Showing posts with label Rob Williams. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rob Williams. Show all posts

Tuesday, 25 February 2014

Revolutionary War: Knights of Pendragon - Some Thoughts & Theories

Before I start, a reminder. While this is a summary for Chapter 3 (the greatest of apologies), Chapter 5 Revolutionary War: Super Soldiers is now coming out this Wednesday (26th February 2014), courtesy of Rob Williams and Brent Anderson. This one has a really interesting premise, so I would really recommend checking it out. A four page preview (which should cover that premise very well indeed) is up at Comic Book Resources.

Okay, back to the task at hand. So, albeit unavoidably delayed by a few weeks, here is my summary for the third Chapter of Revolutionary War - Knights of Pendragon.

This third chapter, written by Rob Williams, was originally solicited as having art supplied by Simon Coleby. This changed. The art for the issue is actually by Will Sliney. Though let me be absolutely clear when I say that it does not suffer at all for it. Sliney's artwork, with colours by Veronica Gandini, looks genuinely great. You'll see a few examples throughout this article.

This issue also had a variant cover (as can be seen here) supplied by 'Edwards, Pallot & Redmond'. It featured the second volume costume renditions of Adam Crown and Francesca Grace, alongside a modern Union Jack. It should, however, be noted that neither Adam nor Grace appear in this issue. It's purely a tribute cover.

Sorry about that. But a nice nod to the past, all the same. :)

Now we here at It Came From Darkmoor are huge fans of Knight of Pendragon. In terms of Marvel UK history it's a damned important book. Without its success we probably would not have had the 90s Imprint which spawned the majority of characters which are appearing in Revolutionary War. This was the precursor to the UK office really being taken seriously as an entity in its own right.

Knights of Pendragon was a standout book. It was still Marvel Comics' characters, but they were appearing in what was at its base a high concept myth and legend story, and with a decidedly different (and much darker) tone for those characters than was usually explored in their US appearances. While we're not quite talking Vertigo comics levels of 'mature reading' this was nevertheless a series which showed its readers things such as scenes of serial killers cutting motifs out of the flesh of their victims, showed the discovery of mutilated body parts turning up packing crates, and somewhat controversially even showed a costumed hero seemingly beating a non-powered character to a bloody pulp - beating him quite literally to within an inch of his life.

It was never gratuitous, but Knights of Pendragon was certainly a little more mature in its themes and content, that's for sure. It set a standard back in 1990. It became the standard by which Marvel UK went forward.

Understandably, to this day it has some very dedicated fans on the back of that. It even has a fan fiction community who continued writing Pendragons stories online.

So yes. There's a certain tone which many readers expect from a title bearing the Pendragon name. For those readers the more light-hearted tone of Revolutionary War: Knights of Pendragon was not entirely to their personal tastes.

I got emails. And tweets. They were not happy ones.

I personally enjoyed the issue. If I had one grumble it would be that it did seem a little rushed to its conclusion, given some of the excellent concepts it touched upon. But I did enjoy it. I can however, understand where they are coming from. I want to draw a line under that and move on. But yes, guys, I heard you. I get where you're coming from.

I'm going to be looking at this issue objectively, and I hope that a few weeks on you might also think about a few of the things I'm going to be highlighting here, and give the book a second chance.

Okay, so with that in mind (and the issue as a whole) here are my Thoughts and Theories...


So what's the story about?

Well, it seems that long time Pendragons foe the Omni-Corporation are out and about again. This time they're Fracking in the Lake District. And yes. I did say 'Fracking'. As in hydraulic fracking for gas and petroleum, and not the pseudo-swearing used by the likes of 2000 AD or Battlestar Galactica. :)

Omni? Weren't they a front for Mys-Tech?

A subsidiary company of, yes. While in the original Pendragons run Omni were an evil multinational company (who just happened to be a front for an evil species known as 'The Bane') it was established at the start of the second volume of Knights of Pendragon that Omni were in fact a subsidiary company of Mys-Tech.

So when they 'say' they're fracking there's more to it, right?

What do you think? :) But we'll get to that...

So no Adam Crown, and no Grace? Which other Pendragons appear?

Well, maybe I should let them introduce themselves...

First up:




Both Dai and Kate were original members of the team during it's first run. All of the above is true. And yes, since we last saw Dai (way back in Paul Cornell's Wisdom MAX series) he has once again become possessed by the spirit of Arthurian Knight Sir Gawain, who occasionally channels his way into Dai's body to help or hinder him, depending on the occasion.




Something like that, for instance. Kate's been researching, and with Gawain's guidance they've realised that the position of Omni's fracking and that of an old Mys-Tech underground lab appear to have a little too much in common for it to be a coincidence....

We also have:




Wait! Pete Wisdom wasn't a Pendragon. He'd not even debuted back then.

Correct.

But after the events of Revolutionary War: Alpha Captain Britain is now MIA, and with the dire need of a Powerhouse British Hero being a thing, Wisdom and Union Jack are off to reacquaint themselves with another one...

Union Jack was a Pendragon in both previous runs of the original series. Although thankfully his modern look is used here, rather than his appearance from the last Pendragons run...




Or the 'Union Juggernaut' as many fans have dubbed him...

But didn't he appear in that costume in the flashback in the Alpha issue?




Um... erm...

Moving on!

So which other British hero are they searching for?

Well, that would be Peter Hunter - 'Albion' the costumed hero of the trenches of World War One.

Ah, yes! Because he appeared in that Un-Earth vision back in the Alpha issue.

He did indeed.




Appearing much as he used to in the first volume of Knights of Pendragon. The old school teacher who doesn't let his students know that he used to be a hero...





So what's he been up to since last we saw him?

Well it looks like Albion has, at least for some while, been residing in the The Green Chapel, in Avalon.

The what in the where now?

Sorry... let me explain.

The previous incarnation of the Knights of Pendragon were always based out of a structure called the Green Chapel. 





The Green Chapel stands in the region of Otherworld known as Avalon. 

It's also the home of the Pendragon's mentor, known only as The Green Knight.




The Green Knight is probably not its original name. I don't think anybody knows what its original name actually is, if it even had one at all. But it takes its name from the Arthurian legend "Sir Gawain and the Green Knight" in which Sir Gawain is tricked into a challenge with an opponent who he cannot beat, even having removed his opponent's head.

In Knights of Pendragon, though, the Green Knight is a rather complicated entity, which strives only to maintain the balance of nature in the world. When a threat arises to endanger the natural order, across history, the Green Knight has transformed men and women into its champions, to go out into the world and restore the balance. Hundreds across history. In the space of the 2 Knights of Pendragon series he has chosen ordinary men and women like Dai and Kate, but also existing Marvel heroes including Union Jack, Black Panther, Captain Britain, The Black Knight and Iron Man.

This is, to me, what has always made Knights of Pendragon a stand out, untapped, resource at Marvel. With ties to so many properties, and such a strong concept as the one above, leaving it untouched for so long is such a bizarre move, in my book.

But, anyway... Avalon and Otherworld. 

It's important to understand that the landscape of Otherworld, which is probably most closely associated with Captain Britain stories, is always subject to a certain amount of physical change. This is because it is a whole dimension of space which is tied to (and shaped by) the people of Marvel's Britain. Their sense of what is 'British' is what effects how the landscape appears.

Now in the past Marvel has often shown us glimpses of Otherworld as being this kinda hokey 'Ye Olde England' theme park vision of Britain. Castles, Bowman, Robin Hood, Knights, Chivalry... terrible Olde Worlde dialogue.

Yeah. That.

In more recent times though we've had stories such as Journey into Mystery's 'Manchester Gods' arc, injecting a sledgehammer of industrialisation into the landscape.

Things have been changing in the consciousness of Marvel's Britons - and its no different here. Where once was idyllic and filled with greenery, a certain amount of globalisation has began to creep in.




Ah. Yes. That's a little bit different.

I really like the concept here. These are the kind of ideas which I've been asking to be explored at Marvel, for years. British identity has changed such an incredible amount since the 1970s, and here we have a landscape which is simply perfect for producing a commentary on all of that through clever storytelling.

But this being a 'British Thing' it just hasn't been. 

I can't help but think if Otherworld was as a dimension based upon the American psyche we'd be getting that regularly explored. 

As it is. We don't. Sadly.

Anyway, this cultural invasion has permeated into the very fibres of Avalon. Of the Green Knight...




Even Peter Hunter, trapped between screens, in an endless cycle of daytime television...




Wait! Albion wasn't bald in the Un-Earth Vision! What's going on??

You really don't miss a trick, do you? An Art error, maybe? Or in some way an added effect of what's happening around Albion. Who can say? I mean the last time we saw Albion in the 90s he was in a rejuvenated body again. Maybe that is what has caused him to age? 

It doesn't match, no. Which is a shame, but not world shattering.

So, back to the plot? Please tell me Fracking isn't the real enemy? 

Well, fracking is probably always the real enemy. :) But no. Mys-Tech intentionally had the area mined to unleash something, previously prepared, upon the world. 

Well? What was it?




...

...

Okay...

I was not prepared for that.

How many people are ever truly prepared for Knights of the Zombie Round Table?

A valid question.

Isn't it.

Are they the real Knights of the Round table... as Zombies?

Possibly. It's a little unclear. They certainly seem to believe they are. They even have a Zombie Excalibur.

Oh, good grief...

:)

This is just one of those big, dumb, larger than life concepts which you can't help but enjoy. It's light-hearted silliness, but it's fun. My only grumble is that the knights keep on using the word "Briton" - meaning a person of Britain - as if they think it's just some kind of Ye Olde English term for 'Britain'.

That really is odd. Does it happen a lot?

Just a little...



What the hell!? The mean 'Britain,' right?

I would assume so. It's all very odd. It would be like calling the USA the 'United States of American'. 

The thing is, I can only assume this is a truly weird editorial or lettering muck up. I mean the writer, Rob Williams, is British. He'd know the difference. 

Minor mistakes, such as when the term 'Ley Line' is incorrectly spelled as "Lay Line" in that first panel? Fine. Typo. That's okay. But this is a frequently repeated term being used completely incorrectly. It becomes very jarring. 

So I notice Sir Gawain appears on the cover of this issue...?

He does.

But if he's inside Dai Thomas, how does that work?

Well, back in the original series, Gawain's spirit found it's way into Dai and slowly began to change him. From the out of shape, chain smoking copper of Scotland Yard...




Very quickly into a much leaner individual...



(Obviously the guy on the left. Not Captain Britain)

...the longer Gawain's spirit stayed in him. But it was still more like a possession. Gawain's memories in Dai's head. Physical tweaks rather than an actual change.

In this issue that kinda changed.




Here Dai is shown to physically transform into Sir Gawain. Off camera, so to speak, but a physical change nonetheless. Where exactly the armour and sword actually comes from, I'm unsure. I'd imagine this approach was taken because it's far quicker and easier to illustrate this way than try to explain Gawain directing Dai's actions. Far easier to display to new readers. But nevertheless I can understand why it's rubbed some readers up the wrong way. 

So yes, that's why a filly armoured Gawain appears as he does on the cover. Not an android. Not a ghost. The real deal. Maybe something to explore another day, in another series. It's a little odd, but if we can buy into the logic that the Green Knight can de-age Peter Hunter is Dai transforming int Gawain really that far a stretch?

So Albion does get de-aged?

Oh. Yes. Sorry. Probably aught to have mentioned that.




Okay, maybe the Zombie Excalibur thing is kinda funny...

Yeah. It made me laugh.

And it is great to see Albion back in action. My only grumble is that it actually only lasts 4 panels. We don't really get to see who takes Hunter down. Or how. He's briefly visible in the background, seemingly fighting back, and then he's down and carried off.




That's a bit abrupt.

It really is.

And just like that Mys-Tech have their hands on one more hero. That's three now. Captain Britain, Dark Angel, and now Albion.

Wait, did they just mention The Bane??

Spotted that, eh?

Yes. The Bane. Original adversaries of the Pendragons. Certainly the adversaries of The Green Knight.

These guys... 




No signs of The Red Lord, though it's possible that Albion is referring to 'him' when the Zombie Knights begin to stir. The Zombie Knights themselves mention serving The Bane several times, although we don't actually see them in panel.




It does make me wonder if they were originally planned to play a more active role in this story. 

So how does the issue get resolved?

Well, that would be the Green Knight. Sort of.  

Sort of?

Sort of. Just not as... we know him.

You see with Albion kidnapped, what remains of the Pendragons are really up against it. Overrun. By Arthurian Zombies.

Which is when Pete Wisdom tries a risky play. Zombie Excalibur's still lying around to hand and with the Green Knight grown over by bracken he decides to try and... wake it up. By introducing one to the other. 




The result is a melding of old and new.

Meet "G Knight".

Meet who, now?

"G KNIGHT".



All the magic, heart and soul, of an Old God repackaged in the form of modern Britain. And what better typifies modern Britain than the form of a giant Olympian Athlete treading zombies into the dirt.





You know what's really odd here? I honestly would have thought that to be a fairly obvious likeness. I mean Farah was such a huge personality of the 2012 Olympics, right? Yet I've seen several posters on forums confused by this one. Granted, mostly American readers, but I was very surprised that they wouldn't have been aware of who Mo Farah is. I mean, I'm British (funnily enough), but I know what guys like Michael Phelps look like, for example. I was quite surprised by that.

Anyway, I know that this one upset a few people. While they conceded that the idea was a pretty clever one, they felt that this transformation in some way belittled the Knights of Pendragon concept. Or to some degree, even if unintentionally, that it sent it up.

Again, I can kind of understand how some might feel that way, but I honestly wouldn't feel too aggrieved. Clearly no offense was intended, here. And think about the transitory nature of Otherworld. The Green Knight has assumed this form specifically for this situation. Where a giant running shoe was the quickest way to resolve things. He can assume many forms. He has before, and will again. Yes, it's for comic effect here. But it's a joke which makes use of a knowledge of the series. I don't think that it sends it up. There is respect here.

All in all, granted, in comparison to the Alpha or Dark Angel issues of Revolutionary War this one does read more like an interlude than a crucial part of the story. But there are some really strong elements to this issue. From ongoing gags like Pete Wisdom's Prog Rock references and Dai's Dylan Thomas quotes, to the overall concepts of the modern world encroaching on the British psyche. For me personally, my only major grumble is that concept alone could have spawn a mini series worthy of exploration in its own right. There's not enough space to explore it in a single issue. Nor is there really space to explore a whole new Knights of Pendragon status quo - which I'm sure many readers would love to read, but wasn't really ever going to be on the cards in a single issue. 

I do find myself hoping though, as was also the case with Journey into Mystery's 'Manchester Gods', that we do at some point get some kind of peaceful synthesis for Otherworld. Here again we see the old torn up an replaced with elements of the new. But this is Britain. It is both old and new. There's no reason why both can't co-exist, as an overview.

But, yes. That too is a story for another day. 

As it is, this issue has moved one more important piece into Mys-Tech hands. And Albion makes three...

Well, we assume three. 

If that's where Death's Head II was taking Captain Britain.  

More of that in the Death's Head issue. Which should still be available, and which I would definitely recommend you track down if you missed it. It's something rather special.

I'll have a summary for that up in the next week. And again, apologies for the delays with the site, of late. I'm working hard to catch up when I get a moment. 

In the meantime, Revolutionary War: Super Soldiers is out on Wednesday. Joseph 'Invincible' Hauer was in that Un-Earth vision, as well... 

I think we can see where that might be going. ;)

Until the next time.

Mark

(Sword)

Saturday, 25 January 2014

Revolutionary War: Knights of Pendragon Preview.

So, Revolutionary War reaches it's third chapter on Wednesday (29th January). I'll be posting up a summary/catch up of the Dark Angel issue tomorrow morning, but for now I thought you'd probably want a heads up of a preview for the next issue - focusing on Knights of Pendragon - which Comic Book Resources have posted up. An unlettered preview of the first two pages turned up a few weeks ago, but without a context it was a little difficult to get much info about it. There are now four lettered pages on show there, along with the variant cover for the issue.

It looks like this:




Alongside Union Jack there, is former head Pendragon Adam Crown and villianess turned Pendragon Francesca Grace. So far there has been no other info as to whether they actually appear in the issue itself. But it's great to see them at least remembered.

Unfortunately, the solicits don't mention who this cover is by. But then that's not the only way that the solicits are now out of date, it seems.

Rob Williams remains the writer for this issue, but at the time the solicits were released the artist listed for this issue was Marvel UK's Simon Coleby. Coleby has been replaced by Irish artist Will Sliney, who has been doing art in more recent times for Fearless Defenders and Superior Spider-man Team-Up.

But when you get a glimpse of his artwork I don't think you'll be left in any way disappointed for the change. I know that I wasn't. It looks great.

I won't spoil the issue by printing a full preview on this site. Go check it out at the link above if you want to read more. But I will post a couple of teaser images.





Revolutionary War: Knights of Pendragon is out on Wednesday. 

Tuesday, 3 December 2013

More information on Rob Williams' sections of Revolutionary War.

As many of you may be aware, two of the one-shot issues of Marvel's upcoming Revolutionary War are going to be written by Rob Williams. Williams is probably better know to some as he writer of Com.X's Cla$$war and 2000 AD's Low Life. But in recent years he's been somewhat of a champion of British characters within his work over at Marvel comics. He introduced a new version of Slaymaster in Deadpool Team-up. He also gave Captain Britain a central role in his Iron Man series The Iron Age.

Well, now he's turning his hand other Marvel UK properties - Knights of Pendragon and Super Soldiers. And thanks to a new interview over at Newsarama we now know a bit more about his plans, for those.

First off, Knights of Pendragon.





I did wonder at the time that cover was unveiled in the solicits as to whether or not that was Kate McClellan standing behind Dai Thomas. I had hoped, but being quite an obscure character I wasn't getting my hopes up too far.

As it turns out, I was in luck.

Williams: Well Knights… in its original incarnation, was this kind of Vertigo-ish non-capes eco-themed book. Then later it morphed into a more spandex superteam kind of deal. I thought we should take it back to its roots. The cast is largely the originals – Dai Thomas, Kate McClellan, Gawain the Knight, Albion, Union Jack. We’ve added Pete Wisdom too, which fits. I’ve written Wisdom before and he’s great fun to write.

So, yes. Kate is back. Now as to whether that Gawain is the android version, or some kind of reincarnated Sir Gawain of legend, I cannot say. But Williams does seem to have a genuine enthusiasm for the original series ahead of the later revamp. And that's something which I feel strongly positive about. The second volume did start to lose a lot of its charm, identity and strength when it was revamped in second volume. Even Alan Davis redesigning the costumes couldn't quite spare the feeling that the change of direction didn't really work...

So it's great to see it seemingly going back to those slightly more serious, myth and legend roots.

But what about Pete Wisdom? How does he come to be with the group?
Williams: Wisdom’s kind of our tether between the books. He’s working for MI:13, as established in Paul Cornell’s fun book Captain Britain & MI:13 from a few years back. That kind makes him Britain’s Nick Fury, albeit a very sarcastic version who snarks a lot. When MYS-TECH reappear, and the scale of the threat becomes known, Wisdom is charged with recruiting the old Marvel UK heroes. Even though he seems to hate a lot of them.

Now whether that's Wisdom's long held contempt for costumed heroes he's talking about, or some kind of grudge for the old guard of British heroes I guess we'll have to wait and see. But, yes, he kind of is Britain's modern equivalent of Nick Fury. It's been some years since we last saw Lance Hunter, and Wisdom really has taken over that role in Marvel's Britain.

As for what the story will actually involve, unsurprisingly, there are limits of what Williams can tell about the overall series at the moment, but with regards to this story he says:
Williams: The underlying storyline with all these books is that MYS-TECH, the old Marvel UK bad guys, are back, and lots of underground bases are being unearthed. This brings the Knights back together, and Pete and Union Jack head for Avalon, the mystical realm, to try and recruit Albion. But Avalon is a magical mirror of Britain, and austerity cuts have had an effect. Meanwhile, Dai and Kate are breaking into a fracking mining operation, where something evil that goes to the heart of the perception of Britain is waking up. There’s lots of battles, an ending no-one will predict, I think, and a fair amount of overt subtext about the image of Britain and what Britain really is today. I had a blast writing it.

Now wherever a story concerns Captain Britain it principally gets referred to as 'Otherworld,' but for the Knights it was always 'Avalon'. Both are, to most intents and purposes, one and the same place. Or at least slightly different aspects of the same place. We're talking about that dimension between dimensions from where it is possible to traverse Marvel's many alternate universes.

Its landscape is quite literally tied to, and shaped by, the collective subconscious of Britain and its people. Some of you may have read the 'Manchester Gods' arc of Kieron Gillen's Journey into Mystery, which illustrated that principle very well. So often the Britain we see in American comics tends to be an idealised image of the Country. An overly positive 1960s image of Britain. 'Manchester Gods' kind of played out what effect a more modern invasion of ideals could have on Avalon. It's something which many British readers had been wanting to see explored for a while.

Here in Britain, right now, it is a pretty bleak place. Austerity measures are hitting everybody hard. There are some real echoes of the sombre days of the 1980s, going on. A period which after all spawned those darker Captain Britain stories of David Thorpe, Alan Moore and Jamie Delano. So Williams exploring what kind of effect that might have on Avalon is definitely welcome, in my book.

It all sounds fairly in step with environmental elements of the original Knights of Pendragon, also.
I look forward to it greatly.

Secondly we have Super Soldiers.





And this one sounds like such a brilliant premise I had to share.

This interview confirms the cast as (left to right) Guvnor, Col Joseph Hauer (Formerly 'Invincible' - though I guess Image Comics kinda claimed that identity in the past few years), Gog (at the rear) and Dalton. All of whom were original members of the team.

Super Soldiers was very much part of that early 90s, Rob Liefeld inspired, 'Roid Rage and huge guns period of comics. A period we often find quite difficult to explain and incorporate plausibly into modern comics.

Well... it sounds like Rob Williams just found a way.

Nrama: So what are they like these days then?

Williams: The Super Soldiers, in the years since we last met them, have done what any crack, black-ops military team would do, and written a ‘tell-all’ novel that’s being turned into a movie. And they’ve managed to convince the makers to cast them in supporting roles. Hauer is acting as ‘Military advisor’ on the production, and hating every minute of this.

This. Sounds. Brilliant.


Williams: The fact that no one’s seen or heard from them in 20 years pretty much sums up their feelings of having seen better days. They’re a group without purpose. There used to be straightforward wars of right and wrong, now they’re privately owned by a corporation and they don’t have a fight. The key line for me was “Super Soldiers? There’s nothing super about us.” “No, but we’re soldiers. So we fight.” It’s the story of people who’ve lost purpose but, when MYS-TECH attack in overwhelming numbers, they have to try and protect innocents. I was channelling movies like Zulu and The Wild Geese writing it. That British soldiers idea of fighting against crazy odds, trying to hold the line. Trying to find something noble.

Well, we heard that some of the Marvel UK characters might have ended up in some very different situations since the 90s. And this is pretty conclusively different. It all sounds like such a wonderful premise, I cannot wait to read it.

Revolutionary War: Knights of Pendragon is out in January and Revolutionary War: Super Soldiers in February. Watch out for them. Better still ask your comic book store to put one aside for you.

Sunday, 17 November 2013

Second month of Revolutionary War titles revealed with Marvel's February Solicits.

I had intended to post these up on Friday. But we've been away over the weekend, so you're getting them now... ;)

So, Marvel's February 2014 solicits are out, and this means that two more Revolutionary War one-shots have had covers and issue information revealed.

First up:





REVOLUTIONARY WAR: DEATH'S HEAD II #1
ANDY LANNING & ALAN COWSILL (W) • NICK ROCHE (A)
Cover by MARK BROOKS
Variant Cover by Liam Sharp
Part 4 of "Revolutionary War"
• The long-awaited return of DEATH'S HEAD -- one of the biggest hits of the original Marvel UK!
• Death's Head! Death's Head II! On an adventure together for the first time EVER!
• What threat could be grave enough to bring these two heroes together from across time? How about the villainous Mys-Tech organization resurfacing with an army?!
32 PGS./ONE-SHOT/Rated T+ ...$3.99


And another great Mark Brooks cover, there. I've mentioned before that THREE versions of Death's Head have been active in Marvel, recently. The version in Kieron Gillen's Iron Man series had recently gone MIA. But that still leaves TWO.

1) Death's Head II, last seen in the pages of Captain Britain & MI13.

and

2) A version of Death's Head I, stranded in the present in an issue of Avenging Spider-man.

Looking at the character designs shown on that cover I'd say there's a fair chance that's what we might be looking at here. Two versions of the same character from different points in their own personal timeline. Why hasn't somebody done this before?

And yes. MYS-TECH. Could they be Revolutionary War's Big Bad? We'll have to wait and see...

Secondly we have:






REVOLUTIONARY WAR: SUPERSOLDIERS #1
ROB WILLIAMS (W) • BRENT ANDERSON (A)
Cover by MARK BROOKS
Variant Cover by TBD
Part 5 of "Revolutionary War"
• Some of the most popular heroes of Marvel UK return for SUPERSOLDIERS – and where the Supersoldiers go, trouble isn't far behind!
• It's the Supersoldiers versus Mys-Tech in all-out war!
• When a vast army of Mys-Tech Psycho Wraiths come calling on a small Scottish town, it's up to the Supersoldiers to put them down for good!
32 PGS./ ONE-SHOT/Rated T+ ...$3.99


That's right. Super Soldiers.

It's been a while, but from memory I'm assuming that's Invincible (Joseph Hauer), the most focussed on Soldier front and centre. The big guy behind him is, without question, Gog (Owen Llewelyn) the highly modified Welsh guy with bionic eyes.

The other two? I'm figuring the red-headed guy on the left is Govnor (Andy Black) the little guy who could absorb kinetic energy and convert it into strength. The guy with the bandana? I'm not so sure. It might be Dalton. I guess we'll have to wait and see... :)

And yes. Psycho Wraiths. Remember them? A little MYS-TECH side project based out of an undisclosed part of the Scottish highlands, which were once activated by the board members to take down Dark Angel. I wonder whether there's been a few more of them sitting unactivated all these years? Just sitting in wait?

So yes, that's what we have coming up in February. Notice also, that when compared next to the 3 covers from January's solicits there is a clear sense of progression going on on the covers themselves, as the event progresses. Check out the flames on the Union Flag at the bottom of each issue's cover.  Absent in the Revolutionary War Alpha cover, creeping in on the base of the Dark Angel and Knights of Pendragon issues, and then far more prominent on both of these new issues. A nice touch.

You'll also notice that if you look back up to the Death's Head II one-shot above you'll see that DH2 co-creator Liam Sharp will be doing a variant cover for this one. The finished article is still under wraps, however Liam Sharp has put up a rough sketch of what we presume is that cover on his Facebook page.



 
 
 
 
Even as a rough sketch you've got to admit that looks pretty damn good. I cannot wait to see the finished article.


So there ya go, to more officially solicited issues. And as I've said before if you want to read them, go to your local comic book store and ask them to pit a copy by for you. By pre-ordering you'll make sure you get the book you want and you'll also let the store owner know that people are interested in the series.

You can't really go wrong with that.

Thursday, 17 October 2013

Revolutionary War hits Marvel's January Solicits

So, Marvel's January solicits have come out. And that means we finally get see confirmed details of three Revolutionary War titles and their creative teams.

Plus Covers.

Check these out (and Click for a larger image):





REVOLUTIONARY WAR: ALPHA #1
ANDY LANNING AND ALAN COWSILL (W) • RICH ELSON (A)
Cover by MARK BROOKS
Variant Cover by TBD
Part 1 of “Revolutionary War”
• Marvel UK’s greatest heroes come together for the first time in 20 years to face a threat that could destroy the world.
• Featuring Captain Britain, Pete Wisdom, Death’s Head II, Motormouth and Killpower, the Warheads and a host of British heroes.
32 PGS./ ONE-SHOT/Rated T+ …$3.99


So... I'm seeing Captain Britain, Dark Angel, Motormouth, Killpower, Death's Head II, Digitek, Stacy and Col Tigon Liger from Warheads, Dai Thomas, the android Sir Gawain, Pete Wisdom, and is that intended to be... Blade? I'm not sure.

I like the logo. The Lion looks like it may have come from Captain Britain & MI13.

All looking good. Mark Brooks on art gives it some real clout on the cover.  And Rich Elson on interior art, as was announced at London Film & Comic Con.

Secondly....


 
 
 
REVOLUTIONARY WAR: DARK ANGEL #1
KIERON GILLEN (W) • DIETRICH SMITH (A)
Cover by MARK BROOKS
Variant Cover by Salvador Larroca
Part 2 of “Revolutionary War”
• When Shevaun Haldane experiences a troubling vision in Darkmoor Castle, she realizes danger may be coming for the heroes of Marvel UK.
• With time running out, Shevaun has no choice but to suit up as Dark Angel once again.
• An adventure that will take fans through the past, present, and future of Marvel UK!
32 PGS./ ONE-SHOT/Rated T+ …$3.99


It's Kieron Gillen writing Dark Angel. If ever there were a better fit for writing Shevaun Haldane I can't think of one off the top of my head. Great choice. I actually don't know anything about Dietrich Smith, but I have confidence.

The guns are an addition, but lets be honest Shevaun can pull out pretty much anything from that void created by her costume. It's the kind of dynamic looking cover which should grab people's attention, and it's great that they've chosen to stick with Shevaun's original Dark Angel costume. I've always much preferred it, compared next to the Larroca redesign. Which is of course interesting, because Larroca *is* doing the variant cover. I wonder which costume he'll be drawing her in.

It certainly sounds like despite her brief appearance in Captain Britain & MI13 Shevaun has mostly been retired from heroing since the end of the Imprint Years. I hope she gets to play a significant part in this story. I always thought that she was a character with a great amount of potential.

And thirdly...


 
 
 
REVOLUTIONARY WAR: KNIGHTS OF PENDRAGON #1
ROB WILLIAMS (W) • SIMON COLEBY (A)
Cover by MARK BROOKS
Variant Cover by TBD
Part 3 of “Revolutionary War”
• A corporate deep-mining setup unearths an old MYS-TECH base, where magical cloning experiments have been taking place.
• What mysteries or monsters are waiting in Britain’s subterranean bones?
• Featuring fan-favorite Marvel UK characters Dai Thomas, Pete Wisdom, and Union Jack!
32 PGS./ ONE-SHOT/Rated T+ …$3.99
 
 
Rob Williams and Marvel UK stalwart Simon Coleby! Excellent news.
 
Albion (Peter Hunter) appears to be back, accompanied by former Knights Union Jack and Dai Thomas. That certainly appears to be the android Sir Gawain on the right, in full armour, and is that actually Kate McClellan returning on the left hand side of the image? I really hope so.
 
The new addition appears to be Pete Wisdom. Which might seem a little odd, but we have seen him and Dai interacting in the past. And it's Wisdom. You can't go wrong with Pete Wisdom.
 
Unearthing some long since forgotten MYS-TECH monster cloning facility?
 
Well, I'm in!
 
So there you have it. The first three titles. They start reprinting Alan Moore's Miracleman stories in January, too. I am going to be SO broke, aren't I?

Tuesday, 22 March 2011

Captain Britain to enter The Iron Age

Just a quick one this. Thanks very much for all the well-wishing. I'm out of Hospital and mending at home, but I couldn't let this weekend go by without posting this up.

Late last week, as some of Marvel's June solicits started to trickle out into the public domain, a few people spotted the following publication title amongst the list:

"IRON AGE #1 (OF 3) CAPTAIN BRITAIN JUSKO VAR"

Captain Britain Variant? Oh, yes. But why? Well, at the time I had no clue what Iron Age even was. But this past weekend C2E2, the convention in Chicago, happened. And this image suddenly turned up:



Was this the Captain Britain variant? Well, no. That was for The Iron Age #1. This is a one-shot tie-in for this mini Event.

Iron Age is a mini-series starting in June written by Rob Williams and pencilled by Rebekah Isaacs. Some of you will know Rob from his work on 2000 AD, or from Cla$$war.

Or you may remember him from the Deadpool Team-Up issue featuring Captain Britain, last year.

Mr Williams describes the concept behind the story thusly:

The initial thought on The Iron Age was one of those 'eureka' moments,” reports Williams. “I'm a huge NFL fan and was reading a magazine article on the success of the Throwbacks weekends, where teams wear their old uniforms. And then I figured, why don't we do that with a one-off super team? Put some of our favorite heroes from today together in their old outfits. Any old time Marvel fan would love to see Luke Cage in his headband, Johnny Storm in his red FF outfit [and] Captain Britain in his classic [Alan] Moore/[Alan] Davis 80’s uniform all fighting side-by-side. From there it was just working out the logistics of how we could pull this off and tell an emotionally engaging story, one that worked as a thrilling adventure and that had something to say about the longevity of these characters and why we love them so much. A story that occurs in today's Marvel Universe and actually matters to the main characters, rather than being a What If? type of deal."

...

“We needed someone with iconic moments we could go back and visit,” he explains. “Also, Stark's technical knowledge means that, if anyone could put one of Doctor Doom's time machine back together, he could. It'd be too easy for Reed Richards, but Stark? There'd be a challenge to his ego there. A time machine should be beyond him. But is it? Also, his arrogance meant that he has a long way to fall. We're really putting Tony Stark through the mill in Iron Age. Kicking him where it hurts and trying to give him one of his greatest challenges.

“Stark's mission? When a long forgotten figure from his past uses one of Doom's time machines to bring back Dark Phoenix, Tony watches in horror as the Marvel Earth is completely destroyed. This isn't a What If?; everyone on the Marvel Earth dies and Stark finds himself trapped in the past. From there he has to recreate one of Doom's machines and travel back to save the day. But he's going to need the help of some surprising Marvel figures to pull this off. And they'll meet some interesting old villains along the way, too.”


Now is it just me, or does anybody else think that this all sounds like a really quite clever and pretty bloody good idea? It's a three issue series, featuring a superteam of characters plucked from some of their strongest and most interesting points in their history. Read the interview in full over at Marvel.com

Oh, and that variant cover? Not sure. But this image by Ben Oliver has been slipped into all the press for the book so far....

 
And good GOD it is Awesome! :)

The two officially solicited titles so far are described as follows:

THE IRON AGE: ALPHA #1
Written by ROB WILLIAMS
Penciled by REBEKAH ISAACS
Cover by ARIEL OLIVETTI
Variant Cover by ED McGUINNESS

The one true Dark Phoenix returns to the Marvel U with a vengeance! As the earth is destroyed, Iron Man is swept into the time-stream where the only chance for survival is to gather the greatest heroes from across the
eras and change the course of history! The Avengers, Fantastic Four, the X-Men and more will join Iron Man for this trip through all the ages of
Marvel! Rising stars Rob Williams (DARK WOLVERINE) and Rebekah Issacs (MS. MARVEL) team up for the century-spanning epic that takes you through the Marvel Universe’s greatest moments…and maybe to
its last!
32 PGS./Rated T+ …$2.99


THE IRON AGE #1
Written by CHRISTOS GAGE & ROB WILLIAMS
Pencils by LEE WEEKS & BEN OLIVER
Avengers Cover by LEE WEEKS
Captain Britain Cover by JOE JUSKO
Trapped in the past, Iron Man races the clock to save the future from annihilation. But his past self is in a drunken stupor, and Tony’s fellow Avengers, dismiss his story as an alcoholic delusion. The keys to saving Tony’s future? Hank Pym…exiled Avenger and one of the Avengers’ greatest enemies: Ultron! Christos Gage (AVENGERS ACADEMY) teams with comics legends LEE WEEKS and TOM PALMER – inker of more issues of Avengers than anyone else – to bring you an all-out epic in the mighty Marvel manner! THEN! Tony’s next stop is Captain Britain’s London, a totalitarian state bent on a new, ‘cleaner’ future. Rob Williams teams with Ben Oliver (Ms. Marvel) as Iron Man and Captain Britain fight for freedom!
48 PGS./Rated T+ …$4.99


So keep an eye out for those in a couple of months...

In other news, remember that Captain Britain Hardcover solicited for May? Well, guess what got solicited for June?

CAPTAIN BRITAIN VOL. 2:
SIEGE OF CAMELOT HC

Written by LARRY LIEBER,
JIM LAWRENCE & STEVE PARKHOUSE
Penciled by RON WILSON,
PABLO MARCOS, JOHN STOKES
& PAUL NEARY
Cover by HERB TRIMPE

The adventures of Marvel U.K.’s first all-original super hero
continue! Captain Britain thought he had it rough facing foes like the alien Star-Creature, the shape-shifting Black Baron, the mad Doctor Claw and the vicious Slaymaster. But that’s nothing compared to what awaits him when travels to America and teams up with Spider-Man to battle the villainous Arcade, and then battles side-by-side with the Black Knight as they plunge into the heart of Otherworld — where they encounter the mystical Merlyn, the evil Modred and the ancient Nethergods…and must resurrect King Arthur himself! Collecting SUPER SPIDER-MAN AND CAPTAIN BRITAIN #233-247; MARVEL TEAM-UP (1972) #65-66; and material from HULK COMIC #1 and #3-46, and INCREDIBLE HULK WEEKLY #47-55 and #57-63.
376 PGS./Rated A …$39.99
ISBN: 978-0-7851-5753-3
Trim size: oversized

So... as I see it, that's all the material Panini have been printing here in the UK, reproduced oversized in two hardback volumes for the US market. And released to coincide with Captain Britain's appearances in The Iron Age maybe? Either way, while I have them in paperback, I shall be buying the hardcovers too.

And one final bit before I disappear back to a comfy chair with some painkillers, remember Simon Williams' Death's Head vs Hulk strip, which I mentioned a while back?

Well, this week #33 of Marvel Heroes comes out in newsagents across the UK. And it's promises something a little bit special. A Hulk story written by Transformers legend Simon Furman and pencilled by Simon Williams.

And it only bloody features Death's Head!


Click for a larger view.

So, yes. This one comes out on Thursday (March 24th). While I was in hospital Simon did an interview with iFanboy about the upcoming issue. You could do a lot worse than check that out.

Well and go out and buy a copy, obviously! ;)

That's going to have to be it, for now.

Speak soon

Mark

Tuesday, 11 May 2010

It's CAP WEDNESDAY - Wha-!? Huh?



No. You're not reading this incorrectly. Captain Britain & MI13 IS still cancelled. More's the pity, but we can't have everything.

However, tomorrow (Wednesday the 12th of May) is being declared a token 'CAP WEDNESDAY' by fans of the series, due to the team's guest appearance in Deadpool Team-Up #893.

It's written by fellow Brit, 2000 AD and Cla$$war writer Rob Williams, and while I'm sure that the thought of Deadpool may turn some people off seriously, put that to one side for a minute.

Rob knows what he's doing. He's a fan of 80s Captain Britain and he's not afraid to reference it! This story focusses on a weapon tech haul, recently turned up in Britain, which once belonged to Cap's one time nemesis Slaymaster. And it seems quite a few people are rather interested in seizing ownership...

Including a guy who just happens to be employing Deadpool. :)

The story shows real promise, and if you're interested in taking a prospective glance at it you can find a preview HERE!

It's always worth supporting a British creator, but this one genuinely does look a lot of fun. Plus, it's the first REAL example of of MI13 guesting outside of what was their own title. If you are a fan, if you were gutted that Marvel canned it, or even if you just love reading quirky stories set in Marvel's Britain, you MUST pick this up!

And needless to say, it all helps to remind Marvel that there is still a fanbase for this team. If those issue were to sell slightly higher than the Team-Up issues around it... well that could only be a good thing ;)

Deadpool Team-Up #893 is out on Wednesday the 12th in the USA and Thursday 13th in the UK.