Friday, December 24, 2021
Thursday, December 23, 2021
Comic Cuts — 23 December 2021
I'll keep this short 'n' sweet because you're going to be busy today and tomorrow and the last thing you need is me rabbiting on. So this week I've spent a couple of days wrangling scans of a strip that will be appearing in a Spanish reprint of 'Patty's World'. Patty was hugely successful here in the UK, running for seventeen years in the pages of Princess Tina, Pink & Mates and, finally, in the revival of Girl.
Even then it wasn't finished, and the strip continued in Spain under the name 'Esther'. It was drawn throughout by the wonderful Purita Campos and written (at least at first) by Philip Douglas. It remains one of the highlights of British comics and it is still hugely popular in Spain. Sadly, the lack of collections from Fleetway/IPC/etc. over the years means that it is nowadays a bit of a distant memory as far as fans are concerned (Mel remembers reading the strip when she was a kid in the early Eighties, so in the pages of Girl). It's over thirty years since the strip folded... just think what sort of industry we might have had if we'd developed the same album/collection culture they had in Europe, keeping older strips alive and available for new generations to enjoy.
(Don't take this as a knock against Rebellion, who are doing a good job of bringing back some of the old characters and gathering old strips into nice hardback albums. I just wish their predecessors had gotten around to it forty years ago.)
Talking about work that isn't getting on with the history of Action, I received a couple of books this week that I had a small hand in. One is unusual for me, a collection of poems by David F. Cheshire. I became involved through the book's editor, John Ashbrook, a friend of many years, and David's daughter, Ellen, who wrote some bits 'n' bobs for me when I was editing at Trinity Mirror.
I did some typesetting, but the rest is down to John and the results are a lovely little hardback with a nice expressive dust jacket. I'm not sure if it is generally available — if it is, I'll post a link in a future CC column.
The other book is Hank Janson Under Cover, put together with loving care by Stephen James Walker. My involvement was to scan a bunch of Heade images, which means that the early Janson covers are, for the most part, the best images available. And there are a few scarcities amongst them. I'll do a proper review when I get a chance, but in the meantime, I'll just say that this covers the whole Janson saga, all the way through his Compact days, and also covers foreign reprints from across Europe and Scandinavia, so there is an astonishing array of styles on show, even a couple of Robert Maguires on the US editions. You can buy it here.
Well, that's me done for the year. My plans for January are to get this Action history finished and get the pages designed. I've mentioned in private to a couple of people that the reason BAM! has been delayed so long is that I wasn't happy with the content. I was putting together a magazine aimed at an audience of one — me! And nice tho' it is to wallow in older strips, I wanted something that wasn't over fifty years old and that had a significant impact on British comics. Hence Action, which I have been wanting to write about for years. I'll build the rest of the magazine around that, but it will include a long piece on John M. Burns and various other articles by me and others. I already have parts of issue two and three written, so hopefully, once I can get to grips with doing the layouts and whatnots, I won't get into the same merry-go-round where time just runs away from me. Believe me, I can easily lose a whole day to an unforeseen problem... as has happened today. I meant to have this written and posted this morning, but the day got off to a bad start (Mel slipped in the bathroom and broke a tooth) and that put paid to doing anything before lunch (she's fine: one visit to the emergency dentist later, the tooth is temporarily restored and will be replaced in the new year). That and Wednesday's slight cooking mishap (my latest banana bread turned into a solid brick after I left it in the oven too long) has meant I'm playing catch-up: I haven't reviewed the stuff I wanted to review; haven't caught up with e-mails as I had planned; haven't read the paper or listened to the daily podcasts I usually listen to.
So, a typical day in the Holland & Hyland household. Merry Christmas, everybody. I'll see you on the other side once I've had some festive cheer, fed my family with too much food, settled down with (or passed out because of) a nice drink (I seem to have ended up with a bottle of very strong vodka) and watched a load of TV that has tinsel all over it. Stay safe.
Commando 5499-5502
Four new Commandos incoming! Heroes find themselves under siege and villains under fire, as luck keeps life and limb together in another four stonking adventures! Issues 5499-5502 are out this Thursday.
5499: Ramsey’s Raiders: The Castle
The Raiders are back for another adventure — and this time under siege! Teamed up with a hot-headed Commando unit and holed up in a gothic castle, the rag-tag team of heroes are outgunned and outnumbered by wave after wave of enemy soldiers. However, the real problem may come from the enemy within… and only some cool, calm and collected teamwork might be able to save the mission!
Another rollicking adventure from Ferg Handley with lively interiors from Carlos Pino and another striking cover from veteran artist Ian Kennedy.
Story | Ferg Handley
Art | Carlos Pino
Cover | Ian Kennedy
5500: Honk Kong Hooky
For our five-thousand-five-hundredth issue, Commando visits Hong Kong, as Royal Navy Lieutenant Commander “Hooky” Jackson defends invasion with a paltry group of military scruffs, fresh from the glass-house and ready for a fight! But as one man’s deviousness might hand the region over to the Japanese, can Hooky turn him around and continue to fight the good fight?
An action-packed Commando classic from Newark with dynamic artwork from J Fuente and one of the most iconic Commando covers from Ken Barr!
Story | Newark
Art | J Fuente
Cover | Ken Barr
Originally Commando No. 245 (1967).
5501: Knock of the Gestapo
A sinister tale of three devious SS officials with a taste for the finer things in life. As these Nazi rats arrange to escape the sinking ship that is the Third Reich, an unexpected visitor comes knocking. What could connect these three guilty parties? And will they pay for their crimes against the Reich or the people they oppress?
An intriguing and ominous story from Colin Maxwell with dramatic artwork from Vicente Alcazar and an arresting cover from Neil Roberts.
Story | Colin Maxwell
Art | Vicente Alcazar
Cover | Neil Roberts
5502: Who Needs Luck?
Pilot Officer Sid Carter flies the renowned Beaufighter on raids over the jungle — a job requiring courage and skill. But Carter lacks faith in himself and insists that luck is all that keeps him and his fellow airborne heroes together — and he’ll need more of it if he’s going to survive this war!
Story | Staff
Art | Jose Maria Jorge
Cover | Ian Kennedy
Originally Commando No. 1757 (1983).
Friday, December 17, 2021
Comic Cuts — 17 December 2021
Could that be a glimmer of light I see at the end of the tunnel? After a couple of weeks writing about individual artists who worked on Action, I've managed to get back to the main narrative and I'm taking a break from re-reading 'Kids Rule OK' to write this. The intention at the moment is to end part one with the closure of the first run of Action, with part two looking into the reasons why that happened and how the paper was retooled by hands other than those of Pat Mills to make it more acceptable to retailers.
Doodling around on Wednesday while I was talking to my Mum on the phone, I found that the main narrative to this point runs to 25,000 words, so you can see I've gone into it quite deeply. For comparison, the Countdown/TV Action book had 40,000 words of introduction, and that, along with the indexes, became of 200 page book. I'm still trying to figure out where to fit in the artists essays—maybe run them with part two or as a piece in a later issue... I won't know how much space I have until I start laying out the main article, which I will be starting on early next year if all goes well.
I was very pleased to get back to the bigger story because I'd had a nagging voice in the back of my brain telling me that I shouldn't have taken time out to write other stuff. You lose momentum and all the details you're storing in your brain start to fade away; the worry is that you come back and have to relearn everything from scratch before you can pick up all the threads. Thankfully, I had left myself in a position where, on Monday morning, I was able to get straight back in to where I had left off back in November and start writing (about Hell's Highway).
The only frustration is that so many of the participants have disappeared without there being any interviews to fall back on. Anyone who has read my histories of comics will know I try to write from first hand account wherever I can — hence all the transcribing of interviews a few months ago before I even wrote a sentence. Quite a few of the people involved I've spoken to, but there are still gaps, the biggest of which is John Smith, who was editing Action when it was pulled. He has been the fall guy for 45 years, and it would be fascinating to get his side of the story. I have a couple of ideas about why the axe came down on Action when it did; I'm not going to go into it here but something significant happened the day after it was axed that may have made defending the comic further impossible.
Having just now read the opening episode of Kids Rule O.K., I'm worried about how prescient it was. I've used the opening two pages as a header, and no doubt your eyes were drawn immediately to the violent affray on page two. But if you read the Prologue, its a description of what happened in 1986:
Eeeek! If only Jack Adrian had the status of David Attenborough, we might have done something about this twenty years before An Inconvenient Truth (2006) and Frozen Planet (2009) made climate change a talking point and thirty years before The Blue Planet II (2017) made everyone aware of how pollution was destroying the planet.
Let's see what else Jack's crystal ball predicted...
Aaaaaggghhhh!
Wednesday, December 15, 2021
Rebellion Releases — 15 December 2021
2000AD Prog 2262
Cover: Toby Willsmer.
Judge Dredd: Trinity by Ken Niemand (w) Richard Elson (a) Annie Parkhouse (l)
The Fall Of Deadworld: Jessica by Kek-w
(w) Dave Kendall (a) Jim Campbell (l)
Interview: Doug Church by Karl Stock
Kingmaker: Falls The Shadow by Ian Edginton (w) Leigh Gallagher (a) Jim Campbell (l)
Dexter: Bulletopia by Dan Abnett (w) Tazio Bettin (a) Matt Soffe (c) Simon Bowland (l)
The Order: Fantastic Voyage by Kek-W (w) John Burns (a) Simon Bowland (l)
Tales From Mega-city One: Christmas Comes To Devil's Island by Karl Stock (w) James Newell (a) John Charles (c) Annie Parkehouse (l)
The Out: Book Two by Dan Abnett (w) Mark Harrison (a) Annie Parkhouse (l)
Proteus Vex: Desire Paths by Mike Carroll (w) Jake Lynch (a) Jim Boswell (c) Simon Bowland (l)
Judge Dredd Megazine 439
Cover: Lee Carter.
Judge Dredd: Saviour by Ken Niemand (w) Steven Austin (a) Matt Soffe (c) Annie Parkhouse
Death Cap by TC Eglington (w) Boo Cook (a) Simon Bowland (l)
Diamond Dogs III by James Peaty (w) Warren Please (a) Simon Bowland (l)
Fiction - Lenny Zero: Isolation by Andy Diggle
Interview: Colin Wyatt by Karl Stock
New books: SK Moore by Stephen Jewell
Lawless: Ballots Over Badrock by Dan Abnett (w), Phil Windslade (a) Jim Campbell (l)
Surfer by John Wagner (w) Colin MacNeil (a) Chris Blythe (c) Annie Parkhouse (l)
Bagged graphic novel: Judge Dredd: Christmas is Cancelled
2000AD Covers Uncovered Annual 2021
Rebellion ISBN 978-178618677-5, 15 December 2021, 132pp, £9.99.
The secrets behind the greatest comic book covers in the galaxy –
revealed in a brand new annual! Every week, 2000 AD Covers Uncovered
takes readers of the 2000 AD website behind-the-scenes on the covers of
both 2000 AD and the Judge Dredd Megazine. From idea to pencils, from
inks to colours, 2000 AD Covers Uncovered reveals the processes behind
the jaw-dropping, genre-defining art that graces the covers of the
Galaxy’s Greatest Comics! For the first time, this new annual collects
the artwork for every 2000 AD and Megazine cover from a single year in a
square-bound bookazine format. Each cover is presented without logos
and cover furniture, allowing readers to savour each image in all its
glory. Alongside, step-by-step images such as wireframes, pencils, inks,
and inspiration are presented alongside commentary from the artists
themselves, providing fascinating detail about the process behind their
covers Written and curated by blogger Richard Bruton, the 2000 AD Covers
Uncovered Annual 2021 is not only an enthralling collection of stellar
art but also an indispensable insight into the artistic process.
Art by: Cliff Robinson, Neil Roberts, Mark Montague, Ben Willsher, Will Simpson, Dan Cornwell, Simon Fraser, Patrick Goddard, John Higgins, Nick Roche, PJ Holden, Brendan McCarthy, Simon Davis, Nick Percival, John McCrea, Tom Foster, Mike Collins, Richard Elson, Leonardo Manco, Dave Taylor, Dermot Power, Pye Parr, Neil Googe, Dylan Teague, Dave Kendall, Stewart K. Moore, Toby Willsmer, Clint Langley, Luke Preece, Mark Harrison, Alex Ronald, Paul Marshall, Paul Williams, Mick McMahon, D’Israeli, Colin MacNeil, Tazio Bettin, Chris Weston, Lee Carter and Neil Roberts.
Print edition available via 2000AD Webshop.
Monday, December 13, 2021
Rebellion's Graphic Novel Schedule for 2022
Four and a half decades, and no signs of slowing down - 2000 AD will celebrate its 45th anniversary in 2022 with a bumper year of incredible collections.
From over-sized ‘artist editions’ of original art to brand new all-ages comics to non-fiction tomes, there’s something for everyone in the graphic novel collection schedule for the coming twelve months, as Rebellion showcases the best of old and new to mark its special anniversary year.
The 2000 AD Encyclopedia (February) provides chapter and verse on the characters and series that have made 2000 AD a powerhouse of comics innovation, bringing more than four decades of comics together in a sumptuous hardcover with dust jacket.
Paying tribute to some of the best talents 2000 AD has ever published, next year will see separate focusing on the work of Judge Dredd co-creators John Wagner (March) and Carlos Ezquerra (May), and co-creator of Rogue Trooper and The VCs Gerry Finley-Day (August), as well as a collection of critically-acclaimed writer Al Ewing’s Judge Dredd work (March). In September, the brand-new Strontium Dog: The Son (November) collection showcases Carlos Ezquerra's final work on the character he co-created for Starlord in 1978, drawn just before his death in 2018.
Artwork from two of 2000 AD’s all-time greatest artists will be showcased in over-sized ‘artist edition’ Apex Edition hardcovers, with Judge Dredd pages by Brian Bolland (February) and Mick McMahon (October) scanned at high resolution and presented at original size. These gorgeous collections will give fans an unprecedented chance to see every line, each blob of white-out, and every printers’ mark on these original pages, covering some of the most influential moments in 2000 AD history and key years in the character’s evolution.
In May, 45 Years of 2000 AD gives forty-five popular artists from the worlds of comics and illustration the chance to show their unique takes on some of 2000 AD’s most famous characters. This new collection will feature work by Michael Allred (X-Statix), Jamie Smart (Bear), Annie Wu (Hawkeye), Mick McMahon (Judge Dredd), Kevin O’Neill (League of Extraordinary Gentlemen), Rachael Stott (Doctor Who) and many, many more.
September sees the first ever collection of DC Comics’ Judge Dredd: Legends of the Law series from the 1990s. Written by John Wagner and Alan Grant, this volume features art by Brent Anderson (X-Men) and Anthony Williams (Judge Dredd).
But it's not just about looking back - this year sees new collections of the very best 2000 AD has to offer today, including all-ages comics with two 2000 AD Regened collections in March and July, as well as the first collection of breakout all-ages Dredd-world sci-fi action series Department K with Interdimensional Investigators in November. Plus there’s collections of brand new series such as Michael Carroll, Henry Flint and Jake Lynch's ‘alien space opera James Bond’ Proteus Vex (April) and Dan Abnett and Mark Harrison's smash hit space opera The Out (October).
There are new collections of ongoing series, War of the Worlds sequel Scarlet Traces (March), hit folk horror series Thistlebone (May), fan favourite Dredd-world Western Lawless (June) and critically-acclaimed sci-fi noir Brink (August), as well as series from the archive with Essential Dredd: Dredd vs Death (January), Essential Judge Dredd: Necropolis (June), and Pat Mills, Tony Skinner and Jim Elston’s pagan eco-terrorist Finn (December).
And there’s more digital-only releases, expanding 2000 AD’s digital library on its app and webshop, including Garth Ennis and Nick Percival’s explosive Dredd-world road trip series Sleeze ‘N’ Ryder (January) and the second volume of classic The Mean Arena (March). Plus new series get a digital release such as sci-fi thriller Skip Tracer: Legion (May), interdimensional nerd comedy Survival Geeks (July), the latest follow-up to space horror series Dark Justice (September), and Dredd-world crime sprees in Tales from the Black Museum Vol.2 (November).
Essential Dredd: Dredd vs Death
The essential Judge Dredd graphic novel series - the ultimate introduction to the Lawman of the Future! The crime is life! The Judgement is death! When Judge Death enters Mega-City One from a parallel dimension, his plan is simple: to find every single living cit and sentence them – to death! The fourth volume in the oversized Essential Dredd series includes the first two Judge Death stories, from John Wagner (A History of Violence) and Brian Bolland (The Killing Joke) presented in stunning black and white, and featuring restored pages. It also includes the first solo Judge Anderson adventure, presented in luscious new colours, also starring Judge Death. The critically acclaimed Essential Dredd Collection is a perfect jumping on point for new readers and this volume introduces Judge Death, the Dark Judges and wisecracking Psi Judge Cassandra Anderson.
Format: Paperback; Release date: 18 January 2022; Price: £19.99 / $25; Pages: 160Sleeze ‘N’ Ryder (digital)
Where did they go? Out. What did they see? Freakin’ everything, man! Sleeze and Ryder are on the roadtrip of their drokkin’ lives. Far from Mega-City 1 and deep in the Cursed Earth, these no-good hell trekkers are looking for adventure – but what they find is dinosaurs, mutants and the grud-dang apocalypse! This outlandish classic of 1990s 2000 AD is brought to you by the outrageous minds of Garth Ennis (Preacher) and Nick Percival (The Dark Judges) and is available in an exclusive digital edition for the first time ever!
Format: Digital only; Release date: 5 January 2022; Price: £7.99; Pages: 542000 AD Encyclopedia
What are the essential Judge Dredd stories? In which progs did The Ballad of Halo Jones run? What year was the first appearance of Nemesis the Warlock? Just who are the Thrillsuckers? Look no further, Earthlets! Every strip and major character from 2000 AD’s trailblazing 45 year history is catalogued and detailed, accompanied by stunning artwork and illustrations. With this show-stopping hardcover collection, must-read characters and storylines from across the cosmos are at your fingertips!
Format: Hardcover; Release date: 15 February 2022; Price: £39.99 / $50; Pages: 336Judge Dredd by Brian Bolland Apex Edition
Acclaimed as one of the greatest artists of his generation for his work on such titles as Camelot 3000 and Batman: The Killing Joke, Brian Bolland’s work on Judge Dredd helped catapult both the series and Bolland himself to international acclaim. His incredible black & white art is showcased in this deluxe, over-sized facsimile edition featuring new high-resolution scans of his original art from 2000 AD showing Bolland’s delicate inking brushwork in unprecedented detail, as well as the titles and word balloons placed over it at the time by IPC’s art team. It promises to be an unmissable collection for fans of comics and of fine art. This book will include pages from the Judge Dredd epics; The Cursed Earth, The Day the Law Died, The Judge Child Quest, and Bolland’s masterpiece Judge Death Lives. Also included is a gallery of covers ranging from 2000 AD to the Judge Dredd reprints published by Eagle Comics which brought Brian to the attention of American readers and show off Bolland’s inventiveness and sardonic humour.
Format: Hardcover; Release date: 17 February 2022; Price: £65; Pages: 128
Format: Hardcover; Release date: 15 March 2022; Price: £24.99 / $29.99; Pages: 304
Format: Paperback; Release date: 15 March 2022; Price: £12.99 / $15.99; Pages: 112
Format: Paperback; Release date: 15 March 2022; Price: £14.99 / $19.99; Pages: 128
Go on patrol and see Mega-City One - and beyond - through the eyes of Al Ewing (Immortal Hulk), one of the most original writers in comics, as Judge Dredd dispenses justice to mutants, laidback religious cults, the Sex Olympics and Santa Claus. But when polite ex-stripper Zombo appears in his dimension, has old Stoney Face finally met his match? Collecting many of Ewing’s outrageous Dredd stories for the first time and featuring an all-star cast of artists, including Liam Sharp (Green Lantern, Wonder Woman), John Higgins (Dreadnoughts: Breaking Ground, Judge Dredd, Watchmen), Simon Fraser (Judge Dredd, Nikolai Dante) and Ben Willsher (Roy of the Rovers, Judge Dredd), this is an essential collection for fans of the Law. Format: Paperback (with 2000AD Webshop exclusive hardcover); Release date: 1 March 2022; Price: £14.99 / $16.99; Pages: 144
The Mean Arena Volume 2: Eat, Slay, Shove! (digital)
In a dystopian future where the ultra-violent sport street football is played in evacuated towns, Matt Talon isn't playing just to win - he's playing for revenge! In the second instalment of this violent, action packed 2000 AD classic, Slater's Slayers take on the the Penzance Riggers, the Edinburgh Executioners, the Salford Slicers and the Oxford Invaders! In the Mean Arena, it's not just football - it’s mayhem, madness and murder! The second volume of The Mean Arena by Tom Tully (Roy of the Rovers), Eric Bradbury (Invasion!, Hook Jaw) and Mike White (Abelard Snazz) is collected for the first time ever in a digital exclusive graphic novel!
Format: Digital only; Release date: 2 March 2022; Price: £7.99 / $7.99; Pages: 112Proteus Vex: Another Dawn
For fourteen brutal centuries, the Imperium Ascendant and the Obdurate have clashed in an intergalactic war that spanned planets and peoples. Then the war – and the Obdurate – came to a dramatic end. Now, the galaxies are picking up the pieces. In the midst of this sprawling, dazzling system of galaxies, is Proteus Vex, ex-soldier for the Imperium Ascendant turned super-agent. He’s fast, brutal, and he always gets his prey. But when he is sent to find his former superior officer, Vex finds himself caught up in a deadly conspiracy. Hit comics team Michael Carroll (The New Heroes, Judge Dredd), Henry Flint (Judge Dredd, Zombo) and Jake Lynch (Judge Dredd) bring you a mind-expanding, colourful story that will plunge you into a series of strange new worlds.
Format: Paperback; Release date: 14 April 2022; Price: £14.99 / $19.99; Pages: 112
Format: Paperback; Release date: 28 April 2022; Price: £19.99 / $24.99; Pages: 304
Format: Digital only; Release date: 4 May 2022; Price: £7.99 / $7.99; Pages: 96
Format: Hardcover; Release date: 24 May 2022; Price: £29.99 / $35; Pages: 96
Format: Hardcover; Release date: 10 May 2022; Price: £??.?? / $29.99; Pages: 240
Format: Hardcover; Release date: 10 May 2022; Price: £14.99 / $19.99; Pages: 80
Format: Hardcover; Release date: 23 June 2022; Price: £14.99 / $16.99; Pages: 128
Format: Paperback; Release date: 7 June 2022; Price: £19.99 / $35; Pages: 160
Format: Digital only; Release date: 6 July 2022; Price: £7.99 / $7.99; Pages: 132
Format: Paperback; Release date: 19 July 2022; Price: £14.99 / $19.99; Pages: 128
Format: Paperback; Release date: 19 July 2022; Price: £12.99 / $15.99; Pages: 112
Format: Paperback; Release date: 16 August 2022; Price: £12.99 / $15.99; Pages: 128
Format: Hardcover; Release date: 16 August 2022; Price: £19.99 / $24.99; Pages: 244
Format: Paperback; Release date: 4 August 2022; Price: £19.99 / $24.99; Pages: 272
Format: Paperback; Release date: 13 September 2022; Price: £19.99 / $24.99; Pages: 176
Format: Digital only; Release date: 7 September 2022; Price: £7.99 / $7.99; Pages: 112
Format: Paperback; Release date: 24 November 2022; Price: £14.99; Pages: 128
Format: Paperback; Release date: 25 October 2022; Price: £14.99 / $19.99; Pages: 144
Format: Hardcover; Release date: 26 October 2022; Price: £80; Pages: tbc
Format: Paperback; Release date: 8 November 2022; Price: £12.99 / $15.99; Pages: 80
Format: Digital only; Release date: 2 November 2022; Price: £7.99 / $7.99; Pages: 104
Format: Paperback; Release date: 8 December 2022; Price: £14.99; Pages: 160