Showing posts with label Dan Jurgens. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dan Jurgens. Show all posts
Tuesday, August 25, 2020
DC's Flash Gordon!
In the summer of 1988 DC Comics was well along in the process to reinvent itself and attempting to shuffle of the rags of bygone eras. To that end they had devised a "Crisis" which pruned the sprawling DC Universe and gave opportunity to reinvent and update some of their iconic heroes. In that same spirit the company got its mitts on the King Features classic Flash Gordon.
The task was handed to Dan Jurgens ably assited by inker Bruce Patterson. Jurgens has proven to be quite an auteur for DC over the decades, working as a one-man band of sorts writing and drawing some very high profile comics, and even inventing one of DC's most impressive newer characters -- Booser Gold.
The Flash Gordon franchise offered up great opportunity, but also great challenge. Clearly the editorial folks at DC, first Mike Gold and then John Greenberger wanted a leaner meaner Flash. The high romance of the classic Raymond comic strip couldn't be utterly abandoned, but in the 80's as the century queued up to close out, a grittier hero seemed of the moment.
Flash Gordon is a retired athlete, specifically an over-the-hill Boston Celtic, a man with an ex-wife and child who has found life to be not nearly as much fun as it once was. We meet him as he crashes his Ferarri, a man literally in a mid-life crisis.
He finds himself soon enough partnered with Dale Arden, a journalist and a crazy scientist named Zarkov who has invented a ship that travel to other dimensions. Of course they go there and find Mongo, a world ruled by a despot named Ming the Merciless. But this Ming is a little different, eschewing his "Yellow Peril" roots and presenting as just your run-of-the-mill nigh immortal megalomaniac. He is willing to kill and even genocide is just an afternoon's diversion.
Mongo is a world filled with Arborians, Hawkmen, Paquans (Lion Men), and Aquatics (Shark Men) among others. These are races specifically developed by genetic manipulation to fulfill the needs of Mongo society, one wracked by a lack of resources until Ming found a way allow all men and women to find a place. That place was one of abject servitude but there was a social balance which was held together by pitting the races against one another and the use of absolute cruelty to maintain control.
Into this brew Flash and Dale come and find themselves attacked and taken captive time and again. Ming seeks to kill Flash over an over again but always fails. Dale escapes his harem barely and she and Flash find a romance between them that takes time to kindle. And always there are the others such as the treacherous Princess Aura, the unreliable Prince Barin, and the gruff King Vultan. Allies along with Professor Zarkov returned from seeming death eventually work together to fight Ming.
The story is told from Flash's perspective and we discover that what is really going on is Flash is a man in a mid-life crisis who is slowly and grudgingly finding meaning again. One issue switches gears and tells the tale from Ming's perspective and while we don't get any sympathy for the devil we do at get some clarity as to his motives.
This is a story of Flash Gordon that has a definite ending and I would be most remiss to say much more about it. I enjoyed the reading, though at this distance I found the story telling a little dated even given it was attempting update the scenario. With over thirty years having passed this story too has signs of age. But if you find it, it's an interesting spin on the Alex Raymond classic and worth time.
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Labels:
Bruce Patterson,
Dan Jurgens,
DC Comics,
Flash Gordon,
King Features
Monday, August 21, 2017
Sandman Of Your Dreams!
The Sandman Special #1 from DC is the best yet of this month-long celebration of Jack "King" Kirby's creations. Under a Paul Pope cover, what you have are two stories, two different takes on another Sandman tale. Now this is the Sandman created by Joe Simon and Jack Kirby, their last tandem effort.
The first story by Dan Jurgens and artist Jon Bogdanove is my favorite so far in these specials. It's a sprawling adventure of Sandman and his two colleagues Brute and Glob as they rush to save a very special young boy who is being overcome by his dreams fired by his unquenchable imagination. The creatures in this dream might ring some bells and the story might seem a bit overly sentimental, but I fully enjoyed it. Bogdanove does a great job with the art and even treats us to a Kirby-inspired collage.
Also in this issue are a battery of fun tiny two-page "Tales of the D.N.A. Project" from the pages of Jimmy Olsen. These little frolics were great fun back when and are still so today and a delightful glimpse into the playful imagination of Jack Kirby.
This one is a hoot and gets my highest recommendation.
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Labels:
Dan Jurgens,
DC Comics,
Jack Kirby,
Jon Bogdanove,
Paul Pope,
Rick Leonardi,
Sandman
Thursday, September 24, 2015
All-Star Comics - Zeroed Out!
Zero Hour was a later reasonably well-crafted but ultimately uninteresting attempt by DC to yet again tap the vein which the original Crisis on Infinite Earths had done so exceedingly well some years before. Here again is a giant threat which spans the entire DCU and which by the end revises substantially much of what had existed before. But unlike the Crisis which arguably filled a need, Zero Hour merely filled a desire for more profits and while that's perfectly understandable for a company to wish for, it undermines the ultimate value of the effort. That and it pretty much failed. Few if any of the character changes which resulted from Zero Hour seemed to linger much past the event itself.
For Justice Society fans though the Zero Hour was mostly regrettable in that once again the mavens of DC tried to off the JSA seeing the vintage heroes as old and out of step, and once again missing the delightful texture to the fictional DC universe the existence of such venerable heroes can bring. DC it seems is always wanting to revise its history and sadly all too often ignoring the rich vibrant history it already has.
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