Monday, January 24, 2022
Action Comics #1038 (February, 2022)
The Martian Manhunter told Mrs. Heath to run from this rookie Human Flame, not the original and "first super-villain I ever fought." He made short work of the suit's flame jets with laser vision, as even though this Flame had been told of the Martian vulnerability to fire, he didn't exactly wilt at the sight of birthday candles. The Alien Atlas carried the imposter "ten thousand feet" in the air, then dropped him as an intimidation factor to get the facts. Apparently, telepathy wasn't an option anymore? He'd only met his benefactors once in person, to get the suit. It was all set up on an online forum. They wore white face masks, and had offered him half a million dollars to kill the Manhunter. As least he could still verify the store with his mental powers, seeing only those familiar featureless masks.
Metropolis Police Department Lieutenant Certa was soon knocking on the door of the parent of another teen taken in by the site. He was met at the door by his protesting (and all-too-similar looking) partner, Ostrander, who still believed that there were times when he wasn't on-duty. Sarah Garber's dad didn't know anything about Katharsis Aureus, respect her boundaries. Was he wrong for that?
Back to the Metropolis Museum. "Elements of my past, previously unrelated, now parts of the same puzzle." Shredded bits of white cloth on an air vent to small for a "normal-sized person" to access. In an alley outside, a young girl brown-haired girl in a orange hoodie claimed she'd seen kids perform the break-in. "I kinda patrol this area... Name's Zoey, but most people call me Zook. And you're Martian Manhunter. Big fan."
"A Face in the Crowd: Part Two" was by Shawn Aldridge and Adriana Melo. This is the part where the inevitable tweaks begin. Not my Zook, but better than a flower, at least. Getting used to the quirks of the art, and still appreciating that Pugh vibe. Good fit for the material. I'm calling Ostrander as the bad guy, but that may just be my bias when it comes to the Sleuth from Outer Space.
Thursday, December 9, 2021
Action Comics #1037 (January, 2022)
In Metropolis, a variety of people of different races, ages, and genders all end up at Middletown Apartments, unit 225. They are all explorations of J'Onn J'Onzz, who wonders about whether the harder choice is just being himself, "But what the hell does that even mean?" As the Martian Manhunter, he feeds his housecat Double Stuff, reflecting on his own time in that role (along with Isobel de la Rosa, also deriving from the 1998 series, plus Bloodwynd.) "An endless list of endless aliases. Of endless lives. Yet none my own. I'm more vagabond than manhunter." Next he pours himself a bowl of Chocos cereal, and plops on the couch to watch a news program on the television. He reflects upon his disconnectedness from his adoptive world, still moored to lost Mars, and wonders if it's time to finally settle in.
Under the identity of Certa, essentially still John Jones, he's a plainclothes officer with the Metropolis police. Another brown haired white man named Peters visits his desk to discuss an ongoing investigation. Something to do with unconnected young people from all walks of life being linked to some crime, presumably the museum theft from the TV. A break in the case-- they visited an internet sub-forum called "Katharsis Aureus."
It's the Martian Manhunter who visits the Metropolis Museum. Admiring the painting "Lost" by Kyle Rayner that seems perhaps inspired by J'Onn himself, he's met by a stylish Black woman named Gwendolyn Heath. The Museum Director, she reports that the only items missing were pieces of an artifact they had been storing. The Sleuth from Outer Space perks up on learning that the "worthless" pieces were from "a large bust known as the Idol Head of Diabolu," which J'Onn confesses to having broken himself.
The discussion is interrupted by a brutish man in a sealed protective uniform featuring a series of bilateral small flaming jets running vertically up the chest. "Enough talk, nerds. I didn't come here to learn... I came here to burn! It's me, ya boy, HUMAN FLAME."
"A Face in the Crowd" was by Shawn Aldridge and Adriana Melo. I was passingly familiar with the Brazilian artist, who did work on two runs of Birds of Prey with Gail Simone, recalling Ed Benes and Terry Dodson. I'm a bigger fan of Steve Pugh, who she seems to be taking more cues from these days. I must confess to being completely unfamiliar with the writer, whose credits in the industry seem mostly in the lettering department. There was a four-parter in the Dark Horse Presents run that I've had sitting unread in a box since 2015, so that's on me, as well as the mini-series Hack/Slash vs. Vampirella and The Dark and Bloody. According to the podcast playing in the background, he's from Kentucky. For what it's worth, I tried to buy a physical copy of this issue from one of the biggest Houston comic shops, but they only had copies of previous issues left on the shelf. I can't speak to the Mongul lead story, as I've bought almost no new DC content this year, but am waiting for the trade of this arc.
Associating the Martian Marvel with the Man of Tomorrow goes back a long ways, but I still tend to chafe at stuff like basing the character in Superman's city. That said, the scripter goes further out of his way than anyone I've ever read to accommodate me specifically as an entitled fanboy. I considered various ways of highlighting all the fan service in the synopsis, but decided it would look like a heavily redacted transcript. One of the complaints I've heard about movies I've chosen not to see like Ghostbusters: Afterlife and The Rise of Skywalker is that filmmakers appeased hardcore audiences by just cobbling together images of all those things they like, so that they can point and say "look at that thing I like on the screen, making me happy by association with the familiar." I usually poo-poo such a thing, but I'm a whipped
I wouldn't have pegged J'Onn as someone who keeps pets, as I myself don't, but then he also had children, so maybe that's me projecting. He's definitely more of a cat person (same,) and I just spent too much time looking at pictures online to hazard a guess at its breed being Ragdoll (???) So I suppose I'm into it. It's fun, something sorely lacking in Manhunter comics, and I hope he gets to do some straight comedy in this serial (a stated goal in the podcast.)
Other things I'm not into? I didn't make it halfway into the last maxi-series, a prequel that featured a costume much closer to his Silver Age look. I don't know if that was used to pivot back to this '80s JLI look in the current continuity, which I'm sure many fans have missed since Infinite Crisis. Meanwhile, I always had an issue with the old costume, and wholeheartedly embraced the New 52 design, which I think would better fit Melo's style besides. The references to some momentous change are lost on me, and mentioning it without any context is vexing. I doubt every issue is somebody's first anymore, but it's my first in a long time, and I miss the brief recaps of comics in my youth. "Certa" is way too on the nose for me, and we don't need a white John Jones in the comics when he's now invariably portrayed by African-American performers in other media.
Yeah, that's about all I've got. It's been decades of my banging the drum for a representation that respects and builds upon the Alien Atlas' lore. This story intentionally draws from as many well loved eras of the character as could be reasonably expected within the space and then some, with direct references to Silver Age stories entirely erased for decades. I'm super-duper gun-shy about having any expectations going forward, but for at least this brief shining moment, I'm Montgomery Brewster and "This is the room I could die in."
Wednesday, May 8, 2019
Podcast- JLMay 2019: Countdown To Blackest Night (2007-2009)
Episode #36
Look for us on iTunes, ShoutEngine or directly download an art-tagged MP3 from the Internet Archive
JLMay 2019-- Blackest Night 10th Anniversary Podcast Crossover EventJLMay 2019
Frank always gets extra with #JLMay, so this first of several tie-in episodes covers three years worth of often extraneous Martian Manhunter material leading to his murder and the aftermath. Series referenced include Infinite Crisis, Amazons Attack, Checkmate, Countdown, Green Arrow/Black Canary Wedding Special, Justice League of America Wedding Special, The Sinestro Corps War, Teen Titans, Black Adam: The Dark Age, Salvation Run, Catwoman, Final Crisis: Requiem, Faces of Evil: Prometheus, Justice League: Cry for Justice, & Blackest Night! From here follow JLMay 2016 to these fantastic podcasts! Each will cover a different issue of SILVER AGE and each will come out in May! And don’t forget to use the hashtag #JLMay2019 when discussing on social media!
- JLMAY Blackest Night Anniversary Special [The Podcast of Oa Episode 138]
- Blackest Night #1 (2009) [Chris & Reggie’s Cosmic Treadmill ep. 139]
- Blackest Night #2 and Green Lantern (vol.4) #44 [Idol Head of Diabolu]
- Blackest Night #3 [The Fire & Water Podcast]
- Blackest Night #4 [Head Speaks]
- Blackest Night #5 [Coffee & Comics Podcast]
- Blackest Night #6 [Longbox Crusade]
- Blackest Night #7 and #8, and Green Lantern (vol.4) #52 [The LanternCast]
- Doom Patrol (vol. 5) #4 and #5 [Waiting for Doom]
- Suicide Squad #67, and Secret Six #17-#18 [Task Force X]
- Justice League of America (vol.2) #38-#40 [Justice’s First Dawn]
- Adventure Comics (vol.2) #4-#7, and Untold Tales of the Blackest Night #1 [Coffee & Comics Podcast]
- Starman (vol.2) #81 [Starman/Manhunter Adventure Hour]
- Booster Gold (vol.2) #26-#27 [Doctor DC Podcast]
- Blackest Night: JSA miniseries, issues #1-#3 [Birds of Prey Podcast]
- Silver Age #1 (July, 2000)
- Silver Age: Justice League of America #1 (July, 2000)
- Silver Age: Dial H for Hero #1 (July, 2000)
JLMay 2016
- JLA: Day Minus-One (1977)
- JLA: Day Zero (1994)
- JLA: Day One (1961)
- Secret Origins Podcast: Justice League of America
- JLA: Year One #10
We enjoy dialogue on the red planet, so here are our non-telepathic contact options:
- Tweet host Diabolu Frank directly, or probe @rolledspine as a group.
- Email Diabolu
- If the main Idol-Head of Diabolu blog isn't your thing, try the umbrella Rolled Spine Podcasts.
Sunday, May 5, 2019
Final Crisis: Requiem #1 (September, 2008)
Thursday, September 20, 2018
2014 The Human Flame Comicpalooza Jam Sketch Detail by Sam Lotfi
I've officially gotten too many commissions when I've got unfinished jams dating back over four years that I can only place and date by cross-referencing other portions of the same jam. Here we revisit Sam Lotfi, who has produced almost every one of his published comic books across his career since I spotlighted his take on TOR, the Robot Criminal of Mars, even though that was only a year earlier than this one. He's currently drawing Cyborg for Marv Wolfman at DC, by the way. Also, it's been a while since we talked Michael Miller hereabouts, and longer still since showing my other commission. I suck, I know, but better really late than never, right? Especially given how "never" my output on this blog was looking for a while there. Speaking of which, I still haven't started working on his profile page, a decade after Final Crisis.
Sam Lotfi
Tuesday, May 5, 2015
Podcast: The Top 10 Most Important Martian Manhunter Villains
Episode #10
Look for us on iTunes, ShoutEngine or directly download an art-tagged MP3 from the Internet Archive
As part of the sixth seasonal Super Blog Team-Up's theme of top ten lists, Frank offers an audio synopsis of the series of essays The Ten Most Important Martian Manhunter Adversaries from 2010, which has held up pretty well these past four years since nothing much ever happens to the Alien Atlas, even during a line wide reboot. The "new kid" on this particular block debuted in 1998, and how many foes of the New 52 Manhunter can you name, anyway?
- DC Bloodlines Podcast #1: The Top 10 Bloodlines Characters
- Between The Pages: Top 10 Wackiest DC Comics Covers
- The SuperHero Satellite: Top 10 DC Comics Titles That Ended Before Their Time
- Longbox Graveyard: Top 10 Super-Dogs
- Legion Of Super-Bloggers: Legion Who's Who Top Ten!
- The Marvel Superheroes Podcast: Top 10 Avengers (An Age of Ultron Tie-In)
- The Unspoken Decade: Top 10 Avengers Moments
- In My Not So Humble Opinion: Top 10 Avengers Sketches
- Chasing Amazing: Top 10 Favorite Moments Of The "Chase"
- Bronze Age Babies: The Top 10 Bronze Age Characters
- Too Dangerous For A Girl!: Ten Best Super-Heroic Hairstyles
- Mystery V-Log: Top 10 Avengers Covers
- Flodo’s Page: Top 10 Green Lantern Ring-Slings ...That Don’t Appear In Modern Continuity
- Vic Sage Via The Retroist: Top Ten Comic Character Deaths
- I’m The Gun: The 10 Best All-Star Squadron Covers!
- Mystery V-Log: Top 10 Avengers Covers
- Fantastiverse: Top 10 Avengers Greatest Super Battles
- #SuperBlogTeamUp
- Tweet host Diabolu Frank directly, or probe @rolledspine as a group.
- Email Diabolu
- If the main Idol-Head of Diabolu blog isn't your thing, try the umbrella Rolled Spine Podcasts.
Thursday, July 29, 2010
The Human Flame: Sixth Most Important Martian Manhunter Adversary
The Scale of Evil Category Criteria Rank
13) Killers with inadequate, rage-filled personalities who "snapped." {Prior Definition}
Why The Human Flame has been selected for 6th Place:
- The Human Flame is conceptually and ideologically opposed to the Martian Manhunter.
- The Human Flame was created to battle the Martian Manhunter.
- The Human Flame was the first super-villain to openly battle the Martian Manhunter.
- The Human Flame disproves the equation “fire=defeat.”
- The Human Flame is the first classic Martian Manhunter villain anyone bothered to remember.
- The Human Flame had his own mini-series..
- The Human Flame helped “kill” Martian Manhunter.
- The Human Flame is the best known Martian Manhunter villain.
- The Human Flame is the model for the unworthy villain elevation.
The Counter Argument:
- The Human Flame f’n blows. Seriously, he’s a waste of flesh, blood and hair.
- He makes our hero look bad by association, on account of the blowing.
- He has yet to develop a strong visual. The Human Flame suit is interchangeable with a dozen other arson-based crooks, his cybernetic upgrade was a ‘90s flashback, and the Inhuman Flame is the type of generic molten monster that was omnipresent in the Silver Age. When you’re defined by unfortunate facial hair, serious thought needs to go into your rehabilitation.
- He’s so derivative, he’s practically a mash-up. Inventor. Flame powers. Unmotivated hostility. Greedy. You could build the Human Flame out of random diced throws with a role-playing character generator.
- He’s the worst Silver Age Martian Manhunter super-villain. Tell me you wouldn’t rather read about Mr. Moth or the Human Squirrel.
Archetypal super-heroes like Captain Marvel and Superman are like George W. Bush—plain spoken, outwardly virtuous, and direct in action. That makes Dr. Sivana and Lex Luthor members of the liberal academic elite in their pursuit of abhorrent social change and detachment from the common man. Martian Manhunter flips this dynamic, as he’s a dark-skinned alien scientist/philosopher who achieves his goals not through force, though he has abundant access to such, but instead through diplomacy and almost inscrutably circuitous avenues.
The Human Flame then is a devoutly blue collar tea bagger high-fiving the guys at the NRA booth who drew a Hitler mustache on Barack Obama. Mike Miller built a crime suit to enable simple smash and grab tactics while warding off the local constabulary and super-hero with the seemingly foolproof means of fire and electrical projection. If Batman is the hero any of us could be with enough training and discipline, the Human Flame is the super-villain waiting for any of us in the garage after a trip through Radio Shack and Home Depot. The Human Flame started out as a regular enough Joe as far as crooks ago, but then this un-American super-creep came into power. It sent Mike Miller on a mission to take Martian Manhunter down through whatever sordid means or questionable alliance was required, and damn any who stand in his way as a cowardly traitor! This of course leaves Miller wide open to manipulation and demonization by forces far beyond his comprehension, but it also allows him access to power unattainable through the standard channels that keep him struggling. Besides, it isn’t murder if it’s a Martian, right?
The Human Flame is also a walking metacommentary criticizing J’Onn J’Onzz. Both characters debuted in Detective Comics, never really broke through, disappeared for many years, and returned in a big way with the expectation that they would impress fans. Yet, Mike Miller is a rather shoddy, low rent adversary, casting a jaundiced light on the Martian Manhunter’s checkered history and dubious rogues gallery. If the Human Flame is the great white hope, what kind of sap must the Sleuth from Outer Space be?
There are, of course other interpretations...
Analogies:
- The Human Flame is to the Martian Manhunter as Flag Smasher is to Captain America.
- The Human Flame is to the Martian Manhunter as Doctor Octopus is to Spider-Man.
- The Human Flame is to the Martian Manhunter as Javelin is to Green Lantern as Captain Boomerang is to the Flash.
Who isn't ranked because of The Human Flame:
- Fernus the Burning Martian: Fernus wasn’t about confronting J’Onn J’Onzz with his weakness, but about an evil Martian battling the JLA without any weakness, plus winnowing the number of White Martians lying around and giving Plastic Man a spotlight moment.
- The Pyre: The post child for villains made up specifically to fight the Martian Manhunter, the Pyre is something that burns, is fated to battle J’Onn J’Onzz in some future time, and has yet to make more than a cameo appearance over a decade after its creation.
- Lobo: Even in his earliest appearance, but especially during Run!, the Human Flame was a barely directed berserker causing nothing but misery in his foul-mouthed and generally offensive wake. Lobo plays off Martian Manhunter well, but not often enough to qualify.
The Human Flame is no one to crow about, but he’s relatively well known in modern comics circles and has impacted the course of J’Onn J’Onzz’s life in noteworthy fashion.
Saturday, May 29, 2010
The Greatest Martian Manhunter (Related) Covers of All Time!
The Top 0 Mr. V/Vulture/Marco Xavier Cover(s)
...
The Top 3 Human Flame Covers
3) Final Crisis Aftermath: Run! #6 (December, 2009)
2) Justice League of America #21 (July, 2008)
1) Final Crisis Aftermath: Run! #1 (July, 2009)
The Top 0 Professor Erdel Cover(s)
...
The Top 3 Scorch Covers
3) Action Comics #774 (February, 2001)
2) Adventures of Superman #582 (September, 2000)
1) JLA #84 (October, 2003)
The Top 0 Diabolu Cover(s)
...
The Top 3 White Martian Covers
3) Son of Vulcan #5 (December, 2005)
2) Son of Vulcan #6 (January, 2006)
1) JLA #57 (October, 2001)
The Top 0 Monty Moran Cover(s)
...
The Top 2 Professor Arnold Hugo Cover(s)
2) DC Super Friends #24 (April, 2010)
1) Detective Comics #306 (August, 1962)
The Top 0 Captain Harding Cover(s)
The Top 1 Diane Meade Cover(s)
JLA: Classified #49 (February, 2008)
She doesn't actually appear inside.
The Top 2 Glenn Gammeron Cover(s)
2) Justice League Task Force #29 (November, 1995)
2) Justice League Task Force #31 (January, 1996)
The Top 1 Vulkor, the Capsule Master Cover(s)
The Brave and The Bold #50 (November, 1963)
The Top 1 Doctor Trap Cover(s)
Chase #6 (July, 1998)
The Top 1 The Marshal Cover(s)
Justice League of America #230 (September, 1984)
The Top 1 Bette Noir Cover(s)
Martian Manhunter #3 (February, 1999)
The Top 1 Commander Blanx Cover(s)
Justice League of America #144 (July, 1977)
Click To Enlarge
Tuesday, May 18, 2010
Creators of Mars: Joe Certa
Little is known about the life of Joe Certa, co-creator and longest serving artist of the Martian Manhunter. Certa was born in 1919, educated through the Art Students League, and entered the field in 1946 through Funnies Inc. As part of the comic strip packaging service, Certa's first published work was on titles for Lev Gleason, including the infamous Crime Does Not Pay and Crime and Punishment. For Novelty Press, Certa worked on the strips Bull's-Eye Bill, Target and the Targeteers, The Cadet and Dick Cole, The Wonder Boy. For other publishers, Certa produced work on True Comics, Picture News and more.
The comic book series for which Certa initially made his name were Captain Marvel Jr. (1947-1953,) Joe Palooka (1950-1959,) and The Durango Kid (1950-1952.) Certa also dealt with the newspaper syndicates on Straight Arrow and Curly Kayoe. Most significantly, after the suicide of series originator Ham Fisher, Certa was called up from the Joe Palooka comic book to contribute to the newspaper strip from 1956-59.
Certa began his long association with National/DC in 1949 on The Adventures of Alan Ladd, continuing with Captain Compass, Casebook Mystery, Gang Busters, Robotman, and The Phantom Stranger. For Harvey Comics, Certa regularly contributed to War, First Romance and pre-code horror titles like Black Cat Mystery. Certa produced for the company that would become Marvel Comics throughout the 1950s, mostly on their western and war strips.
In 1955, Joe Certa began his thirteen year run on DC's Manhunter from Mars, co-creating John Jones/J'onn J'onzz and his entire supporting cast, including Zook, Diane Meade, and Captain Harding. With the exception of Professor Hugo, Certa co-created every noteworthy Martian Manhunter villain of the Silver Age, including Mr. V, Marco Xavier, Vulture and the Diabolu Idol-Head.
The lion's share of Certa's art in the 1960s was produced for Western Publishing, for whom he worked exclusively after the Manhunter from Mars ended in 1968. Most of Certa's assignments were in horror titles and licensed properties like Boris Karloff Tales of Mystery, Dark Shadows, The Twilight Zone and Ripley's Believe It or Not!
Joe Certa retired in 1979 after thirty-three years in the industry, and passed away in 1986.
Reference
Lambiek.net
Jerry Bails' Who's Who of American Comic Books 1928-1999
Comicvine
Saturday, January 2, 2010
New Year's Evil
Happy New Year, everybody! Hopefully, you'll all be voting in this month's survey for which Martian Manhunter villains you would like to read about at the Idol-Head of Diabolu. I've neglected the popular Vile Menagerie, the "rogues gallery" page dating back to my late 90s Manhunter site, for far too long. I'll be sure to knock out several new biography pages, as well as filling in gaps in the story synopses for key villains. This is the month we'll be bringing on the bad guys!
As for the Vile Menagerie itself, the following art from Martian Manhunter #1,000,000 by Tom Mandrake has graced the main page online since about 1999:
Click To Enlarge
Every single one of these creeps was created by Mandrake and writer John Ostrander for the only Martian Manhunter ongoing series to ever see print. At the top left is Malefic, a creation I dislike greatly, but undeniably one of the most recognizable Manhunter villains of the last decade. I've avoided dealing with Malefic for almost 2 1/2 years worth of daily Idol-Head posts, but I feel I must bow to the pressure of expectation and finally give the guy his due here.
Next is "The Headman," which I guess someone realized was a name that conjured rather sordid imagery, so he was redubbed The Headmaster in his single full length appearance. Not a bad concept actually, and to my mind a fair sight better than Malefic, but he's so far been consigned to the scrapheap of history.
At bottom right is Bette Noir, one of the most prolific Manhunter from Mars femme fatales. She appeared in an early issue of the series, again at its end, and even wrangled a guest appearance elsewhere. I like her well enough, and its about time I gave Bette some attention here.
At center/left is The Pyre, who as I noted in their spurious Vile Menagerie entry, have yet to be paid off as anything more than an foreshadowing image.
Point being, a decade on, few of these characters came of much. They never represented the full breadth of the Vile Menagerie's history, and the image was long overdue to be retired. The Vile Menagerie returned to the internet after roughly a five year absence on Wednesday, September 5, 2007, the fifth day of this blog's existence. By Friday, July 18, 2008, I was ready to replace it with this:
As soon as I saw this Carlos Pacheco/Jesus Merino splash page from Justice League of America #21, I knew I wanted to repurpose it for the ongoing link button to the Vile Menagerie. However, I could never quite get it to work right in that capacity, and felt guilty about dumping the old Mandrake image. It has instead sat mothballed as the introductory post of a VM spotlight week, until today, when it finally assumed its destined position on the VM main page.
At top left is a Sal Velluto Despero image, him being probably my favorite artist of this contender for my favorite Martian Manhunter villain. I attempted the first ever Despero themed month recently, after two years of mere week spotlights and sporadic synopses. I'm so enamored of the three-eyed tyrant and so disappointed by my output to date, you can expect more of him this month, and an annual "December of Despero" event besides. Oh, Despero replaced Lex Luthor in the original image, a guy Manhunter has had little to do with outside the Justice League animated series.
The tiny figures at the center are Libra and the Human Flame. Libra was created as a JLofA villain in the 70s, when J'onn J'onzz was far from Earth and being published with any regularity. Libra was pretty much left alone until Grant Morrison dug him up for Final Crisis, where he orchestrated the murder of Martian Manhunter. It was purely business though, so Libra's inclusion in the Vile Menagerie remains a proposal in limbo.
The Human Flame was a lame bad guy from one random Silver Age Manhunter from Mars back-up story. Presumably, Morrison tossed through Showcase Presents: Martian Manhunter Volume One, assumed the Human Flame was the closest J'onn J'onzz had to a proper archfiend, and had him initiate the conspiracy to kill Manhunter. I resent the character, as his prominent revival only served to reinforce the presumption that there isn't a decent Martian Manhunter Rogues Gallery, an assumption I specifically created the Vile Menagerie to dispel. To date, the Human Flame has still only fought Manhunter once, to little effect, abd allowed others to do his dirty work since. He's as much a great Manhunter foe as Professor Arnold Hugo is a Batman nemesis.
At right is Super-Gorilla Grodd, one of my favorite villains in all of comics. I own his Art Adams-influenced action figure, and those DC Direct numbers aren't cheap. He's been consistently awesome for decades without becoming a parody of himself or adulterated by modern writers, no mean feat. It's a bit of a stretch to enter him into the Vile Menagerie, as he's more of a Flash or general DCU bad guy. However, he fought Martian Manhunter in JLA: Incarnations, and met his defeat by the Alien Atlas' hands at the end of the JLApe Annual Crossover. I hope writers will provide me with a bit more persuasion to let him into the club.
At bottom right was Ocean Master. While Aquaman is one of J'Onn's closer friends and a personal favorite of mine, I can't recall their ever sharing in delivering a beating to that guy. I replaced him with a Howard Porter/John Dell image from the JLA story arc "Crisis Times Five." Triumph was a mid-90s retcon who supposedly joined J'Onzz in co-founding the Justice League, only to be lost in time and forgotten. He returned during the Zero Hour event, and joined the revised Justice League Task Force. Triumph constantly fought with Manhunter over leadership of the team, before finally getting throttled and fired by the Manhunter from Mars. Triumph accidentally had his soul sold to the demon Neron, was restored in time, and lived out an even worse fate than being dismissed by the League. Through some complicated continuity, he still joined the JLTF, failed epically, was empowered by a Fifth Dimensional imp, and indefinitely sidelined as a JLA villain. Sadly, this was at a time Martian Manhunter was on leave, but their year of antagonism got Triumph into the Menagerie in a squeeker.
I added the crude Diabolu Idol-Head scan to the table, taken from a yellowed House of Mystery comic and itself in need of renovation. I wish I'd waited until Showcase Presents: Martian Manhunter Volume Two was released, as this sticks out like a sore thumb.
At center is the aforementioned Bette Noir as drawn by Tom Mandrake. She replaced the Batman babymama Talia-- mother to Damian, daughter to Rā's al Ghūl, and nothin' to Manhunter.
Finally, at bottom left is the immortal Vandal Savage, an early addition to the Menagerie. You see, Savage was a constant foe of the Justice League Task Force in the mid-to-late 90s, bringing him into direct, bloody conflict with the Martian Marvel. Retroactive continuity in the JLA Year One maxi-series held that Immortal and Martian had warred for a decade. Further, the pair were fated to be at odds for millennia according to the DC One Million event, where a fight between the pair cost Savage an eye. Unfortunately, the DC Universe is known for nothing if not impermanence. The eye was restored, the One Million continuity seems lost, and the foes have had something like one shared story since. He stays though, since that story had a evil Martian Manhunter persona called Fernus slaughtering Savage's minions in the hundreds.
Now, there's been disputes over time with who is and is not legitimately a Martian Manhunter foe. I decided that I not only wanted to focus on this question for a month, but offer up a new banner/button collage of generally indisputable John Jones-specific ne'er do wells:
Click To Enlarge
Once again, there's Bette Noir at far left by creator Tom Mandrake. She's been drawn by two other artists, but nowhere near as well. She rates as a repeat offender who is clearly Manhunter-specific, though she's also troubled Harley Quinn and D.E.O. Agent Cameron Chase.
Next is Professor Arnold Hugo, another of my very favorite Manhunter foes, as drawn by Joe Certa. It's true he was created as a Batman villain, but they only battled in one story. Hugo fought Manhunter in four Silver Age stories, a record exceeded only by the Diabolu Idol-Head and one other...
Commander Blanx is probably the single most important Martian Manhunter villain ever. Drawn here by Dick Dillin and Sid Greene, this Denny O'Neil c reation was made the reason why J'onzz came to Earth, and why he left for decades. His two appearances were both in issues of Justice League of America, but it was always clear that he was made for the Martian Marvel (unlike The Hyperclan/White Martians, who targeted the JLA as a whole.)
Following right behind is Bel Juz, another O'Neil/Dillin contribution. It can be argued Bel only physically battled Superman, and later engineered a plot against the Justice League. However, the first instance was in the context of a Manhunter team-up comic that directly related to the fate of Mars after Commander Blanx's rampage. The second story more clearly made J'onn J'onzz out to be Juz's most feared threat, in a story centering on our hero. I was trying to match Bel's head to Blanx's proportions, but she's half of the worst looking part of the banner.
At center is Mr. V, also known as Faceless, as drawn by co-creator Joe Certa. I've got all but one of this criminal mastermind's appearances covered on this blog, but little about the man, the myth, the mystery himself. Expect that to be corrected this month.
To the right is The Marshal, as drawn by Alan Kupperberg. The leader of the Red Brotherhood may have vexed the Justice League of America in a three-issue story arc, but it was all about the Alien Atlas, who was directly responsible for his defeat. Again, his head appears out of nowhere, but I wanted him included, and that's where I had the space.
Despero is arguably the least devoted of the potential Martian Manhunter rogues here. He's obviously a Justice League and general DCU villain, but fans know he reserves his most sincere hatred for the Sleuth from Outer Space. No other comic book character has interacted with Despero as much as J'Onn J'Onzz, and I'll scuffle with anyone who denies he's VM material. He's also gigantic, so the only way to realistically include this Sal Velluto image was as a somewhat distant headshot.
That tiny figure beside Despero is the Human Flame, by Carlos Pacheco and Jesus Merino. He sucks, but he's there.
Cay'an masterminded the last Martian Manhunter mini-series, which doesn't explain her prominence here. You see, Mr. V is at the center of this banner, and he's a really stout fellow. He would obstruct anyone behind him, and therefore overwhelm the piece without another figure in the foreground. I needed a svelte character to stand in front of him that wouldn't completely dominate the remaining space. This shot by Al Barrionuevo and Bit fit the bill, even if it is PG-13 and undeserved by someone of her modest standing.
Finally, there's Tom Mandrake's Malefic, who to my chagrin, cannot be denied, In fact, I intended for him to stand next to Faceless and be more visible, but Mr. V's girth wouldn't allow it. Besides, Malefic belongs in the shadows.
So there's a pretty comprehensive overview of the Martian Manhunter Rogues Gallery I call the Vile Menagerie. Look for greater detail and a respectable showcase for the sadistic talents throughout the month...
Tuesday, June 23, 2009
Reabsorb The Absorbascon
Over a year ago, we took a look at The Absorbascon blog, and more specifically, its author Scipio's many posts related to the Martian Manhunter. Scipio has been all over Showcase Presents: Martian Manhunter Vol. 2, collecting the last solo stories of the Silver Age, since its release in May. Based on the sheer quantity of material relating to the Alien Atlas since our last visit, I figured it was about time for another link post here at the Idol-Head to direct ya'll.
Do NOT read Showcase Presents Martian Manhunter Vol. 2!
Vol. 2, and remember, you were warned!
Compassion is a human emotion, referencing House of Mystery #161.
Zook Gets No Love, which is true. The stinkin' Human Flame, who appeared in only one story for nearly fifty years, has a Wikipedia page. Zook, co-star of dozens on Silver Age tales, does not.
The Human Flame has a Mike Miller LE custom Heroclix figure. Zook does not. Instead, we have just Haikuesday with Zook.
The Story of the Human Flame, an hilarious, multi-part over-analysis of Detective Comics #274. This is so great, I've refused to do my own write-up to date.
"You think I'm scared of you?" A look at the Human Flame in Final Crisis: Run! #1.
The Villainous Tarot, a collection of a character's villains who assume specific roles that help secure the hero's place in the comic book pantheon. Basically, the opposite of Scipio's Theory of Dynastic Centerpiece. I drafted my own Tarot here, as well as a Martian Manhunter Dynasty.
Martian Manhunter Demostrates Some Heroclix Powers for You
Where in the World is the Martian Manhunter? Scipio had his conclusions about the location of J'onn's Silver Age base of operations, while I had mine.
Apex City: The Martian Manhunter Heroclix Map
The Justice League of Arcana, placing Dr. Occult in Manhunter's boots.
The Martian Manhunter is a Skrull.
The Real Reason J'onn J'onzz will Die, illustrated with flow charts.
Harvey "Two-Face" Dent argues both sides in the trial for the life of the Martian Manhunter:
The Case for Mr. Jones
The Case Against Mr. Jones
Meteorology in Apex City, a.k.a. Middletown, which suffered from a terrific amount of phenomena in the 1950s. Continued in Weather for J'onn's Funeral Services.
Sunday, April 27, 2008
The Story of the Human Flame
I'd originally intended to append this selection of links to yesterday's post, to meaten it up. However, Scipio seemed to put more effort into his weeklong examination of the Human Flame's first appeatrance than any actual Martian Manhunter scripter since Gerard Jones. In fact, Scipio's synopsis, science, and humor are vastly superior to any of the Silver Age comics that inspire him to employ those assets at his blog, The Absorbascon. This is very funny stuff, and then he goes and turns in seemingly serious pseudo-thesis on the literary merits and subtextual concerns of the work. You'd need powers of levitation to hurdle the mound of bull he slopped, but it was convincing by sheer force of skill.
Part One
Part Two
Part Three
Part Four
Analysis
Wednesday, April 16, 2008
Grant Morrison Spoils Everything
"Martian Manhunter was known around the offices as a character that was sort of boring, but was a JLA "staple," if you will (though we did try to jazz him up with that storyline where he was Scorch's love-slave). If it was him, the fire on the cover would make sense, because fire is his only weakness." -Valerie D'Orazio
Obviously, my opinion of the character varies, but not so much my reaction to the news. Let me tell you, I really just want to move on. I vented a bit of spleen about a tangential subject on Monday, and Tuesday I was all set to do a double post about cute little doggies. Well, that was not to be, but definately today, right? Or will Grant Morrison have an interview posted on Comic Book Resources giving away most of the plot against the Martian Manhunter? The latter, it seems:
"Along the same lines, Morrison shared all readers need to know about the two D-level villains who have been rumored for months as heavy hitters in "Final Crisis" - Libra and Human Flame. "Again, you don't need to know anything about them. Because the more you know about these guys, the lamer they become," laughed Morrison. "I'd rather have people pick up the book and see Libra for the first time done the way I want to see him done and the same goes for the Human Flame character.
"The reason I chose them was because Libra came from my favorite ever run of 'Justice League of America' and he's never been used again. He was a character who had stolen all the powers of the Justice League, but then couldn't handle it and ascended to some kind of screaming godhood where he became a million transparent body parts spread across the sky. So I thought if I was doing a thing about the New Gods, he'd be an interesting guy to bring back because I needed a masked mystery man to start a new recruitment drive for the Secret Society of Supervillains, because they become almost a terrorist sect. Under Libra's guidance, they start doing quite bad things, even to superheroes' wives and families, crossing the line. So there's that element to the story and I needed a masked guy, who people didn't really know that well. And I remembered Libra and the fact that he is connected to this ascending to godhood thing tied him in really quite nicely. What's really going on under the hood will be revealed later in the series.
"With The Human Flame, I wanted a Martian Manhunter villain, and I couldn't find a really good one. Then, looking through the old 'Showcase Presents' books, I discovered this stupid guy called Mike, who declared himself to be the Human Flame. And he wore a homemade costume with six nipples that shot flames. So I just thought this is a great way to start this book because the idea is that Libra gives all the villains a very simple choice, he says, 'Follow me and I'll give you your heart's desire.' And that's it. And some of the villains naturally say, 'Prove it.' So the Human Flame is one of the first to fall in with Libra and he says, 'If you can get revenge on my old enemy, who has had me stuck in jail for the last five years, I'll follow you anywhere.'
"I needed a small-scale dumb guy, who could make very big waves and open the book with a shock moment and the Human Flame fit the bill. Also the name is great, because he's the first of the villains to succumb to the Anti-Life Equation. And the idea of the Human Flame being 'extinguished' in this way was just too cool for me to let go of it.""All of these guys were chosen for roles in the story, not because they are fan favorites. I just don't play that game. I wish I could. So I don't want readers to run back to their 'Who's Who' thinking that there will be some big revelation about these characters in there. All the stuff you need is in the book. And these two are just the tip of the iceberg, every DC villain appears in this book. There's a cosmic murder mystery running through the book and the really big bad doesn't turn up until the very last issue. There's a lot going on but I've noticed that no matter what I say about the content of 'Final Crisis,' there will still be online fans who'll swear blind they have no idea what the book is about so I'll leave it at that."
And so will I, again, hopefully...
Monday, February 18, 2008
The Idle-Head of Prescience?
Okay, Grant Morrison is writing the actual "Final Crisis" title, but he noted here that "DC Universe #0" and a multitude of other related books are being co-plotted with Geoff Johns. Obviously, there have been mini-events at play since the end of "52," which Morrison and Johns also plotted together. The rapidly dying New Gods, and specifically Darkseid are involved-- which is one connection to J'Onn J'Onzz, thanks to the Ostrander series. Now, another prime mover is this Libra character from the 70's era JLofA, of which Manhunter was not in fact a member. Yet, in the above cover, we see Libra consorting with, of all people, the Human Flame. When the subject of obscure characters in "FC" came up to Morrison, he replied, "Ah – in terms of obscurity, there’s so many." Further, the solicitation copy for the book notes, "The entire Multiverse is threatened as the mysterious Libra assembles an army of the DCU’s most terrifying super villains." Aren't most of DC's super-villains in the process of killing one another while imprisoned on an alien world? Does Libra rescue them to form his army, or has he instead rounded a mass of losers like Human Flame and used his now godlike powers to give them a Neron-style upsizing in threat level? Otherwise, why bring back someone like the Human Flame?
"Worlds will live and heroes will die in this epic tale spanning the beginning and end of the DC Universe!" Seems to me we heard much the same during Johns' "Infinite Crisis," which launched with the massacre of the Freedom Fighters. So here's ad copy for JUSTICE LEAGUE OF AMERICA #21, shipping one week before FINAL CRISIS #1: "Meet Libra and the Human Flame, two central villains in the upcoming FINAL CRISIS! Where’d the Human Flame come from, and who does he hate more than anything in the universe?" Well see, he's made exactly one previous appearance, in which he and his pal Joey are sent to prison by J'Onn J'Onzz after failing to exploit rumors of the Martian's weakness to fire. That'd help bring up some hate, right? Oh, and FC#1 ships with two covers in 50/50 ratio, one of which isn't currently available to the public. Wouldn't it be interesting if, say the Martian Manhunter were on it in a spotlight, as Hal Jordan is on the solicited cover?
My prediction: Human Flame, the fannish poseur super-villain taken under Libra's wing, proves the revived villain's threat level by killing the Manhunter from Mars in Final Crisis #1. Sure, the fire weakness was written out recently, but we've been down that road before, and wasn't it Morrison who returned that very weakness to prominence in "New World Order?" Alternately, the Human Flame could just as easily batter fry Arthur Joseph Curry, the pretender Aquaman. Maybe both? That would actually be heartening, as an early bow for J'Onn J'Onzz could lead to the same late game resurrection Animal Man enjoyed in Morrison & Johns' "52," likely in a classic, non-Skrull form. Alternately, you could easily "avenge" the Manhunter in decidedly lethal fashion with regard to the Human Flame, and no one would be likely to undo the deed. I may just be playing with my mashed potatos here, but consarnit, this means something...
Friday, February 15, 2008
Grant Morrison and the Absorbascon
"There’s a really obscure character I like in Final Crisis, a guy called the Human Flame. He’s this really goofy character we found in an old Martian Manhunter story. He’s this dumb supervillain who just sits around with his cell phone taking pictures of all the other villains and driving them crazy. But he’s got a really big role to play. The name was just so great, “the Human Flame,” in a story about evil coming to Earth…and snuffing out “the Human Flame.”
How obscure is this cat? Seeing as I haven't read that deep into his presumably sole appearance in the Martian Manhunter Showcase Edition, even I had to employ the intarwebbingski. I've visited The Absorbascon a time or two, but never with a mission to uncover a piece of Manhunter lore. Scipio pretty much derails any dreams I have of expanding the Vile Menagerie with 50's foes with his take on "The Martian Manhunter's Rogues Gallery!" There's the ever-lovin' B&W Human Flame in his entire lack of glory, and he's far from the worst of the lot.
I decided to linger at the blog, and offer up these gems from their "Martian Manhunter Week..."
The Hobbies of the Martian Manhunter
In "Argonauts of...JUSTICE!" Scipio equates heroes of the DCU to the Greek myths. He writes: "Autolycus (yeah, like the guy on Xena, *sigh*) was a master thief and infiltrator. So to me that's got to be the quiet and sneaky MARTIAN MANHUNTER."
Scipio believes he recognizes the Silver Age J'onn J'onzz as a "sister" in I'm Not Saying He's GAY, exactly... (... but, have you ever seen the Martian Manhunter dance?)
Is there sucj a thing as too many powers. Mmm, yeah. See "Never Enough."
There were some bones of contention, however:
A vote for rounding out the Martian Manhunter's social circle in "Support Your Local Martian!"
One of the few, and I mean very few, things I liked about the 1998 Martian Manhunter series was his decision to use fellow heroes as J'Onn J'Onzz's supporting cast. While he briefly brought a heavily revised Diane Meade to the series early on, she exited in much the same fashion as in the Silver Age. Shortly before making the leap to starring in House of Mystery, John Jones was revealed to the world as the Manhunter from Mars. His longtime secret identity rendered useless, J'onn J'onzz abandoned the premise entirely and began travelling the country with his pet/sidekick Zook, mostly in search of the dreaded Diabolu Idol-Head. Once that matter was resolved, he began his crusade against VULTURE in the new identity of Marco Xavier, muchly sans Zook, and this time was internationally mobile. Gerry Conway forgot that important fact when he resurrected the John Jones identity in JLofA #246 in '86, and everyone else followed suit. The 1998 series took elements of the origins of both the Jones and Xavier identities for an amalgamated Detective Jones in Martian Manhunter #0 from '98. Again though, the series had all of Manhunter's secret identities publicly exposed, so there's no point in returning to that well for what was always a fairly crumby supporting cast.
Since J'Onn J'Onzz is such a workaholic and so rarely has his own title anyway, it makes sense he spends most of his time with other super-heroes. I realize supporting casts have always been a comic book staple, but so too has the general apathty among fans and public alike regarding those types. For every Alfred Pennyworth or Mary Jane Watson, there are dozens of examples of Dulla McLovintrest, Guy Bestpal, Dr. Arther Tayfigure, and the rest. Regardless of whether or not Jimmy Olsen must die, does anyone really care either way? Rather than surround John Jones with expendable, forgettable cop buddies, why not get the exact same mileage with far greater levels of interest and reasonance out of middling-to-obscure super-heroes? Also, the 1998 series brought great characters like DEO Agent Cameron Chase into the mix, who is still a mostly non-powered supporting character type, but makes more sense in the context of the Martian Manhunter's modern life. I'm still annoyed the 1998 series didn't also use important support from J'Onn's past like Gypsy, Max Lord, or Dale Gun in a similar fashion.
Meanwhile, Scipio also explains his theory that "DC" really stands for:
"what I'll call the "Dynastic Centerpiece" model to its icons. In the Dynastic Centerpiece model, a hero is not a single character but the centerpiece of his/her own array of good and evil forces. Using basic concepts (such the Kid Sidekick, the Junior Counterpart, the Black Sheep, the Elder Statesman, the Female Counterpart, the Animal Companion, the Romantic Interest, the Civilian Companion, the Authority Figure, etc.) a constellation of characters is clustered around the central figure, which helps make him/her seem even more important. Against them is arrayed an "anti-dynasty" of villains similarly created according to familiar archtypes (The Arch Enemy, The Lunatic, the Heroworshipping Villain, the Civilian Enemy, the Untouchable Crime Lord, the Magician, the Evil Opposite, the Femme Fatale, the Mental Challenger, The Physical Challenger, etc)."
Scipio details his own notion of what the Manhunter's "DC" could be in the article, Are You Sleeping, Brother J'onn? In his defense, he drew more from a "Who's Who" and "DC Encyclopedia" wishlist because a)the Showcase volume wasn't yet available to him and b)casual MM fans will gain little-to-nothing from standard DC reference materials. Tomorrow, I'll formulate my own take on the concept, and we'll really dig in....