Showing posts with label Neal Adams. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Neal Adams. Show all posts

7.31.2019

Ghost of the Killer Skies - Detective Comics #404


About 5 years ago, I was watching Witchboard with my wife when my phone started blowing up.

"Who keeps calling?" she asked.

It was two people who never called me: my best friend Aharon "AJ" Klum's soon-to-be-ex-wife, and another of our mutual friends. After each call came the texts: PLEASE CALL ME AS SOON AS YOU CAN.

"Aren't you going to answer?"

Neither the ex or Chris ever really called me all that often, or ever. "If they're calling this much, something bad happened," I said. "Whatever it is will still be bad when the movie's over, and I can't do anything about it from Chicago. Let's just finish the movie."

At this time, our firstborn was about a year-and-a-half, and our second was two months old. No one was sleeping much, but that Sunday, both of them were asleep, allowing Dawn and I the chance to watch the Witchboard DVD we'd had from Netflix for forever. These moments were few and far between and I was absolutely adamant: we were gonna do this. Had nothing to do with the movie or anything (Witchboard is hardly a do-not-disturb-upon-pain-of-death affair), just the window of opportunity was damn well not going to be compromised.

So I turned my phone off and staved off learning the inevitable for another hour or so. On October 19, 2014, the mysterious Mr. Klum breathed his last in this world. Caught the last train out, bought the farm, went to the clearing at the end of the path, swept out with the tide however you want to put it. He who was my companion through adventure and hardship was gone forever


Obviously one never gets completely over these things, and much more could be said. But let me skip over everything from that moment until just yesterday when a package arrived for me from AJ's mom. "Saw this, thought of you" was the note. The book:


Now I'm never unhappy to receive anything like this in the mail. (Would that every day had the unsolicited but warmly appreciated arrival of an Archive Edition of fantastic Kubert art.) But I was slightly perplexed. And then it all came back to me: I got AJ this! For some Christmas or birthday of yesteryear. He was over at my place sometime around 2000 or 2001, whenever it was, and I had a copy of Enemy Ace: War in Heaven (the one set in WW2) and he read it and liked it. So, always eager to expand my buddy's comic-book horizons or at least spruce up his bookshelves a little bit with some McMolo-approved reading material, I got him this edition. And here it was, showing up at my place, all these years later. 

Did he ever read it? I don't know. I doubt it, actually, but who knows? I know for sure he read the War in Heaven one, as I watched him do it and he referenced it a few times over the years as a movie he wanted to make. To the day he died Klum was talking about the movies he was going to make. No one chooses when, as Martin Blank once said, and things are left unfinished. That's life and death for you. 


So all of the above was going through my head and heart when I cracked this one open. Enemy Ace was never a comic I actively read, but I think Joe Kubert is one of the all time greats, and I like pretty much any WW1 dogfight story anyone is going to put in front of me. 

I knew the broad strokes already but had never read the actual stories (outside of the aforementioned War in Heaven by Garth Ennis and Chris Weston.) Here's how the wiki puts it:

"Enemy Ace centered around the adventures of a skilled but troubled German anti-hero and flying ace in World War I and World War II, Hans von Hammer, known to the world as "The Hammer of Hell". It featured detailed and accurate depictions of WWI air combat, as told from the German POV. Hans von Hammer was a man of honor and chivalry, a flying knight in his Fokker Dr.I, but he was haunted by his duties and the constant death surrounding him."

More details: Von Hammer does not fraternize with his fellow pilots. He never speaks to his orderly, who is forever adding medals and dogfight cups to his mantelpiece and commenting on how easily Von Hammer falls asleep after a day of killing in the skies. His only friend is a wolf in the Black Forest, a fellow loner and killing machine. (Later he gets a dog.) Almost every pilot he shoots down salutes him from his doomed aircraft before plummeting to earth. (You can expect at least one of these - usually all of them - to happen in a single issue.) 



Good stuff, right? It would make a great movie or series or something, especially if it ended with him in WW2 telling der fuhrer to go fornicate with himself like in War In Heaven. (Although ideally, he'd be killed by his long-time nemesis, The Hangman, a French fighter pilot in WW1, and not in WW2.) The whole thing is about grace in defeat, honor in death. No one chooses when. Kudos to Joe Kubert and Robert Kanigher for coming up with the character way back when. 

Long before I knew who Kanigher, Klum or Joe Kubert was, (although I guess I had some inkling of Kubert, though no direct familiarity with his work) I came across the Hammer of Hell in: 


as collected in The Greatest Batman Stories Ever Told. As mentioned elsewhere in these pages, that and its companion volume (The Greatest Joker Stories Ever Told) altered my bat-trajectory altogether. I shan't retread that ground, though, but I broke the story out again and man is it wonderful. I just felt like putting up a few panels and talking about it a bit. 

Bruce Wayne is producing a movie in Spain about the life of, you guessed it, Hans Von Hammer. Not only is he fascinated by the tales of the Baron, but he believes in the project and "the things it can say to audiences about the nature - and the folly - of war." 

It's unclear why he's in his Batman duds at this point.

Someone is sabotaging the production, and people keep dying. As Bruce talks the situation over with the director, the film's technical expert, Heinrich Franz, enters.


If you're thinking we just met the saboteur, you're absolutely correct. And after a few more deaths and misdirections, Batman comes face to face with the self-styled "Ghost of Von Hammer." Why is he doing this?


So this is about control of the legacy/ competing narrative frames. Naturally, it all ends with a duel in the sky.

Just as naturally, Batman may be receiving a little help from the Great Beyond.

God that last page is so great. And - I realize now but didn't then - a wonderfully Kubert-ian composition. All the kudoses and all the chapeaus to Messrs O'Neil and Adams. I was going to say it would all make a terrific movie. And it would, I'm sure, but it'd make an even better two-hour Special TV Event if they ever end up doing another Batman TV show. (And they should.) This'd be the episode they'd talk about all summer long and for all summers after.

Two last things: I never tire of stuff like this:

"El Hombre Murcielago!" Or, as he helpfully repeats in English below, "Man of the Bats."

And (2) may all the ghosts of our own killer skies, circling above, one day glide to a peaceful landing. Failing that, may they all guide our hands in aviating death-duels with the enemy. Amen and amen. 

5.29.2014

Batman: The Inevitable Best of the 1970s Post

Welcome to the first (and only) Batman: The Best of the '70s Awards. Who will win the most Alfies?

Named in honor of Gotham Manor's faithful and unflappable caretaker, of course.
Or perhaps it should be the Gordies?
Neither, you say? Shut up and dive right in, you say? I hear and obey the voice of Landru.

Let's start with everyone's favorite:

THE WORST

Got to go with Justice League of America here. 


The series in general, but specifically, the worst issue of any comic published in the 1970s to feature the Caped Crusader is JLA #89. That's the one with the Mike Friedrich stand-in "Harlequin Ellis" that walks around under agonized prose all issue long before the writer addresses the reader directly in the last panel about the "crash-pounding of his artistic soul" before laying it all at Harlan Ellison's feet.

Moving on.
BEST CONCUSSION

Oooh! So many to choose from. I'll go with these two from the pages of Detective Comics in 1975:


There were actually far more brutal ones, and it's a silly category to begin with. But when I close my eyes and mentally picture the Batman getting cracked on the back of the head, it's one of the two above that I seem to recall.

BEST SUPPORTING PLAYER

This to me was a no-brainer:


Reading all of Batgirl's adventures in this decade convinces me more than ever that Alan Moore's (really Denny O'Neil's, the same way killing Jason Todd was not Jim Starlin's idea, though he wrote it, but Denny's) idea to cripple her in the pages of The Killing Joke was one of the ugliest, dumbest decisions of all comics in the 1980s.

And it's a logical enough segue into...

BEST BACK-UP

Tougher than you might think.

The Robbins/Heck Batgirl stories are all pretty great.
Not to mention all of those fantastic early-70s Robin ones where he's mixing it up with hippies, cultists, and Jesus freaks.


And later in the decade there's some very interesting Wonder Woman and Steve Ditko stuff, to boot. And some of the reprints of old Batman or sci-fi tales come to mind, as well. But in the final analysis, I'll go with Archie Goodwin's and Walt Simonson's Manhunter series from Detective Comics in 1974.


BEST CREATIVE TEAM  

The obvious answer would be the most famous Bat-pairing of the 70s, Neal Adams and Denny O'Neil. And while I certainly wouldn't fault anyone for saying so, I'm going to with:

Jim Aparo
and Bob Haney.
They were far more consistent than O'Neil and Adams. (Well, O'Neil, anyway - Adams was and remains always consistent.)

Even the way he looks. (1978, left, and these days, right.) How is that possible?
Haney and Aparo were responsible for a greater amount of stories that I personally enjoyed than O'Neil and Adams at any rate. But that's a more awkward name for the category. Also, an honorable mention for Archie Goodwin, whose all-too-brief tenure as a writer and editor led to some of the Batman's best stories.

Gotham's International Airport (number 25) is named after him.
He was immortalized in The Batman Adventures as "Mr. Nice."
BEST OF THE BATMAN'S SITTING IN BRANCHES AND STAKING OUT A HAUNTED HOUSE PANELS

Oh, here I can't even hazard a guess. They're all winners. It was just a delight to discover it happening so often, over and over again, and wondering about it.


BEST VILLAIN

Well, it's definitely not any of these guys:

or
The Calculator
I get a kick out of the Spook and the Gentleman Ghost, but I can't in good conscience say their respective appearances are "Best Of..." level. So I'll play it safe and choose:


He's used fairly sparingly (despite even getting his own title halfway through the decade) but he steals the show each time he appears. As per usual. So, the Joker it is.

BEST OUT-OF-CONTEXT PANELS

Both from Batman 221.
From Batman 250.
And this gem from Batman 285.
MOST GRATUITOUS BOOBS

Another no-brainer.
Let's break down the individual titles for more Alfies-and-Gordies fun... numbered just to make it more presentable, not in order of importance or personal esteem.

1.

BEST WRITER: Tough not to go with Denny O'Neil here.
BEST ARTIST: Ditto for Neal Adams, but I'm going to go my own way, here, and choose Irv Novick, who while certainly following Neal's lead, kicked an unreasonable amount of ass and is perhaps somewhat unsung among Batman artists of the '70s.

NOTABLE STORIES


2.

BEST WRITER: Elliot S. Maggin? Steve Englehart? Archie Goodwin? I'll go with Archie Goodwin.
BEST ARTIST: The amount of artists who worked on this title is staggering. As with Batman, it's tough not to go with Neal Adams. But I'll go with a tie between him and Marshall Rodgers.

NOTABLE STORIES



3.

BEST WRITER: Bob Haney. Not very difficult - he wrote the vast majority of them.
BEST ARTIST: Slightly more difficult. Dick Dillin illustrated a whole lot more of them than either Curt Swan or Kurt Schaffenberger, but I'll take those two guys over Dillin any day - with all respect to Dillin, of course. Just a big fan of Swan and Schaffenberger's style.

NOTABLE STORIES
(You'll notice there's quite a few of these... of all the Bat-titles of the '70s, this was for me the most surprising. It marched to the beat of its own seriously-warped drummer, and each year seemed to bring something more memorable than the last.)


4.

BEST WRITER: Bob Haney. As with World's Finest, pretty easy to pick this one, as he wrote most of them.
BEST ARTIST: Jim Aparo. (Ditto.)

NOTABLE STORIES


5.

BEST WRITER: Steve Englehart
BEST ARTIST: Dick Dillin

Okay, so I beat up on this title a bit during my overview. Not too unfairly I hope, but apologies to anyone whose favorite era of JLA is the '70s. Me, I'll stick with Gardner Fox's and Grant Morrison's respective runs. (And the anomaly of the DeMatteis/Maguire/Giffen JLI from the 80s.)

NOTABLE STORIES


6.

BEST WRITER: Martin Pasko (with appropriate kudos to Alfred Bester)
BEST ARTIST: José Luis García-López

NOTABLE STORIES


and finally 7.

Probably my favorite of all the titles, as short-lived as it was. So much bang for your metaphorical buck, here, and a great cross-section of eras, styles, and characters. (Hell, even Alfred had an ongoing back-up.)

 

BEST WRITER: Bob Rozakis,
BEST ARTIST: Bob Brown. (Brown was all over the Bat-map and this is more of a catch-all award. His best work was arguably in the pages of Batman.)

NOTABLE STORIES


That does it for this one-off edition of the Alfie/Gordies. As threatened last time, I'll be back to inflict one more slice of Bronze Age Batman on you before darkening the Bat-signal from the roof of Dog Star Omnibus HQ forever. I'll leave you this - here's hoping wiser heads prevail at some point and give us the Bat-Mite / Mr. Myxlplyx buddy comedy we so desperately need.