Archive for October 22nd, 2009

Cannon & Saber

Thursday, October 22nd, 2009

Contributed by MikiShawn

Marshall Saber and Henry Cannon had a passion for murder, and each other. Clad in a green uniform, the red-haired Saber was an expert marksman, an assassin for a New York City mobster named Leibowitz. Cannon hid his Moe Howard haircut in a dark blue body suit, offset by a yellow robe, gloves and boots and was a blade master in the service of the Rinaldi Mob. The men decided a career move was in order and each murdered the other’s boss. They did so on the orders of a woman within the District Attorney’s office who vowed to consolidate Manhattan’s gangs under her control. Saber had thrown down his rifle almost without a fight when he encountered the Vigilante while Cannon simply surrendered to the police. They did so knowing that D.A. Marcia King would “put in an application for both assassins with the Government Witness Relocation Program” and set them free.

Appalled that the duo was literally getting away with murder, the Vigilante raided their apartment and quickly found himself outmatched. Brought down by successive knife and bullet wounds, the Vigilante might well have been shot to death by Saber had it not been for the intervention of another concerned citizen — the Electrocutioner. Arriving on the scene, the police found three unconscious gunmen — the Vigilante and the electrocuted but still breathing Cannon and Saber (Vigilante # 5, by Marv Wolfman, Keith Pollard and Romeo Tanghal).

In a rather ludicrous scene, the couple escaped the hospital after Cannon threw a lightweight plastic knife at CaptainArthur Hall. Instead of falling to the ground, as it would have in the real world, the knife slashed Hall’s throat (# 7). The assassins took their services to the West Coast. It was at their Malibu beach house that they accepted a contract to kill the Vigilante (# 35).

By now, the mantle of the Vigilante had passed from Adrian Chase to Alan Welles to Dave Winston. Despite his unfamiliarity with the duo, Winston held his own and managed to get a shot off at Saber, wounding him seriously enough for Cannon to abandon the battle and flee. In the course of the conflict, the men had revealed their client’s Long Island address and, with Saber recovered, they raced to the scene to salvage their reputation. In the end, Vigilante maneuvered them into striking each other: Saber took a blade to the shoulder and Cannon was felled by a bullet in the abdomen (1986′s Vigilante Annual # 2, by Paul Kupperberg, Ross Andru and Tony DeZuniga, with edits by Wolfman).

Cannon and Saber were slated to return in 1989′s Manhunter # 10, which would have introduced a gay supporting cast member named Vince Nuncioin into the series. As described by co-writer John Ostrander in Amazing Heroes # 145, “Mark Shaw was cellmates with him in prison. In prison, as on the streets, if you need something, he’ll arrange it.” According to AH # 157, the episode had “already scared a couple of artists off” and, with Manhunter’s cancellation in early 1990, the story’s completion became a moot point.

Both show a high proficiency for hand to hand combat. Saber has an almost instinctive ability to aim quickly and accurately firearms. Cannon’s affinity is for using edged objects as weapons, ranging from playing cards to throwing knives.

Cannon and Saber were confirmed as gay and a couple in Vigilante #5

© by ® DC Comics. All rights reserved.

Arnold Astrovik

Thursday, October 22nd, 2009

Contributed by Ronald Byrd

Arnold Astrovik was the father of Vance Astrovik, the mutant super-hero initially known as Marvel Boy and later called Justice. When Vance’s mutant powers first appear, Arnold, outraged that his son is a “freak,” beats him to discourage their use. The abuse continues until Vance, by now a member of the heroic New Warriors (a further source of anger to Arnold), finally lashes out with his telekinesis, accidentally killing his father. Vance is found guilty of negligent homicide and spends some time in the superhuman prison known as the Vault before returning to action. Some time later, when the New Warriors are cast back into various periods of the past, Justice encounters his father as a teenager thirty years ago in Queens, New York. Justice is startled to discover that the teen Arnold is gay and in love with a young man named Bradley, for which his father Jerry berates and beats him, and he realizes that it was his father’s own self-loathing and resentment that led to their antagonism, Arnold beating him not only for his mutantness just as his own father beat him for his homosexuality, but because Vance succeeded in “deviating from the norm” where Arnold had failed. Despite the risk of erasing his own existence, Justice urges Arnold to follow his heart and tries to convince Jerry to accept his son as he is, but to no avail. The young Arnold turns his back on his potential new life, dooming himself to repeat the cycle of abuse that will ultimately result in his own death. Justice vows to prevent such problems from plaguing other young children when he returns to the present, but how or whether he pursued that goal upon his return is unrevealed.

Arnold worked as an accountant in the family’s home town of Saugerties, New York. Vance learned that his father was a closeted homosexual in New Warriors #48.

© by ® Marvel Comics. Used without permission.