Showing posts with label Gladiator. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gladiator. Show all posts

Thursday, November 12, 2015

Suggestion Unboxed - Appreciating the Underappreciated


Doug: You may recall that back on October 9, in the midst of a fit of non-creativity, we solicited readers' thoughts on post ideas. What we got was amazing, and we've already mined that one-day flurry of brainpower for several good days' conversations. Today I'm pulling two thoughts from the same comment. Both were in a cornucopia (seasonal reference there) of offerings from Martinex1, and since they are related I am putting them together in the same post. I'll take the liberty of leading off with some thoughts of my own. Many thanks again to all -- and this isn't the last time we'll be doing this, so if you took a penny for your thoughts, you'll yet be further rewarded.

Mike S. (Martinex1): Under appreciated comic book artists and writers (no Kirby, Byrne, Lee, Claremont here...).

Mike S.: Under appreciated heroes and villains. If you were in charge who would you give a title to?

Doug: In answer to the first question, I've always enjoyed the inks of John Severin and Sam Grainger. Certainly Severin was a star in his own right in the 1950s, but most Bronze Age fans will remember him best as the inker over Herb Trimpe on early issues of the Incredible Hulk. Severin brought a polish to Trimpe's pencils that really did give it that throwback look to the period right before the Marvel Age dawned. Great pairing. Grainger worked into the 1970s and shows up all over the Marvel Universe. I most fondly recall his inks over a young Sal Buscema in those turn-of-the-Age Avengers tales. Again, Grainger really polished Sal's work and gave it a rich texture. Grainger also inked Dave Cockrum in the first issues of the All-New, All-Different X-Men.

Doug: As to underappreciated characters, count me among anyone who digs Kid Flash. While I don't know if Wally West could have carried his own series, he was always a favorite of mine in the Secret Society of Super-Villains and the Teen Titans revival.  Oh, and you want an underappreciated villain? I always thought the Gladiator had a great look. The whirling blades on his wrist seemed dangerous enough, but especially to him! I enjoyed his appearances in Daredevil and wished he'd crossed over into the Peter Parker or Nova books (for examples).


Saturday, August 18, 2012

Doug's Favorites: Daredevil Annual 1



Daredevil Annual #1 (September 1967) -- Giant-Size Daredevil #1 (1975)
"Electro and His Emissaries of Evil!"
Stan Lee-"Adam Austin" (Gene Colan)/John Tartaglione

Doug:  So I'll start this one off by saying I'm mad.  For the life of me, I cannot find my beat-to-Hades copy of DD Annual #1!  I'm sure I never sold it, as there isn't a soul out there who'd have paid me money for it - it was in that bad of condition!  But, as a save for the day, I do have a copy of Giant-Size Daredevil #1 which reprints in full the aforementioned missing tome.  So, the covers above are just references -- no sense in scanning the G-S, which is in decent shape after all.  And a programming note -- since I've not read the G-S issue until right now, I will put this on the sidebar under DD Annual #1.  With all of that out of the way, shall we...?

Doug: This story is the epitome of "jumping on point".  Despite the fact that Daredevil had been appearing for four years when the Annual hit the shelves (and 12 years ahead of the Giant-Size reprint), Stan Lee and Gene Colan provided a story that could instantly immerse a reader of any experience deeply into the DD mythos.  And even though I'd dabbled in a few DDs by the time I obtained the Annual (I cannot recall how I got it, either -- it may have been at the same yard sale I acquired the Thors we looked at a couple of weeks ago, as well as a coverless X-Men #58 and half of Silver Surfer #4 -- yes, half...), I always found this story to be a treasure.  Part of it is due to Stan's very light-hearted script -- the wise-cracking Marvel heroes were always my favorites -- and of course the remainder is due to Colan's energetic/frenetic art treatment.  Plus I just always like super-teams, even if they are comprised of bad guys.  Although one could argue that this wasn't the greatest collection of DD foes, they are colorful characters.  Below, as they show up I've given the reference to their first appearance in a DD mag.

Doug:  We open in Matt Murdock's in-home gymnasium, as an unmasked Daredevil puts himself through his paces.  Stan used the first five pages of the story to describe Daredevil's personality, powers, marital status, employment status, living status, billy club properties...  you get the picture.  And as I said above, I felt this was an invaluable resource.    So Daredevil takes to the skies, looking for a little trouble.  Well he finds it plenty soon enough!  Overhearing heartbeats, then voices, he recognizes, his attention is drawn below to an alley.  And who should be plotting and scheming but the Matador (see DD #2) and Electro (see DD #5)!  Colan's art is sure-fire throughout most of this book, but there are some misses along the way.  I'll add that Stan often puts way too much dialogue into a page where the action would literally take a split second.  I offer you the splash of Daredevil making his attack to illustrate my point.  Great page at first glance, but there are nine word balloons on a page that in real time would have lasted less than 2-2 1/2 seconds.  Additionally, and we don't see it, but wasn't DD going to land hard on his butt?  Ouch!!  Our combatants brawl for a bit, with Daredevil getting the better of it -- until Electro manages a clean shot that wings DD in his right shoulder, knocking him out.  Rather than finish it -- because no super-villain in his right mind would ever a) unmask or b) kill a fallen foe -- our do-badders flee so that they can organize the rest of their partners in crime.

Doug:  After coming to his senses, Daredevil tries to get home to sleep off his wounds.  Trouble is, the shock has made his right arm virtually useless as well as made him dizzy.  He begins to lose it mid-swing and tumbles to a rooftop.  In another scene that I'd question, DD uses his left hand to cushion the blow as his face was about to drive into the roofing material.  Hey, wouldn't that shatter all the little bones in his hand and wrist, in addition to breaking his neck?  But who am I?  It's a cool visual...  DD ends up walking back to his brownstone and enters right through the front door -- and you thought New York was the "city that never sleeps".  Apparently not in Matt Murdock's neighborhood!

Doug:  We cut to an airplane carrying the Gladiator (see DD #18) across the Atlantic, back to the States.  He muses to himself how DD's about to get it from a new-and-improved Gladiator, and then we cut to Electro dragging the Stilt-Man (see DD #8) from a river.  In his best Dr. Frankenstein (that's Fronk-un-steen...) impression he uses his electrical powers to bring Stilt-Man back among the dastardly.  Cut again to the law offices of Nelson & Murdock, where we see the ever-lovely Karen Page lamenting the no-show of Mr. Murdock -- and without a call.  Foggy tries to tell her that Matt can look after himself, but you know how Stan writes angst.

Doug:  After a night's rest, DD's awakened by the phone, as Foggy placated Karen with a call.  Matt says he's dealing with a "personal issue" and excuses himself from the day.  Taking again to the skies, he comes across the Matador out causing trouble, doing so in an effort to lure our red-clad hero into the open.  Well, three pages of butt-kicking later, the Matador is tossed in the drink and disappears under the water.  DD exits the scene and hits it high again with his billy club.  And speaking of that wonderful weapon, we're shown an interesting side of superhero life -- part of the club is hollow and contains some nutritional pills DD pops to avoid having to eat while super-heroing.  While this is news-you-can-use, I'm not sure in 1967 I'd have glorified any sort of pill-popping.  Oh, well -- Stan must have been oblivious to the implications.


Doug:  DD's continued searching for Electro pays off (in a way), as rounding a corner he comes face-to-face with the Stilt-Man!  And, four pages of butt-kicking later, DD's off for home, one tuckered-out swashbuckler.  Here's a funny bit of out-of-time for you:  on Matt's doorstep is a cassette tape.  In the days before answering machines, voicemail, etc. Foggy dropped by a recorded message to let Matt know of his concern for his well-being -- after all, there's been a Stilt-Man sighting.  Don't we know it!  After patching up some wounds and bruises, Matt sets out as himself and walks to Central Park.  But what lurks in parks, especially those with lagoons?  Frogs!  Big ol' Leap-Frogs (see DD #25)!  As you may have already guessed, two and a half pages of butt-kicking have the Leap-Frog on the jump, and right into the hands of the Gladiator!  DD takes a hard chop, then a kick to the chops, and is now in the presence of the full roster of the Emissaries of Evil!

Doug:  Not to sound like a broken record, but seven pages of butt-kicking later and the E of E are all tied up!  As Karen and I have often discussed, team books avoid that sense of omnipotence due mainly because the team members never fight together, pooling their powers and resources.  Here it's a combination of that, and the fact that these villains are just plain dumb.  And who ever thought Electro showed any leadership potential at all (other than Bendis)?  DD has a nifty trick at the end to keep the baddies at bay -- he loops them together and then uses Electro's powers to keep the other four knocked out!  Back at the law offices the next day, Matt by necessity acts bruskly toward Karen -- because that's what comic book lovers do to protect that secret identity!


Doug:  Loved this issue then, and in spite of its obvious flaws (only revealed to me as an adult -- when I was 10 this was highbrow fare!) I still like it a lot now.  As I remarked, the entry level writing is well done, and comics in general would do themselves a favor if they were more accessible these days (and dropped the price, what, a couple of bucks?).  The villains, while never too threatening, are colorful and comical in their push to defeat our hero.  And said hero -- what a guy -- all of those handicaps yet he barely breaks a sweat against what should definitely be stacked odds!  This book is just a nice 30-minute diversion that delivers a smile.  What more could we want?


 

Friday, November 20, 2009

Part Four: Super-Villain Suave


Doug: Here we go again -- another sartorially-challenged super-type, or perhaps a fashion plate in spandex? We'll give our opinions -- but you be the judge!

Doug: Today's victim, er, object of examination is the original Gladiator, one Melvin Potter! Melvin is primarily a Daredevil baddie, although in and around the Bronze Age he did branch out to get his butt kicked by Iron Man, Ghost Rider, and later Spider-Man. But so what -- he looks so cooooollll!!


Doug: Let's start with the color scheme -- you can't hardly go wrong with blue and yellow. College teams everywhere use that combination and it works here. The helmet is a nice touch in this costume -- reminiscent of the Legion's Ferro Lad. There's something about a guy with his whole face covered that shouts out "Hey, man -- I'm mysterious!" and Melvin is pulling that off. His footwear, while functional, evokes days gone by with the razor look -- I'm sure this was all the rage among Roman slaves about to be thrown to the lions! But of course what we really are drawn to are those two nasty little buzzsaws mounted on ol' Melvin's wrists -- just all kinds of deviant behavior can be meted out through those bad boys!

Karen: This is a costume that does scream "retro" - but that's not necessarily a bad thing. I do think that it'd be nice to see more of a breastplate for the chest -maybe more evocative of a Roman gladiator. But I do like the helmet and boots. The wrist saw-blades do seem kind of dorky though. But practically anything looks good when it's drawn by Romita Sr.!

Doug: Despite his good taste in clothing (if you've ever seen Melvin without the helmet... well, you'd be thankful that he usually has it on), the Gladiator usually comes up on the short end of the stick when it comes to super-hero bashing. I guess you could say that Mr. Potter is more often than not the "bashee".

Doug: I vote "Success!" on the original Gladiator. It's a character I've always liked, and a super-costume that not only evokes the character's namesake, but has a lot of elements (helmet, weapon, color scheme) that make it memorable.

Karen: Oh heck Doug, your enthusiasm for this costume is contagious! I'll give it a vote of "success", with some slight reservations.


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