual print comic, which sucks because I would love to read the Supergirl and Doctor Mid-Nite stories included.  Maybe Anj from Comic Box Commentary is familiar with the issue.

The story was untitled when first published in Adventure, but credited as "The Canary and the Cat" in the Archives collection.  Here now, the first part of O'Neill and Toth's story.  I've included the whole thing because, well, because I can't deprive anyone of Toth's luscious depiction of the character.









Come back tomorrow for part 2!

Friday, October 5, 2012

Black Canary sketch by Neal Adams

I finally got around to reading Dennis O'Neil and Neal Adams' Green Lantern/Green Arrow series in the recently reprinted trade paperback.  Among the many, many highlights of this now legendary run is seeing Neal Adams' gorgeous treatment of Black Canary.

There aren't a lot of artists who make her look tougher or sexier than Neal Adams.