Doug: Here are the stories Karen and I plan to review in the next few months:
Showing posts with label New Frontier. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New Frontier. Show all posts
Tuesday, February 17, 2015
Wednesday, January 12, 2011
BAB Two in One: Denying One's Birthright and Secret Origins!
Today's story, as mentioned, is the conclusion of Kubert's adaptation of Burroughs' first novel. Thus, there's a whole lot of action crammed into these pages.
Clayton tells D'Arnot that Jane had been carried away by an ape. D'Arnot immediately organizes a search party, and they set off into the thick jungle.
However, the locals didn't reckon on the return of the "muwango keewati" -- the evil one of the jungle. Tarzan has used his rope to snatch one of the warriors right from the midst of his fellow, kill him, and then drop his lifeless body right back into the thick of the killing frenzy. The Africans fled at once, and Tarzan was able to descend and cut D'Arnot loose and spirit him to safety.
While together, Tarzan's curiosity and intelligence proved overwhelming to D'Arnot. Tarzan could read English, and through that D'Arnot began to teach him to speak French. The two men became very close, and once D'Arnot had healed, Tarzan took him back to the cabin. However, upon arrival, they discovered that everyone else had been evacuated. Distraught at Jane's absence, Tarzan immediately fled, not giving D'Arnot the chance to show him a note that had been addressed to the Ape Man. D'Arnot, now alone, immediately became overwhelmed at his plight. That same evening, hearing a noise at the door, the officer leveled a rifle as it swung open and fired. But it had been the returning Tarzan that he shot!
Merely grazed, Tarzan healed quickly.
Tarzan did indeed manage to get passage to Baltimore, and upon arriving at the home of Jane Porter, he was dismayed to find her still in the company of William Clayton, who was now Jane's fiancee -- and the recently named Lord Greystoke. At almost the same time, a cable arrived for Tarzan with the simple message: "Fingerprints prove you Lord Greystoke -- Congratulations!" Tarzan folded the telegram and put it into his suit coat. With one word he could have greatly affected the lives of all three people. But that would not have been the noble thing to do.
I thoroughly enjoyed this story, and heap major kudos on Joe Kubert for his faithful adaptation of Burroughs' wonderful tale. The art is lush -- if you think John Buscema draws animals well, Kubert would rank #1A in that race. These are beautiful stories, and Kubert's somewhat-scratchy style really works. Not sure if I'll review subsequent stories in Kubert's series (you may recall that I got all three volumes of the Tarzan Archives for a song while on vacation last summer), since there's so much Bronze Age goodness yet to cover, but I am looking forward to reading his version of Tarzan's continuing adventures!
Karen: Secret origin stories can be thrilling, or terrible. Messing around with the established canon of a comic book title takes some skill (as well as balls) and not everyone can re-tell and re-tool an origin such that it's acceptable (if not enjoyable) to everyone.
Karen: I've reviewed one issue of Steve Englehart's JLA run before, and eventually I'd like to cover them all. But for today, let's consider Justice League of America #144, from July 1977. Englehart wrote it, and it has the team of Dick Dillin and Frank McLaughlin on the art. It also features dang near everybody in the DC universe! OK, that's an exaggeration, but not by much. Englehart gives us the first real meeting of the people who would eventually form the Justice League here. It all starts when Green Arrow is looking over the official origin of the team in a book and realizes that all the dates don't add up. What's funny here is that Englehart uses the actual dates from the comics -GA confronts Green Lantern to confirm he became a GL in September 1959. We get a footnote from Julius Schwartz to remind us that this is "comic mag time" -otherwise, these heroes would be getting a middle age paunch!
Karen: Once Green Lantern and Superman realize that Green Arrow is not going to d
Karen: Unfortunately some of his fellow martians arrive and they began causing all sorts of problems in their attempts to kill J'onn. The public is in a panic over the alien invaders. The Flash gets involved, and he decides the only way to settle the fears of the public is to bring in someone they all trust: Superman! Ironic, considering he was also an alien.
Karen: Now if this all sounds familiar, it might be because you've read The New Frontier by Darwyn Cooke. Although the overall story is different, I can't help but think he took some inspiration from reading this. Particularly later on, when a future JLA member shows up in his civilian identity.
Karen: Seeing as how it's a DC comic, the heroes split up into three teams. It's during these separate adventures that we get cameo appearances from Rip Hunter, Time Master, Adam Strange, and test pilot Hal Jordan! Jordan has had a close encounter with the martians around the site of a rocket launch. The heroes who will become the JLA answer his call and they discover the martians have tied J'onn onto the rocket, to send him into space to die. The heroes work together and overcome the martians, then free J'onn and hear his tale. Superman says he'll take J'onn back to Mars, but he doesn't want to go. He says Mars is hopelessly evil -but Earth still has a chance. He wants to stay and help his new home. "I can understand that," Superman says. But the anti-alien hysteria is too high right now for J'onn to come out publicly. Aquaman
Karen: In any case, the whole thing is covered up and several months later, the League does officially form. They kept the whole tale of their first adventure quiet to protect J'onn but obviously that secrecy was no longer necessary, and both GL and Superman are glad the secret is out. I thought this was a really fun story, even if it seemed a bit silly that such a secret would be kept for so long. The nice thing about this story is it allowed us to see so many characters together, but it didn't actually violate the real origin story -it just added to it. You can't help but get the feeling that Englehart himself was having a bit of fan-boy wish fulfillment here, bringing so many different characters into one title. It's rather shocking to realize this whole story was told in one (admittedly giant-size) issue. I think today it would be strung out over 6 issues, or be a limited series. But this story works perfectly as is.
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