Archive for October 25th, 2009

Kathy and Lennie

Sunday, October 25th, 2009
Art by Chris Bachalo or Jan Duursema

Art by Chris Bachalo or Jan Duursema

Kathy George came from a fairly well off Southern family, but decided to move north and become free spirited. She fell in love with Roger, an African American, perhaps out of defiance to her family’s attitudes. She convinces Roger to meet her parents. Shortly before Kathy and Roger arrive at her parents’, Troy Grenzer breaks into the house and brutally murders her parents. Grenzer is caught in the aftermath by Kathy and goes after her. Roger comes to her aid, attacking Grenzer. When the police arrive, they decide that Roger is the murderer and fatally shoot him.

Time passes with Kathy in a state of depression. She’s outside the prison on the day of Grenzer’s execution. At the same moment of his execution Shade crosses over from the Area of Madness, possesses Grenzer’s body, teleports in front of Kathy, and orders her to drive off. Thus starts their great American road trip to search for the Madness Stream that’s been affecting people.

Kathy winds up alone scared and without money in New York, and has no luck searching for friends she knew from before. Her last hope is to find Ray. Like all her other friends, Ray has moved on. Lennie (Lenora Shapiro), the new tenant is intrigued by Kathy and takes her in. They share a little adventure in which Lennie holds up a cabdriver. Shade makes his way back through the Madness Stream to Kathy, and for lack of anything else to do, Lennie gets involved in their bizarre,
“hallucinogenic” road trip.

Later, Kathy and Lenny visit relatives of Kathy’s who live on a Montana farm. Alone in the barn, they have a long conversation and kiss. Neither is quite sure what to make of it, especially Kathy who has been in love with Shade. The story in issue #26 is told from Kathy and Lennie’s points of view as they lay naked in bed talking with each other. Peter Milligan, the series’ writer, comes up with the most surprising way for Shade to find out this bit of news. Kathy and Lennie’s relationship continues for a while. Jealous, Shade asks Kathy if she and Lennie are still having sex, and then tries to turn the table on them by kissing Lennie. Soon afterwards, Kathy gets pregnant by Shade. During her pregnancy Kathy realized she’s not in love with Shade, and they become friends. In a case of being in the wrong place at the wrong time, Kathy is shot while shopping. She lives long enough to deliver her baby.

Being part human and part Metan, Kathy’s baby George isn’t normal. His metabolism is much faster than a human’s and he grows up and dies within a short time. Shade uses his power to safekeep George’s soul until he can transfer it into another body. As irony would have it, the child’s new body belongs to Lilly, Lennie’s estranged daughter.

Milligan wraps up the series by having Shade go back in time. History is rewritten so that Troy Grenzer never murdered Kathy’s parents and her fiance Roger was never killed by police. Lenny was back in New York, Kathy was living in a Montana farmhouse and Shade had gone to be with her.

Kathy first appears in Shade #1, vol 2 and Lennie in #8. Kathy may have been bisexual. In any case. they’re outed in #20.

© and ® Vertigo Comics. Used without permission. Created by Peter Milligan.

Freedom Ring

Sunday, October 25th, 2009

freedomring01Strawberry-blond Curtis Doyle is first seen meeting a group of friends at their local hangout, the Happy Sunrise Diner in Greenwich Village. The friends make small talk and point out to Curtis that the waiter, Jeffrey, is flirting with him. Later outside the diner Curtis finds a ring lying on the sidewalk and keeps it.

Back in his apartment the unemployed Curtis is surprised to find his wish for a large ice cream sundae to appear out of thin air. His friend Troy, who lives in the same building, shows up later in the day in response to Curtis’ frantic message about “magic sundaes.” By now he’s figured out the ring is responsible for manifesting his desires. Unknown to Curtis, the material for the ring came from a fragment of the Cosmic Cube. Note: the ring had played a part in previous issues of Marvel Team-Up. A night of practicing leads to the discovery that the ring’s power has two limitations: things will disappear if Curtis loses his concentration and if the distance between Curtis and the object is more than 15 feet.

The next day Curtis and Troy join the gang at Happy Sunrise again. On his way out, Curtis is surprised to be asked out on a date by Jeffrey.

In the opening scene in issue #21, Curtis is showing off costume ideas for Troy. A couple of pages later, Curtis meets Jeffrey outside his building for their date. Curtis admits it’s been a while since he’s been on a date, and it shows when he says he’s brought a CD as a gift instead of flowers, and then suggests dinner at McDonalds followed by a movie. Jeffrey is assertive enough to nix fast food in favor of a new, trendy restaurant. Their two-hour wait for a table is interrupted by loud crashing noises, prompting the line of people to run. In sort of a gay take on the old Clark Kent schtick, Curtis feigns fear, screams, and runs away from Jeffrey in order to change into Freedom Ring.

The Abomination is on a rampage, and Spider-Man is trying to contain him when Freedom Ring comes onto the scene. Curtis gets in a couple of shots, and thanks to Spider-Man’s quick rescue, is saved from a pummeling. Despite Spider-Man’s caution, Curtis is knocked unconscious by the Abomination. Spider-Man whisks him off to the nearest hospital.

Curtis’ story next picks up in issue #22 with his friends talking with a doctor at St. John’s Hospital. She informs them he has massive internal injuries and damage to his spine, and a coma has been induced. Troy is at Curtis’ bedside when Jeffrey
comes to visit. The two share a few words.

Curtis learns from his doctor he’s paralyzed from the waist down and will not walk again. Two days later Troy brings him home. Alone, the idea occurs to him to try the ring to make his legs work. Excited by this turn, Curtis runs down the hallway to Troy’s apartment. From the corner of his eye, Curtis catches another neighbor watching him (apparently this has been happening for a while), and Curtis walks into this stranger’s apartment to confront him, only to be surprised to see Troy there. But it really isn’t Troy. It’s a Skrull who’s been sent to earth to spy on the Avengers, but gave up in

frustration when the super group disappeared (during Avengers Disassembled). The Skrull confides he’s thought about becoming a super hero and the talk turns to Curtis. It’s the Skrull who suggests the ring can make Curtis invulnerable, and proposes they try the ring out. Curtis trains with the Skrull for two full weeks before going out on patrol.

insane. Like the 616 Tony Stark, this one has cybernetic armor. He’d escaped from the SHIELD helicarrier and was going to On their first time out, Freedom Ring and Crusader (the codename the Skrull takes when appearing as a human super hero) encounter Iron Maniac. This villain is Tony Stark from an alternate earth where the Avengers died and as a result he wentattack the Baxter Building, hoping to get equipment to send him home.

Freedom Ring heedlessly attacks Iron Maniac. The insane Stark easily takes out Crusader, and then Curtis. Captain America, Spider Woman, and Luke Cage arrive just in time witness Stark drop Curtis and plunge to the ground. Curtis reverts to his regular appearance as Spider Woman carries him to a nearby pair of EMTs with a gurney.

Iron Maniac defeats the three Avengers in record time, and turns toward a now conscious Crusader, punching a fist through Crusader’s stomach. Miraculously, Curtis has woken up and transformed into Freedom Ring again. Curtis uses his ring to immobilize Iron Maniac, and inadvertently tells the villain the ring is his source of power. Stark uses his armor to morph into sharp spikes that he uses first to cut off Curtis’ ring finger, then to pierce his head and then his entire body twenty-eight times. The Avengers regain consciousness just as quickly, and Cap defeats Iron Maniac with a quick and forceful blow to the head with a toss of his shield.

Curtis is buried a few days later. Off panel, super heroes have come to pay their respects and left. His friends and Jeffrey are shown at graveside questioning why their friend tried to become a super hero and wondering where the mysterious ring went. For the curious, the ring was retrieved by the Skrull who is shown on the last page wearing it and being served by a pair of accommodating Skrull women.

Curtis’ power came from a ring he found on a sidewalk. The ring had been made out of a fragment of the Cosmic Cube. He simply needed to concentrate on an idea to make an object materialize or to induce a change, such as becoming invulnerable, or to give himself the power of flight.

Curtis’ first appears and is confirmed gay in Marvel Team-Up #20, vol 2. Curtis’ Skrull neighbor and trainer appeared in The Avengers Initiative book, notable # 15 – 17 before disappearing after being shot by the 3D Man (formerly Triathalon).  In #15 he says he honored Curtis in the Skrull tradition by taking up his weapon (the ring) after his death.

© and ® Marvel Comics. Used without permission. Created by Robert Kirkman.

Gannon Malloy

Sunday, October 25th, 2009
Art by Patrick Zircher

Art by Patrick Zircher

Gannon Malloy is a rookie police officer in the Blüdhaven Police Department. The first time he appears several other senior policeman are beating him up in the locker room. During the attack, one of them says “… And now we gotta change clothes in fronta you? If you’re smart, you’ll change at home from now on… ” Dick Grayson enters the locker room before his shift just as the three men are on their way out. Dick offers Gannon help, but Gannon refuses. Dick tries to confirm the names of the attackers but Gannon doesn’t know them since he’d worked the night shift. It’s then that they realize they’re now partners; Amy Rorhbach, Dick’s former partner was promoted to Captain after a majority of the force was revealed to be corrupt.

A second beating involving the same officers occurs in front of Grayson in #78. This time Grayson steps in. When he says he’ll have to report this, the main perpetrator shouts “What are you, Grayson? His boyfriend?” The question is met with a steely “What if I am?” before Captain Rorhback rushes in because of the noise. “We were just messing around, Captain” is the explanation.Gannon and Grayson watch each other’s backs in an encounter with Deathstroke in #80.

Malloy first appeared in Nightwing #71 and is confirmed gay in #77.

© and ® DC Comics. Used without permission. Created by Devin Grayson.

El Brujo

Sunday, October 25th, 2009

elbrujo1Contributed by Ronald Byrd

On an alternate earth in which North America is divided into several different territories, El Brujo (real name: Diego Escobar) is the super-hero of the Empire of Mexico; he has also appeared in at least one movie, “El Brujo and the Vampires from Venus.” Although many of his activities are staged for public relations, El Brujo proves his worth at a conference of super-heroes in New Orleans (Louisiana Free State), where he and several others help expose a terrorist plot to manipulate the various governments.

In the aftermath of a “hostage crisis” prior to leaving Mexico, El Brujo makes sexual overtures to reporters of both genders, indicating that he is a bisexual.

Like most other super-heroes on his Earth, El Brujo has no superhuman powers. During his staged crisis, El Brujo demonstrates excellent fighting skills, wields a gun, and uses smoke to make a theatrical entrance; precisely how well he would acquit himself in an unscripted conflict is unclear.

El Brujo first appeared and is confirmed as bisexual in Captain Confederacy #1.

© and ® Epic/Marvel Comics. Used without permission.

Anna Albrecht and Marthe Muller

Sunday, October 25th, 2009

annamarthe1Anna is a student attending an art school in Berlin. After a life drawing class she introduces herself to Marthe Müller, another student. They talk about how difficult it is to draw with the strict instructor, comparing him to a drill sergeant. Marthe has recently moved from Köln to Berlin and hasn’t any friends. The two women are a contrast. Anna’s hair is short and styled similarly to a man’s cut and she circumvents gender roles by wearing male clothing: trousers, suspenders, bow ties, vests, and shirts. Marthe’s hair is short though a feminine cut. She often wears dresses.

Anna invites Marthe to join her friends for one of their informal gatherings on the school’s rooftop. She tries her best to make Marthe feel welcome amongst her friends, all of whom are male, while they indulge in philosophical and political talk.

A few days later Anna visits Marthe at her boarding room. After learning Marthe hasn’t experienced any of Berlin’s nightlife she persuades her new friend to go out on the town that night. Anna is happy and smiling at the prospect. That night they attend an all women cabaret. Some of the performers are dressed in men’s clothing and one performer in particular catches their eyes because she was a nude model in their life drawing class. Later, Anna bursts into song as they walk home. Marthe confides a big secret to her new friend. She had given up art for eleven years and only began drawing again after learning her father had arranged a marriage for her. She refused and decided to attend art school.

Classes have ended for the Christmas holiday and Marthe is walking Anna and Erich, another classmate, to the train stationon their trips home. Marthe shocks them with the news that she’s decided to drop out of school. Anna is visibly shaken and calmed only when Marthe says she will find a job and stay in Berlin.

Anna is happy to return to Berlin after Christmas. She and Marthe are riding the tram and catching up on news. Anna talks about her frustration of being with her family and made to wear dresses, the idea of which makes Marthe laugh. Marthe holds Anna’s arm and nestles her head on Anna’s shoulder, an intimate moment that ends when Marthe talks of spending a good deal of time in the company of Kurt Severing, a man whom she met on the train when she first came to Berlin. Anna is noticeably crestfallen, and politely excuses herself for the evening when her stop arrives. Instead of returning to her boarding room, Anna walks to the banks of the Spree. Alone, she thinks of Marthe. “The smell of her hair unfastens something inside of me. A smile she’s never worn before carves it out and casts it away.” She removes a small bust she’d carved while away at home to be a gift for Anna, and throws it into the river. She instantly regrets the action and retrieves it.

A few weeks pass. Marthe arrives at Anna’s boarding house intending to walk with her to school. There’s quite a surprise waiting for Marthe when she opens the door to find Anna naked in bed with another woman. Anna cautions her friend to quickly close the door lest her landlords discover her and throw her out. Anna introduces the other woman as Trude, a clerk at the corner tobacconist who sold her some cigars. Marthe is visibly embarrassed but doesn’t say anything while Anna apologizes for forgetting their plans and playfully slaps Trude on her naked butt. Half-dressed, Anna offers with outstretched arms the small bust she’d made as a gift to Marthe, and then flirts with Trude.

A couple of months later and Marthe and her lover Kurt Severing are picnicking. Kurt asks if things between she and Anna are better, but she says they’re not. Marthe tells him about the morning when she found Anna with another woman, and Kurt calmly explains that Anna was in love with Marthe. She confesses their friendship had confused her. Kurt muses, “We do live in separate worlds, we boys and you girls. And then there’s the boys who want boys and the girls who want girls. One thing I love about this city is the way all of our different worlds rub shoulders every day.”

Please note that this entry doesn’t yet include events recounted in Berlin: City of Smoke, volume 2.

Amazon stocks Berlin: City of Stones and Berlin: City of Smoke with sample preview pages.

© Jason Lutes. Used without permission. Berlin is published by Drawn and Quarterly.