Archive for July, 2009

Miracleman & Kid Miracleman

Friday, July 31st, 2009

This entry will focus on a single aspect of Miracleman rather than the character’s entire background. Please reference Wikipedia’s Miracleman entry and Young Miracleman for further information.

At some point after the destruction of London by Kid Miracleman (Johnny Bates) in Miracleman #15), Miracleman (Michael Moran) requested Mors of the Qys to clone Young Miracleman’s body. The resurrection was successful and young Dicky Dauntless awoke with his original memories in a utopian world. Eager to learn, Dickie persuades Miracleman to show him around. Despite it going against his original plan, Miracleman does exactly that by introducing him to Miraclewoman, a human-looking firedrake, two Warpsmiths and a Qys. Dickie politely excuses himself, asking to speak privately with Miracleman. Dickie implores to be told everything that has happened between his death and resurrection. Miracleman first insists on Dickie relating what he remembers, then informs him these were all false memories implanted by Dr. Gargunza. Following up, Miracleman relates a condensed history of London’s destruction, the subsequent reconstruction of the world by himself (and compatriots), and his contemporary role of god-like being. This new reality of the world and the truth of his memories overwhelm Dickie who can barely contain his sobbing till after Miracleman leaves the room (issue #23).

A week passes in the story internally between issues #23 and 24. Dickie seems to have adjusted remarkably well and quickly, and has begun something of a world tour that started with a rebuilt London and picks up with a stop in New York that afternoon. Miracleman and Miraclewoman have two conversations about the newly revived Dickie while he’s away marveling New York and addressing the huge crowd gathered in his honor. She believes there’s a matter between the two men that they need to discuss. Miracleman is somewhat unconvinced and reluctant to take her previously offered advice, implying the matter has come up before now. In the second talk, Miraclewoman insists Miracleman’s avoiding the issue. He disagrees, saying he’s “merely considering all the options.” The topic of their conversations becomes evident when he proceeds to use a device to show her cherry-picked highlights of Dickie (and Young Miracleman) admiring and ogling women. She embraces him and says, “Darling, I’m right. Trust me,” and kisses him.

Later that night after Dickie’s return from New York, Miracleman asks to talk with him. Dickie talks enthusiastically about the “brave, New World” and is happy. “Isn’t this great, MM? A midnight snack and a jolly old natter? We’re chums together again. Special chums, aren’t we?” [Emphasis in the original.] Dickie then confides his concern about being so powerful, wondering if this is what drove Johnny to his destructive acts. He also confesses to dreaming of Johnny the night before. Miracleman then mentions that he and Miraclewoman have been talking about Dickie, saying she thinks something should be settled between them. Dickie’s confused, citing that “everything’s just super.” Miracleman draws in, placing a hand on Dickie’s shoulder, and asks how Dickie feels about him. Miracleman simply kisses Dickie to convey his point. Dickie is shocked and enraged, and without thinking, knocks Miracleman into space, where he confronts his friend and mentor. He accusingly wonders if a similar act turned Johnny evil. Miracleman says he thinks he made a mistake and implores Dickie to return to Olympus to talk about this, but Dickie stands defiant with tears streaming down his face. His last words are “Don’t follow me” before flies away and disappears from sight. (Issue #24)

Art by Mark Buckingham

Art by Mark Buckingham

The first half of this scene is visually constructed with a variety of techniques to emphasize the sexual tension. The pair often appears in the same panel, sometimes in shadow or close proximity. Miracleman’s pose is at an early point distant, as if to mirror his hesitation, and then becomes intimate and sexual when he lays on Dickie’s bed.  Contrast this with the following scene in space where the two are shown some distance apart the two times they appear in the same panel. Miracleman’s body language appears to be contrition and Dickie’s a combination of defiance, hurt, and anger.

This is the last issue that was printed before the publisher, Eclipse, went bankrupt. These two issues were the first installments of writer Neil Gaiman’s “The Silver Age” arc that was planned for six issues. Sources indicate issue #25 was written, pencilled, and submitted to Eclipse before it went out of business. It may never be known how Gaiman would have dealt with this topic unless the tangled copyright matters are resolvedMarvelman first appeared in Marvelman #25 and Dickie Dauntless in Marvelman #101. This particular revelation takes place in Miracleman #24.

Joe Quesada revealed at Comic Con in 2009 that Marvel had recently obtained the rights to Marvelman. What this means with regard to Miracleman remains to be seen.

Used copies of Miracleman Book Four: The Golden Age are sometimes available on Amazon.

© and ® by current legal owner(s), whomever it may be. Used without permission.

Doop

Friday, July 31st, 2009

doopDoop is included here because of a short story written by X-Force and Doop creator Peter Milligan. An older man named James Gilray hires a private detective, a Mr. Chandler, to follow his younger wife, Brigit, to find out whom she is seeing.

Chandler tails the woman and discovers that she is having an affair with Doop. When Chandler meets with the husband afterwards he simply tells his client that his wife is not seeing another man. Chandler continues to tail Brigit and Doop, documenting their affair. Gilray returns to confront Chandler after discovering her confessional letter. A drunken Chandler tells Gilray his wife and “Doop” checked in to a Las Vegas hotel and he confesses that he’s fallen in love.

Not long afterwards, Chandler realizes that a crazed Gilray is liable to do something violent and he drives to Vegas. Chandler crashes through the hotel room door just in time to knock out Gilray, gun in hand. Chandler confesses: “Guess I fell in love with you the first time I day you. Give me a chance to make us both happy.” The last page reveals that Chandler is driving away from Vegas into the desert at night with Doop seated next to him, happy smiles and knowing looks all around.

Doop first appeared in X-Force #116 vol. 1 and is affiliated with X-Force which was later renamed X-Statix. Doop sexual orientation is further revealed in I (Heart) Marvel: My Mutant Heart #1.

Please read Doop’s Wikipedia entry for more complete information on the character.

© and ® Marvel Comics. Used without permission.

Cactus Jaq and Sahara Skyhawk

Friday, July 31st, 2009
Art by Chris Sprouse

Art by Chris Sprouse

Hammerlocke was a science fiction mini series that was published in 1992 and lasted for nine issues. The story is set in a not so distant future Earth in which one of the most advanced technological achievements is the Olympus Starbridge, a 72,000 km railroad to outer space. It originates from a plateau in the Andean Mountains. At the halfway juncture is a stop for the Selene Space Colony and it ends with the Terminus Space Platform. It is highly guarded, contested, and the object of political ploys.

Cactus Jaq and Sahara Skyhawk are operatives for the organization called UNICORN (United Nations International Covert Operations Research Network). They are lovers. Cactus Jaq, or Jaq as she likes to be called, has red hair and a penchant for western-style garb; a pair of guns on her hips. Events in the story make it clear that Jaq is also cybernetically enhanced and has the ability to interface with computers and other electronic devices. Sahara is the end product of years of research in bio and cybernetic engineering. She has the ability to fly and favors a futuristic outfit. Her arms seem to be integral parts of her wings, ending in wing tips and not hands. From a comment Jaq makes, we learn that Sahara has been alive for eight years. It isn’t clear how long the two women have known each other and been lovers. In a letter column reply in the last issue, Tom Joyner commented that the women’s history would be explored if a sequel were approved.

When seen for the first time in issue #1, Jaq and Sahara play major roles in a mission to rescue and retrieve Amanda Locke, the only child of Sir Archer Locke (the architect and strongest supporter of Olympus) and Miranda Locke (current Olympus director). The two women fail in their efforts. Amanda is kidnapped and becomes a bargaining chip in a complex scheme devised by Hugo Tharn, leader of the Ecotechnic League that vehemently opposes the Starbridge, among other technological advances.

Cactus Jaq and Sahara join other operatives from deployed PeaceGarda units to fight the Ecotechnic guerillas who continue the effort to bring down Olympus after it was sabotaged in issue #1’s cliffhanger. Director Kingman Rhee sends the pair to Antarctica after they’ve come into some reasonable intelligence indicating Tharn’s lair is located on the icy continent. Jaq expresses the need to be cautious before starting into the hideaway. Amanda is quickly found, along with an older man named Harry who’d been captured years before by Tharn. Dialog alludes this man to being a grownup Prince Harry of Great Britain, but his story digresses from this bio’s purpose. The mission goes awry when a cybernetic construct controlled by Tharn ambushes them, and captures Jaq and Sahara. Later they awake to find themselves chained to separate stone pillars. Tharn has “possessed” a robotic form (ironic for someone who claims to be against technology) and menacingly looms near Sahara with a scalpel in hand. Unable to free herself from the chains (Tharn also fitted her with an electronic inhibitor), Jaq turns her consciousness inward to the advanced data net UNICORN wired her into and discovers a way to amplify her abilities to circumvent the inhibitor and free herself (presumably enhancing her strength). She also discovers evidence that Director Rhee had installed his own fail safe, a “pio-chip” that insured loyalty, a thing which Jaq destroys without hesitation. During this effort she had no awareness of either time or the outside world. Unfortunately the reality of Sahara’s dead and mutilated body hanging from chains is proof that Jaq is too late (issue #5)

A UNICORN sanctioned mercenary team arrives at the Antarctic base at least in time to help Jaq carry out revenge against Tharn (issues #6 and 7) which she succeeds at by causing Tharn’s death in issue #8. She, Harry, Amanda, and the mercenaries still must as Tharn’s security safeguards prove challenging and in Harry’s case, lethal obstacles.  Jaq comes to a terrible realization that Director Rhee would likely subject Sahara’s body to “medical studies”, and so she decides to enlist the help of another agent with phasing abilities (with the obvious name Phade) to inter her body well beneath the icy surface. Nkemete, the man whom Sahara flirted with and innocently kissed, is part of the rescue mission. Jaq and he recite Sahara’s favorite poem as an eulogy. Later, Archer Locke offers Jaq his gratitude for being instrumental in saving his daughter Amanda as well as his condolences. There is one more act before Jaq can begin to rest. She confronts Rhee about his own duplicity and culpability in matters relating to the mission and Sahara’s death. Thanks in part to a deus ex machina that occurred to Jaq during her fight with Tharn, she’s able to interact with Rhee’s artificial heart and induce a fatal attack. She’s last seen figuratively walking off into the sunset (issue #9).

Jaq and Sahara’s relationship is written as being perceived as normal by the other characters. In issue #2 Jacob Kingman Rhee is talking to Jaq while she watches Sahara cavort in the sky. She exclaims, “I’m watching, sweetie! Don’t get too close now!” and then to Rhee, “She’s such a kid sometimes.” In a following scene Sahara asks Jaq when they’ll return home, a place called Eagle Butte, Arizona. Jaq has brought Sahara’s favorite book, “Tales of Faraway”. Awkwardly hidden inside it is a necklace Jaq had made for Sahara, modeling it on the hero’s “ghost horn.”  Sahara is happy and promises never to take it off.

cactusjaq01The pair is shown talking about concerns in bed in issue #4. In a bit of foreshadowing, Sahara confides she wants Jaq to avenger her if anyone should kill her, but Jaq is somewhat dismissive. Later, Jaq snaps at her girlfriend when Sahara expresses her anxiety about the possible odds the pair will face on their imminent mission to rescue Amanda Locke from Hugo Tharn’s Antarctica lair. Jaq is quick to apologize and admit her apprehension just as Sahara quickly forgives and eagerly carries out Jaq’s request to deliver a disc to Archer Locke. While delivering it, naïve Sahara falls for the charm of young Patric Nkemete, Archer’s aide de camp, who is equally beguiled her. The incident briefly becomes a point of contention for Jaq when Sahara innocently mentions it. The matter becomes moot when they’re captured, bound, and tortured by Hugo Tharn. Sahara is truly fearful of Tharn, and Jaq tries her best to calm her lover by reminding her of a poem in “Tales of Faraway.” And there is real grief, anger, and vows of vengeance from Jaq after she fails to save Sahara. Other characters sustain injuries or wounds, notably Archer Locke and Nkemete. Unlike Sahara, they recover. The women and their relationship were portrayed as the most affectionate in the ensemble cast. LGBT relationships were very much a novelty for comics in 1992; to have one partner murdered was both unique and tragic, and to my knowledge was not repeated till the Ultimate version of Colossus suffered the death of Northstar in 2008.

Cactus Jaq and Sahara first appear and are confirmed as lovers in Hammerlocke #1.

Created by Tom Joyner and K. S. Wilson. © and ® DC Comics. Used without permission.

Arnie

Friday, July 31st, 2009
arniezatanna

Art by Rick Mays

We first see Arnie, Zatanna’s manager, discussing matters with Zatanna about her stage act and tour in a Las Vegas nightclub dressing room. Four male assistants dressed a la Chippendales appear on stage with her. In a following scene, a mostly naked Arnie is shown making a phone call to Zatanna from his hotel room to remind her she’ll be late for her Denver performance. Lying on the bed behind Arnie is another naked man, one of Zatanna’s stage assistants whom we learn is named Andre. Arnie’s last appearance is on the story’s final page with him and an upbeat Zatanna talking.

Arnie’s only appearance is in the Zatanna Everyday Magic one shot published by DC/Vertigo in 2003.

© and ® DC Comics. Used without permission.

Argo Bones & Kimball Richards

Friday, July 31st, 2009
Art by Cooke and J. Bone

Art by Cooke and J. Bone

Argo (Argonaut) and Kimball are at home in Central City (this being the location used by Will Eisner for the Spirit, not the Flash’s Central City) one night; Argo is deeply involved with a book about the occult he’s writing and Kimball tries to distract him into spending a little time together. Moments later their doorbell rings and Argo opens it to find Ellen Dolan, his former college girlfriend. Argo introduces Ellen to Kimball as a best friend.

Ellen has come to Argo in desperation to find help fighting El Morte who has plans to kill the Spirit. An early issue recounts how a gangster was killed and raised from the dead to become El Morte. Argo is surprised to find Ellen on their doorstep and introduces her to Kimball as his college best friend. She figures Argo’s interest in the occult and zombies will help her to save the Spirit, who’s also her boyfriend.

Argo remains quite skeptical after hearing Ellen’s story, emphasizing that there aren’t any proven cases of zombie phenomena. His attitude changes when Kimball turns on the TV and draws attention to a news report of some incident at the Central City bridge involving men wearing what reporters assume are monster costumes. Masking his concern from Kimball, Argo announces he’s driving Ellen home. Instead, they drive into the city. On the way, Ellen reminds Argo that they were engaged in college. It leads to a little heart to heart talk between them.

Argo stops the car near the bridge and admits to Ellen the existence of zombies, and persuades her they can save the Spirit. His plan is to stop the source of power that raised El Morte, the villain’s own mother. They bravely fight their way through the zombie mob to confront her in the guardhouse sitting atop one of the bridge support columns. The mother proves to be as determined to keep her undead son on Earth, as they are to stop her. She also has no compunction against murdering Ellen to achieve this. Fortunately, Argo acts by stabbing her with a knife, which blinds her with pain, and crashing through a window to her death. Argo collapses from wounds and Ellen cradles him in her lap, gratefully kissing him on the forehead for his bravery. She runs off to find the Spirit and the story closes.

This is the first and to date only appearance of Argo and Kimball. In a very few panels Darwyn Cooke and inker J. Bone depicted a happy, loving, and normal gay couple. They did not return in the few remaining issues Cooke and Bone worked on, nor to my knowledge again in the rest of the series.

Argo and Kimball’s first and only appearance is in The Spirit #11.

© and ® DC Comics. Used without permission.

Tyler Lang & Jefferson Wolfe

Friday, July 17th, 2009
Art By Dale Keown

Art By Dale Keown

Contributed by Ronald Byrd

Tyler Lang, the son of an L.A. crimelord, contracts AIDS from his lover, Jefferson Wolfe, and succumbs to the disease’s effects more quickly than Jefferson. The two take up residence at an AIDS hospice run by Jim Wilson, longtime friend of the Incredible Hulk. Tyler’s father sends his underlings to kill Jefferson, but they’re rebuffed by Jim’s uncle, the Falcon, leading Mr. Lang to contract the armored assassin Speedfreek for the job. The Hulk battles him and sends him on his way, but Tyler dies during the encounter. Mr. Lang later confronts Jefferson at Tyler’s grave and intends to oversee his murder personally, but the Hulk disables his henchmen and records his threat for the police, presumably resulting in Lang’s imprisonment. Jefferson’s ultimate fate is unrevealed.

Tyler and Jefferson’s only appearance is in Incredible Hulk #388. Jim Wilson also dies of AIDS in Incredible Hulk #420; it is never revealed how he contracted it.

Peter David Talks More About That Kiss

Friday, July 17th, 2009

Over at CBR, George A. Tramountanas interviews X-Factor writer Peter David about events in X-Factor, including the now famous kiss between Rictor and Shatterstar.

Pulling a quote by PAD from the interview: “So we did some redesign work on Shatterstar so he’d fit in with the tone of the book. As for their relationship, I really had three options: 1) I could continue to play coy. 2) I could contradict it. 3) Or I could build on it. In light of such anti-gay activities as Prop 8, option 1 seemed kind of insulting and out-of-touch. Option 2 seemed gutless (what, was I so weirded out by the notion that I would feel the need to toss out what previous writers had done?). On that basis alone, option 3 seemed the way to go.”

Go read the rest here!

Melissa Maro

Wednesday, July 15th, 2009

Contributed by Ronald Byrd

Melissa Maro is a political science major at Reardon College in the Bronx and a classmate of Danny Ketch, host body for the Spirit of Vengeance called the Ghost Rider. Melissa befriends Danny but rebuffs his initial flirtation, saying that she doesn’t “like boys.” Melissa has also organized an urban action group in her neighborhood to promote action against drug dealers and corrupt police officers, which makes her a target of the supernatural crime boss Snowblind. One of Snowblind’s underlings hires some thugs to kill Melissa, and they shoot down Melissa and Danny when the pair are riding back to the Bronx on Danny’s motorcycle. The Ghost Rider emerges and rushes Melissa to the hospital, then takes vengeance upon her attackers. However, Melissa’s wounds render her comatose. She was not mentioned again until her reappearance from limbo in Venom: Sign of the Boss #1. Maro, Danny Ketch, and Eddie Brock were taken hostage during an attack on dictator Franco Santera (which he had pre-arranged to gain political sympathy) while he was giving a speech in the United States. Supervillain Teraknid appears on the scene with a grudge against the dictator and plans to kill him and his wife, only to be stopped by Venom.

Melissa was introduced early in Ivan Velez, Jr.’s stint as Ghost Rider writer, but if he had any long-term plans for her, he abandoned them, and the character appears abandoned again. Oddly enough, Darkhold, another horror book of the nineties, also had a lesbian character who was rendered comatose and never heard from again. See the entry for Victoria Montesi.

Victoria Montesi

Wednesday, July 15th, 2009

Contributed by Ronald Byrd

Victoria Montesi is the only child of Monsignor Vittorio Montesi; the Montesi line was long ago designated as the guardians of the Darkhold, a tome of ancient black magic which has the potential to summon the Elder God Chthon to wreak havoc upon the Earth, but Victoria, half-American, disbelieves her father’s claims and takes up work as a doctor in Rome, where she lives with her lover, karate instructor Natasha “Nash” Salvato. However, when pages from the Darkhold are distributed to unsuspecting mortals by a demonic dwarf and Nash is rendered quadriplegic and comatose following an explosion intended to kill Victoria, Victoria joins with occult expert Louise Hastings and Interpol agent Sam Buchanan to recover the pages as the Darkhold Redeemers. After some months of such adventures, Victoria’s life takes an even worse turn when it is revealed that she is in fact Chthon’s daughter, created when the sterile Vittorio used magic to guarantee himself an heir, and she is mystically impregnated with Chthon himself; Sorcerer Supreme Doctor Strange kept Victoria in mystic stasis for a time to delay Chthon’s rebirth into the Earth dimension, and he was ultimately able to prevent it. When last seen, Victoria was being spirited away by the Midwife, a creation of Chthon’s who nevertheless rebelled against her master’s rebirth and sought to help Victoria recover from her ordeal; what has become of her since then, as well as whether or not Nash ever recovered, is unknown.

Except for a period when she briefly possessed demonic abilities obtained from a Darkhold page, Victoria Montesi had no superhuman physical powers, although as the daughter of Chthon, she no doubt had the potential to manifest such powers; her half-demon nature granted her visions directing her to the missing Darkhold pages. She also possessed a reasonable level of fighting skill, much of it learned from Nash. Montesi first appears and is confirmed as lesbian in Dark Hold #1.

Quesada Talks about Shatterstar

Tuesday, July 14th, 2009

In this week’s edition of Cup o’ Joe , Joe Quesada responds to Kiel Phegley’s questions about the revelation (or confirmation) that Shatterstar is gay. Quesada commented “I thought it was totally cool. As long as it works within the story and it makes for a good story and character development, I have no issues whatsoever.” When asked about Shatterstar co-creator Rob Liefeld’s comment that Shatterstar isn’t gay and hoped to undo this characterization, Quesada replied, “…and ultimately while Rob is one of the guys who created Shatterstar, Shatterstar is a Marvel character and not a Rob Liefeld character.”