A whole two bits! |
Bemoan the existence of the big annual crossover “Event Comics” as much as you’d like – seriously, go for it, I won’t stop you – but DC’s Invasion (or is that “Invasion!”) is mostly one of the good ones. Besides keeping the main story confined to three dense but otherwise coherent giant-sized issues, it came up with a pretty reasonable excuse to collect all the Earth’s superheroes for a singular mission, introduced a concept (The “metagene”) which persisted in its titles for a good twenty years, and kept the crossover issues relatively unjammed with content you’d have to read the main series to understand. After all, “aliens are invading the Earth” is a plot which would have happened in most superheroes’ comics four times a year anyway.
Of the direct spin-offs from Invasion!, there was the fairly long-running L.E.G.I.O.N. series, an then of course there were The Blasters.
Originally prisoners of the Invasion! Fleet’s scientific wing, the Blasters were a group of human beings whose possession of the “metagene” – a component of human DNA which allowed otherwise normal human beings to gain superpowers from situations which probably should have left them smoldering masses of protoplasm – allowed them to survive brutal testing at the hands of the extraterrestrial Dominators. Returning to Earth after their incarceration on the alien prison, the yet-unnamed and not-yet-united group of individuals struggled to come to grips with their newfound super-powers.
There's also this great scene where the German robot beats a Jewish child. |
Blasters had its tongue firmly planted in cheek from the git-go, opening on a splash panel featuring the adventures of Ben Steel and his Bear Hans (say it out loud), and loaded with nods and references to other comics and media. Snapper Carr - former sidekick to the Justice League of America and now the Blasters’ resident teleporter and probably team leader – makes reference to his counterpart Rick Jones (also famously scripted by Blasters scribe Peter David) over in the competitors’ mags, for instance, before running afoul of the work of a Vogon Contructor Fleet (which I’m not explaining because I know you know what it is), and so on.
It’s hard to say if the light tone being taken with the book was a reaction to what might arguably be a bit of a bum assignment, or if the Blasters was meant as a response to overly serious, similar products, like the equally space-faring Omega Men or the even-spawned and so-serious-it-hurts New Guardians. The comic elements serve it well, though, since the emotional crux of the book involves the human Blasters coming to terms with powers which makes their lives difficult and even unlivable.
The Blasters are:
- Snapper Carr, the aforementioned former “mascot” of the JLA (before human rights organization intervened) and now a teleporter. Carr had previously been notorious for his characters’ obnoxious tendency to snap his fingers obsessively. Granted super-powers, he uses them … by snapping his fingers obsessively. No joke, later on? Later on someone cut his hands off. Hooray!
- Churlijenkins, a sexy cat alien lady with an attitude, because I guess she was a strong female character? I gathered as much from how she didn’t wear a lot of clothes and made sarcastic observations in lieu of having motivation.
- Carlotta Rivera (aka Jolt, the superheroine with twice the caffeine) whose power to wibbly-wobbly the joobly-poobly seems very scientific at first. Her powers go wild unless she’s exhibiting immense concentration, and while it’s great that the book has one female character who isn’t an unrelenting scold, pretty much her only scene has her confront a bunch of potential rapists. Check that one off on your Bingo cards, if you got ‘em.
- Moshe Levy is Dust Devil, an Israeli kid who could generate tornadoes, and unfortunately for my juvenile sense of humor is not called “The Kosher Tornado.” His real super-power is his overbearing mother, which is true for a lot of Jewish kids, really. I kid, I kid …
- The Blasters was evidently meant to be one of those mutli-ethnic superteams which upends stereotypes and breaks the white hegemony, but the only black guy on the roster was nonetheless a career criminal. Amos Monroe, aka Crackpot is a professional con man with the power to make people believe anything, and yet he lets people call him that.
- There’s an Austrian guy who becomes an exploding mass of jagged metal and goes by the name of “Frag”, which is pretty hilarious to imagine being said in Arnold Schwarzenegger’s accent. Try it, hours of fun, I guarantee you.
- And lastly a British storybook writer who can turn into a full-length mirror, which just seems pervy.
Plus an alien with a rubber light bulb for a head and I don’t remember his name or care.
In all, the Blasters wasn’t at all a bad or unenjoyable book, focusing as it did on how normal people might react to abnormal situations, and in its way providing something of a metaphor for how unexpected crisis can both open new vistas and render normal life impossible, while never completely abandoning a deliberate silliness. Mind you, put all of these people on a spaceship and having them go fight space crime is dumb bunk, and yet that’s what they ended up doing. Oh well, it was a fun forty-whatever pages while it lasted…
Peter David invented Krumping. |
Ohhhh, boy! THE BLASTERS!!! Been on my mind a lot lately, since Marvel just released a big-budget movie about a buncha characters hardly anyone remembers or cares about flying through the galaxy in a spaceship. C'mon, Warner Brothers! When is it MY turn??? >ahem< Yeah, you nailed it: Peter David and I were having too much fun doing this thing (and yes, sometimes at the expense of the story). Here's what happened: the concept for BLASTERS was originally the work of Robert Loren Fleming, of AMBUSH BUG and THRILLER fame, probably with genuinely helpful suggestions from editor Bob Greenberger. It was supposed to spin off from INVASION! as a regular monthly book, like L.E.G.I.O.N. But for reasons never explained to me, DC backed down from that plan, reducing the book from a monthly to a four-issue mini, and finally to a one-shot. If I had to guess at a reason, I'd say they doubted the sales potential of a deliberately funny (and sometimes downright silly) comic at that point, as things were swiftly moving towards "grim 'n gritty". We were promised that if, by some miracle,the book sold well enough, the concept of going to series would be revisited---shyeah, right. Up to that point, Fleming and I had been jazzed about BLASTERS---so much so that we'd worked out continuity for the book's first year. But when we were nickel-and-dimed down to a one-shot, Mr. Fleming left the project. That's when Peter david was brought aboard.
ReplyDeleteHooray! I didn't want to put any pressure on you, but I was really hoping you'd chime in with the backstory!
ReplyDeleteI'd love to hear what the ultimate plans were for the book, particularly since I understand they ultimately ended up in a pretty grim scenario sometime in the 90s (Snapper got his hands cut off, he makes some reference to the other Blasters having bought the farm, etc). It would have been neat to see how the mission unfolded, given that the mission was apparently to "fly through space and convince aliens that Earth-people aren't jerks" keeping in mind that half the crew is total jerks.
Yeah, actually the following is Part Deux of my earlier comment. I w'd intended to have it finished and sent to you just a few minutes after the first, but Life got in the way. Which is why I'm Against It. Anyhoo, Peter David was a natural for taking over the writing chores. BLASTERS was always intended to pretty lighthearted, and Peter was (and is) a whiz at blending adventure. darma and comedy. So, bingo. He plotted a story, I whined to have certain things changed to keep the story a little closer to what I thought Flem would have preferred,and away we went. Random stuff:1)The BEN STEEL gag on page one was stolen by me from Kurt Busiek. He probably hasn't forgiven me---I wouldn't have. 2) Fleming and I had planned for the first three issues of the book to be a prison break story: Temporarily cut off from communication with Earth, our heroes hear that Superman has been captured by marauding aliens and is being held on the Prison Planet of Kanjar Ro.The story would have been called "Sing Sing Sing", a gag you may be too young to get. The Blasters break into Sing Sing Sing in oredr to break the Man of Steel out---only to discover that Superman hasn't been captured at all. What the aliens have brought back is a nebbishy accountant named Arnold Supperman. Apparently, the aliens that captured him a)were very confused, and b) think all featherless bipeds pretty much look alike. Guards in the prison proper are savvy enough to know that this isn't Superman they've got, but none of them want to be the ones to own up to Kanjar Ro when he returns from---somewhere. This results in the Blasters being trapped in prison after their break-in---they didn't really have an escape plan. They just figured they could hitch a ride with Supes, once they freed him from whatever Kryptonite-based trap he was probably being held in. After the team's eventual escape,Arnold would have stuck around as a love interest for Mrs. Levy. I REALLY wanted to draw this story. I was especially looking forward to designing Sing Sing Sing, and maybe updating kanjar Ro a bit....
ReplyDeletePart Three: Peter's plans included revealing that Frag had once been a guard at a concetration camp during WWII. This would, of course, ratchet up the tension between himself and the Levys to eleven. I talked him out of it for a couple of reasons. In no particular order,A) despite being fully bald, the character as envisioned by Fleming and myself was only in his early-to-mid-thirties. Making him an adult (even a young one) back in World War II would put him at least in his upper fifties or sixties, on a team where there were ALREADY two characters visibly in that age range, and B)in a book in which the black guy is a career criminal, the latina gal had a fiery temper and the Jewish mom was a noodge, we were already doing the Stereotype Samba. Making the german character a Nazi would have just been over the top, to say nothing of making the character irredeemably unlikeable. I'm not one of these guys who thinks everyone in a story needs to be huggable, but---no. Ironically, you could probably do that in a comic today without anyone blinking hard. Go know. I also thought a Nazi character might have been hard on the comedy, and we had a fair amount of that planned: There would have been recurring meta-humor (pardon the pun) and fourth-wall-nudging, like a running gag in which we catch little Moishe on the phone with his agent, demanding that he be released from the book and awarded a more high-profile gig; his long-standing rivalry with Macaulay Culkin would be referenced. Another idea was Churljenkins discovering that her long-lost-and-believed-dead kid brother was alive and well. We planned to name him "Muggy", after a gone and forgotten (PLUG!!!) comic and cartoon character called Muggy-Doo, Boy Cat.Ironically, a couple of years later, Kurt Busiek and I would create a character called "Dougie-Moo, Coy Bat!" who DID make it into print albeit for only one panel. A bit I couldn't convince peter to change was the scene in which Snapper bonds with Churl by playing her some music from Earth. Churl wasn't supposed to be just a green-skinned, pink-haired, oversexualized (I was young; forgive me) alien cat lady.No, her deal was that she was a green-skinned, pink-haired, oversexualized ROCK AND ROLL alien cat lady. My feeling was that if she had to respond to some cat-related Earth-tune, it wouldn't be anything from the musical "Cats"---or any other goddamn show tune either! My bid was for "Stray Cat Shuffle", but That Didn't happen. Oh, and as far as half the characters being jerks---Shhhh. I'm not sure Peter knows that about some of the characters he writes. Dig: A couple of years later, I tried to cajole Peter into putting SLAPSTICK into an issue of THE INCREDIBLE HULK in order to raise Slap's profile (I regret nothing!). His response was something along the lines of "The way you've described the character to me, he sounds like a jerk. Why would I want to write a character who's a jerk?" 'Nuff said! :-)
ReplyDeleteSHIT! Hoe did I forget? The love-struck Dominator scientist Gunther (lightbulb-headed alien, real name unpronounceable) would have taught Jolt how to become invisible using her repelling powers to bend light rays away from her. The experiment is half a success: she does become invisible, but since no light rays are reaching her, she becomes blind when using her power that way. My contribution, stolen form some old science fiction story I'd read as a kid. I remember seeing the team pop up in a couple of issues of VALOR,later in the nineties, but I had no idea they'd almost all died at some point. Neither did I ever hear about Snapper's hands being cut off. Was this before or after the HOURMAN series? That was the last time I remember seeing the character in a comic book. His later appearances in a couple of DC cartoons warmed my cold little heart, though...
ReplyDeleteTwo more things here: first, this coming from the quarter bin felt almost warmly familiar-- it's where you;ll find most of my comics work.And second: A sense of humor about one's work is probably an utter necessity in this biz. To that end, Jon, feel free to post about any of my work, whether it's in the "What-the-fuck-IS-this-shit?!" arena, or the"everyone-hates-this-but-I-think-it's-kinda-cool" camp. I'm good either way. And may I strongly suggest SLAPSTICK? We've discussed him briefly, years ago. At the time you'd gotten a number of requests for the character but were reluctant to acquiesce. I say go for it. I'd love to see what you thought, good or bad.
ReplyDeleteJames, this is fantastic! We gotta get you on a podcast to talk about this stuff.
ReplyDeleteI actually HAVE finally gotten around to writing about Slapstick, bu it's for a *thing* that won't see the light of day for several more months (Short version was: I thought it had promise, but it kind of needed to decide whether it was a straight superhero or a superhero parody book) I'll keep it in the queue for a G&F entry down the road, tho! After Slapstick, I can't imagine anything else you've worked on is suitable for framing around here
Yeah, all the grim stuff happened to the Blasters prior to Snapper joining Hourman, or at least so I gathered from Wikipedia. The "gettin' his hands cut off" thing was sort of grimly amusing, although I'm not sure how it was played in the comic itself...
Well, it's at least nice to know his hands grew back, or whatever. I had a real soft spot for those mascot/ sidekick/ camp follower characters. Glad to have gotten to draw both Snapper and Rick Jones. As foe dtuff that might fit here, thanks for the vote of confidence, Jon, but there's a few I might suggest. Like INHUMANOIDS. It was one of Marvel's less (least?) successful '80s toy-and-cartoon comics.If you've ever seen the cartoon, you know it was the work of Crazy People. In the early 90s, Kurt and I did JACK KIRBY'S SILVER STAR for Topps and in the late '90s Christopher Priest and I did a book for Acclaim called CONCRETE JUNGLE: LEGEND OF THE BLACK LION. Both titles were cancelled after one issue. Also produced for Acclaim was BIG MAX, written by Dan Slott. THAT one had its plug pulled BEFORE publication,when Acclaim couldn't get ANYONE to agree to carry it. Dan and I corrected that in 2006, literally a decade later. And even though we only got the damn thing into print by trading on Dan's newly-minted status as a "hot" writer, nobody bought the comic. I mean, there's no "HANSI" in there, but that's settin' the bar AWFULLY high...
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