shaxper
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Post by shaxper on Nov 22, 2014 13:15:56 GMT -5
Note: This thread was initially begun at the old Classic Comics board and has been re-posted here. While the original reviews have been restored with a lot of time and patience, there was ultimately no good way to preserve the original replies and discussions made in response to those early reviews. ____________________________________________________________________________________________________ Months before Avengers #1 made it to the stands, Marvel had already developed a following around Sgt. Nick Fury and his Howling Commandos. Thus, as Marvel quickly became a universe of superheroes, how Nick Fury was incorporated into that universe was both creative and fascinating. These days, the Marvel Cinematic Universe has us accept as an inevitability that a non-super powered government agent belongs square in the middle of costumed beings with the powers of gods, but this thread will explore the genesis of that idea, as well as the early classic adventures of both The Howling Commandos and S.H.I.E.L.D. Shortcuts to individual reviews: Sgt. Fury and His Howling Commandos #1Sgt. Fury and His Howling Commandos #2Sgt. Fury and His Howling Commandos #3Sgt. Fury and His Howling Commandos #4Sgt. Fury and His Howling Commandos #5Sgt. Fury and His Howling Commandos #6Sgt. Fury and His Howling Commandos #7Sgt. Fury and His Howling Commandos #8Fantastic Four #21Sgt. Fury and His Howling Commandos #9Sgt. Fury and His Howling Commandos #10Sgt. Fury and His Howling Commandos #11Sgt. Fury and His Howling Commandos #12Sgt. Fury and His Howling Commandos #13Sgt. Fury and His Howling Commandos #14Sgt. Fury and His Howling Commandos #15Sgt. Fury and His Howling Commandos #16Sgt. Fury and His Howling Commandos #17Sgt. Fury and His Howling Commandos #18Sgt. Fury and His Howling Commandos #19Sgt. Fury and His Howling Commandos #20Strange Tales #135Sgt. Fury and His Howling Commandos #21Strange Tales #136Sgt. Fury and His Howling Commandos Annual #1Sgt. Fury and His Howling Commandos #22Strange Tales #137Sgt. Fury and His Howling Commandos #23Strange Tales #138Sgt. Fury and His Howling Commandos #24Strange Tales #139Sgt. Fury and His Howling Commandos #25Strange Tales #140Sgt. Fury and His Howling Commandos #26Strange Tales #141Sgt. Fury and His Howling Commandos #27Strange Tales #142Sgt. Fury and His Howling Commandos #28Strange Tales #143Sgt. Fury and His Howling Commandos #29Strange Tales #144Sgt. Fury and His Howling Commandos #30Strange Tales #145Tales of Suspense #78Sgt. Fury and His Howling Commandos #31Strange Tales #146Sgt. Fury and His Howling Commandos #32Strange Tales #147highlights of the run thus farSgt. Fury #1 - 1st appearance of Nick Fury, Happy Sam, and The Howling Commandos. Sgt. Fury #2 - Kirby's strongest effort on the title. Tremendously fun action. Sgt. Fury #3 - An otherwise weak issue featuring a World War II era Reed Richards working for US intelligence. Fantastic Four #21 -- 1st appearance of Fury in modern day Marvel continuity Sgt. Fury #4 - 1st appearance of Pam Hawley and the first of two major deaths in the title. Sgt. Fury #5 - 1st appearance of Baron Von Strucker. Sgt. Fury #6 - The Howlers face a biggot in their ranks. Pretty powerful. Sgt. Fury #7 - 1st appearance of Bull McGiveney, partial origin of Nick Fury. Sgt. Fury #8 - 1st appearance of Percival Pinkerton, 1st full appearance (along with Avengers #6 -- published in the same month) of Baron Zemo, and an all around incredibly strong issue. Sgt. Fury #10 - 1st appearance of Captain Savage Sgt. Fury #11 - An otherwise average issue that sheds some light on Happy Sam's past and the origins of Able Company. Sgt. Fury #12 - Powerful issue in which the Howlers believe Dino has deserted under fire and are about to witness his execution while Fury, presumed dead, rots in a Nazi POW camp. Sgt. Fury #13 -- Nick and Reb work alongside Captain America and Bucky. Good story. Sgt. Fury #18 -- The second and more memorable of the two major deaths in this series. Exceptional artwork as well. Strange Tales #135-141 -- Beginning of the Agent of SHIELD franchise. 1st appearance of SHIELD, HYDRA, and the SHIELD Heli-carrier. The first HYDRA arc. Incredibly imaginative and fun throughout. Sgt. Fury #27 -- Not a good issue, but it explains how Fury ultimately gets his eye patch. Sgt. Fury #28 -- A Brutally honest depiction of the internal struggle of loyal Nazi officers forced to commit atrocities. Also, some of Dicky Ayers' best artwork. Sgt. Fury #29 -- Roy Thomas takes over and provides the most busy/exciting issue of the series yet. Strucker declared an enemy of the state by Hitler.
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on Nov 22, 2014 19:59:47 GMT -5
Sgt. Fury And His Howling Commandos #1 "Sgt. Fury And His Howling Commandos" writer: Stan Lee pencils: Jack Kirby inks: Dick Ayers letters: Art Simek colors: ? Grade: A- Before addressing anything else about this first outing with Nick and the gang, I have to ask -- a story set right before D-Day?? How in the world does a WWII series set in the European Theater keep going if you set the very first story right before the end of that conflict? Will the series jump backward in time, or are most of the adventures consolidated into an extremely brief window of time? As one might expect, this first issue is a simple introduction to the team as they take on a simple but extremely critical mission to prevent the tides of war from turning against the Allies. Nick and the gang must rescue the captured leader of the French resistance (LeBrave -- not the most creative name; I'm assuming the character and scenario were invented and not based on any historical fact) before he is tortured into giving away the date and location of the D-Day invasion. Our cast of characters includes: "Happy Sam," exec officer of Able Company (are the Howling Commandos and Able Company the same, or are they an outfit within the company?) The Howling Commandos (thus named because they give a "thunderous war cry" before entering combat) -- Sgt. Nick Fury: a self-sacrificing hothead. 6'2". -- Robert "Rebel" Ralston: Ex-Jockey, from Kentucky, small in stature. -- Corporal "Dum Dum" Dugan: Equally hotheaded and possibly a bit sadistic. A former circus strongman. -- Jonathan "Junior" Juniper: Just out of an Ivy-League college. An explosives expert? -- Gabriel Jones: A jazz playing African American (definitely a bold move to incorporate him into the company in 1963). Formerly played in Carnegie Hall (perhaps he played Classical professionally and jazz as his off-the-clock passion). -- Izzy Cohen: Master mechanic who can repair anything. Both the last name and the fact that he "remembers the fate of his relatives in Europe at the hands of the mad little man with the moustache" suggest that he is Jewish. -- Dino Manelli: An established actor, apparently fluent in German, and apparently the good looking guy of the outfit. His description on page two strongly implies that it's Dean Martin using a "real" name different from the one you see on the silver screen. How come Gabriel has no nickname, and Izzy and Dino have no real names? The clear descriptions we're given in the "Meet the Howling Commandos" spread aside, the story doesn't give us a strong feel for any of the individual characters at this point, though the company definitely has its own distinct personality here, with each member cracking wry quips as they face potential death throughout the issue. Even when the plan falls to heck, and one character after another appears doomed, there are no grim self-reflections, and Jack doesn't attempt to pour on the empathy with close-ups. They push on bravely, seven against an entire nation, and therein lies the magic of this entire series. Obviously, there are problems with the plot of this issue. Couldn't the allies just change the date and location of the D-Day attack, and isn't it a little weird when the Nazis demand "All you have to do is tell us the time and place of D-Day," as if they were acknowledging that D-Day was an inevitability. And really, the success of D-Day was because the Allied Nations finally unified and coordinated their attack, not because of any brilliant surprise. Would knowing when and where it would happen really change things for the Nazis all that much? Still, despite a weak plot and some truly over the top antics by Nick and Dum Dum early on (maybe Stan is just trying to show how tough and ready for war they are?), this ends up being an incredibly strong story, full of self-sacrifice as Nick believes he has left Gabe and Junior to die in order to fulfill the mission and then appears to die himself, and also full of tremendous excitement and fun as Nick emerges from the rubble to save the day at the last moment. Stan and Jack really pace this right and make us go through the emotional rollercoaster, even when our brains know full well that it's all going to work out in the end. And, speaking of Jack, I'm still not sure what to make of his work in this issue. On the one hand, Nick looks like more of a man ape than most of Kirby's characters, which is very distracting, some faces in the background are often too loose and simplistic (check out Nick's "smiley face" on page 15, panel 1), and our one glimpse of Hitler is entirely uninteresting whereas it should have been something special. But, on the other hand, you've got that gorgeous sequence on page 6 in which we slowly watch Dum Dum release the grenade, watch it fly apart in slow motion, watch the pilot bail out, and then have time seem to catch up with the reader once again as the explosion occurs. True artistic genius there. Oh, and check out page 8, panel 3: visual prototype for Baron Von Strucker? One line Stan probably should have considered rewording n a WWII era story: "Using the Holocaust as a diversion, the commandos gain entrance into the fortress." Sensitivity fail. The plot synopsis in one sentence: Nick and the gang partner with the French Resistance to rescue their leader from the Germans before he is tortured into revealing the date and location of the allied D-Day attack.
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on Nov 22, 2014 20:13:36 GMT -5
Sgt. Fury And His Howling Commandos #2 "7 Doomed Men!" writer: Stan Lee pencils: Jack Kirby inks: Dick Ayers letters: Art Simek colors: ? Grade: A+ This issue truly strikes gold. Intense, feel-good action, laugh-out-loud humor, strong characterization, and enhanced art all converge to create a story that positively surpasses the first one and takes the series into a whole new realm of excellence. I think at least part of this can be attributed to Kirby. The intensely fun 5 page action sequence that opens this story seems like something Kirby drew first and Lee added words to later. In the first issue, it seemed like Kirby was scrambling to work around Lee's story, but the story gets the heck out of the way in this issue in order to allow for some sincere fun. I notice that, whereas Lee attributed the "story" to himself on the first page of the previous issue, he only credits himself with the "script" this time. That would seem to back up my theory. That five page action sequence is absolute gold. It's amazing how much fun Jack has with justified violence. Normally, I think any sane reader would cringe at having the good guys toss live grenades in the faces of their adversaries, but these guys were Nazis, America's greatest enemy who almost took over the world. There's absolutely no guilt in watching Able Company's exceptionally brutal retribution as a result. Of course, the strongest aspect of this issue is the characterizations it begins to lend to the Commandos. Whereas it was hard to get a fix on them last issue, Stan gives us a lot to work with this time around: Nick Fury doesn't seem quite so over-the-top alpha male this time around. He's still unnecessarily pushy and domineering, but it comes off as more of a calculated act than a personality flaw, especially when we see him show true strategic leadership at various points in this issue (not just leading by being the craziest, most fearless member of the outfit) and in showing genuine concern to his commanding officer about his troop not getting rest, even while concealing this concern from the troop and going so far as to fire an automatic weapon at them to get them up and going. Incidentally, this is the first time anyone ever uses Nick's first name in the comic, as Happy Sam addresses him by it. Happy Sam Walks a careful line between reminding Fury that he's his commanding officer when necessary, but talking with him as a true friend who respects Fury otherwise. Maybe it's because I'm just coming off of reviewing the Batman run, but Happy Sam seems like Nick Fury's Commissioner Gordon, pulling rank when necessary, but generally needing and respecting the phenomenal warrior working under him. Dum-Dum seems far more comfortable as the second ranking soldier in this issue than he did in the previous one. At no point do we see him seriously disagree with and attempt to undermine Fury; And while he's every bit the loose cannon he was in the last issue, he unleashes it solely on the enemy, remaining amusing and non-threatening, even when Junior steps out of line by attempting to command the outfit in Fury's absence. I also really enjoyed the terrible jokes Dum-Dum kept making at his wife's expense. Junior has a brain on his shoulders and the ambition to eventually lead. Dino once again uses his acting skills to take on the role of a German officer. Signs of his vanity also re-emerge as he twice expresses a desire to have cameras present so that he can be in the news reels. Reb's Kentucky accent comes through clearly for the first time in this issue, as does his quick sense of humor. However, Izzy and Gabriel are still relegated to the background in this issue. Virtually all we know about either of them came from the "Meet the Howling Commandos" spread in issue #1. While I find it laugh-out-loud hilarious when the unit pretends to surrender to a half-senile old Nazi officer, resulting in the line: "YOU captured those seven? Maybe Der Feuhrer iss RIGHT! Maybe ve ARE the Master Race!",
this portion of the story also got me thinking. The true point here is that the Howling Commandos are the master race -- their courage and attitude appear to make them invulnerable in this story, able to take on anything. And, battling the greatest villain in real American history, we enjoy seeing them be so invulnerable against an impotent Nazi threat, casually getting themselves thrown into a concentration camp without any fear of something happening to them. It's all clearly fantasy, but it's fun fantasy. Don't bother wondering how the commandos snuck into that German town in the beginning of the issue, or how they pull out nuclear cooling rods with their bare hands and swing them around without repercussion, because their seeming invulnerability is so much of their charm. Of course, that invulnerability will get revoked on occasion in the title, but let's be realistic: a crack team of commandos like that, repeatedly going on the kind of absurdly impossible suicide missions they go on, would not live long. Eventually, there'd be that one fatal mission where the whole team would fail to return home. But reality has no place in this title unless served in small, poignant doses. I found it interesting how the final panel attempted to address the question I raised in my previous review about whether any of these adventures had any basis in historical fact. Apparently the answer is generally no, though Lee made a desperate attempt to connect the destruction of the nuclear facility in this issue to Hitler's abandoning of the Nazi nuclear program. Side notes: Last issue, I was impressed by Fury's willingness to sacrifice his own men for the sake of fulfilling a critical mission. This issue, I'm impressed by Fury's willingness to put the success of the critical mission on the back burner in order to save Dum Dum. These two events completely contradict each other, but I'm somehow not bothered by that. The fact that the commandos unleash a hideous howl when entering battle, combined with the fact that they were even introduced on the first page of the first issue as resisting tyranny with said howl, gives them an uncomfortable resemblance to Confederate soldiers in the Civil War. Did Lee mean to draw parallels between the North and Nazi Germany? Are we still in the days leading up to D-Day, or will that timeline get conveniently ignored as time progresses? Lots of coloring errors in this issue, most notably in the fact that Gabriel is Caucasian for much of this issue, and a weird blend of colors for the remainder (as if someone attempted to re-color his face after making his skin white). Izzy's hair is also blonde on page 18. Is there some connection between the biblical character of Gabriel and African Americans that I don't understand? We've got Gabriel in this comic and (soon) Mal in the pages of Teen Titans, another early black hero who models himself after Gabriel and also carries a horn. What's the connection? I wonder what thoughts went through Stan and Jack's heads as they worked on the concentration camp sequence, and if their Jewish heritage played a significant role in such thoughts. Nick is drawn much better in this issue. Kirby tones down the apish qualities a bit and gives him a shirt to wear this time. A great quote from page 4: "Look! It iss THEM! The Commandos!!...The vay they yell -- it iss as though THEY haff US out-numbered!!"Okay, Commandos have to be trained to deal with any number of things, but I find it hard to believe they're all trained horseback riders. So what's the story with Able Company? Was it assembled as a sort of all-star commando troop to take on the most impossible of missions, or did the group earn a name for itself as time progressed, resulting on their being sent on an endless chain of suicide missions? The true facts about Nazi Infantrymen and WWII era rifles inserted into this issue were a nice touch. I had to read a reprint of #1, so I have no idea if there was similar content in the first issue. The plot synopsis in one sentence: The Commandos are sent to stop a shipment of heavy water to a Nazi nuclear research facility and make a detour to liberate a concentration camp.
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on Jan 2, 2015 21:09:25 GMT -5
Sgt. Fury And His Howling Commandos #3 "Midnight on Massacre Mountain" writer: Stan Lee pencils: Jack Kirby inks: Dick Ayers letters: Sam Rosen grade: B- On the one hand, I didn't find this issue as entertaining as the last one. Once again, Stan's script seems to dominate the foreground, with Jack's action functioning as an after-thought, and we've definitely seen the reverse work better. On the other hand, though, Stan continues to be very careful with characterization, keeping all seven Howlers entirely consistent with their previous characterizations, and even taking pains to make Fury and Dum Dum's over-the-top antics in #1 fit by showing how all the Howlers seem to go half-insane when they don't have a battle to fight. Man, these guys are going to have a hard time reacclimating to civil society after the war. In addition to rehashing much of what we already knew about the individual Howlers, Stan adds an intriguing new detail about Dino, showing his more serious side when we discover that he was born in Italy and how enraged he is about what the Nazis have done to his home country. That makes two characters in the outfit seeking outright revenge against the Nazis for what was done to their people (Izzy being the other) And, speaking of Izzy, we learn he's from Brooklyn in this issue, once again strongly adding to the implication that he's of Jewish decent. Izzy still doesn't have any sign of a personality in the first half of this book, but he's cracking jokes along with Reb by the second half. I'd imagine that Izzy would be the world's first Jewish American comic book hero. Can someone fact check me on that one? And was Gabriel the first African American one, as well? Incidentally, Gabriel is still colored as a Caucasian at points in this issue. Why does that keep happening? Once again, Able Company is depicted as some sort of idealistic beacon of racial equality, featuring a ragtag ensemble of representatives from stigmatized American ethnicities, both past and present: two Irishmen, an Italian, a Southerner, an African American, and a Jewish American, and I dig that. All that matters is how hard they fight against evil. Assuming I'm correct that Fury is Irish (reddish hair color, last name is generally associated with Irish or English ancestory), Junior is the only commando who doesn't represent a stigmatized American ethnicity. Juniper is an English last name, but we know he graduated from an American Ivy League school, so that would suggest that he's an American Anglo-Saxon Protestant. I think the style of story-telling that this issue repeats from the previous one is enormously successful -- beginning with a fun, multi-page snapshot of the crew when not in danger in order to bring out the humor, fun, and personality of the team, before sending them into the central plot. Unfortunately, the plot of this issue is less than fantastic (no play on words intended -- you'll see why I say this by the end of the paragraph). I still have no idea how the Howlers got through that Nazi brigade in a raft without being blown to bits, and the rescue of the stranded Italian soldiers couldn't possibly be as compelling as protecting the secret of the D-Day Invasion or thwarting Hitler's nuclear program. Lee could have done more to emphasize the importance of saving the lives of G.I. heroes in this issue, or Kirby could have done more with the action. Even the random insertion of Reed Richards as an O.S.S. agent couldn't make this plot more compelling for me. The Nazi informant was a nice twist, I suppose. And, I believe that Reed Richards' cameo here makes this only the third time in the Marvel Silver Age in which a Marvel hero crosses over into someone else's book (The FF in Amazing Spidey #1 being the first, and Hulk in Fantastic Four #12 being the second, unless you count Sub-Mariner in Fantastic Four, which I don't). The minor details: House ads for both Avengers #1 and X-Men #1 -- Wow. This is definitely Kirby's best cover on this title yet. How the heck does the same man produce this and the incredibly clumsy cover to #1? Of course, Fury still looks like a man-ape in at least one panel of this issue (page 11, panel 3). As far as I can tell, we're still moving forward in time from the first issue, though past events are never referenced in this or the previous issue. Since new characters will soon be introduced and one current character will eventually die, the comic pretty much has to move forward in time each issue. Maybe they'll just ignore the timeline established in the first issue. I don't know how far D-Day was planned ahead of the actual invasion, but I'm willing to bet it wasn't done 120 days in advance (roughly the number of original Sgt. Fury stories published before the series was cancelled). The plot synopsis in one sentence: The Howling Commandos thwart a sabotage attempt on the English shore, briefly meet up with Reed Richards, and then rescue a stranded Italian resistance division from Massacre Mountain.
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on Jan 2, 2015 21:17:32 GMT -5
Sgt. Fury and his Howling Commandos #4 "Lord Ha-Ha's Last Laugh" writer: Stan Lee pencils: Jack Kirby inks: G. Bell colors: ? letters: Sam Rosen grade: B ***Normally, the idea of spoiler warnings in a review for a 48 year old comic book would seem ridiculous, but I feel compelled to make such a warning this time around. If you plan on ever reading this issue of Sgt. Fury and have not already done so, then I strongly suggest avoiding this review and all the reviews that follow in this thread. You may want to read this one for yourself.***Four issues in, and we already have a first death of a main character. I wonder how common this sort of thing was in war comics of the time period. It certainly seems shocking to me, and yet it's treated so matter of fact to the cast. I guess hardened commandos would need to deal with it in that way. I applaud Lee and Kirby for showing such true-to-life restraint in the treatment of Junior's death, but I certainly would have enjoyed watching those tough facades crack for just a moment in dealing with the loss of their compatriot. Sure, Fury stumbles on his words, Dino wonders which one of them will die next, and Izzy remarks that they are all expendable, so maybe it's just Kirby holding back then . These reactions are all done in a single unexpressive panel, and then life moves on. Fury certainly gives more emotional attention to Pamela at the end, and maybe they mean to infer that that's why someone like Pamela is so important to a soldier...life affirming things like romance help put the horrors of war in the emotional background. Or maybe I'm reading too far into it. At any rate, Kirby's restraint in depicting Junior's death makes more sense when you consider that he served in WWII himself. Chances are, he understood, first hand, the need to downplay the death of a comrade. And so we have our first death, done less to draw sympathy and more to present the true horrors and dangers of war. In just the second issue, Lee and Kirby took us to a concentration camp. Now Junior is dead...randomly killed in one of their dozens of impossible showdowns -- a simple reminder of the risks they continually take in a war that isn't done justice when glorified and wiped clean of its horrors. Suddenly, the Howlers seem even more heroic as a result. It's not hard to leap into impossible dangers when there's no true risk. It's why, in 1975, Len Wein created John Proudstar as a member of the All New, All Different X-Men with the full intention of killing him off early on. Doing so showed that their adventures weren't just fun and games. The stakes were now incredibly high, and the dramatic tension so much greater as a result. I never realized Lee and Kirby had done this first, more than ten years earlier. (Too bad I already know who the only other major death in this run will end up being.) Of course, I wonder if the Comics Code would have allowed this in a superhero comic in the 1960s. I'd imagine one of the perks of writing a pseudo-historical war comic enmeshed in our country's true violent history is being able to depict violence and death to an extent that it was not allowed in other genres. The gun firing, the grenade throwing, and the body counts in each issue certainly couldn't be done in a superhero mag of the time period, and I doubt the death of a major character would have worked either. No wonder Stan and Jack were so eager to write a war series. Then again, I wonder if even a war story had attempted to depict the death of a major character within the confines of the Comic Code before. Look at how careful Stan is to avoid outright stating Junior has died in this issue. The cover only promises that, "one commando will fight no more after this nightmare mission!" and when Dum-Dum asks, "Sarge, what's the scoop? How bad did Junior get it?" Fury only replies with, "Bad enough, Dum-Dum. He...won't be...coming back," with Reb then referring to Junior going out the way he would have wanted. Maybe the emotional restraint shown by Stan and Jack was done in order to avoid censure from the code -- doing everything possible not to draw more attention to the death than was absolutely necessary. Whether Stan and Jack had planned to kill Junior from the start or made that decision partway in, it seems to me that there were several reasons why Junior was the one who had to go: 1. Ethnicity. As stated in my previous review, every other Howler represents an ethnic group that was, at one point, marginalized by American culture (African American, Southern, Irish, Italian, Jewish). Junior, on the other hand, had an English last name and, without an English accent and with an American Ivy League background, would appear to be an American ancestor of early British Protestant Settlers; mainstream 1960s America, essentially. I hate to think of the Howlers as some sort of Affirmative Action group where Whitey always has to die, but Junior certainly didn't serve as the kind of meaningful symbol of anti-discrimination and national harmony in the face of tyranny that his compatriots did. 2. Looked too much like Reb. Each other Howler is pretty easy to distinguish from one another with even broad pencil strokes, but Reb's hat is the only thing that allows you to tell him and Junior apart from a distance. Whenever they're in costume, they are very easy to confuse for one another. 3. Ambitious personality. Each of the Howlers is beginning to develop some sense of personality at this point, but all that Junior has displayed was the ambition and ability to one day usurp Dum-Dum back in issue #2. Clearly, that wasn't going to work in a tight-knit group like the Howlers unless Dum-Dum was going to die (and he's just too darn fun to get rid of). Either Junior was going to get promoted out of the group, or he had a personality that was ill-suited to the title. You'd either have to kill him off or ignore his earlier ambition and start back at square one with the kid. I find it interesting that Jack chose not to include Junior on the cover. He hadn't died at the point in the story being depicted. Maybe the cover was drawn ahead of the story being written, and Jack wasn't sure when Junior was going to die? Of course, check out the only other Howler that was left off the cover -- Gabriel. At least he's finally correctly colored as an African American throughout this issue. Are the miscolors and the cover absence this time all coincidence, or was there that much of an ordeal with attempting to include an African American hero in a mainstream comic at the time? Also worth noting: This is the first appearance of Pamela Hawley and her father, though she doesn't seem particularly notable at this point. The inevitable side notes: This issue explicitly sets the date as "World War II," with no other specifics offered. Once again, there seems to be a conscious attempt to move the series away from any kind of historical time-table within which to constrain the series' progression. I'm still not sure the series could have ever lasted as long as it did if it held to the time-table established in the first issue, with D-Day already being planned. It's probably a smart idea to avoid dates and references to major events in the war at this point. Fury helplessly trapped in an airraid shelter with Nazis flying overhead and his own soldiers above ground without him -- I would have liked Lee and Kirby to have spent more time here and taken Nick's frustration a bit further. Giving more attention to Pamela talking him down in their first meeting would have been a powerful move -- a woman who can tame Fury's rage. It certainly would have made me understand Fury's feelings for her a bit more. Why is there a Nazi flag in the Howlers' barracks on page 4? I'm assuming the gun above it suggests that they use it for target practice, but that's not really obvious from the panel. An Ad for Avengers #4 promising an appearance by "Sub-Mariner". Wow. Finding that issue on the stands after such a misleading solicit must have been a real heart-stopper. Lord Ha-Ha, an Englishman captured and used as propaganda against the Allies -- was there a historical counterpart to this? I'm not sure I buy the idea of having him specifically taunt the commandos in each announcement so that they'd try to sneak into Berlin to get him and then get caught, themselves. Seems a little far fetched to me. Wow. The Howlers just fly a lone bomber directly into Berlin, deploy 20 miles outside of the city limits, and fight their way in. Good thing Junior dies at the end, because this all seems so unbelievable otherwise. Little moments like the one in which a German circus performer is all set as their contact in Berlin make me more intrigued with the spies who lay all the resources out for the commandos than with the commandos themselves. How in the world do you establish and conduct communications with a sympathetic German residing WITHIN Berlin? Has there ever been a comic series that focused on the spy networks that did this kind of work during WWII? We get all too many panels of the escaped lion (uninteresting) yet never see those German trucks fall into Junior's trap by rolling into the mud while pursuing the Howlers in a high speed chase. This was kind of a big moment not to depict. Page 14, panel 1: Reb: Some way for a Howler to die...fallin' onto a li'l ol' circus floor, eh, Junior?
Junior: It looks like fun, Reb. I'd like to try it, myself!...Foreshadowing? Nick's decision to preserve the memory/dignity of Pam's brother is especially impressive/shocking considering that his disgraceful actions indirectly caused Junior's death. A quick review of the talents the Howlers bring to the fight: Izzy is a mechanic wiz, Dino has acting/impersonating abilities, and Dum-Dum has expertise with explosives, adding up to one crack team of specialists. So what are Gabe and Reb's specialties? Surely, playing a trumpet and cracking one-liners aren't on the same level of usefulness to the outfit. The plot synopsis in one sentence: Nick meets Pamela Hawley during an air raid on London, The Howlers are ordered to sneak into Berlin and capture Lord Ha-Ha, a British citizen (and Pamela's brother) being used as a propaganda mouthpiece by the Nazis, they do so, it turns out that Ha-Ha is a traitor, he attempts to alert the Nazis to the Howlers' whereabouts, they mistakenly kill him, Junior dies in the final showdown, and Nick returns to Pamela, telling her that her brother died as a hero instead of hurting her with the truth. Good issue overall, but this modern-age reader expected a major character's death to be treated as a bigger spectacle than it was. I understand why it was appropriate to do the opposite, but I still feel a bit cheated. Beyond that, I can't say the characterization or action were particularly impressive this issue, but I certainly didn't find them disappointing either.
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on Jan 2, 2015 21:23:36 GMT -5
Sgt. Fury and His Howling Commandos #5 "At the Mercy of Baron Strucker" writer: Stan Lee pencils: Jack Kirby inks: G. Bell letters: S. Rosen colors: ? Grade: B+ In the wake of Junior's death, one would expect this title to shift into a darker tone, full of mourning/survivor's guilt and a genuine fear that any character in this title is expendable. Instead, it takes a surprising turn toward comic relief. While the title has always contained some comedic elements in it, this issue contains bigger, sillier gags on nearly every page. It begins with Fury running the Howlers ragged with extra training in response to losing Junior. While Lee takes pains to show that Fury is grieving as if he'd lost a son (and, it's even suggested, he's never lost a soldier prior to this), the scene is kept lighthearted with taunts from the Howlers about Nick's unfair treatment. Possibly my favorite portion of this section was Reb responding to Izzy driving a tank at him (under orders from Fury) by hurling a live grenade at him. It's so over the top psychotic. I think Reb just became my favorite Howler. Sure enough, the story actually gets sillier, as it then transitions into DumDum and Izzy doing laundry and screaming bloody murder when Baron Strucker's bomber plane shoots up Izzy's favorite long johns and then launches a canister directly at Izzy. It's the first and only straight up comedic panel I've ever seen Kirby draw as the canister ricochets off of a stunned Izzy's head. We then soon transition into an even more ridiculous scene as Nick is on a date with Pam Hawley (apparently, things have progressed since the last issue) and she keeps pushing him to practice table manners and behave like a gentleman, even as another soldier mocks him. It's the stuff of Sunday funnies and is positively delightful here. There are some semi-serious moments in the issue, as well. Certainly both battles between Fury and Strucker were exciting -- especially the sheer mismatch of well-honed skill (Strucker) and completely unfocused brute rage (Fury). Watching Fury get his revenge against Strucker at the end felt great on an almost physical level -- true catharsis. There's also the odd bit about Happy Sam in this issue. When he demotes Fury, he thinks to himself: "I never thought I'd be talking this way to you, Nick! Not the man who...who...sniff..."I wonder if and when we'll find out what that's about. Later on in the story, when Happy Sam comes to regret his decision, it's played for comedy and as if Sam simply made a bad call -- not the result of some intense inner conflict, as was suggested in the quote above. This is the first appearance of Baron Von Strucker, though it's difficult to tell that he'll amount to anything from this first appearance. He's an expert weapons master who cheats to win and proves no match to Fury in a fair fight. He certainly didn't seem like important enough a character in this issue to warrant a return, let alone to become an established villain in the Marvel Universe. Kirby's art is all over the place in this issue. Strucker's face never looks the same twice, Izzy looks exactly like Fury all throughout page 7, and I had to re-read page 4 several times to figure out whether Reb or Fury fired that grenade, or if they both did. At the same time, he does pull off that one comedic panel I mentioned earlier, and I really enjoyed his depiction of the rage building within Fury across three panels on page 9. Over-all, though, I wasn't that impressed with his work in this issue. The minor details: - Lee and Kirby both give their former U.S. Army ranks in the credits. I knew Kirby was a veteran, but I didn't know about Lee. Hard to believe he was a sergeant! - Hitler is personally aware of Nick Fury's reputation? Somehow, I find that hard to believe. - If Baron Strucker can just fly right up to the Howlers' encampment and start firing, why can't the entire German airforce? - According to Happy Sam, Fury has turned down various battlefield commissions and chosen to remain a sergeant. - The Germans were certainly masters of propaganda, but did they ever actually try anything like this? It seems to me that, in presenting one of America's greatest heroes and then showing his defeat, they first have to acknowledge that America has great heroes. I would think keeping the enemy faceless/anonymous/without identity would be the better propaganda move. - Seriously, what are the chances Strucker was going to be there when the Howlers raided that rocketbase at the end? They weren't looking for Strucker and had no reason to believe he would be there. - I'm not sure what to think about the fact that Fury couldn't figure out Strucker was poisoning him with the wine before both duals. It makes him a more adorable brute, but I also can't believe that such a competent war hero could be that...stupid. - Still not clear on what specialties Gabe and Reb bring to the Howlers. Reb loves grenades, but DumDum is the explosives expert. - In past issues, Izzy had generally been the Howler we'd seen and heard the least. In this issue, he gets more lines and panels than any other Howler (aside from Nick). - In the end, when the Howlers pull the stripes off of another sergeant so that Happy Sam can reinstate Fury, I wonder if Lee isn't bringing a tad of personal experience to this, having been a sergeant, himself. Clearly, he's showing that superior soldiers don't respect that rank unless they respect the person behind the stripes. I'd actually consider it a startlingly offensive and treasonous move if it weren't the Howlers pulling it off. The plot synopsis in one sentence: Nick is upset about having lost Junior, Hitler orders Baron Strucker to personally take on Nick Fury and humiliate him, Happy Sam orders Nick not to answer the challenge, Nick defies him and loses when Strucker cheats, the defeat becomes the subject of Nazi propaganda, Nick is delivered back in disgrace and Sam demotes him to a corporal, the Howlers go on a mission to take out a rocket base, Strucker is there, Nick gets his revenge in a fair fight, and Sam is pressured from higher-ups to reinstate Nick as a sergeant. A surprisingly silly/fun story, but I enjoyed it. I wonder if this tone will continue throughout the run, or if it's just a bit of relief after Junior's death last issue.
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on Jan 4, 2015 19:52:22 GMT -5
Sgt. Fury and His Howling Commandos #6 "The Fangs of the Desert Fox" writer: Stan Lee pencils: Jack Kirby inks: Geo Bell letters: Art Simek colors: ? Grade: A There's so much to love about this issue, but I think the two main aspects I loved are as follows: 1. The Howlers do not complete their mission. It's about time that this team faces an impossible situation that it can't surmount. Granted, upon close examination, the failure of the mission can easily be chalked up to the actions of their new unpredictable comrade, but it's still nice to see that even the Howlers have limits. 2. FINALLY, this team of ideal diversity faces a true bigot, and it allows the characters to shine more brightly in contrast. Gabe, in particular, finally get to play an important role. Whereas he's generally been kept safely to the side and maintained an inoffensive temperment in the past, Stonewall's racism gives him all the license necessary to show tough stoicism at first ("He won't bother me none, Sarge. I'm used to his kind"), go off on the guy with full savagery later, and finally be a critical hero who saves his life at the end (though someone needs to explain to Lee that blood type AB is the universal receiver; Stan was clearly thinking of type O when he wrote that portion). It is interesting, though, that just as Gabe is about to rightfully tear into Stonewall for his absurd level of racism that has just jeopardized the entire mission, Gabe's skin turns white again. I'm getting really tired of this level of censorship (unless it really is just a repeated error, but it seems too convenient here). Once again, Lee is the master of saying something without really saying something. I guess it comes with pushing boundaries the way he repeatedly has in this title, but just as he never outright said Junior had died back in issue #4, yet did everything he could to imply it, he outright avoids referring to Izzy as a Jew, yet does everything possible to let us know that's exactly what Izzy is, first having Stonewall only have issues with Gabe (African American) and Izzy, then telling Izzy to go back to the "ghettos," objecting to Izzy's last name (Cohen), and finally having Izzy say "I notice you ain't complainin' about my religion all of a sudden." Of course, watching Izzy risk his life to single-handedly get Stonewall out of an impossible trap and then have Gabe be the one to save him with a blood transfusion at the end was damn satisfying, if a bit hokey. This issue also provides some more useful background information about two of the Howlers: -Reb is an expert with the Burp Gun (a sub-machine gun, I believe). -Dum-Dum is a former prize fighter. This would seem to conflict with what we were told in the "Meet the Howling Commandos" spread in issue #1 about him being a former circus strongman. I suppose he could be both, but then why wasn't the prize fighter bit mentioned in the first issue? Seems like the more memorable former career. Kirby's art is still frustrating me in this issue. For one thing, Rommel looks NOTHING like the real Rommel -- there isn't even a resemblance. The facial structures are completely different. Granted, Kirby didn't have Wikipedia and Google Images at his disposal, but still. Also, consistency continues to be a problem for him. Check out Izzy's face on page 20, panels 7 and 8. It's like comparing Bruce Banner and the Incredible Hulk. Now go back and look at Izzy on page 7. Not only is his face completely different, but he's roughly a foot shorter. And Happy Sam looks thirty years older and completely different in this issue. Part of this is a coloring glitch that gives him white hair, but that certainly isn't the whole problem. At the same time, Kirby does get some redeeming panels in with this issue. His far shot of Rommel's forces on page 18 absolutely blew my mind. The minor details: - Love that the issue begins with Fury on a bicycle because his vehicle broke down and he doesn't want to miss a date with Pam. While this is definitely a more serious issue than the previous one, little moments like this one keep the laughs going. - Is England the Howlers' permanent home base? They've been based there for at least three issues now. - So Fury is in England, on his way to a date with Pam (presumably in a relatively civilized area of England) and he stumbles upon a German encampment. Were these guys really just strolling around in England during the war?? They don't come across as an invasion force. Maybe they were spies or advance troops? - The Howlers rarely get a week off between missions. Wow. No wonder Fury was concerned about them not getting leave a few issues back. - Dino's chute doesn't open and he's plummeting toward the earth, and Fury dives after him. Someone explain to me how Fury sped up his fall to catch up with Dino, especially with his arms and legs as far apart as possible. - Why does Happy Sam have a tattered Nazi flag in his office? War souvenir?? - Kirby's image of Stonewall firing on a Nazi radio man on page 11 comes off as particularly violent. The guy was presumably unarmed aside from the grenade he's already thrown, and Stonewall fires an automatic at the guy at point-blank range. - Stonewall has an issue with Italians, but not the Irish? Maybe Dum-Dum just seemed like a worthy comrade in comparison to Izzy (a Jew). - Fury catches on to Stonewall's racism a lot faster than he caught on to Strucker poisoning him last issue. Either he's being depicted as smarter in this issue, or Lee is implying that Fury has dealt with racists before. I suppose the latter is likely considering that Fury's team is so diverse. I like the idea that Fury may have had to fight to put Gabe and Izzy on the team against the judgment of higher-ups. Then again, I'm probably inferring a lot more than Lee intended to imply. - What's the point of Stonewall's page-long conversation with the German prisoner? I suppose it adds a bit of a twist, fooling us into believing Stonewall might be about to change his racist tune, or maybe he really was beginning to change his mind? - If only the prisoner had learned what we already know: Anytime a German prisoner runs out to greet the attacking Germans in this title, he gets mistaken for the enemy and mowed down. - Page 15, panel 4, looks really cool, but it's damn hard to tell what's happening. Couldn't tell if the planes were diving or falling. - Ah, an age in which we could still hope that a random Arabian family would be supportive of American forces. How the times have changed though, as a well-meaning Howler calls them "Ay-Rabs." - If Rommel is already involved in a plot to kill Hitler, than we're already into 1944 and once again approaching D-Day. Cei-U has warned me to ignore references to the war's timeline in this title, but I just can't help myself. - Kirby's final frame is a little over the top. Fury's final thoughts on racists might have carried a little more weight if not delivered directly to the reader with the floating heads of the other Howlers behind him. The plot synopsis in one sentence: The Howlers are sent in to take out Rommel (who is commanding forces in Africa), but before they can do so, Dino is injured during training, forcing Fury to temporarily replace him with George Stonewall, who quickly proves to be an outright bigot, Stonewall screws up the mission twice by failing to trust Gabe and Izzy, Izzy and Gabe save Stonewall's life, it turns out that it's better Rommel survived since he's involved in a conspiracy to kill Hitler, and as Stonewall is transferred out of Able Company at the end, he leaves his PO address for Izzy and Gabe, suggesting that he's learned his lesson. A fantastic issue, full of all the action, comedy, and boundary-pushing that make this title legendary!
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on Jan 4, 2015 20:41:30 GMT -5
Sgt Fury and His Howling Commandos #7 "The Court-Martial of Sgt. Fury" writer: Stan Lee pencils: Jack Kirby inks: Geo Bell letters: Art Simek colors: ? grade: B Honestly, I expected more from this one. A court martial is grounds for intense excitement, but the only real drama in this trial was the fact that Nick conveniently got amnesia and couldn't remember his otherwise clearly justified reasons for his actions. I was expecting a murkier trial, one in which there was no obvious "out" for Nick waiting at the end (clearly, he was going to recover his memory at the last moment). And I can't help but feel the cover lied to me, promising, "If he's found guilty, it's the FIRING SQUAD for Nick Fury!" Would they really have executed Nick for striking and disobeying a commanding officer? I expected the case against Nick to have been something more dire than it proved to be. It almost seems like Lee and Kirby envisioned the cover first and then created a story to go with it, never stopping to realize the latter was nowhere near as exciting as the former. Still, this issue provided some important background info for Nick that was worth seeing. We learn that Nick was an orphan from the wrong side of the tracks, quick to anger, but a good kid, hanging out in pool halls and never holding down a regular job. We also meet Chaplin Lewis Hargrove, learn that his younger (unnamed) brother was Nick's boyhood friend, and that Nick became a commando in order to avenge his friend's death at Pearl Harbor. I'm not sure whether this means Fury was already in the Armed Forces and chose to become a commando or that he first enlisted in the armed forced because of this. And speaking of first appearances, we also meet Sgt. Bull McGiveney, Fury's loud-mouthed rival, in this story, as well as "Cookie" (is this his nickname or just something Dino called him when he walked in?). Finally, we learn that Able Company is the 1st Attack Squad. I don't know enough about the military to know if this means anything, but it's presented to us in the form of a paper in Fury's file. Kirby's art is incredibly inconsistent and problematic again in this issue. For example, page 4, panel 4, should have been awesome, as Reb fires his Burp Gun as the Nazis are firing a mortar, but I can't tell what the heck is happening in the frame. A round appears to fly through the mortar without impacting it, and Reb's dialogue bubble comes from a completely different direction than the round. Then, on page 12, the defense attorney gets the weirdest four panels of sulking at the witness, constantly moving closer to him in the most creepy and unnecessary of ways, finally looking like he's going to kiss him. And, by page 17, the prosecuting attorney's features change so drastically between panels that the colorist mistakes him for two separate characters and attempts to better distinguish them from one another by giving them different colored hair. I never thought I'd live to see the day I'd say this, but I'm getting real tired of Jack's pencils on this book. The minor details: - Doodle-Bugs: what nasty weapons. How were they operated? I'm assuming the Nazis did not have the technology to operate them by remote. - Fury reads their new orders over the course of two panels. In the first, they are getting into a car. In the second, Fury is still explaining the orders as if no time has passed, and yet they are already at the destination stated in the orders. - Another tattered Nazi flag in the Howlers' bunker. I guess these really were war trophies to them or something. - Gotta love Gabe blowing his horn just to rumble with McGiveney and his men. It's always all-out-war or nothing with the Howlers; no inbetween. - On page 21, we'll see that Fury's Court-Martial was happening within running distance of the guardhouse where the Howlers were being detained for brawling, yet the Howlers hear the air raid siren on page 17, and it doesn't sound "at the site of the court martial" until page 19. - Both the guard house and the site of the court martial are bombed, and yet Dino is the only Howler who walks away even slightly injured, even while virtually everyone else around them who isn't critical to the trial appears dead or severely injured. - So Fury made a deal with a captured German Officer in order to get information from him that he never bothered to report to anyone, even a week after learning it? Surely, the entire mission Fury risked his career to stop never would have been ordered had Nick actually reported what he'd learned about the trap. What if he hadn't been sent on that mission? An entire platoon of men would have died needlessly because he neglected to share the intel he bargained so hard to learn. - Can a German prisoner's word really be enough to save someone in a Court Martial? Fury's lawyer seems convinced that the case is won and it's all formality now, but I would expect some serious fact-checking before a military court would just take the guy's word and close the entire case on that alone. The plot summary in one sentence: The Howlers are assigned to help the French Resistance in a raid, Fury randomly tries to stop the raid at the last moment, striking his commanding officer when he won't listen, they are bombed, Fury loses his memory and faces a court martial for his unexplained actions, info is provided about his past, the Howlers tussle with Sgt. McGiveney (who is maligning Fury behind his back), the Germans bomb the camp causing Fury to regain his memory, and he's able to provide a German Officer prisoner as a witness, proving that he had been trying to prevent the troops from walking into a trap. A decent issue, overall. Not the hallmark levels of action, intensity, humor, nor boundary pushing I've come to expect from this title.
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on Jan 4, 2015 20:42:58 GMT -5
Sgt. Fury and his Howling Commandos #8 "The Death Ray of Dr. Zemo!" writer: Stan Lee art: Dick Ayers inks: Geo Bell letters: S. Rosen colors: ? grade: A+ Without a doubt, this has been my favorite Howlers adventure yet, and for many different reasons: Reason 1 -- Universe Building It's been astonishing watching the Marvel Universe develop in the background house ads throughout these issues, but it's no more apparent that the MU has finally arrived than in this issue, where this title (along with the other core Marvel titles this month) receives a letters column, and where the Howlers take on Baron Zemo, the very same villain concurrently debuting in this month's issue of the Avengers (though he technically first appeared, unnamed, four months earlier in Avengers #4). Meanwhile, the Fantastic Four are off on a cosmic adventure with the Watcher this month, thoroughly expanding the limits of this new shared universe that the Sgt. Fury magazine has found itself squarely in the middle of. While I don't expect Fury and the Howlers to go off on a mission to battle the Skrulls anytime soon, the very idea that villains they encounter now can have an impact upon the superhero titles occurring in present time, two decades later, is pretty darn cool. In fact, in about half a year, we'll be seeing Fury in his own present day ongoing feature with S.H.I.E.L.D. in the pages of Strange Tales. Reason two -- Jack's gone. Stan promises Jack is just taking time off to stay on top of some other work, but I hope he's wrong. I do know both leave the title soon to stay on top of all the new titles popping out of the emerging MU. Now, if we were talking about any other book, I'd be espousing Jack's virtues and lamenting his departure, but I think he's done a very poor job on this title, often making each character look like one another, maintaining no consistency in appearances, and drawing some very confusing panels that are very hard to figure out. In contrast, Dick Ayers is a welcome change. For the first time, each Howler has his own distinct face. If I couldn't see the color of their hair, I'd still absolutely know who each one was. Reason 3 -- Percival Pinkerton I frickin' love this guy. Not only is his laid back, non-intimidating demeanor tremendously fun when paired with his combat abilities, but he takes the title's push for equality one step further. We've come to accept the Irishmen, the Southerner, the African American, and the Jew, but now we have an apparent homosexual to contend with -- and, unlike the others, this guy isn't just like everyone else once you get past the label. Pinkerton is definitely different and comfortable being so. This issue makes it easy for us to be comfortable with him, as well. Of course, continuing Stan's legacy of never outright saying certain things, we don't know for sure that Pinkerton is a homosexual, but the taunting soldiers he meets certainly imply as much, and Pinkerton does not feel the need to correct them. I wonder if Stan was going for the double meaning when Pinkerton declares, "And I associate only with Gentlemen!" on page 4. Either way, the idea of this rough, tough hot bed of alpha males working with, depending upon, and bunking with a homosexual was bold, bold stuff. It's impressive to see that, as soon as they see Pinkerton can fight, they never bother themselves with any other concerns about him. Reason 4 -- Gabe and the tank Gabe gets a pretty big moment in this issue, putting his own life on the line to single-handedly take out a German tank in order to save the rest of the Howlers. That, in itself is impressive, as is the fact that they finally color his face with a deep, dark African American complexion and pink eyes while undergoing his moment of glory (though they do color him white again later in the issue. This time, I'm relatively sure it was an error). However, what impresses me the most is that, after his moment of triumph, we watch the Howlers take turns carrying him all the way into the German city they're about to invade and even forestall they're fleeing from the pursuing German forces in order to get Gabe medical attention, and they do all of this reflexively and without a moment's thought. If there was any doubt left as to whether Gabe was an equal member of the team, there's your answer. Reason 5 -- references to "back home" It's a little thing, but both Gabe and Percy make references to the streets they grew up on in this issue, making them feel a little more real, and reminding us once again that the Howlers are really a cross section of America as a whole, each representing the towns, communities, and streets they came from. Even beyond that, Izzy refers to being from Brooklyn, Dino refers to his movie career, Reb refers to Carpetbaggers (reminding us of his Southern origins), and Dum-Dum jokes at his wife and mother-in-law's expenses, all reminding us that these are full-fleshed out characters with real identities and real roots. It makes their putting their lives on the line for our nation all the more impressive. Reason 6 -- The Howlers believe in what they do. We've seen this before, but I feel it received more prominence here. Gabe thinks of his debt to Uncle Sam while taking out the tank, Dino and Dum-Dum both consider how the Nazis' unwavering adherence to procedures and authority has weakened and blinded them, and Fury is willing to blow himself up with a stick of dynamite to make a point to the German doctor about the cowardice of Nazis and the determination of Americans. Without making these sentiments forced and over the top, a clear message is given that the Howlers don't really do this because they have to, nor because they love a good fight, nor even for revenge (and Fury, Dino, and Izzy all have good reasons for wanting revenge -- in fact, they all do when you think of Junior). At the heart of it all, they do this because they truly believe in the cause in a deep way that transcends labels and war-time propaganda. Reason 7 -- Junior isn't forgotten. It's both a great continuity move and a great way to give the Howlers a sense of history and a greater sense of peril as they push onward. Both Stan and Fury give a lot of attention to the memory of Junior in this issue, particularly as his spot is finally being filled in this issue. I respect that. The minor details: - All of the Howlers are passed up for promotion in this issue, even right after capturing an entire squad of SS soldiers. We know from issue #5 that Nick has refused promotion after promotion, but Izzy is genuinely offended by the fact that he was passed up, and Reb is resentful, two panels later, when he feels that Fury is still treating them like "Li'l ol' recruits". I wonder if Stan means to imply this has to do with their colorful ethnic backgrounds, or if it's just because they're square pegs in a round-holed army that believes in following orders and pleasing superior officers more than the rough tough determination that the Howlers display which channels the American Ideal. In a sense, one could argue that bureaucracy itself is a very Nazi concept. - Page 4, panel 2, is priceless, as those soldiers taunt Percy and throw every possible insinuation of his being gay at the reader without Stan saying it. - The house ad on the back of the front cover -- early inspiration for Pac Man? - Fury rams a submarine periscope with a PT boat. HOW COOL IS THAT?! - More rambling about the American Ideal/Dream -- Some scholars have argued that the reason Baseball is America's pasttime is because every player gets a chance to bat, just as the American Dream is supposed to guarantee every citizen a chance to succeed through their own ambition and hard work. In a similar manner, Dino, Gabe, and Dum-Dum all get a chance "at bat" in this issue, taking on absurd odds with the entire company depending upon their individual success. In that sense, it's actually an odd blending of the American Dream and communism -- the individual must succeed through his own efforts in order to benefit the community. - The story makes it very clear that Zemo has (foolishly) developed only one Death Ray so that, when it's destroyed, so are any hopes of making more of them. Wouldn't Zemo still have blueprints and, even if those were blown up in the castle, wouldn't he be able to go back to the drawing board and use his intellect and memory to make another Death Ray within a reasonable span of time? - On page 19, how did Fury know that they had succeeded in breaking Zemo's listening equipment? Maybe because he yelled "Ohhh!! My EARS!!" with the microphone still on? Ridiculous as that move was, it still isn't clear proof that the listening equipment was disabled. - Ayers' only real penciling fails in this issue are on pages 19 and 22. On 19, it's impossible to tell why the Howlers are in danger from the wall that's closing in. Are they unable to run past it? It sure seems that the wall ends only about fifteen feet ahead of them (and, as a criticism to Stan, WHY would the controlling circuit breaker be accessible from within the trap?). Ayers other fail is on page 22 when I had no idea that the biplane was within the castle. The colorist added to this confusion by giving the completely unspecified blank background a sky blue coloring. The exhaust coming from the rear of the plane even looks like a cloud. The plot synopsis in one long sentence: The Howlers are assigned Percival Pinkerton as a replacement for Junior, Percy quickly proves himself in spite of his flamboyant demeanor, the Howlers are sent to Germany to stop Baron Zemo and obtain or destroy the death ray he has invented, Gabe is injured while saving them along the way, they take a detour to get him healed, they take on Baron Zemo, force him to flee, and he remotely destroys the death ray. Awesome, awesome issue full of action, humor, rich characterization, and more boundary pushing.
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on Jan 4, 2015 20:51:46 GMT -5
Fantastic Four #21 "The Hate Monger" writer: Stan Lee pencils: Jack Kirby inks: George Roussos letters: Art Simek Grade: C+ Oops. This issue was published in the same month as Sgt. Fury #4. I probably should have gotten to it sooner. This FF adventure features Nick Fury, which would have made it significant enough for inclusion in this review thread, but it's also our first glimpse of Fury in the modern day Marvel continuity. While Sgt. Fury #3 first established, beyond doubt, that The Howlers' adventures were occurring in the regular Marvel continuity (they met Reed Richards), this is our first glimpse of any of them in the present day. So we learn that, twenty-something years later, Nick is a Colonel working for the C.I.A. An exchange between Reed and Fury in this issue also suggests that Fury remains a sergeant thru the end of the war (as well as the fact that the two meet again one final time prior to this issue at or near that time). Also -- no eye patch for Nick yet. Absolutely no mention of the fates of any of the other Howlers in this story. What's odd is that, even though this is the exact same creative team that created and wrote the Sgt. Fury title, they portray Nick so differently here. I suppose the end of the war, two decades, and a lot of promotions, can change anyone, but Nick is so much more...passive here, agreeing to seek out the Fantastic Four in order to bring down Hitler (come on! Nick would have never sought someone else to do this for him!), worrying about Reed's not being himself, and playing passive mind games to incite the FF to go on his mission. I just can't accept Nick Fury doing this, even if he's beginning to wind down in his early 40s. Truly, Nick's role in this story felt superfluous. If you're going to bring in a guest hero to reunite the FF after breaking up, Nick is probably the least qualified guy in the early Marvel Universe to be the touchy-feely diplomat to do it. And even though Fury picks up the machine gun and plays a major role in the ending, it isn't with his typical bravado. A reference to The Howlers and to Sgt Fury #3 aside, this guy didn't read like the character we know and love at all -- even with twenty something more years behind him. Really, the only moment where Nick seems at all like Nick is when he calls HQ at the end and tells them that the FF will provide the details, "I ain't much on makin' speeches." And yet, he's a high ranking secret operative in the CIA. I find it hard to believe he could keep that position, no matter how good he was, by having others file his top secret reports for him -- especially when the CIA is probably going to want to know the outcome of a mission to kill Hitler as soon as possible. The plot itself was a fun one, even if it fell far from Stan's promise at the beginning that it would be "the most unusual, thought-provoking tale you will read this season." The Hate Monger uses a special H-Ray to turn people towards hatred and violence, turning them into a willing militia for him, while he remains legally innocent of anything they do on his behalf. Lee works hard to convince us that intolerance is un-American (if only!), and ultimately reveals that the Hate Monger is actually Hitler (or one of his doubles). Of course, to make the story more interesting, the Hate Monger turns the FF against each other, and it's up to Nick Fury to reunite them as he attempts to get them to defeat the Hate Monger on behalf of the CIA. So, did Hitler have a vocal coach, or was the Hate Monger speaking with a German accent all this time? Wouldn't someone have noticed this? Oh, and using the moon as a satellite with which to bounce the ray back to Earth -- the curvature of the moon, as well as its orbit around the Earth, would really complicate The Monger's ability to aim/control it. Truly, my favorite part of this issue was watching a pissed off Reed Richard take on the Hate Monger's army single-handedly (I never really considered how potentially powerful he could be on his own until this moment). I absolutely loved watching him disarm a bomber with his own two (extended) hands. I can't say this issue holds any real importance for the Nick Fury continuity beyond establishing his presence in the modern day Marvel Universe. Fortunately, he'll be stepping onto the SHIELD heli-carrier in less than a year's time.
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on Jan 4, 2015 20:54:26 GMT -5
Sgt. Fury and his Howling Commandos #9 "Mission: Capture Adolf Hitler!" writer: Stan Lee pencils: Dick Ayers inks: Geo. Bell letters: S. Rosen grade: A- Well, it was inevitable -- The most effective company of Allied soldiers in all of WWII on a mission to capture Hitler. Of course, there's no way the mission can succeed, both because history doesn't show Hitler being captured and because Fury still believes he's at large in the modern day Fantastic Four #21, but that doesn't really hamper the fun at all. This was a great issue. Simple, uncomplicated, but incredibly fun, and I think a lot of that is due to Ayers' art. He really seems to have spent a great deal of time studying/designing Fury's face prior to this issue, as he repeatedly shows it in different contexts, each time looking very different, but each time clearly being the same face. Compare the humor of seeing him clean shaven on page 2, being his normal self on page 3, worried and all business on page 21, and (my personal favorite) looking like he's feeling a little too cool while disguised as a German officer on page 17. Whereas Kirby's greatest flaw was his faces, they appear to be his replacement's specialty. Ayers' work truly made this issue all the more fun. I think Ayers' only flub was on the second to last panel of page 21. That soldier's neck and shoulder appear to be rising out of the grass, and he doesn't look at all injured even while he's just taken a fatal wound. Pretty much killed an otherwise powerful moment. Speaking of which, that self-sacrificing pilot who got the Howlers home in the end was a nice touch. I always love the attention Lee gives to the unsung heroes working on the sidelines to help make Allied missions a success. This was a shining example of that. Perhaps the single most important aspect of this issue is that it establishes Baron Strucker as their first recurring antagonist. He's a much more pathetic, unthreatening figure this time (though he does a nice job of punching Fury with a phone), but it's nice to see a familiar face, all the same. Missed his having the monocle this time around, though. One thing that always strikes me as odd is how Stan takes such care to explain technicalities like who is speaking what language and how the events of certain issues tie into real history, yet he never explains the fine details of how the Howlers accomplish something like getting into the same room as Adolf Hitler. They just do. I really wish Stan would either take the time to explain more of the logistics of these Howler missions to make them a little more believable, or reduce them into simpler 10 page stories (two per issue) that don't try to explain anything. Either we should be thinking while we read these or we should just be enjoying the simple fun of it all and shutting our brains off. I feel like we're caught somewhere between the two. Minor details: A kinder, gentler Nick Fury dating Pam Hawley. I love it. Nick truly is a complicated man presenting the facade of being simple for the sake of his soldiers. We even see this when he's genuinely surprised and proud to learn that the Chiefs of Staff recommended him for the mission. All of this actually makes his change in demeanor in the present day of Fantastic Four #21 a little easier to accept. Still loving Pinkerton. Check out the first panel of page 7. While the rest of the Howlers run across the German countryside, Percy is power walking and keeping pace. Izzy's full name is Isadore. The plot summary in one sentence: The Howlers are sent on a mission to capture Hitler, most of the group gets captured, Nick and Izzy capture Baron Strucker and get him to have Hitler attend the Howlers' execution and help them pose as German officers, they crash the execution and manage to capture Hitler, a self-sacrificing pilot gets them out of there by staying behind to cover their escape (saluting the Howlers as he dies), and they return to the US to discover that "Hitler" is an imposter, but this is still a PR victory for the US since they can now show that Hitler uses duplicates to protect himself.
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on Jan 4, 2015 20:59:27 GMT -5
Sgt Fury and his Howling Commandos #10 “On To OKINAWA!” writer: Stan Lee pencils: Dick Ayers inks: Geo Bell letters: S. Rosen colors: ? Grade: B What an unexpected issue. I had expected the fun of this issue to be seeing how different fighting in the Pacific Theater would be for the Howlers, and indeed, they suggest as much toward the beginning. But, in fact, the true fun of this issue is in watching the Howlers get there – all the complex coordination it takes to get them from the UK to Okinawa in under 72 hours. It’s exciting and almost feels like science fiction as we see refueling planes, trip wires on an aircraft carrier, and even a submarine that launches people out of its torpedo tubes. While the adventure was still present once they got on the island, the journey took up the bulk of the book and was truly the best part. Really the only significant development in this issue is a new approach to characterizing Happy Sam. While he’s always been a hothead, past issues have never depicted him as Fury’s actual equal, and one issue even suggested he was a far weaker man who felt indebted to Fury (Sgt Fury #5). We always knew Nick truly respected the man, but we never knew why. In this issue though, Lee is clear to show that Happy Sam is just as tough as (if not tougher than) Nick when it comes to training and leading troops. The Howlers are amazed to see a man who spends much of his time behind a desk never tiring out as he leads them through the day’s training, and Nick genuinely comes off as less menacing than he. It’s fun to see this side of Sam and helps us to understand how Nick respects him. In a sense, Nick almost becomes a character we can relate to in this issue through relative inaction. He does just as much fighting and saving as ever, but he says less this time around, taking flack from his soldiers and taking flack from Sam, all in stride. Somehow it made me relate to Nick a little more and feel a bit of what it was like to walk in his shoes. I’m not sure why his bark softened as much as it did in this issue, but it was a nice change of pace. He sort of became the straightman to everyone else. This issue does feature the first appearance of Captain Savage (thanks to Scott Harris for pointing this out!). He is not named in this issue, but he commands the submarine that gets the Howlers to Okinawa. I don’t know if Col. Phil Parker will ever be appearing in this comic again, but this is his first appearance in the mag, and he certainly seems like an important enough character. A colonel that the Howlers actually respect and don’t mouth off to, as well as a soldier brave and capable enough to be a one man espionage team in Okinawa while clearly being in his middle age. It’s nice to see that even the Howlers have heroes that they look up to in the army. Probably better that most Howlers stories not be set in the Pacific Theater. I know it’s hard to abandon old war-time stereotypes (especially when it’s still fun to have the Howlers call Germans “Krauts” and “Otto”) but the visual depiction of the Japanese seemed a little too over-the-top, especially as Dino puts face paint on Izzy to make his eyes look more slanted. Japanese people don’t actually look like that. Anyway, the plot synopsis in one long sentence: The Howlers are ordered to Okinawa to free Col. Parker before the place is bombed, they take a long journey across the world, disguise Izzy as a Japanese officer, and team up with other allied prisoners to overtake an entire destroyer.
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on Jan 4, 2015 21:05:16 GMT -5
Sgt. Fury and His Howling Commandos #11 "The Crackdown of Capt. Flint!" writer: Stan Lee pencils: Dick Ayers inks: Geo Bell letters: Art Simek grade: C I had high hopes for this issue based upon the cover, assuming that Fury and the gang would be stuck under the authority of a commander who was unfit for duty. Unfortunately, that's not the story we got. Instead, this is a pretty predictable tale in which a "by-the-book" captain is temporarily put in charge of the Howlers, has no appreciation for how they work, and must ultimately learn to respect their methods. Sadly, it's done in such an over-the-top fashion though, with Captain Flint's transformation seeming so sudden, arbitrary, and unrealistic, ultimately resulting in his walking around the base, looking like Nick. However, this issue does give us some valuable info worth noting: - We finally get some background on Happy Sam. The last two issues have worked hard to steer away from the earlier suggestion that he was somehow less competent than Fury, instead clearly putting the two men on the same level. Additionally, this time around, we get a brief flashback to Sam working as a lone commando in Africa toward the start of the war, resembling Nick in his methods and result. We're then told that he was injured in a mission, resulting in his moving to a desk job and then training a group to do what he'd done. In fact, his reasoning for being away in this issue is to go out and train yet another group (presumably Captain Savage and his Leatherneck Raiders). It's an interesting concept for Fury to actually be an imitation/protege of a secondary character in the title. - We already knew that the Howlers were the first attack squad of Able Company, but now we finally see the full picture. There are four attack squads total in Able company, with Happy Sam being the Captain to all of them. There's also apparently a first sergeant they all report to (though we've never seen this character interact with The Howlers), and they all appear to wear a patch that says "7". Still no indication as to whether "first," "second," "third," and "fourth" indicate anything about these squads beyond being arbitrary designations. Anyone with more military knowledge than myself want to weigh in on this? - Sgt. Bull McGiveney (of Sgt. Fury #7) returns in this issue, once more serving as a minor rival to Fury who seeks to ruin his career and replace him. Ayers' art was a little unclear on this, but it looks like McGiveney runs the fourth attack squad. His little attempts to make Fury look bad in front of Captain Flint felt tedious and cliche, so I'm glad Stan didn't spend much time on McGiveney here. He doesn't seem like a worthwhile rival. Minor details: - Check out Percy in the final panel of page 4. I love that Ayers always makes his movements look so effortless and graceful. In this case, he almost seems to glide/float across the wall while the rest of the team scurries over it. - On page 14, Stan is careful to explain that most soldiers could never hit an airplane with a grenade while Dum Dum does just that, but there's no attempt to explain away the unlikeliness of Percy floating through the air with his parasol on page 15. Totally realistic, of course. - The letters column expresses two interesting points. The first is that, while fans enjoyed Lee connecting this title to the Marvel superhero titles via Baron Zemo, they could not accept a fantastical "death ray" in a war mag. At the same time, fans are beginning for the Howlers to meet Captain America. I sense a conflict of desires here -- there's no way fans are going to be happy making further connections between this magazine and the superhero ones if they are unwilling to suspend their disbelief a bit further. The plot synopsis in one sentence: The Howlers get a new temporary captain who does things by the book, and the Howlers prove him wrong. Not a great issue, but I'm intrigued by the background offered about Happy Sam. I also think Lee held back on explaining what his injury was and how it happened on purpose. Happy Sam's final mission seems like a great idea for an annual.
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on Jan 4, 2015 21:10:22 GMT -5
Sgt Fury and His Howling Commandos #12 "When a Howler Turns TRAITOR!" writer: Stan Lee pencils: Dick Ayers inks: Geo Bell letters: S. Rosen grade: A- At the end of the letter column for this issue, Stan and Dick asked for feedback on this issue because they felt it was their best one yet. I mostly agree. The cover promised that one of the Howlers was going to desert in the issue, and so I expected a predictable bail-out, like one of the Howlers faking it for some reason. What I didn't expect was for the surprise twist NOT to be that a Howler was faking it, but rather what the consequences for faking it would be. Very nice misdirection. This proved to be a particularly intense story (far moreso even than the death of Junior) as The Howlers must deal both with believing Dino has deserted to the Nazis and that Fury is dead. I got so into it, myself, that when the Nick Fury pin-up popped up after page 17, I thought it was a panel in the story and was thrilled to see Fury make his dramatic return -- and I was a bit crushed when I suddenly realized I'd been misled. It all worked out in the end (it usually does in these stories), but it was a heck of a ride just the same! That being said, I think the one detractor to this story was Ayers' penciling. A few issues back, I was THRILLED to get him on the book in lieu of Kirby's inconsistently drawn ape people, but while Dick Ayers does faces well, his pacing and depiction of action leave something to be desired. The action in these issues just isn't as exciting or intense as it was with Kirby. Ayers could never produce the same brilliant, dialogue-free action sequences of the earlier issues where Stan didn't even dare to have his words compete against Kirby's panels. And Cei-U's warning was right -- Ayers does pace things wrong and cram everything in at the end to the point where the story just drops out and doesn't even make sense. So was this Stan's best Howler story yet? YES. Was it Dick's? Not at all. The minor details: - What's up with the berserk Fury face at the end of page 4? Nick's demented, red, heavily shaded face with two different color eyes in an intense close-up does not match the dialogue nor plot at all. - Am I the only one who knew the answer to the mystery of how the Germans were moving around their V-1 rocket base from the very first panel in which the mystery was introduced? I mean, come on. They comment on the train tracks (and Rosen bolds the words "train tracks") in the very same panel! - Gabe using his bugle to confuse the enemy was a pretty creative idea UNTIL you consider that they would be hearing the bugle coming from the direction of the Americans they are firing upon. Why would they assume its their own bugler, especially as one of the confused Nazi soldiers comments that they don't even have a bugler with them? - Fury took one heck of a gamble having Dino pretend to desert right in plain sight of the Howlers. Look at page 9, panel 3. What if Dum Dum had decided to open fire upon him right then and there, both for his betrayal and out of concern that he'd leak all of Abel Company's secrets? - Page 11, last panel -- Nick diving off a rumbling tank (which prevents him from aiming properly) in order to take aim at and destroy an attacking plane with his rifle. COME ON! Let me remind you again that Stan took the time to explain last issue how Dum Dum could throw a grenade at a helicopter in spite of the seeming improbability, yet this gets overlooked! - For the first time in quite a while, Stan implies that Dino is Dean Martin, having the German officer recognize him as a famous movie star and exclaim "Of course! I've seen you a dozen times!...but I never knew your real name was Manelli!!" - Upon surrendering to the Nazis, Dino is taken to a building with two high ranking officers and ABSOLUTELY NO GUARDS in case Dino should choose to -- I dunno -- knock their heads together and flee? - And the Nazis never even frisked Dino? He had a giant frickin' radio under his shirt! - Ayers' one cool action moment would be Dino blowing up the V-1 launcher train on page 15. It's not Kirby, but it's very good. - I feel a little bad for the independent German pilot that Dino gets gunned down on his way back to Allied territory. True, he had a Nazi patch on his jacket, but he seemed like a pretty normal civilian. We don't even know if he made it out of the plane alive, and if he did, there went both his plane and his freedom. - Couldn't Dino have simply explained at his court martial how he placed the signal on the V-1 launch train? Wouldn't that be proof that he'd been the one who did it and hadn't really deserted? D'oh! - I was truly touched by Happy Sam's little internal moment in which he reflects that, "I loved 'em ALL!! Dino was always one of the BEST! How did it happen? Why did he DO it?? I'd have trusted him with my LIFE!" Sam is really starting to grow on me, perhaps even moreso than any of the Howlers themselves. - I guess the army really did use firing squads on deserters during WWII, but it seems so...shocking to me. I mean, that whole trial happened REALLY quickly. - And speaking of which, how the heck did Fury get back so quickly? No time is spent depicting how he gets back either. - What the heck is happening in that last frame? Is that Sam in the background, thankful that things are back to normal? The plot synopsis in one ridiculously long sentence: The Howlers are sent to find the coordinates of the Nazi's new V-1 rocket launch base and set it on fire so that a squad of bombers can destroy it, they get to Germany and find that the base is not where their experts had triangulated it should be based upon the previous launch, the Nazis close in, Fury tells Dino to pretend to desert in order to find and "mark" the base, The Howlers are distraught to see this, Fury gets captured and presumed dead, Dino gets the info and, without a match or gun, uses a radio to signal the bombers in code, he returns to the US, is tried as a deserter since Fury isn't there to explain for him, and is about to be killed as Fury returns at the absolute last second.
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on Jan 4, 2015 21:15:25 GMT -5
Sgt. Fury and His Howling Commandos #13 "Fighting Side-by-Side with CAPTAIN AMERICA and BUCKY!" writer: Stan Lee pencils: Jack Kirby inks: Dick Ayers letters: Artie Simek grade: B+ I must be honest. This is the first Cap AND Bucky story I've ever read. I'd imagine that was also true for most fans reading this issue for the first time. In that respect, this issue was a big success. Cap and Bucky were fun ("Welcome to the mainland, Mr. Barnes!" "Glad to be aboard, Mr. Rogers!"), had a clear synergy (still trying to work out how Cap back-kicked Bucky over him to take out the Nazis on page 2), and were just downright awesome (that coordinated running trick they pulled off on page 20 blew my mind). And, of course, getting Kirby back on pencils to return to Golden Age Cap was a necessary move. It's nice seeing some truly dynamic Kirby action on these pages again, and his faces aren't as awful this time around either, though Happy Sam does look completely different. It's not a perfect story, though. For one thing, I was truly eager to learn more about the German invasion tunnel being built (even more so than I was to see the climax of the story). As the story progressed, I was truly hoping to see a panel showing or explaining how it was built, whether there was any historical truth to it, etc, but Stan and Jack skimped on all the details, presenting the tunnel, presenting some other part of the tunnel that looked like it might still be under construction on page 21 (but never explaining HOW it was done), and never giving any indication whether Operation Einfall had any historical basis (a Google search turned up nothing). Another, and possibly larger, problem to this story is that the Howlers are entirely non-essential to the plot. The three pilots Cap and Bucky rescued were actually more beneficial to the mission (saving Bucky's life) than Fury and the First Attack Squad proved to be. The first rule of a crossover should always be that neither side walks away looking like a chump compared to the other one, but that's pretty much what happened here. In terms of secondary character development, we do have two things that pop up in this issue, helping to further develop the Sgt. Fury "universe." - Bull McGiveney is back again and as useless an antagonist as ever. We don't even need to see his fight with Fury to know who won. The Howlers actually hold an entire unrelated conversation while taking down his squad in a bar brawl. - Happy Sam gets further developed as a true hero in this issue and the true backbone of The Howling Commandos, as we see him pushing the Howlers to learn Judo and even have him take down Izzy in order to prove a point, while clearly in pain afterward (but hiding it) while Izzy expresses concern for Sam's health/injuries. He also gets some internal narration showing how he acts tough but is careful to turn away, for example, to give the Howlers time to catch their breath after a rigorous training session. We're also reminded again that Sam's tone always becomes gentler/nicer when about to give Fury some tough orders. Oh yes, and he allows Nick to know that he's been trying to get promotions for the Howlers for several weeks now. Sam truly has become my favorite character in this series over the past few issues. Minor Details: - Pam Hawley takes great pains to refine Nick, yet she allows him to talk in full American slang while sipping his tea. - Why would Pam and Nick go to the Pig and Whistle while on a date? A hangout for soldiers is hardly a classy establishment, and it's got to put Nick in an uncomfortable situation. I'd love to see that expanded upon. Would have been cool for modern day Nick to be able to comfortably and effortlessly present himself as thoroughly refined (thanks to Pam's influence and, perhaps, as a tribute to her memory) while able to get brash and dirty on a moment's notice. - When does Kirby finally start playing around with panel arrangements? Compressing his larger than life action into standard Silver Age panels is immensely frustrating to watch. - If anyone ever wanted to make the argument that Nick had a thing for Percy, you need do no more than check out page 16, panel 6. What is up with that expression on Nick's face as he gazes longingly in Percy's direction? I sincerely doubt this is what Kirby was going for, of course. Again, Jack and his faces... - It truly took me a few panels to realize the Hitler Youth officer was Bucky...and I got darned excited to see the rest of the story when I finally did. Really well done! - In the letters column, we learn both that they are discussing an ongoing feature about Nick as a C.I.A. operative in current day (I suppose they hadn't decided upon SHIELD yet) and that there are no plans for an annual at this time. - We also get a sense of how quickly the Marvel empire is building as they announce that they can no longer send cards in acknowledgement of receiving fans' letters (because there are too many) and also tell us that the MMMS is starting, will cost $1 to join, and will receive a full page official announcement next month. The plot synopsis in one ridiculously long sentence: Captain America and Bucky are in the UK to investigate a mysterious Nazi build-up, Fury briefly meets Steve Rogers in a bar brawl and thinks little of it, In Germany, the Nazi project continues to look more and more important, Cap sends word back for the Howlers to join them (Cap knows of their reputation), Gabe is injured and sent back with Iz, Dum-Dum, Dino, and Percy fall behind to cover Nick and Reb's advancing, Nick and Reb end up sneaking onto a prisoner train headed to the build-up area with Steve Rogers aboard and Bucky undercover as the Hitler Youth officer commanding them, it turns out the Nazis are building an underground invasion tunnel (Operation Einfall), Bucky orders Steve away (so that they can change), they attack and Nick and Reb join in, Cap and Bucky blow up the tunnel, Nick and Reb narrowly escape, and they end up recovering in the same hospital as Steve and Bucky. Really GOOD issue that fell just short of being really GREAT. More info about the tunnel and a more significant part for the Howlers would have made this an A++ in my book.
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