Peter: "Operation: Overkill" is so blessedly short, it almost acts as an epilogue to next issue's double-sized stick of dynamite, the series conclusion featuring Batman himself. The "Nemesis" series has been so forgettable that I really can't recall (irony!) what the hero's mission was in the first place. Burkett pocketed an easy ten bucks with this script; half of it is Shakespeare quotes.
Jack: I admit it--I want to know what the terrible plan is that Ms. Scarfield outlined for the crime bosses. It's so bad that Nemesis will need to team up with Batman next issue! This is Dan Spiegle's swan song on the series, and good riddance. This is some of the worst art I've seen in the 1980s.
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Aparo |
The Best of DC #30
"The Stage is Set... for Murder!"
(Reprinted from Detective Comics #425, July 1972)
"The Assassin-Express Contract!"
Story by Len Wein
Art by Carmine Infantino & Dick Giordano
(Reprinted from Action Comics #419, December 1972)
"The Magical Mystery Mirror"
(Reprinted from Detective Comics #444, January 1975)
"The Riddle of the Unseen Man!"
Story Uncredited
Art by Ruben Moreira
(Reprinted from Detective Comics #201, November 1953)
"A Burial for Batgirl!"
(Reprinted from Detective Comics #400, June 1970)
"Midnight is the Dying Hour!"
(Reprinted from Detective Comics #401, July 1970)
"The Three Feats of Peril!"
Story by Bill Woolfolk
Art by Leonard Starr
(Reprinted from Detective Comics #209, July 1954)
"Case of the Dead-On Target!"
(Reprinted from Detective Comics #435, July 1973)
"The Man with 20 Lives"
Story by Jack Miller
Art by Joe Certa
(Reprinted from Detective Comics #227, January 1956)
"The Ocean Pest!"
Story by Otto Binder
Art by Joe Certa
(Reprinted from Detective Comics #222, August 1955)
"Wanted for Murder-One, the Batman"
(Reprinted from Batman #225, September 1970)
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"The Assassin-Express Contract!" |
Peter: The digest-sized 30th issue of
The Best of DC offers up a series of reprints from
Detective Comics (and, oddly, one each from
Action and
Batman), all in super-tiny format. Five of the eleven stories here are new to us. First up is "The Assassin-Express Contract," wherein Christopher Chance, the Human Target, is hired by a dimwit who has mistakenly taken out a contract on a competitor. There's no way to contact the assassin to call off the deal, so Chance must board a train disguised as the mark. I love the Infantino-Giordano art and the story makes me nostalgic for the 1970s, when every superhero comic story was engaging, intelligent, and entertaining. See what nostalgia does to you?
Our old friend, Roy Raymond, TV Detective, host of the popular Impossible... But True! show, discovers he's got an invisible stalker in "The Riddle of the Unseen Man!" As usual for this strip, Roy is given an impossible situation (invisible man) and manages to produce a very logical explanation (electronic radio interference or some such). Now, the expository doesn't always work (there's a gimmick with a typewriter that still doesn't make sense to me), but there's a goofy air to the whole package (including the sharp Moreira art) that can't help but make even an anti-DC curmudgeon like myself smile from ear to ear. Jack, can we forget the '80s and go back to the '50s? Pretty please?
Equally as much fun is "The Three Feats of Peril," starring Mysto, Magician Detective. The plot is a bit confusing (Mysto investigates the death of his friend and mentor, the Great Zambesi, and must perform the "three impossible feats" Zambesi had perfected, in order to smoke out the killer) and the climactic reveal is predictable, but I had a whale of a good time with this disposable fluff. The art is the usual great stuff from Leonard Starr. In the useless trivia department: did you know that Captain America and Bucky were terrorized by a stage magician (who doubled as a Japanese spy) named Mysto in the 1940s?
Detective John Jones (aka J'onn J'onnz, Martian Manhunter) is tasked with putting cracks in the alibi of a hood who's committed murder. Lucky for the D.A. that Martians can look into the human brain and "retrace thought processes." J'onnz stalks the killer until the man confesses. "The Man with 20 Lives" rates three out of four yawns and lulled me to sleep with its boring Joe Certa art.
Captain Compass is hired by a chap named Walters to aid him in his search for a huge cache of pirate's treasure lying on the bottom of the ocean in a sunken ship. Compass very quickly suspects that there's a criminal element at work on his ship and his suspicions become reality when the divers come up with a chest full of eighth century gold coins,
all matching each other perfectly! Oh, wipe that confused look off your face. Didn't they teach you in history class that eighth century gold coins were
etched by hand and no two coins are identical? Turns out the man who hired Compass has been melting down stolen gold and placing it in the hull of a ship they put at the bottom of the sea! "The Ocean Pest" has one of the more elaborate funny book plots I've seen and it manages to pull the feat off in only six pages. Captain Mark Compass had a very long run throughout several titles (his debut landed in
Star Spangled Comics #83, August 1948), which only goes to show that back in the 1940s, any character could have a long run in the comics.
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Aparo's back cover |
Jack: This is a fun collection of stories with great front and back covers by Jim Aparo. We have the benefit of reading the stories online, so we don't have to squint to make out the words in the digest format. I enjoyed "The Assassin-Express Contract!" too and am always happy to see quality Infantino art with the usual great inks by Giordano, who is one of the unsung heroes of DC. By the way, this was the first appearance of the Human Target! "The Riddle of the Unseen Man!" is done in the classic early '50s style, where mysterious events are all explained away by dubious science. There is more of the same faith in science on display in "The Three Feats of Peril," which has clear, straightforward storytelling to go with the crisp art. I suspect we're tiring of the Gerry Conway/Marvel Comic style of storytelling, where the main thread of plot is constantly interrupted by subplots and no storyline ever quite ends. I always liked the Martian Manhunter and the Red Tornado in the '60s/'70s
Justice League of America, so I was happy to read "The Man with 20 Lives," and I agree that "The Ocean Pest!" packed a lot of plot into six short pages.
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Next Month.... Wrightson to the Wrescue! |
4 comments:
You left the best part of Batman 353 out. The preview of "Masters of the Universe" by Kupperberg and Swan. Now this is a Hostess Twinkiw ad. Superman gets dragged into this mess. At the time DC did quite a few of these previews, but few are as bad as this.
Dr. Thirteen is one of these characters that don't make sense in the DC context. In a cosmos with the Phantom Stranger, the Demon or the Spectre he will always be an idiot, regardless of his achievements.
The sub-plots on Batman are disappointingly dull. This is by far not Gerry's best work.
Andy-
My bad. I actually thought the Masters of the Universe insert WAS a Twinkie ad!
Couldn't agree with you more on the sub-plots. The sub-plots on General Hospital were more interesting and original. How many months until Miller shows up?
I believe that MOTU preview was the widest DC ever did — showing up in 16 titles in November 1982 (also including Detective 520) leading into the three-issue limited series they would publish. And by the time of the preview, Superman had already encountered He-Man back in July in DC Comics Presents 47. Personally, I enjoyed DC's take on it. But that could just be the Twinkies talking...
Andy:
I agree 100% about Dr. 13. He’s HILARIOUSLY ridiculous in the early issues of THE PHANTOM STRANGER, constantly trying to prove the Stranger’s a fraud, despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary, issue after issue. And he’s so over the top about it, shaking his fists, his face contorted with rage as he screams, ‘One of these days I’ll expose you for the fake you really are! Your cheap magician’s tricks don’t fool ME!!’ Etc. This just after witnessing the Stranger clearly using his mystical powers to SAVE some innocent from the Forces of Evil. You end each story thinking, ‘Jeez, what is this guy’s problem?’
And I agree with Peter — I’m not a fan of Alcala’s inks over Newton’s pencils. Alcala was an excellent artist on his own, and he was good paired up with some other artists, but he smothers Newton on these Bat-books. The finished product looks fine, technically — it just doesn’t look much like Don Newton. I think every single issue by this team is a somewhat tragic missed opportunity. I’d much rather they’d been inked by Adkins, or Chiaramonte, or Bob Smith.
b.t.
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