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Post by rberman on Aug 8, 2018 22:47:09 GMT -5
Chris Claremont’s The New Mutants (from the middle)
This first major spin-off from the X-Men began with the editorial edict that Professor Xavier needed students. A previous false start in the pages of X-Men had yielded one teen mutant, Kitty Pryde, but the creative team of Chris Claremont and John Byrne were at loggerheads with Editor-in-Chief Jim Shooter over the direction of a junior squad, including a troll named Caliban, which was deemed too much like DC's Legion of Substitute Heroes. Back to the drawing board! A couple of years later, Writer Chris Claremont and artist Bob McLeod assembled a new team of ethnically diverse super-teens to be the new X-students, but within a few issues they found excuses to keep the team away from their mentor. Not hard to understand, given the tendency of overwhelming telepathic powers to suck all the dramatic tension out of a narrative. Shaxper has already written up the first dozen issues of the series in a thread found here, for which I’ve also given my comments, so this thread will pick up where that one left off. But first, let’s run briefly through the events of those issues, including links to Shaxper’s previous comments on that issue, and mine as well: Marvel Team-Up #100 ( shaxper): Xavier meets Xian Coy Manh, a Vietnamese refugee with mind control power. Marvel Graphic Novel #4 ( shaxper, RBerman): Assembles the team, fight with Donald Pierce #1 ( shaxper, RBerman): Hanging out at the mansion, angst related to Dani triggering Xian’s PTSD. #2 ( shaxper, RBerman): Fight with the Sentinels at the mall #3 ( shaxper, RBerman): Xavier is hosting a Brood Queen embryo which tries to kill Dani. X-Men #167 ( shaxper, RBerman): The X-Men return from space, subdue the kids, and deal with the Brood embryo in Xavier. #4 ( shaxper, RBerman): An abused teen stalks the kids’ dance teacher, Stevie Hunter. #5-6 ( shaxper, RBerman): Viper and Silver Samurai kidnap Dani to force the motorcycling Team America to retrieve an artifact from an A.I.M. base in Mexico. The kids rescue Dani from Viper’s nest in Big Sur, but Xian is lost in an explosion. #7 ( shaxper, RBerman): The kids travel to Brazil and endure an awkward quarrel between Roberto’s parents, then save his mom from a kidnapping by Mr. T. I pity the fool who messes with mutants! #8-11 ( shaxper, RBerman): Far up the Amazon River, the kids survive another attempt on Roberto’s mom’s life, discover a lost Roman colony, befriend the mutant teeen Amara, and rescue Dani from human sacrifice by the witch-mutant Selene. #12 ( shaxper, RBerman): Returning to Rio with the kids, Amara gets heatstroke on the beach and almost destroys the city by summoning a new volcano. This thread intends to show where the story went over the couple of years afterward: Marvel Team-Up Annual #6Interlude: The Three Roles of Illyana RasputinSal Buscema pencils: #13, #14, #15, #16, #17Bill Sienkiewicz Art: #18, #19, #20, #21, Annual #1, #22, #23, #24, #25, #26, #27, #28, #29, #30, #31Varied Artists: #32, #33, #34, Special Edition #1, X-Men Annual #9, #35, #36, #37, #38, #39Jackson Guice and others: #40, #41, #42, #43, #44, Annual #2, X-Men Annual #10, #45, #46, #47
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Post by rberman on Aug 8, 2018 22:57:27 GMT -5
Marvel Team-Up Annual #6 “The Hunters and the Hunted” (October 1983)Focus characters and theme: Rahne and Roberto in an urban crime/ "Science creates a monster" pastiche The Story: In the same month as New Mutants #8 (The beginning of the Amazon River caper) came this story featuring the kids along with Cloak & Dagger and Spider-Man. It divides very neatly into four acts: The Exposition (8 pages): Spider-Man helps Cloak & Dagger defeat a ring of auto thieves who were also hooked into the gang of drug dealers that Cloak & Dagger usually hunt. The action showcases Cloak and Dagger’s power, while the text is mostly Spider-Man recapping their origins to himself and thus to the reader. The Kidnapping (7 pages): The New Mutants are in Manhattan to see the musical “Cats” on Broadway. Instead of going home afterward, Roberto drags them all to a video arcade where he plays Space Invaders for an hour while Rahne gets harassed by some street toughs. Things escalate, and soon Bobby and Rahne are lying unconscious in a culvert, to be dragged away by henchmen in the drug trade. The Team-Up (6 pages): Spider-Man tracks Cloak & Dagger to the Holy Ghost Church on 42nd Street where they often hide out. Sam Guthrie and Danielle Moonstar see the open church door and seek refuge inside, where they learn from Spider-Man and Cloak & Dagger that Roberto and Rahne have probably been kidnapped as experimental subjects by the drug lords who hope to replicate the circumstances leading to Cloak & Dagger gaining their powers. The Climax (11 pages): In the back rooms of a meat packing plant on West 14th Street, the captive Rahne and Roberto are indeed injected with experimental drugs. This transforms them into rampaging, ultra-powered monster versions of themselves. Rahne kills one of the gang bosses (the caption says he’s just unconscious, but the art says otherwise) before Cloak & Dagger can arrive to absorb Bobby and Rahne’s powers (respectively) into themselves. Then Cloak and Dagger merge together momentarily, canceling out each other's extra power and returning to their usual selves. They turn down an offer to come to the Xavier School with the usual and bafflingly foolish “We must learn about our powers alone.” My Two Cents: The best place to fit this Bill Mantlo story within Chris Claremont’s continuity is between issues 4 and 5, just prior to the county fair where the kids met Team America. That’s the last time the kids are in New York before Dani is kidnapped at the fair, causing the kids to travel to Big Sur, California to rescue her, then immediately go to Brazil, not returning home to New York until issue #13. Xian Coy Manh should have been with the team at any point prior to the Big Sur trip. But that’s easily explained as Xian having to go take care of her siblings while the other kids are having fun in Manhattan. A tough break, but easy to believe. Both Bobby and Sam transform from street clothes to costumes when their powers activate. This is not a thing. Why were any of them besides Rahne even wearing their costumes to go see Cats? I could have sworn the New Mutants already had seen and discussed Cats in an episode of their own comic book, but maybe I was thinking of their trip to see the film E.T. at the Westchester Mall in issue #2. Speaking of Cats, Rahne is scandalized by the slinky costumes and dancing, as well as by the general ambience of seedy early 1980s Times Square, which includes a hooker and a peep show. But in the early 1990s, the Disney Corporation bought a theatre in the area on the condition that the city government evict the porn peddlers and improve police services in the area. This led to a wave of upscale tourist attractions setting up camp in the area, including Madame Tussaud’s, numerous restaurants and shops, a modern multiplex movie theater, and the studios for ABC TV’s “Good Morning America.” A state-led nonprofit consortium renovated stage theaters in the area, leading to a renaissance of Broadway musicals which continues to this day. At the arcade, Bobby is shown playing the 1978 video game Space Invaders rather than one of the new hits of that year like Star Wars, Mario Brothers, or Dragon’s Lair. Maybe they only had old games in Brazil? Rahne is knocked unconscious when the bullet bounces off of her forehead. Yow! That's one thick skull. Also, the human hand in the second panel below implies that she switched back to girl form before she was shot. Why did she do that? Spider-Man is almost incidental in this story. He throws a few punches in the final battle, but his main contribution is to lead Sam and Dani from Holy Ghost Church to the meat packing plant to which Cloak & Dagger have already teleported. For some reason Cloak & Dagger don’t immediately attack the mobsters after arriving; we don’t see them intervene until Spider-Man, Dani, and Sam break open a wall, just after Bobby and Rahne have been injected. Did Dani have to run from the Holy Ghost Church (42nd and 9th, a few blocks from Times Square) a mile and a half to 14th Street on the south end of Chelsea? Sam could fly, but at this point he had never carried anyone with him. Maybe Sam flew and Spidey carried Dani. Or maybe she took the A line on the subway? Yes, I am overthinking it, but I’m having fun. Mantlo’s dialogue is serviceable, heavy on exposition, with some light characterization but none of the self-doubting internal monologues that mark Claremont scripts. Bill Mantlo wrote Cloak & Dagger’s debut in 1982, so he knows the characters well. The art by Ron Frenz and Kevin Dzuban is perfectly fine as well. Is Cloak a rewrite of DC’s Raven, who was introduced in 1980? Their powers and darkness theme seem similar. Cloak and Dagger’s “fighting drug crime in Hell’s Kitchen” premise seems like a slam-dunk to join Daredevil, Jessica Jones, Luke Cage, and (sigh) Iron Fist in yet another Netflix series for the Marvel Cinematic Universe. But nope, their 2018 TV series takes place in New Orleans and is broadcast on the Freeform network instead. Seems like a missed opportunity for crossovers. On its own, this is a typical "one and done" issue of Marvel Team-Up. But with Chris Claremont, it's "waste not, want not," so elements from this story will be woven into his own increasingly elaborate X-Men mythology in upcoming issues, which is why we had to cover it before moving forward to New Mutants issue #13.
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Post by rberman on Aug 9, 2018 7:43:59 GMT -5
Interlude: The Three Roles of Illyana RasputinNew Mutants #13, the next issue to review, serves as Illyana Rasputin’s coming-out party as a main character in X-Men comics, so let’s spend a minute today reviewing her story. She’s had a series of roles within Chris Claremont’s narrative structure. The first was when, as a six year old girl, she functioned repeatedly as an object of endangerment for her brother Colossus to rescue. In the very first panel in which she appears, a Russian tractor is barreling down on her, giving Peter an opportunity to flex his steel muscles (Giant-Size X-Men #1, 1975), before he even joins the X-Men. The next time we see her is in the Arcade arc in X-Men #145-7, in which she is kidnapped as leverage for the X-Men to rescue Arcade from Doctor Doom. Even when freed, she stayed in America instead of going back to her parents, “to keep her safe.” Because after all, who lives safe lives, if not the inhabitants of Xavier’s School? Riiiiight! Also, who takes care of her when the X-Men are off being heroic? Moira McTaggart, I guess. Her final “girl in jeopardy” appearance involved her kidnapping by the Satan-figure, Belasco. This was the era in which the X-Men lived on a Lovecraftian island in the Bermuda Triangle. It turned out to have a portal to Hell (called “Limbo”) through which she was lured, and by the time the X-Men rescued her, she had aged from six to thirteen in the blink of an eye. This inaugurated Illyana’s second phase, which was to serve as a conversation partner for Kitty Pryde. Every scene with Illyana for many subsequent issues featured her and Kitty talking. This was an effective way to develop Kitty’s character more organically, without resorting to thought balloons all the time. Illyana’s third and final phase began in X-Men #171 (July 1983). During one of her talks with Kitty, Illyana unexpectedly conjured a magic sword and began swinging it at her friend. This was a teaser for the Magik: Storm and Illyana limited series that ran in late 1983 and early 1984, revealing that while Illyana was in Limbo for four years, she was tutored by a sorceress version of Storm, a feline ninja version of Kitty Pryde, and the demon lord Belasco himself, ultimately defeating him and winning control of that hellish dimension. The memory of those events was conveniently locked away from her conscious mind while the X-Men were busy first with the Brood saga and then with the “Dark Phoenix Returns, or Does She?” Madelyn Pryor story. After those stories, when the board was clear for something new, Illyana became the new Jean Grey, a young woman torn between her moral center and her yearning for great power. Claremont gradually pulled out all the occult stops on his narrative organ, with bloodstones, sacrifices, mystic armor, and finally an all-out “Hell on Earth” scenario in the company-wide crossover event “Inferno” (1989). Illyana’s personality and story role changed radically as this last phase progressed. As the “demon who fights for the angels,” she was allowed to be snarky, sexy (in attire, though never in a relationship of any sort), and ruthless, opening up story solutions that would have been morally unlikely for other characters to pursue. That trait carries through to her most recent appearances, when she isn’t depowered, dead, or banished to another dimension, of course. So, that’s the overall story of Illyana Rasputin. How does all this fit into New Mutants? We see her in the very first regular issue, accompanying Moira McTaggart to meet Gabrielle Haller in London for what turns out to be the opening salvo in the Legion storyline. So right away Illyana is finally getting her own life apart from Kitty and Peter. This continues in issue #3, in which she gets a page of dialogue on Muir Island with Banshee, mainly exposition to remind readers about her demonic background. Then she lies low in New Mutants (but not X-Men) until the conclusion of her own mini-series. This brings us to New Mutants #13, which I will discuss tomorrow.
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Post by sabongero on Aug 9, 2018 10:38:30 GMT -5
Alright! I've been waiting for this New Mutants thread to be created by rberman . I just have a slight suggestion. I was wondering if you could also add that one sentence theme for the issue, that you included on the Astro City review thread for each issue? Thanks.
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Post by rberman on Aug 9, 2018 10:49:50 GMT -5
Alright! I've been waiting for this New Mutants thread to be created by rberman . I just have a slight suggestion. I was wondering if you could also add that one sentence theme for the issue, that you included on the Astro City review thread for each issue? Thanks. That's an interesting challenge! In Astro City, Kurt Busiek seemed to start each story with a theme (say, "A reporter learns what truths not to report") and then finds civilian and super-hero characters to support that theme. Chris Claremont tended to work in a different fashion, telling stories that could be identified by the focus character and by a specific genre (e.g. "Cyclops in H.P. Lovecraft" or "Kitty re-enacts Aliens"). I will see what I can come up with along those lines at least.
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Post by rberman on Aug 10, 2018 5:52:54 GMT -5
#13: “School Daysze” (March 1984)
Main Character and theme: Amara settles in The Story: The kids return to the Xavier School for the first story since issue #4, bringing Amara along. A hamburger cookout is fraught with teen drama. Dani is jealous of the attention that Roberto gives Amara, who realizes that she has overdressed. Sam tries to show off for Amara but ends up drenching her in soda. Amara loses control of her powers, starts a small volcano, and flees, humiliated, contemplating whether the world would be safer without her in it. At Project Wideawake, Valerie Cooper, Agent Gyrich, and Sebastian Shaw watch a test Sentinel go berserk. Back to the drawing board! But what made the Sentinel go nuts? Turns out that Kitty Pryde is over at the house of her buddy Doug Ramsey, and the two were hacking into the Hellfire Club’s computer to spy on Sebastian Shaw’s activities. This accidentally gave them access to Project Wideawake. Xavier telepathically commands Kitty to return to the mansion, which apparently is not far on foot from Doug’s house. It seems she has skipped an X-Man training session to be with a boy. Kitty cuts through the woods and comes across Amara, sobbing inconsolably. Kitty tries to be nice, but Amara will have none of it, and the other kids are quite surly as well when Kitty crosses their path on the way home. The cookout has gone sour, and everybody’s in an infectious bad mood. Xavier chastens Kitty for calling the new students "X-Babies." Rahne and Sam are flummoxed in computer lab, while Amara picks up on this modern contraption fairly easily. Eager to find something she’s better at than Amara, Rahne, seeking attention, does a werewolf trick in dance class, earning a rebuke from Stevie Hunter for her lack of discretion. Xavier has recreated Amara’s bedroom from her home in Nova Roma, but she’s less comforted by the familiarity and more creeped out that he invaded her mind to get the image of her bedroom. I don’t blame her! He says he won’t enter her mind again but almost immediately finds an excuse to establish an ongoing "low level psychic rapport" with her. Later, Amara has her first session in the Danger Room, with Stevie Hunter bizarrely at the controls. Xavier says he will monitor her power usage telepathically. This seems like precisely what he promised not to do earlier, so she calls him a liar and flees. But that night she overhears Xavier wistfully communicating holographically with his interstellar girlfriend Lilandra. This humanizes Xavier in Amara’s eyes, so she decides to give him another chance. My Two Cents: After several plot-heavy issues, this one is completely characterization, showing the emotional aftermath of recent events while setting the pieces in place for future storylines. Chris Claremont was really good at doing this without feeling decompressed. This issue is all about Amara’s integration into life in Westchester, and how her innocent beauty alters the team dynamic, with both guys desirous of her and the other two girls jealous. The episode title “School Daysze” is an obvious portmanteau pun that would have worked better as just “School Daze,” cliché though it is. Here’s a 1942 cartoon of the comic strip character Nancy, one of the many previous “School Daze” stories: Xavier calls the team “The New Mutants” on page 1. Xavier also gives Amara the codename “Magma.” The sequence with Kitty and Doug accidentally hacking into a government system was an obvious homage to the 1983 film Wargames which starred Matthew Broderick as a teen genius who accidentally sets off World War III while hacking into a military computer, thinking it hosts a video game company’s work. Kitty and Doug are shown working on separate computers in a study upstairs in Doug’s house. A two computer house would have been quite rare in 1984. (Even a one computer house was uncommon at the time.) The ability to dial out on two computers simultaneously would have also been very rare, since each computer required a dedicated phone line in those days of the 300 baud modem. Kitty compares herself and Doug to Stradivarius (a famed violin maker) and Itzhak Perlman (a famed violinist) since she writes the computer code that he uses. John Byrne has expressed his disappointment that Chris Claremont made Kitty into a computer genius rather than a regular girl, but Claremont wanted a character who could play scenes like this one. She does end up being something of a Mary Sue though: Mutant, ninja, computer hacker, physicist, politician, etc. Xavier reminds himself to check whether the events of Marvel Team-Up Annual #6 have wrought any permanent changes on Rahne and Roberto. Did he follow through? If so, he missed the boat, since several issues from now we will indeed be seeing further effects of the drug with which they were injected. Living with a telepath ought to be highly unsettling, especially when he has a tendency of saying things like “I don’t pry, but you were broadcasting your thoughts so strongly that I couldn’t help noticing…” Yeah, sure! In fact, Xavier has one of these encounters with Rahne later in this very issue when she’s feeling down on herself for not being smart. Meanwhile in X-Men (#179): Kitty escapes marriage to Caliban the Morlock, and Colossus is saved from being a living statue. The four issue X-Men/Micronauts miniseries, published in Jan-April 1984, takes place concurrent just after this issue. The less said about that, the better.
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Post by rberman on Aug 11, 2018 6:26:22 GMT -5
#14: “Do You Believe in…Magik?” (April 1984)
Main Character and theme: Illyana vs Cerebus rematch The Story: Illyana Rasputin narrates this entire issue in caption boxes. Professor Xavier tries poking around in her mind but can’t get in. Nosy Professor! The giant Limbo demon S’ym show up and defeats Xavier and Illyana. The rest of the team gets involved, and ultimately Illyana is able not only to subdue him but also to secure an oath of fealty from him. This understandably disconcerts Stevie Hunter, who witnesses the interaction between the demon and this girl-with-secrets. Illyana uses magic to make Stevie forget that part of the story, which is scary both that she can do that and that she would do that to protect her secrets. The kids feel like Xavier is depressed, so they resolve to throw him a party. After dance class, Stevie Hunter gives the kids a ride to the Salem Mall (still reconstructing from the Sentinel attack in issue #2) to get party supplies. They meet Diana and Tony (kids from town last seen at the school dance in issue #4) for a brief “hey, how are you?” Chris Claremont felt it was important that the teenage X-students be shown interacting with other teenagers, both because it's normal for their age and to show how different they are from the other kids. Back at the mansion, after the fight with S’ym, the party commences, albeit with both a sedan (teleported there by Illyana) and a volcanic shield cone (created there by Amara) occupying much of the living room. The X-Men return home from an unspecified adventure and join the festivities. The big surprise comes when Professor Xavier arises from his wheelchair to dance with Illyana. Apparently he’s over the mental block that prevented his healthy cloned body (see X-Men #167 -- Editor) from walking. Kitty’s friend Doug Ramsey comes by the mansion to drop a bombshell of his own: He’s been offered a scholarship to the Massachusetts Academy. Kitty is alarmed, knowing that its headmistress Emma Frost is a telepathic super-villain. See below in the “Meanwhile in X-Men” section for how this pans out. My Two Cents: The biggest hole in the plot is “How did S’ym get to Westchester?” Can he just pop up anywhere in our world that he feels like? Also, from what adventure were the X-Men returning? The previous issue of X-Men involved Colossus having been turned to a statue and then healed by the Morlock Healer, who will grace these pages soon enough. The title of this issue is of course from the hit song by the Lovin' Spoonful: As usual, Claremont gives us lots of little character bits: • Illyana reflects on returning to America after spending years growing up in the demonic Limbo dimension. It’s a nice touch that what hit her the hardest was “All my clothes are too small.” • Amara implies that she and Roberto made out under a palm tree on the beach in Rio two issues ago. It would have to be on the beach, right? There aren’t palm trees in the middle of the Amazon rain forest, as far as I know, though Zeb Wells apparently didn’t know this when it came his turn many years later to discuss that event. • Amara tells the other kids that Xavier misses Lilandra; it’s apparently news to them that he has a girlfriend, though they would have seen Xavier and Lilandra together around the mansion in early issues of New Mutants. Seems like a plot hole. The giant horned demon S’ym who wears a black vest is an homage to Dave Sim, creator of the similarly attired and similarly foul-tempered cartoon aardvark Cerebus. S’ym speaks about himself in the third person, as does Cerebus. I guess the Comics Code does not permit S'ym to go pantsless, though. Sim had featured “Professor Charles X. Claremont” in an early Cerebus adventure, so this was Claremont’s return wink. At one point, Illyana uses her “stepping disc” power to teleport her friends to rescue her from S’ym. This requires taking them through Limbo on the way to her, and while there they have a one panel experience of seeing her as a younger child. This was a crossover plot element with issue #3 of the Magik mini-series (February 1984, so two months prior to this issue). Claremont was juggling multiple series from this point on, and he waited to introduce Magik to the main plot of the New Mutants book until now, when her own mini-series had just concluded. In both cases, the crossover serves no point except to tease readers of each book to read the other book. Claremont didn't even believe that the Magik mini-series was necessary; he was just going to drop references to its events. But his editor Louise Simonson wanted the story told explicitly, so that's what happened. --------------------------------------------- Meanwhile in X-Men (#180): Kitty hangs out with Doug Ramsey, making Peter insecure. Storm and Kitty have a heart-to-heart about the recent changes in Storm’s personality and appearance, and how you can’t expect people to stay the same. The X-Men investigate the Beyonder’s device in Central Park and are transported to Battleworld, where the entire original Secret War unfolds. Kitty is captured by Emma Frost while accompanying Doug to his interview at Massachusetts Academy.
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Post by rberman on Aug 12, 2018 6:43:12 GMT -5
#15: “Scaredy Cat!” (May 1984)
Focus Character and theme: Illyana spills the demonic magic beans The Story: Illyana Rasputin travels to Massachusetts in astral form and finds that Kitty Pryde is the prisoner of Emma Frost, who threatens to ruin Kitty’s parents unless Kitty joins the Hellfire Club. When Emma dissipates Illyana’s astral form, the psychic backlash releases a horde of demons from Illyana’s body back at the mansion. This draws the attention of the other kids, who ineffectually battle for several pages until Illyana wakes from her trance and banishes the spirits. This is the first time the kids have seen Illyana in demon-mode, and they are understandably alarmed. Learning of Kitty’s distress, Roberto calls around for super-hero help and finds that the X-Men, Fantastic Four, and Avengers are all unavailable, thanks to the Secret Wars. Time to spring into action! But how are they going to get from Westchester, NY to the Berkshire Mountains in Massachusetts? For once, transportation is presented as an actual challenge, and the kids pool their piggy bank money to buy bus tickets from NYC. (I guess they took a bus into NYC first?) This road trip gives plenty of space for several conversations between the kids. On the bus, Sam gives Rahne a two page pep talk that God doesn’t hate her for being a mutant just because Rahne's stepdad was a mean pastor, and he lets her snuggle up to him as he calls her “My friend. Our friend.” Hey, watch the mixed signals there, buddy! Once they get to Massachusetts, the kids are quickly penned into a room by Emma Frost who says that she already has their bodies, and “very soon now, your minds and souls will follow.” Claremontism! My Two Cents: Illyana dons an X-uniform in this issue and is effectively a member of the team from here on out, though Xavier is not around to declare her so, and besides he doesn’t even know the extent of her abilities. She represents every kid who feels like she has a shameful secret that would destroy her friendships if it were revealed. We also get the second example in two issues of "Illyana saves the day." This will be a common occurrence; she simply has too many powers compared to the rest of the kids: stepping discs, magic sword, magic armor, whatever Doctor Strange-like powers a given situation requires, etc. Illyana is the second blonde girl to join in just a few issues, and with Kitty Pryde and Doug Ramsey hanging around and Xian Coy Manh gone, the scene is looking whiter every minute, as Shaxper noted in his own New Mutants thread. Amara was supposed to be half-Inca, but there’s never a hint of it in the art, just as Nova Roma bore no evidence of Inca culture, despite Claremont’s aspirations in that direction. “I will ruin your parents financially” is an odd threat for Emma Frost to hold over Kitty’s head. She’s a telepath! Doesn’t she already have the ability to make Kitty want to be in the Hellfire Club? As frequently happens in comic books, the power level of both heroes and villains fluctuate wildly to meet the demands of the individual story, which is why Daredevil survives more than five seconds punching The Hulk. Claremont drops his first hint that the souls of Kitty and Illyana have been bonded. If this was intended as a long-term build into a romantic relationship, it was aborted in favor of a Kitty/Rachel storyline that would take literally decades to evolve. But for now, Emma taunts Kitty about her mutual attraction to Doug Ramsey. The Massachusetts Academy is in the fictional Snow Valley in the Berkshire Mountains. Claremont devotes two pages to Rahne and Roberto thinking about their Cloak and Dagger misadventure. I admire Claremont’s ability to keep these plates spinning until he is ready to bring those stories to their conclusion, or at least their next segment. I love that when Illyana is thinking “Rahne hates me for being demonic,” Rahne is actually thinking, “I hate me for being demonic.” Claremont writes self-doubt and existential loathing like nobody’s business. Everyone is the hero of their own story and spends too much time thinking that everyone else is thinking about them all the time too, which is pretty accurate. The Massachusetts Academy looks more like a college campus, with multiple buildings and spacious lawns. There are some nice prep schools out there, I suppose. Do the students know that their headmistress dresses like a dominatrix? Why does Emma Frost want to have this day job? Running a school is incredibly taxing. The Firestar limited series will deal with this further in 1986. Meanwhile in X-Men (#181): The Secret Wars having concluded, the X-Men are dumped in Tokyo, where they defend the city from a giant dragon. The Mutant Control Act gains traction in the U.S. Senate.
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Post by Roquefort Raider on Aug 12, 2018 18:39:09 GMT -5
It’s interesting to see S’ym be used as a regular character, as he was specifically mentioned when Marvel told Dave Sim to stop using Wolveroach in Cerebus. In his editorial pages, the artist said he got the point, and that his continued used of Wolveroach would be as if Marvel turned the one-time joke of the demon S’ym into a recurring character.
Can’t win against corporations.
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Post by rberman on Aug 13, 2018 8:00:01 GMT -5
#16: “Away Game” (June 1984)
Focus Character and Theme: Crosstown rivals. The whole team faces an equal and opposite reaction. The Story: In a Hellfire Club facility buried beneath the Massachusetts Academy, Amara’s magma-control powers expand to include more general Human Torch capabilities, as she produces a nova flare to blind the guards while an earthquake disrupts the electrical supply throughout the Massachusetts Academy. After hiding in a storeroom, they ambush two female Hellfire guards who were strolling by. Dani and Illyana don the Hellfire uniforms but thoughtfully dress the captive soldiers in their own X-student uniforms, which I suppose was to spare Roberto and Sam the temptation of ogling the two bound women. Thoughtful all around, our heroes. Amara, meanwhile, finishes the job on the electric system, taking out the backup generators. Academy students, perhaps wakened by the earthquake, pour out of dorms onto the campus commons, creating a crowd through which Sam and Amara slip into the night. Roberto sticks with Rahne, who is trying to track Kitty’s scent in her werewolf form. What happens when the heroes split up? Separate encounters, of course! Each of our three pairs meets a pair of Emma Frost’s proteges, corporately known as the Hellions. Roberto and Rahne are incapacitated by Thunderbird and Roulette. Dani and Illyana do better against Catseye and Tarot. Before tangling with Jetstream and Empath, Sam and Amara also run into Doug Ramsey, whom you may recall was visiting the Massachusetts Academy for a scholarship interview. He’s shocked to see them in the dormitory, moreso because they’re dressed in their uniforms, which he has never seen before. But when the rocket-powered battle between Sam and Jetstream starts tearing up buildings and ancient trees on the Massachusetts Academy campus, Emma Frost decides that enough is enough. Emma neutralizes the heroes telepathically, sending Doug Ramsey back to bed without his memories as well. Incidentally, does this first panel not have the most typical Sal Buscema face ever? When Emma tries to pull the same trick on Dani and Illyana, they flee into Limbo through a stepping disc. My Two Cents: This issue finally provides the New Mutants the nemesis team they’ve been lacking for the last year. A rivalry with another school of super-kids is a perfect element to introduce, and Claremont gives the Hellions distinct personalities. They banter with each other just like heroes do. Some of them seem sadistic or selfish, but others like Thunderbird are noble. Tarot is French and spacey. They even have their own lycanthrope, a were-cat who hates her human form and uses babytalk like one of the sprites from Elfquest. The three separate fights make good use of the issue’s narrative space. The Hellions flush out the New Mutants so that Emma can deal with them. Sam lets slip his interest in Amara, calling her “sweetheart” right before Emma gives him a fantasy vision of romance with her. Emma calls the kids “The New Mutants.” It’s one of those breadcrumbs for new readers that I wish wasn’t necessary. She may not have telepathically altered Kitty’s mind, but she’s not above gaslighting her with “I have already made you my minion” taunts. Kitty makes a reference to the time that Emma was struck catatonic by Mastermind during the then-recent Madelyn Pryor storyline. Tarot fights Dani with a card-summoned demon which wraps a wicked chain around her neck, “corrupting body and soul.” Claremontism! That must be his favorite merism. Meanwhile in X-Men (#182): Rogue rescues Michael Rossi from murder by the Hellfire Club, drawing the attention of S.H.I.E.L.D. in the process.
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Post by cellardweller on Aug 13, 2018 19:01:05 GMT -5
Loving this thread! Thanks for starting it!
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Post by rberman on Aug 14, 2018 7:24:04 GMT -5
#17: “Getaway!” (July 1984)
Focus Character and Theme: New Mutants vs Hellions battle royale The Story: The scene opens on a three page spat between Jetstream and Empath, the latter of whom is short on temper and long on ambition, which makes him a dangerous asset for Emma Frost. The New Mutants are stuck for a week in a dorm room which deactivates their powers, chatting about their plight, while Roberto convinces Kitty Pryde to give him a back rub. Yes, really. Dani gets her first look at Limbo, where Illyana’s stepping disc took the pair of them last issue. S’ym gives them sexy duds: a buckskin bikini for Dani, a cleavage-baring gown for Illyana. I have no idea why the girls would wear these clothes instead of the extremely functional Hellfire suits they were previously wearing, but I have a pretty good idea why Claremont wants them to. Dani is understandably confused that S’ym, who fought the kids two issues ago, is now kowtowing to Illyana and calling her “boss” and “magus.” A first attempt to “step” back to Earth takes Dani and Illyana a year into the future, where they see their teammates incorporated into the Hellions. They return to Limbo and try again, this time landing in the right time (a week later, but close enough). Illyana calls the mansion, but nobody answers. (Rogue missed the call in last month’s X-Men issue.) Dani wonders aloud why she and Illyana ditched the Hellfire uniforms. I wonder too. Anyway, soon enough the New Mutants are facing off against the Hellions in Emma’s Danger Room (apparently every super-team has one of these), starting with a Cannonball vs Jetstream flying duel. Several pages later, Sam has prevailed, but the arrival of Emma Frost and Sebastian Shaw makes the contest moot. In the confusion, Kitty phases into the Danger Room circuits, sending its hazards going haywire. The New Mutants gather, and Illyana teleports them home, giving everybody a good look at bad Limbo in the process. Finally, the last three panels set up the following issue: Dani gets a dire warning from a ghostly shape speaking Shakespearean English that the demon bear which killed her parents years ago is after her now. My Two Cents: A good conclusion to the first Hellions encounter. They already seem like real characters with individual agendas of their own, not just generic baddies. James “Thunderbird” Proudstar in particular declares that his intention is to avenge his brother John, who died back in X-Men #95 (1975). Add to that the inconclusive nature of this first face-off, and we’re left wanting more, which we’ll eventually get down the line. Sam even raises the prospect that if Xavier and the X-Men (off in the Secret Wars) don’t return, the kids may be forced to let Emma teach them in his stead. Where previous issues showed conflict among the New Mutants, these last few issues have shown them coming together in the face of various external threats. None of this “what do my classmates think of me?” introspection in the face of more pressing concerns. This issue features a striking cover of dueling Jetstream and Cannonball, with art by June Brigman and Bill Sienkiewicz. The shape of things to come! Plus, check out the reaction shot in the corner head box. Dani calls Thunderbird a “brave.” Is that how Native American women talk about the men in 1984? Meanwhile in X-Men (#183): After Peter breaks up with her, Kitty packs her bags and returns to Chicago. Logan, as the voice of Chris Claremont, is not pleased with the editorial edict separating the lovebirds Peter and Kitty. He takes Peter to a bar where a fracas with Cain “Juggernaut” Marko ensues. This issue shocked 12 year old me because Kitty got quite a haircut, and I didn't recognize her any more. It was my first awareness that this was a thing that people (especially girls) do, and it can significantly alter their appearance.
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Post by rberman on Aug 14, 2018 7:26:18 GMT -5
Loving this thread! Thanks for starting it! Thanks! Any remiscences to share about this run?
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Post by cellardweller on Aug 14, 2018 18:35:59 GMT -5
What I remember about this run?
I definitely started liking the character of Magik at this time, I felt like she was such an interesting character. I also remember really staring to dislike Kitty a lot, the whole "X-babies" thing really was grating my nerves.
Was there ever an issue of X-Men where Kitty addressed why she disliked the New Mutants so much? I know she wasn't happy with being demoted from the X-Men, but it always seemed like there was more to that story.
I also enjoyed the Hellions, but felt that Tarot was under-used. I always wanted to see more of her in the stories.
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Post by rberman on Aug 15, 2018 7:34:48 GMT -5
#18: “Death-Hunt” (August 1984)Focus Character and Theme: Horror abounds as Dani is haunted and then assaulted by the Demon Bear. The Story: After an iconic splash page of Dani hiding under the covers thinking about the Demon Bear that killed her parents comes an equally shocking four page segment in which a young redheaded woman, standing outside the Xavier School gate, recalls the murder of Xavier during a military attack on the mansion in the future. Coming to the mansion’s front door, she has a confusing interaction with Illyana. Who can this new character be? The next three pages tease us with new character Warlock, resting on a planetoid in deep space, when his father flings half of a star at him in a failed attempt to kill him. Things are getting slightly cosmic! Inside the mansion we get four pages worth of Danger Room stunts by Amara, Roberto, and Sam. Dani and Illyana watch from the control room. Later, Dani practices her archery in the Danger Room, dons her war paint, and ventures into the snowy night to face her ghostly ursine foe. Her mutant power shows her that its greatest fear is her, and she seems to slay it with an arrow to the head. But later that night, her friends find her mauled body lying in the yard. My Two Cents: Well, then. Did ever two issues of a comic book ever turn the corner so sharply in their tone, especially under the pen of the same writer? Claremont has suddenly shifted gears radically from optimistic adolescent heroics to full-bore E.C. style horror. This was the perfect time for a new artist to come aboard, replacing perennial Marvel workhorse Sal Buscema, but it’s hard to think who would more suit the task at hand than former Moon Knight artist Bill Sienkiewicz. His chiaroscuro deviations from the Marvel house style featured one part abstraction and one part gorgeously expressive faces reminiscent of the world of haute couture advertising. Sienkiewicz was originally going to do only the three Demon Bear issues, but he and Claremont hit it off so well that he stuck around for much longer. (Claremont discusses this in the April 6, 2018 edition of The Epic Marvel Podcast.) Selecting a favorite page or panel is a futile exercise; this is artwork that brings the reading to a snail’s pace just to soak in the detail of individual panels. Panels deliberately askew, sections of all white or all dark, and frequent use of bleach as a paint are a few of the effects that he brought to the fore, and he would later confess to having enthusiastically dumped his whole bag of tricks too quickly in New Mutants rather than rationing them out to keep the sense of freshness and discovery rolling. It would be nice to say that Sienkiewicz’s work was the next step forward from the studied realism of the Neal Adams/John Byrne/George Perez school of comic book art, but his turned out to be a trail that could be blazed but not followed by others – and sometimes not by Sienkiewicz himself. Much of his comic book art of the last thirty years has been inking the layouts of others rather than offering his own fully realized work. Like Tom Waits or Leonard Cohen in the world of music, he can be appreciated but not easily emulated, which necessarily limits his influence, despite his acclaim. This issue belongs to Danielle Moonstar, already the most fully realized personality among the New Mutants. Her initial hostility towards Xavier (for being a white man, a rich man, and an authority figure) softened, but ever since the first mention of the Demon Bear in issue #1, Claremont made sure to bring it up again every few issues. Now comes the payoff, a supernatural tale about the un-killable beast that lurks in every empty room where you just turned out the lights. As if that weren’t enough, Claremont teases us with the debut of Warlock, the alien robot that only Sienkiewicz can draw right. The name is ill-chosen, since (1) he has nothing to do with magic, and (2) Marvel already has Adam Warlock running around much of the time. But I suppose it does fit the supernatural theme of the next several months of The New Mutants. But that’s not all! The reader is likely to be faked out at first by the girl at the gate's red hair (shoulder length in the future, buzz cut in the present) and think that it’s Rahne. But the dialogue cues us that this is a new character, eventually identified as Rachel Summers from the “Days of Future Past” X-Men story. The conclusion of that story left things ambiguous whether its dystopian future had been averted. Perhaps so, if Illyana's age is wrong for those events. But then again, maybe it will still unfold the same way, only with an older Illyana being the one who dies seven years from now. Illyana tells Rachel that Professor Xavier will be returning from Massachusetts tomorrow. I wonder what he’s doing there; we haven’t seen him at all in The New Mutants since he departed for the Secret Wars, though he returned to Earth (in Tokyo) three months ago in The X-Men, and returned to the USA two months ago. Keith Silva has written art-oriented commentaries on the early Sienkiewicz issues of New Mutants in a series that begins at the following link. There’s no easy way to just follow the successive issues through hypertext links, but you can change the URL to reflect the numbers of the individual issues, starting with # 18 here. Meanwhile in X-Men (#184): Rachel arrives in our time from the future in the cleverly titled “Past of Future Days” and battles Selene in a nightclub. She interacts with Ororo and Xavier and realizes that this version of the present is different from the one in her timestream.
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