Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Marvel 1974 Week--Avengers #130!!

A common complaint these days is that modern comic books are too steeped in their own continuity, and therefore too complex and daunting for new readers (who, I suppose the theory goes, are completely unable to handle jumping into a story in media res, and would run away in terror at the thought of not immediately and instantly knowing every single fact about this new universe right away).

Damn good thing these newbies were never exposed to Steve Englehart's Avengers in the 1970s or nobody ever would have taken up comic books.

I mentioned yesterday about Englehart's tendency to play the "long game" in his 70s Marvel work. I mean, this guy would have plots that percolated for 20-odd issues, and expect you to keep up. He'd sow the seeds for the Celestial Madonna story in issue #114, and drops a hint or three every once in awhile, and then have everything explode in #129, settle, perk up again a few issues later, intertwine with the Vision/Scarlet Witch story he's been doing since #107, throw in a new retconned origin for an old, forgotten Avengers villain who hadn't been seen for 125 issues, make another long-forgotten bad guy the father of one of our characters, bring time travel into the mix, tie in with the travails of Captain America's mag, completely retcon the origin of one of the Avengers into being the corpse of a WWII hero based on a stray comment during the Kree/Skrull war, and then tie it all in with his Doctor Strange run by having Dormammu show up.

So, yeah, Steve expected you to be able to keep up. This particular issue contained explicit references to at least 20 other Marvel comics. And yet, somehow, readers were able to keep up.

Now, I've discussed my first Avengers experience before, and therein discussed why I think the concern for newbies is a bit overblown. So I won't belabor the point any longer, except to say: give the newbies some credit, dudes.

Anyway, let's get to the rocking fun this issue:

Oh. Sorry. No disrespect intended.

Last issue the Swordsman died saving Mantis from Kang, and it was revealed that Mantis was likely to be the "Celestial Madonna," she who will bear "The One." Heavy stuff, so this issue is mostly a lull before the next chapter of the epic.

Our creators:

Englehart chose to go the flashback route, so after the splash, we zig back 48 hours, as Hawkeye talks up his recent guest stint in Captain America:

Then Mantis decides she wants to take the Swordsman's body "home" for a funeral.


So they loaded up the Quinjet and flew to Vietnam, everybody's idea of a fun place in 1974. Meanwhile, a petty thief with a painful gimmick is slice up Saigon shops:


Back to Four Heroes and a Funeral--who better to officiate at one of these things than--a god?!?



After the ceremony, there's a ruckus outside the temple:

Well, it turns out that, even though we know this trio as villains, they're after a killer...and when the Avengers try to intervene:

What? They're good guys now??

We learn their evil communist past (damn, more references to past issues!), and how they became disenchanted with their Soviet and Chinese masters, so went to Vietnam to become heroes there!:


Now, Iron Man is having none of this, because he blames the Crimson Dynamo for the death of his girlfriend of the week a while back...and he wants to revenge. Thor, surprisingly, is the voice of reason. Which leads to our Mid-Issue Rumble!!



Thor wins, Stark chills out. And Hawkeye, who only showed up last issue, wants the lowdown on this whole Mantis business. So Vision gives him the handy recap page:


Now, the issue is only halfway done, but our heroes and "villains" have reached an uneasy truce. What excuse for more fighting? That's right--the random thief we watched earlier!! He sees the Avengers and assumes that they are after him (because, after all, the Avengers often pursue jewel thieves in Asia...). So he plays the "lie to one set of guys so they'll fight the other set under false pretenses" card...

...which inevitably leads to:


The End Of Issue Tussle!!!

Fight fight fight...

Fight fight fight...

Which, of course, starts going the American team's way.


And the Vision stops the Slasher, which, of course, reveals his wicked deception:



Of course, the commies never thought to ask why, if the guy was innocent, he was running around in a suit of knives...

And, as the communist super-team leaves him to his fate, Vision gets to deliver the issue's moral lesson:

Uhh, OK.

Hey, Englehart wasn't perfect. The second half of this issue was overly rushed and compressed (perhaps spending two pages on Iron Man vs Thor and one whole page on an extended Mantis flashback wasn't the best ideas). The end of the Celestial Madonna story was fairly unsatisfying,
an anti-climax that didn't meet the expectations built up along the way (but then again, what ending could??). He became obsessed with Mantis to a disturbing degree, first using a thinly veiled Mantis in his work at DC and Eclipse--and upon his return to Marvel, using her in the Fantastic Four AND the West Coast Avengers AND Silver Surfer (she even became the Surfer's girlfriend!!). He's had a history of tensions with editors that has resulted in abrupt endings to runs and comics published with pseudonyms.

But by golly, the man was ambitious when crafting a story; he knew how to use the history of Marvel is unique and fascinating ways; he challenged the readers. And his run on the Avengers in the 1970s is one of the greatest in Avengers (or Marvel) history.

ELSEWHERE IN THE MARVEL UNIVERSE:

Speaking of Sal Buscema and team books:

Man, is there anything that Sal didn't draw?

The Defenders--what a concept. Marvel's attempt at a "non-team," although nobody actually seemed to know what that was supposed to mean, or how to actually implement that idea. Still, with that cast, even the most conventional superhero stories turned odd quickly.

This issue, written by Len Wein, saw the origin of the Wrecking Crew (yes, in the Defenders!!), as they were tearing down buildings Kyle Richmond (Nighthawk) owned, looking for a hidden Gamma Bomb!! Guest starring Luke Cage!! It was the middle chapter of a three-parter!! All lovingly rendered by Our Pal Sal Buscema!!

Two months later, Steve Gerber would come on board, and things would get really weird...

2 comments:

SFF said...

Yeah really. Perhaps their idea of a non-team was to find a team for Dr. Strange, Hulk and Sub-Mariner. Let's find a home for the three oddballs.

Although I did like some of those issues including the Guardians Of The Galaxy thread.

SFF said...

Oh and nice work on The Avengers. It was a true classic!