Posts Tagged ‘Captain Marvel’

Goodbyeireland eBay store

Monday, May 3rd, 2010

Folks, I’m selling off a number of books, dvds and comics, before the big trip across the hemisphere. Below I will list a selection of the lots on auction.

Oh and the shoes and tights? They’re Stephanie’s. I swear.

Goodbyeireland

Grant Morrison dovetails his run on Batman with the opening of Final Crisis by stripping away everything that makes the Caped Crusader who he is, leaving only the tortured psyche of Bruce Wayne exposed and vulnerable. An excellent conclusion to his first arc on the title.

After the epic whimsy of Bone, Jeff Smith released this original one-off story that retells the origin of Captain Marvel, now referred to as Shazam for legal reasons (damn you Marvel!). Breezy and light-hearted, there’s even a couple of digs at the Bush administration thrown in for good measure along with the fantastic art. Strongly recommended.

Alan Moore’s return to the underground ‘zine. Dodgem Logic features erudite editorials from the Magus himself, contributions from a number of guest writers and familiar faces, as well as handy lifestyle hints for community activists. Plus….burlesque! Issue One includes a cd which contains some hints at the future musical direction of Moore’s newly formed Supergroup Unearthing.

Signed by the author, this was the also the basis of one of De Botton’s first television series. A charming introduction to philosophy.

Tragic and beautiful, this supernatural fantasy is an excellent adaptation of Lindqvist’s novel. Avoid the ridiculous American remake.

Some black shoes. Um…..well my wife likes them!

So there you have it, a sample of what is available at my eBay store Goodbyeireland. Take a browse and if you see something you like, throw up a bid. Cheers, Emmet.

Shazam!

Monday, December 7th, 2009

“When I was a child I spoke as a child I understood as a child I thought as a child; but when I became a man I put away childish things.” I Cor. xiii. 11.

1938! The birth of the Superman – adopted parents Joe Shuster and Jerry Siegel, spawned from the minds of Albert Einstein and Friedrich Nietzsche. Heady stuff for a man who wears his underpants over his trousers. As a fashion statement it caught on and before long they were all coming out of the closet.

This is where the history of the modern superhero starts. Caped Doc Savages, ‘science heroes’, as Alan Moore calls them, often empowered by varieties of pseudo-science like serums; atomic blasts; cosmic energy rods; or indeed simply being born an alien.

But it all could have gone very differently. 1938 saw the birth of another kind of superhero. No mad professors or lab accidents. No benevolent space aliens descending from heaven in a confusion of religion and science fiction. Just a kid named Billy Batson with a secret magick word: SHAZAM.

It’s an acronym of names from biblical and classical myth, a magick word summing up hamanity’s imaginative past, as opposed to the speculative future represented by his peers. His name was Captain Marvel – and he is the hero Billy becomes once he says his secret word aloud.

Sure he looked similar, cape and suspiciously visible underwear so clean any Mormon would be proud – but the best-selling creation of Fawcett comics, with art by C. C. Beck was a different beast entirely. Billy Batson becomes Captain Marvel, a grown man with incredible powers, but when he says Shazam a second time he becomes poor Billy again. A small impoverished child living on the streets. Acting as narrator Billy spoke directly to readers, allowing them to identify with him and the fantasy of becoming the kind of person you always wanted to be.

Compare this to the many other comic heroes produced by National Comics, soon to become DC. Grown men having adventures in masks and gaudy costumes. Maybe there was something slightly unappealing about that, or perhaps children were not as willing to read about vigilante millionaires and bruiser scientists. This may be why so many heroes acquired teen wards like Robin and Speedy.

Marvel did not have this problem. Soon Fawcett had one of the most successful characters on the market, surpassing the sales of the last son of Krypton. Until a legal case was brought against the company by National alleging the character bore too great a resemblance to Superman.

I find the history of the Captain Marvel character fascinating. Buried after decades of litigation and subsequent acquisition by DC, the character should have been little more than a footnote. Instead it inspired numerous copycat creations, including a sly franchise name place-holder by Marvel Comics seeing an opportunity not to be missed; and a British superhero named Marvelman, whose creators would in turn become embroiled in legal wranglings that are still ongoing. All this over a little boy with a magick word?

There’s a lot of history to talk about, but I would like to discuss what the character means to me. I believe Captain Marvel matters not just because of how entertaining his classic adventures were – talking Tigers; an insect-sized villain more devious than you could imagine; the Marvel family! – but for what he represents. The freedom to dream, the power of the imagination. Comic books typically deal with fantasy, but in the wake of the science heroes these adventures become increasingly narrower. The format ever more copied and limited. Heroes went from pastel-coloured imaginauts to grim ‘n’ gritty vigilantes.

Their appeal became narrower and comic books soon seemed to be read by the stereotypical geek only – twenty-somethings still living with their parents.

Captain Marvel is not so easily defined. Is he a man or a boy? Writers tend to parody the character as a simpleton like the child wearing a suit that’s too large for him. He can also be seen as that ideal version of ourselves we all want to be – that we could be if only circumstances would allow. Having a magick word that could do that for us – whether we’re a kid looking to escape our childhood; a teenager confused by a suddenly changed world; or middle aged and trapped by a life that didn’t go our way.

Shazam is the answer.

This is wish-fulfillment in its purest form. It is not reasonable or rational – it is the essence of daydreaming. When Cap appeared in Grant Morrison’s JLA he is described as an expert on the world of the irrational – by Superman himself! Putting these words in the mouth of Marvel’s former sales rival underlines the main difference between them. These issues of JLA are a real treat for classic golden-age fans, featuring a battle between 5th dimensional imps similar to Mr Mxyztplk and Cap’s adventures as a 2d paper cut out figure – complete with a distinctive C. C. Beck squinty face. Think PatrickWarburton with a facelift and you’re halfway there.

So to me Captain Marvel represents the kinds of stories readers used to enjoy. Breezy and fun, absurd but with a message. Today those same familiar heroes from the Golden Age of comics and beyond seem like the shuffling zombies of loved ones, bereft of wonder, more concerned with a strange faux realism of pain and depression. Girlfriend in a fridge anyone? It is strange that Cap is made such a figure of fun considering the comic book readership seem caught in a state of arrested development themselves.

Not to place the blame entirely on them, as the mainstream comic industry itself is selling a product stripped to the bone, stories dictated by shrinking possibilities and ever more congested relations between franchises. The industry is changing, but seems to have no idea what it will become. It’s time to take stock, to assess what might have gone wrong and return to some childhood friends left behind.

Friends like Captain Marvel.

Story Time

Wednesday, November 18th, 2009

The success of J. K. Rowling Harry Potter series was a starting pistol for children’s books, with literary agents searching the land for the next bestseller phenomenon. Thankfully many interesting writers have managed to ride this wave of enthusiasm. However, children’s literature has appealed to talented writers for years, with the advantage of writing for an audience whose imaginations are less troubled by having to suspend disbelief. Terry Pratchett gave a much remarked upon interview disputing that Pottermania had ushered in children’s literature. Stories told for an audience of children are nothing new. From Aesops Fables to the Brothers Grimm, Enid Blyton to Maurice Sendak – kids remain eager listeners when storytime comes round.

Author Sarah Webb has asked for recommendations of the best ten children’s books from the last ten years. I find I still enjoy reading books that the younger Me would have liked. The pleasure remains the same. In fact the older I am the more I appreciate the difficulty of writing a memorable book for children.

In no particular order:

Philip Pullman  – His Dark Materials

Michael Chabon  – Summerland

Terry Pratchett  – Nation

Lemony Snicket  – A Series of Unfortunate Events

Brian K. Vaughan  – Runaways

Philip Reeves  – Mortal Engines

Eoin Colfer  – Artemis Fowl series

S. E. Connolly  – Damsel

Jeff Smith  – Shazam! The Monster Society of Evil

Philip Pullman understands the importance of crafting a story that will live in the minds of its readers. Take his early attempts at science fiction for adults, the now out of print Galatea, and compare it to the excellent His Dark Materials trilogy. Pullman wants to use his writing to impart his view of the world and challenge received ideas of social order and the nature of religious authority. Whereas the magic realism of his adult fiction falters, the adventures of Lyra and Will, pursued by agents of the Church across two worlds, manages to illustrate concisely how adulthood can be compromised by good intentions and failure of imagination. Children in Pullman’s universe are the ultimate rebels, as they have the freedom to think differently. He is the modern standard bearer for G. K. Chesterton’s much quoted phrase - Fairy tales are more than true — not because they tell us dragons exist, but because they tell us dragons can be beaten.

The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay is possibly the best book yet written about the comic book industry, a  fictional version of events that gives a greater sense for the history of what those men stooped over flattened squares in the years following WWII endured while dreaming up new heroes for their century. Summerland is equally epic in scope, Michael Chabon’s attempt to write an American fantasy novel to rival C. S. Lewis’ The Chronicles of Narnia. Blending imagery from Norse myth with Native American mysticism, the novel is a love song to a childhood spent on the ballpark in the summer heat. Chabon is an ambitious author and Summerland a worthy experiment with the genre.

Terry Pratchett’s Nation is more of a thought experiment for children. Try to imagine how our world would be today if the role of the Church in colonial expansion was not as strong. A Robinson Crusoe without adult characters, two children from different cultures are forced to work together to survive. Like Pullman, the question is asked of the kids reading – can you imagine a better world? Try and make it so.

Lemony Snicket’s A Series of Unfortunate Events achieves the rare feat of being both tragically sad and also whimsically comical. The entire series represents what may be the best modern fable for children published in years. Its collection of grotesques rival Mervyn Peake’s Gormenghast and the Beaudelaire children would send the Famous Five running home crying to their mothers with bloody noses. Assuming Sunny Beaudelaire didn’t bite them off. Once again these books carry the important moral that in the adult world, there is no one to rely on but oneself, but there can be relief courtesy of love and friendship along the way, while it lasts.

Runaways by Brian K. Vaughan may be an unusual inclusion. For one it’s an American comic book. Also the original creative team of writer Vaughan and artist Adrian Alphona have since moved on.  Nevertheless for its original run of 24 issues, Runaways (following the adventures of a group of children who discover their parents are supervillains and, well, go on the run) achieved the seemingly impossible in American comics. It became a classic, original comic book series. Recommended for readers young and old.

Philip Reeves won the Guardian book award for the first entry in his Mortal Engines series of books for children and it is easy to see why.  A dystopian tale with the marvelous hook that in the future cities are mobile and only the larger, ‘hungrier’, metropolises survive. The writing is dark and imaginative and the main characters are forced to grow up too soon.

Eoin Colfer has taken a lot of stick recently for writing a sequel to Douglas Adams’ Hitch-Hiker’s Guide. I feel the Wexford native was on a hiding to nowhere from the day the news broke. He was forced to compete with a dead man who still can claim a fanatical fan base and who know when they are being exploited. Better to stick to his own literary universe, the artful world of Artemis Fowl, scourge of the Fairy Folk who are surprisingly technologically advanced. A Celtic Tiger-cub who would give Irish bankers a run for their money, he wheels and deals his way through two worlds, bamboozling humans and Fairies with his intelligence and conniving. Fantastic fun.

Susan Connolly’s Damsel is the fairy tale every child should have already heard. The story of a young girl whose hero father goes missing on a quest, she ventures forth to rescue him aided only by his guidebook to heroism. Witty, imaginative and deserving of a much wider audience.

Jeff Smith’s Shazam! The Monster Society of Evil is a two-fold treat. An introduction to the greatest superhero of all for younger readers who missed him first, second and third times round; and a homage to the wonderful work of its creator C. C. Beck. When Billy Batson speaks the magic word Shazam aloud he is transformed into the hero Captain Marvel. Smith’s art references the style of Beck, while also containing some modern day satirical digs, including the villain’s resemblance to a certain member of the Bush Administration.

I find I don’t have a tenth recommendation, so instead I will mention books I am looking forward to reading, such as Margo Lanagan’s Tender Morsels, as well as Dave McKean’s illustrated collaboration with Richard Dawkins on evolutionary science for kids. Now I just need to write a story of my own.

Use of the Fawcett Marvel Family in Final Crisis

Tuesday, January 20th, 2009

Grant Morrison’s Final Crisis, rather than being a direct sequel to Crisis on Infinite Earths, has instead focused on Jack Kirby’s New Gods. This series told the story of a conflict between Darkseid’s armies of Apokolips and the New Gods of New Genesis. The son of Darkseid himself, Orion, was fated to battle his father to determine the ultimate fate of their peoples. Kirby never got to write that story, so Morrison pitched the storyline thus. There was a war in Heaven. And Evil won.

Thus the conceptual deadlock of Kirby’s New Gods was broken – the final battle between the two armies has been fought and now earth’s heroes must suffer the consequences, including the creation of the fabled ‘Fifth World‘. This is an idea Morrison has been building towards since his JLA run, expounded upon in the Seven Soldier Mister Miracle miniseries and finally brought to boil with Final Crisis #1.

But wait – there’s more!

For I’ve also noticed that Morrison has evidenced a healthy respect in the past for C. C. Beck’s Captain Marvel creation, the one-time sales rival of DC’s Superman, when it was produced by Fawcett Comics. This is underlined in Superman Beyond #1, a two-part series that acts as an adjunct to Final Crisis. Superman is pulled away from the Crisis to join a team of other ’supermen’. These include Ultraman, his criminal counterpart; Uber-Mensch, a literal Nazi interpretation of Nietzsche’s ideas; an interesting combination of Charlton comic’s Captain Atom and Alan Moore’s Dr. Manhattan (the latter a reinterpretation of the former); and finally Captain Marvel. Except he’s not the DCU proper Captain Marvel – consigned to comic book limbo – he’s in fact the ‘Fawcett’ Captain Marvel, the premier superhuman of his reality, which is why he is present.

I see this as a comment on Morrison’s part of DC’s treatment of these former publishing rivals bought and then buried. Captain Atom and Captain Marvel both exist in the DCU, but as characters they are made subservient to Kal El. He is their better, reflecting the publishing coup of DC itself over its competitors. Even their villains obey the same hierarchy. Luthor and Dr. Sivana both survive the initial Anti-Life Equation purge of earth, but join forces to defeat Darkseid’s agent Libra (although Lex is most definitely in charge).

Within the Final Crisis storyline itself that competitiveness is reflected once again by having Supergirl spar against a corrupted Mary Marvel. It is strongly implied that Darkseid’s lieutenant Desaad has possessed Mary, but it is also suggested in Final Crisis #6 that she has the choice of becoming her tainted, empowered self. I find this similar to the quandry of Kid Marvel in Alan Moore’s classic Marvelman. For in that book (lost to publishing litigation) Kid Marvel has grown into an adult and become corrupted by power. He enjoys being the most powerful being on the planet and Marvelman’s return from the dead is a threat to him. So he tears up London in an attempt to kill his former friend. Though eventually defeated and returning to his non-powered alter ego, he continues to be tempted by the thought of saying his ‘magic word’ and becoming Kid Marvel again. Morrison pens a scene very reminiscent of that -

Mary Marvel: I can never say it again. Never say the word, never say it ever.

Finally we come to Tawky Tawny the tiger, who can also be seen in the link above. Genteel Tiger of choice, he faces off against the second son of Darkseid, Kalibak, who has incarnated on earth in the body of a tiger-man himself. Kalibak leads an army of tiger…um…people, created by the Evil Gods Flesh Farm. Tawny challenges the son of Darkseid and defeats him in single combat, resulting in the armed humanoid tigers bowing down to him in recognition of his superiority.

In a neat twist Morrison has here married the Fawcett universe to Jack Kirby’s other DC creation – Kamandi, the last boy on Earth.

To my mind Final Crisis resurrects these neglected properties and reintroduces them into the mainstream DCU, whereas previous Crisis-sis-sis-es have been editorial mandated exercises in streamlining. It’ll be interesting to see how successful these new riffs on the Marvel Family and Kirby’s creations will be in a post Final Crisis DCU.

Here’s hoping.

How MARVELous

Monday, April 28th, 2008

I’ve been reading up on C. C. Beck after John and I agreed to pursue our little documentary venture together. Some fascinating stuff.

Particularly Captain Tootsie..now this is just weird. Namely an advertising creation that appears as a doppelganger of the Big Red Cheese, gobbling down the glucose while fighting crime.

I also discovered an article published by the man himself under his Crusty Curmudgeon column. It excited me as he used the same structure I proposed to John.

I’m taking this to be a sign for the train to pull out of the station.