Luke hasn’t had a rant for quite a while, he’s had a bit to drink and his ill informed opinions and hasty assumptions will enthrall and entertain.
Or not.
Hey! Let’s debate!
Luke hasn’t had a rant for quite a while, he’s had a bit to drink and his ill informed opinions and hasty assumptions will enthrall and entertain.
Or not.
Hey! Let’s debate!
Despite being a little off the pace, as the series finished a few months ago, and not 2000AD, Luke argues it gets in here by the fact that it’s from a direct ancestor of the prog’, and it was created by the “Flesh” team of Pat Mills and Ramon Sola. Plus Si Spurrier was a long term contributor to the prog. Finally, Luke is providing the labour, so has the right đ
Everyone likes a good tyrannosaur. But, a black, time travelling seemingly indestructible dinosaur facing off against some of your favourite 2000ad characters is awesome. Luke takes a look at Satanus and family
E bay is a vile temptress.
My current obsession is to fill the gaps in my collection of 2000ad specials, and annuals.
Annual s were always quite cool, a traditional Christmas treat. My brothers and I would get a selection of annuals for the festivities. Most of the time they were the DC Thompson fare, âVictorâ , âBeanoâ , the occasional âValiantâ and âBattleâ were in there from Fleetway. I had to specifically ask for the 2000ad annual, I donât think Mum and Dad were too keen on some of the content.
2000ad annuals were no different from the rest on the market. A motley collection of reprint from the progâ or its siblings (both ancient and modern); some vaguely relevant articles and the occasional new strip. Nice hardback covers sandwiching filler strips and text that wouldnât have made the weekly, though they had the odd gem.
For Christmas 1984âs offering we have a spiffy Dave Gibbons cover (with Lionel Richie being used as the model for Johnny A judging by the hamster cheeks) and true to form, some great, and quite frankly not so great, content.
Kicking things off: Staccato (another of Wagner & Grantâs pseudonyms) and Ian Gibsonâs âRobo Hunterâ. Samâs away and Hoagy minds the office, taking a call from a punter who needs to disable his rampant robo dog which is preventing him moving house. âCourse this isnât true, but itâs easy to have a battle of wits with an unarmed robot. Predictably it all goes badly wrong. Gibsonâs art is great as usual, and Toby from Halo Jones has a pre fame cameo role. A well worn joke, but lots of fun with some fabulous Ian Gibson art.
âAndersonâ stars in an early solo tale âThe Hauntingâ, again with a âStaccatoâ writing credit , art by Kim Raymond . A citâ is possessed by a demon he released whilst working at the Museum of Antiquities. Cassâ has the task of fishing him out. Very much in the filler category. Raymondâs art is perfunctory; clear storytelling, but not dynamic, not a good fit for 2000ad. He works for Disney now dontâcha know?
In digging through old thrills, we hit the first reprint seam. âBonjo From Beyond The Starsâ by Kevâ OâNeill. 2000adâs attempts at humour strips are a bit hit and miss, for every âDR & Quinchâ, you get a âCaptain Klepâ, or âBonjoâ. Itâs Kevâ and I can excuse him anything, but this just isnât funny. It is interesting in that it shows OâNeillâs IPC humour roots.
âInvasionâ written by Chris Lowder and the brilliant Ian Kennedy. Silk and Savage team up with the French resistance to destroy the channel tunnel (which at the time of publication still fictional). Lowderâs script is action packed, silly and nonsensical, but loads of fun. Volgs get offed , loadsâve âshootaâ action and cockney geezer ânessâ. Ian Kennedy is fantastic, clean, shiny lines, fantastic for âDan Dareâ but not gritty enough for Bill. Mike Dorey is more âInvasionâsâ speed.
Next : an early Gibson âDreddâ with an early âJohn Wagnerâ script credit. Co Starring Giant, Dredd investigates the substitution of juves with robots in a case of industrial espionage. Very early Dredd and highlights how much the character had developed in the 7 years since the debut of the character, also it shows how far Gibson had come when you compare the art with that of âRobo Hunterâ.
Finally breaking the through the reprint, some original content. The first of two Alan Moore strips is âRogue Trooper : First of the Fewâ drawn by Jesus Redondo. Redondo is not known for his war art, and you can kind of see why. Again, a great artist, but not a good fit. Our hero stumbles across an old soldier in rags, Mooreâs tale making the logical assumption that Rogue and buddies were not the first GIs. With an anti war and political subtext, this is a bit more sophisticated than the usual âRogue Trooperâ fare. Not great, and certainly not something you would hold up as one of Mooreâs classics, but good stuff, but doesnât fit easily into the original Rogue Trooperâs canon.
After the brief respite from old thrills, weâre back to reprint. This time itâs a few episodes of the original run of âFleshâ, and Earl Reaganâs first meeting with Claw Carver. Written by R.E. Wright and drawn by Sola, gory, gritty, and he draws great dinosaurs. This has the grindhouse â bâ movie feel that the revival is striving for, but which gets lost amongst the conflicting moralising, bombardment of ideas and illogical plot development. You canât help but look at Joe & Reaganâs relationship in a different light after current developments; itâs gone all âBrokeback Mountainâ (âBrokeback Cretaceous?â)
A rather humdrum, though occasionally blackly funny Dredd sees Joe coming up against an escaped exhibit from the alien zoo that is hiding out in a citâs apartment. Scripted yet again by âStaccatoâ and drawn by a very stiff looking Robin Smith, antiseptic colours, unimaginative character design and all. He is a great layout artist (as backed up by the article on covers in the annual), editor and designer, but his strip art was never great.
For me the highlight of the package comes next âA Day In The Death Of Torquemadaâ which allows Pat Mills & Kevin OâNeill to go completely off it on their greatest creation. 4 pages of OâNeillâs bizarre and outlandish designs and characters, there is little story to speak of, but who cares?
A beautifully drawn but slight âFuture Shockâ (yep â reprint) follows, written by Jack Adrian and drawn by Brian Bolland.
Mooreâs second strip a âRo Bustersâ tale, with art by Joe Eckers, and winner of âwho gave this guy a job?â 1984. A rival to Quartzâs disaster squad threatens to steal their limelight and more importantly their profit. Possibly (ahem)based upon a certain puppet show from the 60sâs whose family name rhymes with âStaceyâ; âStorm Eagles Are Goâ is a fun little tale, unessential and with a very unsophisticated and âunMooreâ punchline . If Moore thinks âDR & Quinchâ was bad, what does he think of this?
Yet more reprint! But you rarely go wrong with Wagner, Grant & Ron Smithâs Daily Star âJudge Dreddâ.
Interspersed amongst the stories, are a plethora of crosswords, profiles on 2000ad villains and articles of how the progâ is put together.
Droid profile pages, including script âbot Alan Moore, letter droid Frame and what they would no doubt call âmediaâ droids today Spex, DJ1 and D Mil. A 3 page introâ into Ace Trucking Co â please, please no one revive this, only Belardinelli could draw it.
Editor droid Burt interviews Billy Dee Williams âLando Calrissianâ from the original Star Wars trilogy and in quick succession, articles (or really a 4 page advert) on micro computers. Finally the Moore droid (and now professional curmudgeon and offence taker) returns with a short (for him anyway) article on the creative process behind undervalued 2000ad gem âSkizzâ.
The bargain basement feel of the package is exemplified by the text Strontium Dog story that rounds it off, spot illustrations by Robin Smith.
If you havenât got any of the reprint, then it may be worth hunting down and itâs definitely one for the nostalgic Squaxx. Personally Iâd buy it purely for âNemesisâ if I didnât have a dozen copies of that story already, but as you can probably guess, my ratio of money to sense is arse backwards.